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Papers/Quantifying and Optimizing Simplicity via Polynomial Representations
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Quantifying and Optimizing Simplicity via Polynomial Representations

May 28, 2026

arXiv
Abstract

Deep networks often exhibit a preference for "simple" solutions, and such a simplicity bias is widely believed to play a key role in generalization. Yet a broadly applicable, quantitative measure of simplicity remains elusive. We introduce polynomial representations as a distribution-aware, low-dimensional surrogate for neural functions: we approximate a network's predictive behavior along data-dependent interpolation paths using orthogonal polynomial bases, yielding a compact functional representation. We show that the effective degree of this representation serves as a practical simplicity metric that is predictive of generalization across tasks and architectures, and consistently outperforms existing generalization proxies such as sharpness. Finally, polynomial representations naturally yield a differentiable simplicity regularizer, which consistently improves generalization in image and text classification, fine-tuning contrastive vision-language models, and reinforcement learning.

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Authors
Tianren Zhang, Xiangxin Li, Minghao Xiao, Guanyu Chen, Feng Chen
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arXiv:2605.29823