Posit AI Blog: Infinite surprise


Among deep learning practitioners, Kullback-Leibler divergence (KL divergence) is perhaps best known for its role in training variational autoencoders (VAEs). To learn an informative latent space, we don’t just optimize for good reconstruction. Rather, we also impose a prior on the latent distribution, and aim to keep them close – often, by minimizing KL divergence.

In this role, KL divergence acts like a watchdog; it is a constraining, regularizing factor, and if anthropomorphized, would seem stern and severe. If we leave it at that, however, we’ve seen just one side of its character, and are missing out on its complement, a picture of playfulness, adventure, and curiosity. In this post, we’ll take a look at that other side.

While being inspired by a series of tweets by Simon de Deo, enumerating applications of KL divergence in a vast number of disciplines,

we don’t aspire to provide a comprehensive write-up here – as mentioned in the initial tweet, the topic could easily fill a whole semester of study.

The much more modest goals of this post, then, are

  1. to quickly recap the role of KL divergence in training VAEs, and mention similar-in-character applications;
  2. to illustrate that more playful, adventurous “other side” of its character; and
  3. in a not-so-entertaining, but – hopefully – useful manner, differentiate KL divergence from related concepts such as cross entropy, mutual information, or free energy.

Before though, we start with a definition and some terminology.

KL divergence in a nutshell

KL divergence is the expected value of the logarithmic difference in probabilities according to two distributions, \(p\) and \(q\). Here it is in its discrete-probabilities variant:

\[\begin{equation}
D_{KL}(p||q) = \sum\limits_{x} p(x) log(\frac{p(x)}{q(x)})
\tag{1}
\end{equation}\]

Notably, it is asymmetric; that is, \(D_{KL}(p||q)\) is not the same as \(D_{KL}(q||p)\). (Which is why it is a divergence, not a distance.) This aspect will play an important role in section 2 dedicated to the “other side.”

To stress this asymmetry, KL divergence is sometimes called relative information (as in “information of \(p\) relative to \(q\)”), or information gain. We agree with one of our sources that because of its universality and importance, KL divergence would probably have deserved a more informative name; such as, precisely, information gain. (Which is less ambiguous pronunciation-wise, as well.)

KL divergence, “villain”

In many machine learning algorithms, KL divergence appears in the context of variational inference. Often, for realistic data, exact computation of the posterior distribution is infeasible. Thus, some form of approximation is required. In variational inference, the true posterior \(p^*\) is approximated by a simpler distribution, \(q\), from some tractable family.
To ensure we have a good approximation, we minimize – in theory, at least – the KL divergence of \(q\) relative to \(p^*\), thus replacing inference by optimization.

In practice, again for reasons of intractability, the KL divergence minimized is that of \(q\) relative to an unnormalized distribution \(\widetilde{p}\)

\[\begin{equation}
J(q)\ = D_{KL}(q||\widetilde{p})
\tag{2}
\end{equation}\]

where \(\widetilde{p}\) is the joint distribution of parameters and data:

\[\begin{equation}
\widetilde{p}(\mathbf{x}) = p(\mathbf{x}, \mathcal{D}) = p^*(\mathbf{x}) \ p(\mathcal{D})
\tag{3}
\end{equation}\]

and \(p^*\) is the true posterior:

\[\begin{equation}
p^*(\mathbf{x}) = p(\mathbf{x}|\mathcal{D})
\tag{4}
\end{equation}\]

Equivalent to that formulation (eq. (2)) – for a derivation see (Murphy 2012) – is this, which shows the optimization objective to be an upper bound on the negative log-likelihood (NLL):

\[\begin{equation}
J(q)\ = D_{KL}(q||p^*) – log \ p(D)
\tag{5}
\end{equation}\]

Yet another formulation – again, see (Murphy 2012) for details – is the one we actually use when training (e.g.) VAEs. This one corresponds to the expected NLL plus the KL divergence between the approximation \(q\) and the imposed prior \(p\):

\[\begin{equation}
J(q)\ = D_{KL}(q||p) – E_q[- log \ p(\mathcal{D}|\mathbf{x})]
\tag{6}
\end{equation}\]

Negated, this formulation is also called the ELBO, for evidence lower bound. In the VAE post cited above, the ELBO was written

\[\begin{equation}
ELBO\ = \ E[log\ p(x|z)]\ -\ KL(q(z)||p(z))
\tag{7}
\end{equation}\]

with \(z\) denoting the latent variables (\(q(z)\) being the approximation, \(p(z)\) the prior, often a multivariate normal).

Beyond VAEs

Generalizing this “conservative” action pattern of KL divergence beyond VAEs, we can say that it expresses the quality of approximations. An important area where approximation takes place is (lossy) compression. KL divergence provides a way to quantify how much information is lost when we compress data.

Summing up, in these and similar applications, KL divergence is “bad” – although we don’t want it to be zero (or else, why bother using the algorithm?), we certainly want to keep it low. So now, let’s see the other side.

KL divergence, good guy

In a second category of applications, KL divergence is not something to be minimized. In these domains, KL divergence is indicative of surprise, disagreement, exploratory behavior, or learning: This truly is the perspective of information gain.

Surprise

One domain where surprise, not information per se, governs behavior is perception. For example, eyetracking studies (e.g., (Itti and Baldi 2005)) showed that surprise, as measured by KL divergence, was a better predictor of visual attention than information, measured by entropy. While these studies seem to have popularized the expression “Bayesian surprise,” this compound is – I think – not the most informative one, as neither part adds much information to the other. In Bayesian updating, the magnitude of the difference between prior and posterior reflects the degree of surprise brought about by the data – surprise is an integral part of the concept.

Thus, with KL divergence linked to surprise, and surprise rooted in the fundamental process of Bayesian updating, a process that could be used to describe the course of life itself, KL divergence itself becomes fundamental. We could get tempted to see it everywhere. Accordingly, it has been used in many fields to quantify unidirectional divergence.

For example, (Zanardo 2017) have applied it in trading, measuring how much a person disagrees with the market belief. Higher disagreement then corresponds to higher expected gains from betting against the market.

Closer to the area of deep learning, it is used in intrinsically motivated reinforcement learning (e.g., (Sun, Gomez, and Schmidhuber 2011)), where an optimal policy should maximize the long-term information gain. This is possible because like entropy, KL divergence is additive.

Although its asymmetry is relevant whether you use KL divergence for regularization (section 1) or surprise (this section), it becomes especially evident when used for learning and surprise.

Asymmetry in action

Looking again at the KL formula

\[\begin{equation}
D_{KL}(p||q) = \sum\limits_{x} p(x) log(\frac{p(x)}{q(x)})
\tag{1}
\end{equation}\]

the roles of \(p\) and \(q\) are fundamentally different. For one, the expectation is computed over the first distribution (\(p\) in (1)). This aspect is important because the “order” (the respective roles) of \(p\) and \(q\) may have to be chosen according to tractability (which distribution are we able to average over).

Secondly, the fraction inside the \(log\) means that if \(q\) is ever zero at a point where \(p\) isn’t, the KL divergence will “blow up.” What this means for distribution estimation in general is nicely detailed in Murphy (2012). In the context of surprise, it means that if I learn something I used to think had probability zero, I will be “infinitely surprised.”

To avoid infinite surprise, we can make sure our prior probability is never zero. But even then, the interesting thing is that how much information we gain in any one event depends on how much information I had before. Let’s see a simple example.

Assume that in my current understanding of the world, black swans probably don’t exist, but they could … maybe 1 percent of them is black. Put differently, my prior belief of a swan, should I encounter one, being black is \(q = 0.01\).

Now in fact I do encounter one, and it’s black.
The information I’ve gained is:

\[\begin{equation}
l(p,q) = 0 * log(\frac{0}{0.99}) + 1 * log(\frac{1}{0.01}) = 6.6 \ bits
\tag{8}
\end{equation}\]

Conversely, suppose I’d been much more undecided before; say I’d have thought the odds were 50:50.
On seeing a black swan, I get a lot less information:

\[\begin{equation}
l(p,q) = 0 * log(\frac{0}{0.5}) + 1 * log(\frac{1}{0.5}) = 1 \ bit
\tag{9}
\end{equation}\]

This view of KL divergence, in terms of surprise and learning, is inspiring – it could lead one to seeing it in action everywhere. However, we still have the third and final task to handle: quickly compare KL divergence to other concepts in the area.

Entropy

It all starts with entropy, or uncertainty, or information, as formulated by Claude Shannon.
Entropy is the average log probability of a distribution:

\[\begin{equation}
H(X) = – \sum\limits_{x=1}^n p(x_i) log(p(x_i))
\tag{10}
\end{equation}\]

As nicely described in (DeDeo 2016), this formulation was chosen to satisfy four criteria, one of which is what we commonly picture as its “essence,” and one of which is especially interesting.

As to the former, if there are \(n\) possible states, entropy is maximal when all states are equiprobable. E.g., for a coin flip uncertainty is highest when coin bias is 0.5.

The latter has to do with coarse-graining, a change in “resolution” of the state space. Say we have 16 possible states, but we don’t really care at that level of detail. We do care about 3 individual states, but all the rest are basically the same to us. Then entropy decomposes additively; total (fine-grained) entropy is the entropy of the coarse-grained space, plus the entropy of the “lumped-together” group, weighted by their probabilities.

Subjectively, entropy reflects our uncertainty whether an event will happen. Interestingly though, it exists in the physical world as well: For example, when ice melts, it becomes more uncertain where individual particles are. As reported by (DeDeo 2016), the number of bits released when one gram of ice melts is about 100 billion terabytes!

As fascinating as it is, information per se may, in many cases, not be the best means of characterizing human behavior. Going back to the eyetracking example, it is completely intuitive that people look at surprising parts of images, not at white noise areas, which are the maximum you could get in terms of entropy.

As a deep learning practitioner, you’ve probably been waiting for the point at which we’d mention cross entropy – the most commonly used loss function in categorization.

Cross entropy

The cross entropy between distributions \(p\) and \(q\) is the entropy of \(p\) plus the KL divergence of \(p\) relative to \(q\). If you’ve ever implemented your own classification network, you probably recognize the sum on the very right:

\[\begin{equation}
H(p,q) = H(p) + D_{KL}(p||q) = – \sum p \ log(q)
\tag{11}
\end{equation}\]

In information theory-speak, \(H(p,q)\) is the expected message length per datum when \(q\) is assumed but \(p\) is true.
Closer to the world of machine learning, for fixed \(p\), minimizing cross entropy is equivalent to minimizing KL divergence.

Mutual information

Another extremely important quantity, used in many contexts and applications, is mutual information. Again citing DeDeo, “you can think of it as the most general form of correlation coefficient that you can measure.”

With two variables \(X\) and \(Y\), we can ask: How much do we learn about \(X\) when we learn about an individual \(y\), \(Y=y\)? Averaged over all \(y\), this is the conditional entropy:

\[\begin{equation}
H(X|Y) = – \sum\limits_{i} P(y_i) log(H(X|y_i))
\tag{12}
\end{equation}\]

Now mutual information is entropy minus conditional entropy:

\[\begin{equation}
I(X, Y) = H(X) – H(X|Y) = H(Y) – H(Y|X)
\tag{13}
\end{equation}\]

This quantity – as required for a measure representing something like correlation – is symmetric: If two variables \(X\) and \(Y\) are related, the amount of information \(X\) gives you about \(Y\) is equal to that \(Y\) gives you about \(X\).

KL divergence is part of a family of divergences, called f-divergences, used to measure directed difference between probability distributions. Let’s also quickly look another information-theoretic measure that unlike those, is a distance.

Jensen-Shannon distance

In math, a distance, or metric, besides being non-negative has to satisfy two other criteria: It must be symmetric, and it must obey the triangle inequality.

Both criteria are met by the Jensen-Shannon distance. With \(m\) a mixture distribution:

\[\begin{equation}
m_i = \frac{1}{2}(p_i + q_i)
\tag{14}
\end{equation}\]

the Jensen-Shannon distance is an average of KL divergences, one of \(m\) relative to \(p\), the other of \(m\) relative to \(q\):

\[\begin{equation}
JSD = \frac{1}{2}(KL(m||p) + KL(m||q))
\tag{15}
\end{equation}\]

This would be an ideal candidate to use were we interested in (undirected) distance between, not directed surprise caused by, distributions.

Finally, let’s wrap up with a last term, restricting ourselves to a quick glimpse at something whole books could be written about.

(Variational) Free Energy

Reading papers on variational inference, you’re pretty likely to hear people talking not “just” about KL divergence and/or the ELBO (which as soon as you know what it stands for, is just what it is), but also, something mysteriously called free energy (or: variational free energy, in that context).

For practical purposes, it suffices to know that variational free energy is negative the ELBO, that is, corresponds to equation (2). But for those interested, there is free energy as a central concept in thermodynamics.

In this post, we’re mainly interested in how concepts are related to KL divergence, and for this, we follow the characterization John Baez gives in his aforementioned talk.

Free energy, that is, energy in useful form, is the expected energy minus temperature times entropy:

\[\begin{equation}
F = [E] -T \ H
\tag{16}
\end{equation}\]

Then, the extra free energy of a system \(Q\) – compared to a system in equilibrium \(P\) – is proportional to their KL divergence, that is, the information of \(Q\) relative to \(P\):

\[\begin{equation}
F(Q) – F(P) = k \ T \ KL(q||p)
\tag{17}
\end{equation}\]

Speaking of free energy, there’s also the – not uncontroversial – free energy principle posited in neuroscience.. But at some point, we have to stop, and we do it here.

Conclusion

Wrapping up, this post has tried to do three things: Having in mind a reader with background mainly in deep learning, start with the “habitual” use in training variational autoencoders; then show the – probably less familiar – “other side”; and finally, provide a synopsis of related terms and their applications.

If you’re interested in digging deeper into the many various applications, in a range of different fields, no better place to start than from the Twitter thread, mentioned above, that gave rise to this post. Thanks for reading!

DeDeo, Simon. 2016. “Information Theory for Intelligent People.”

Friston, Karl. 2010. “Friston, k.j.: The Free-Energy Principle: A Unified Brain Theory? Nat. Rev. Neurosci. 11, 127-138.” Nature Reviews. Neuroscience 11 (February): 127–38. https://doi.org/10.1038/nrn2787.
Itti, Laurent, and Pierre Baldi. 2005. “Bayesian Surprise Attracts Human Attention.” In Advances in Neural Information Processing Systems 18 [Neural Information Processing Systems, NIPS 2005, December 5-8, 2005, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada], 547–54. http://papers.nips.cc/paper/2822-bayesian-surprise-attracts-human-attention.

Murphy, Kevin. 2012. Machine Learning: A Probabilistic Perspective. MIT Press.

Sun, Yi, Faustino J. Gomez, and Juergen Schmidhuber. 2011. “Planning to Be Surprised: Optimal Bayesian Exploration in Dynamic Environments.” CoRR abs/1103.5708. http://arxiv.org/abs/1103.5708.

Zanardo, Enrico. 2017. “HOW TO MEASURE DISAGREEMENT ?” In.



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