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author | Jaron Kent-Dobias <jaron@kent-dobias.com> | 2022-09-27 13:22:48 +0200 |
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committer | Jaron Kent-Dobias <jaron@kent-dobias.com> | 2022-09-27 13:22:48 +0200 |
commit | 07dbb34e714ace184f32cb62c5c484daf053bd48 (patch) | |
tree | 73271fa1d503cc6ad3616ee1927c70d18c8bf4aa /frsb_kac-rice_letter.tex | |
parent | 33d89f6ec26a545df9db276914904cacfd64c3fc (diff) | |
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diff --git a/frsb_kac-rice_letter.tex b/frsb_kac-rice_letter.tex new file mode 100644 index 0000000..ba54e06 --- /dev/null +++ b/frsb_kac-rice_letter.tex @@ -0,0 +1,120 @@ + +\documentclass[reprint,aps,prl,longbibliography]{revtex4-2} + +\usepackage[utf8]{inputenc} % why not type "Bézout" with unicode? +\usepackage[T1]{fontenc} % vector fonts plz +\usepackage{amsmath,amssymb,latexsym,graphicx} +\usepackage{newtxtext,newtxmath} % Times for PR +\usepackage[dvipsnames]{xcolor} +\usepackage[ + colorlinks=true, + urlcolor=MidnightBlue, + citecolor=MidnightBlue, + filecolor=MidnightBlue, + linkcolor=MidnightBlue +]{hyperref} % ref and cite links with pretty colors +\usepackage{anyfontsize} + +\begin{document} + +\title{ + Unvieling the complexity of heirarchical energy landscapes +} + +\author{Jaron Kent-Dobias} +\author{Jorge Kurchan} +\affiliation{Laboratoire de Physique de l'Ecole Normale Supérieure, Paris, France} + +\begin{abstract} + We derive the general solution for counting the stationary points of + mean-field complex landscapes. It incorporates Parisi's solution + for the ground state, as it should. Using this solution, we count the + stationary points of two models: one with multi-step replica symmetry + breaking, and one with full replica symmetry breaking. +\end{abstract} + +\maketitle + +The functions used to describe the energies, costs, and fitnesses of disordered +systems in physics, computer science, and biology are typically \emph{complex}, +meaning that they have a number of minima that grows exponentially with the +size of the system. Though they are often called `rough landscapes' to evoke +the intuitive image of many minima in something like a mountain range, the +metaphor to topographical landscapes is strained by the reality that these +complex landscapes also exist in very high dimensions: think of the dimensions +of phase space for $N$ particles, or the number of parameters in a neural +network. + +The \emph{complexity} of a function is the logarithm of the average number of +its minima, maxima, and saddle points (collectively stationary points), under +conditions like the value of the energy or the index of the stationary point. +Since in complex landscapes this number grows exponentially with system size, +their complexity is an extensive quantity. Understanding the complexity offers +an understanding about the geometry and topology of the landscape, which can +provide insight into dynamical behavior. + +When complex systems are fully connected, i.e., each degree of freedom +interacts directly with every other, they are often described by a hierarchical +structure of the type first proposed by Parisi, the \emph{replica symmetry +breaking} (RSB). This family of structures is rich, spanning uniform +\emph{replica symmetry} (RS), an integer $k$ levels of hierarchical nested +structure ($k$RSB), a full continuum of nested structure (full RSB or FRSB), +and arbitrary combinations thereof. Though these rich structures are understood +in the equilibrium properties of fully connected models, the complexity has +only been computed in RS cases. + +In this paper we share the first results for the complexity with nontrivial +hierarchy. Using a general form for the solution, we detail the structure of +landscapes with a 1RSB complexity and a full RSB complexity. + +The Thouless--Anderson--Palmer (TAP) complexity is the complexity of a kind of +mean-field free energy. Because of some deep thermodynamic relationships +between the TAP complexity and the equilibrium free energy, the TAP complexity +can be computed with extensions of the equilibrium method. As a result, the TAP +complexity has been previously computed for nontrivial hierarchical structure. + +\cite{Albert_2021_Searching} + +\begin{figure} + \centering + \includegraphics[width=\columnwidth]{figs/316_detail.pdf} + + \caption{ + Detail of the `phases' of the $3+16$ model complexity as a function of + energy and stability. Above the yellow marginal stability line the + complexity counts saddles of fixed index, while below that line it counts + minima of fixed stability. The shaded red region shows places where the + complexity is described by the 1RSB solution, while the shaded gray region + shows places where the complexity is described by the RS solution. In white + regions the complexity is zero. Several interesting energies are marked + with vertical black lines: the traditional `threshold' $E_\mathrm{th}$ + where minima become most numerous, the algorithmic threshold + $E_\mathrm{alg}$ that bounds the performance of smooth algorithms, and the + average energies at the $2$RSB and $1$RSB equilibrium transitions $\langle + E\rangle_2$ and $\langle E\rangle_1$, respectively. Though the figure is + suggestive, $E_\mathrm{alg}$ lies at slightly lower energy than the termination of the RS + -- 1RSB transition line. + } \label{fig:2rsb.phases} +\end{figure} + +\begin{figure} + \centering + \includegraphics[width=\columnwidth]{figs/24_phases.pdf} + \caption{ + `Phases' of the complexity for the $2+4$ model in the energy $E$ and + stability $\mu^*$ plane. The region shaded gray shows where the RS solution + is correct, while the region shaded red shows that where the FRSB solution + is correct. The white region shows where the complexity is zero. + } \label{fig:frsb.phases} +\end{figure} + + +\paragraph{Acknowledgements} +The authors would like to thank Valentina Ros for helpful discussions. + +\paragraph{Funding information} +JK-D and JK are supported by the Simons Foundation Grant No.~454943. + +\bibliography{frsb_kac-rice} + +\end{document} |