Ph.D. Dissertation Defense - Ali Payani

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Event Details
  • Date/Time:
    • Friday April 17, 2020 - Saturday April 18, 2020
      11:00 am - 12:59 pm
  • Location: https://bluejeans.com/206174966
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  • Fee(s):
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Summaries

Summary Sentence: Differentiable Neural Logic Networks and their Application onto Inductive Logic Programming

Full Summary: No summary paragraph submitted.

TitleDifferentiable Neural Logic Networks and their Application onto Inductive Logic Programming

Committee:

Dr. Faramarz Fekri, ECE, Chair , Advisor

Dr. Matthieu Bloch, ECE

Dr. Mark Davenport, ECE

Dr. Ghassan AlRegib, ECE

Dr. Siva Theja Maguluri, ISyE

Abstract:

Despite the impressive performance of Deep Neural Networks (DNNs), they usually lack the explanatory power of disciplines such as logic programming. Even though they can learn to solve very difficult problems, the learning is usually implicit and it is  very difficult, if not impossible, to interpret the underlying explanations that is implicitly stored in the weights of the neural network models. On the other hand, standard logic programming is usually limited in scope and application compared to the DNNs.  The objective of this dissertation is to bridge the gap between these two disciplines by presenting a novel paradigm for learning algorithmic and discrete tasks via neural networks. This novel approach, uses the differentiable neural network to design interpretable and explanatory models that can learn and represent Boolean functions efficiently. We will investigate the application of these differentiable Neural Logic (dNL) networks in disciplines such as Inductive Logic Programming, Relational Reinforcement Learning, as well as in discrete algorithmic tasks such as decoding LDPC codes over Binary erasure Channels. In particular, in this dissertation we reformulate the ILP as a differentiable neural network by exploiting the explanatory power of dNL networks and we show that the proposed dNL-ILP outperforms the current state of the art ILP solvers in a variety of benchmark tasks. We further show that the proposed differentiable ILP solver  can be effectively combined with the standard deep learning techniques to formulate a relational reinforcement learning framework. Via experiments, we demonstrate that the proposed deep relational policy learning framework can incorporate human expertise to learn efficient policies directly from images and outperforms the traditional RRL systems in some tasks.

Additional Information

In Campus Calendar
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Groups

ECE Ph.D. Dissertation Defenses

Invited Audience
Public
Categories
Other/Miscellaneous
Keywords
Phd Defense, graduate students
Status
  • Created By: Daniela Staiculescu
  • Workflow Status: Published
  • Created On: Apr 8, 2020 - 4:50pm
  • Last Updated: Apr 9, 2020 - 11:32am