Transformers as Measure-Theoretic Associative Memory: A Statistical Perspective and Minimax Optimality

Kawata, Ryotaro, Suzuki, Taiji

arXiv.org Machine Learning 

Transformers excel through content-addressable retrieval and the ability to exploit contexts of, in principle, unbounded length. We recast associative memory at the level of probability measures, treating a context as a distribution over tokens and viewing attention as an integral operator on measures. Concretely, for mixture contexts $ν= I^{-1} \sum_{i=1}^I μ^{(i^*)}$ and a query $x_{\mathrm{q}}(i^*)$, the task decomposes into (i) recall of the relevant component $μ^{(i^*)}$ and (ii) prediction from $(μ_{i^*},x_\mathrm{q})$. We study learned softmax attention (not a frozen kernel) trained by empirical risk minimization and show that a shallow measure-theoretic Transformer composed with an MLP learns the recall-and-predict map under a spectral assumption on the input densities. We further establish a matching minimax lower bound with the same rate exponent (up to multiplicative constants), proving sharpness of the convergence order. The framework offers a principled recipe for designing and analyzing Transformers that recall from arbitrarily long, distributional contexts with provable generalization guarantees.

Duplicate Docs Excel Report

Title
None found

Similar Docs  Excel Report  more

TitleSimilaritySource
None found