Paper detail

Task Relevance Is Not Local Replaceability: A Two-Axis View of Channel Information

Channel importance in vision networks is usually summarized by a single score. That summary hides two different questions: how much a channel is related to the task, and whether its function can be supplied by same-layer peers when the channel is removed. We call the second property local replaceability. We introduce a two-axis view that separates these questions. The local axis measures input capture and peer overlap, while the target axis measures task information and target-excess information. Across ResNet-18, VGG-16, and MobileNetV2 trained on CIFAR-100, the two axes are weakly aligned, induce different channel groupings, and separate rapidly during training despite being strongly coupled at random initialization. A Gaussian linear analysis accounts for how this separation can arise through residualized gradient directions, and lesion plus peer-replacement experiments show that peer support refines removability beyond input capture and task relevance alone. Under the fixed FLOPs-matched pruning protocol, local-axis metrics are more reliable predictors of removability than target-axis metrics across the three CIFAR-100 backbones, with the same direction preserved in stress tests on CIFAR-10, Tiny-ImageNet, ImageNet-100, and a ConvNeXt-T/ImageNet-100 pilot. These findings identify an axis-level distinction rather than a universal ranking of pruning scores: local replaceability is a more reliable guide to removability than target relevance, while norm-based baselines remain competitive in architectures such as VGG-16. Relevance-based scores ask what a channel says about the task; pruning asks whether the network still needs that channel when its peers remain available.

preprint2026arXivOpen access
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