Researcher profile

Haitz Sáez de Ocáriz Borde

Haitz Sáez de Ocáriz Borde contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

6 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

Classification Fields: Arbitrarily Fine Recursive Hierarchical Clustering From Few Examples

Classical clustering methods usually return either a finite partition of the observed data or a finite dendrogram over it. This finite-sample view is inadequate when the hierarchy of interest is a recursive geometric object with fine-scale refinements that continue beyond the levels directly observed. We introduce classification fields: infinite-depth hierarchical cluster structures on $\mathbb{R}^d$ generated by a local parent-to-child refinement rule. A classification field generator maps each parent centre to an ordered, bounded, and separated tuple of child residuals. Together with a root and a scale factor, this rule recursively generates cluster centres, Voronoi cells, and a metric DAG encoding the hierarchy. Given only a finite prefix of such a hierarchy, we learn a classification field predictor that approximates the generator and can be rolled out to unseen depths. We prove exponential truncation convergence in the completed cell metric and ReLU realizability with width $O(\varepsilon^{-γ})$ and depth $\widetilde O(\varepsilon^{-3γ/2})$, where $γ=\log K/(-\log s)$, up to finite-window aspect-ratio factors. The approximation holds at the level of the induced compact metric structures, measured in the completed cell-metric Hausdorff distance. Experimental validation on matched CFG-generated hierarchies, IFS fractals, and image-induced recursive clustering hierarchies shows that learned predictors preserve ordered child slots, unordered geometry, and hierarchy-level path metrics under recursive rollout. These results support the claim that finite hierarchical observations can reveal local refinement rules capable of generating substantially deeper classification fields.

preprint2026arXiv

Every Feedforward Neural Network Definable in an o-Minimal Structure Has Finite Sample Complexity

We show that, in a precise sense, a broad class of feedforward neural networks learn (have finite sample complexity) in the PAC model: every fixed finite feedforward architecture whose layers are definable in an o-minimal structure has finite sample complexity in the agnostic PAC setting, even with unbounded parameters. This covers standard fixed-size MLPs, CNNs, GNNs, and transformers with fixed sequence length, together with the operations and layers typically used in such architectures, including linear projections, residual connections, attention mechanisms, pooling layers, normalization layers, and admissible positional encodings. Hence, distribution-free learnability for modern non-recurrent architectures is not an exceptional property of particular activations or architecture-specific VC arguments, but a consequence of tame feedforward computation. Our results reposition finite-sample PAC learnability as a baseline rather than a differentiator: they shift the focus of architectural comparison toward inductive biases, symmetries and geometric priors, scalability, and optimization behaviour.

preprint2022arXiv

Latent Space based Memory Replay for Continual Learning in Artificial Neural Networks

Memory replay may be key to learning in biological brains, which manage to learn new tasks continually without catastrophically interfering with previous knowledge. On the other hand, artificial neural networks suffer from catastrophic forgetting and tend to only perform well on tasks that they were recently trained on. In this work we explore the application of latent space based memory replay for classification using artificial neural networks. We are able to preserve good performance in previous tasks by storing only a small percentage of the original data in a compressed latent space version.

preprint2022arXiv

Multi-Task Learning based Convolutional Models with Curriculum Learning for the Anisotropic Reynolds Stress Tensor in Turbulent Duct Flow

The Reynolds-averaged Navier-Stokes (RANS) equations require accurate modeling of the anisotropic Reynolds stress tensor. Traditional closure models, while sophisticated, often only apply to restricted flow configurations. Researchers have started using machine learning approaches to tackle this problem by developing more general closure models informed by data. In this work we build upon recent convolutional neural network architectures used for turbulence modeling and propose a multi-task learning-based fully convolutional neural network that is able to accurately predict the normalized anisotropic Reynolds stress tensor for turbulent duct flows. Furthermore, we also explore the application of curriculum learning to data-driven turbulence modeling.

preprint2022arXiv

Sheaf Neural Networks with Connection Laplacians

A Sheaf Neural Network (SNN) is a type of Graph Neural Network (GNN) that operates on a sheaf, an object that equips a graph with vector spaces over its nodes and edges and linear maps between these spaces. SNNs have been shown to have useful theoretical properties that help tackle issues arising from heterophily and over-smoothing. One complication intrinsic to these models is finding a good sheaf for the task to be solved. Previous works proposed two diametrically opposed approaches: manually constructing the sheaf based on domain knowledge and learning the sheaf end-to-end using gradient-based methods. However, domain knowledge is often insufficient, while learning a sheaf could lead to overfitting and significant computational overhead. In this work, we propose a novel way of computing sheaves drawing inspiration from Riemannian geometry: we leverage the manifold assumption to compute manifold-and-graph-aware orthogonal maps, which optimally align the tangent spaces of neighbouring data points. We show that this approach achieves promising results with less computational overhead when compared to previous SNN models. Overall, this work provides an interesting connection between algebraic topology and differential geometry, and we hope that it will spark future research in this direction.

preprint2021arXiv

Convolutional Neural Network Models and Interpretability for the Anisotropic Reynolds Stress Tensor in Turbulent One-dimensional Flows

The Reynolds-averaged Navier-Stokes (RANS) equations are widely used in turbulence applications. They require accurately modeling the anisotropic Reynolds stress tensor, for which traditional Reynolds stress closure models only yield reliable results in some flow configurations. In the last few years, there has been a surge of work aiming at using data-driven approaches to tackle this problem. The majority of previous work has focused on the development of fully-connected networks for modeling the anisotropic Reynolds stress tensor. In this paper, we expand upon recent work for turbulent channel flow and develop new convolutional neural network (CNN) models that are able to accurately predict the normalized anisotropic Reynolds stress tensor. We apply the new CNN model to a number of one-dimensional turbulent flows. Additionally, we present interpretability techniques that help drive the model design and provide guidance on the model behavior in relation to the underlying physics.