论文标题
贝叶斯积极学习用于扫描探针显微镜:从高斯过程到假设学习
Bayesian Active Learning for Scanning Probe Microscopy: from Gaussian Processes to Hypothesis Learning
论文作者
论文摘要
机器学习方法的最新进展以及扫描探针显微镜(SPM)的可编程接口的新兴可用性使自动化和自动显微镜驱动了科学界注意的最前沿。但是,启用自动显微镜需要开发特定于任务的机器学习方法,了解物理发现与机器学习之间的相互作用以及完全定义的发现工作流程。反过来,这需要平衡领域科学家的身体直觉和先验知识与定义实验目标和机器学习算法的奖励,这些算法可以将其转化为特定的实验协议。在这里,我们讨论了贝叶斯活跃学习的基本原理,并说明了其对SPM的应用。我们从高斯过程作为一种简单的数据驱动方法和对物理模型的贝叶斯推断作为基于物理功能拟合的扩展的贝叶斯推断,再到更复杂的深内核学习方法,结构化的高斯过程和假设学习。这些框架允许使用先验数据,在光谱数据中编码的特定功能以及实验中表现出的物理定律的探索。讨论的框架可以普遍应用于结合成像和光谱,SPM方法,纳米构造,电子显微镜和光谱法以及化学成像方法的所有技术,并且对破坏性或不可逆测量的影响尤其有所影响。
Recent progress in machine learning methods, and the emerging availability of programmable interfaces for scanning probe microscopes (SPMs), have propelled automated and autonomous microscopies to the forefront of attention of the scientific community. However, enabling automated microscopy requires the development of task-specific machine learning methods, understanding the interplay between physics discovery and machine learning, and fully defined discovery workflows. This, in turn, requires balancing the physical intuition and prior knowledge of the domain scientist with rewards that define experimental goals and machine learning algorithms that can translate these to specific experimental protocols. Here, we discuss the basic principles of Bayesian active learning and illustrate its applications for SPM. We progress from the Gaussian Process as a simple data-driven method and Bayesian inference for physical models as an extension of physics-based functional fits to more complex deep kernel learning methods, structured Gaussian Processes, and hypothesis learning. These frameworks allow for the use of prior data, the discovery of specific functionalities as encoded in spectral data, and exploration of physical laws manifesting during the experiment. The discussed framework can be universally applied to all techniques combining imaging and spectroscopy, SPM methods, nanoindentation, electron microscopy and spectroscopy, and chemical imaging methods, and can be particularly impactful for destructive or irreversible measurements.