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Learning quadratic neural networks in high dimensions: SGD dynamics and scaling laws

We study the optimization and sample complexity of gradient-based training of a two-layer neural network with quadratic activation function in the high-dimensional regime, where the data is generated as $f_*(\boldsymbol{x}) \propto \sum_{j=1}^{r}λ_j σ\left(\langle \boldsymbol{θ_j}, \boldsymbol{x}\rangle\right), \boldsymbol{x} \sim N(0,\boldsymbol{I}_d)$, $σ$ is the 2nd Hermite polynomial, and $\lbrace\boldsymbolθ_j \rbrace_{j=1}^{r} \subset \mathbb{R}^d$ are orthonormal signal directions. We consider the extensive-width regime $r \asymp d^β$ for $β\in [0, 1)$, and assume a power-law decay on the (non-negative) second-layer coefficients $λ_j\asymp j^{-α}$ for $α\geq 0$. We present a sharp analysis of the SGD dynamics in the feature learning regime, for both the population limit and the finite-sample (online) discretization, and derive scaling laws for the prediction risk that highlight the power-law dependencies on the optimization time, sample size, and model width. Our analysis combines a precise characterization of the associated matrix Riccati differential equation with novel matrix monotonicity arguments to establish convergence guarantees for the infinite-dimensional effective dynamics.

preprint2025arXivOpen access

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