Expand-and-Cluster: Exact Parameter Recovery of Neural Networks
Can we recover the hidden parameters of an Artificial Neural Network (ANN) by probing its input-output mapping? We propose a systematic method, called `Expand-and-Cluster' that needs only the number of hidden layers and the activation function of the probed ANN to identify all network parameters. In the expansion phase, we train a series of networks of increasing size using the probed data of the ANN as a teacher. Expansion stops when a minimal loss is consistently reached in networks of a given size. In the clustering phase, weight vectors of the expanded students are clustered, which allows structured pruning of superfluous neurons in a principled way. We find that an overparameterization of a factor four is sufficient to reliably identify the minimal number of neurons and to retrieve the original network parameters in of tasks across a family of 150 toy problems of variable difficulty. Furthermore, shallow and deep teacher networks trained on MNIST data can be identified with less than overhead in the neuron number. Thus, while direct training of a student network with a size identical to that of the teacher is practically impossible because of the highly non-convex loss function, training with mild overparameterization followed by clustering and structured pruning correctly identifies the target network.
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