Achieving Universal Approximation and Universal Interpolation via Nonlinearity of Control Families

Abstract

A significant connection exists between the controllability of dynamical systems and the approximation capabilities of neural networks, where residual networks and vanilla feedforward neural networks can both be regarded as numerical discretizations of the flow maps of dynamical systems. Leveraging the expressive power of neural networks, prior works have explored various control families F that enable the flow maps of dynamical systems to achieve either the universal approximation property (UAP) or the universal interpolation property (UIP). For example, the control family Fass(ReLU), consisting of affine maps together with a specific nonlinear function ReLU, achieves UAP; while the affine-invariant nonlinear control family Faff(f) containing a nonlinear function f achieves UIP. However, UAP and UIP are generally not equivalent, and thus typically need to be studied separately with different techniques. In this paper, we investigate more general control families, including Fass(f) with nonlinear functions f beyond ReLU, the diagonal affine-invariant family Fdiag(f), and UAP for orientation-preserving diffeomorphisms under the uniform norm. We show that in certain special cases, UAP and UIP are indeed equivalent, whereas in the general case, we introduce the notion of local UIP (a substantially weaker version of UIP) and prove that the combination of UAP and local UIP implies UIP. In particular, the control family Fass(ReLU) achieves the UIP.

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