Schwartzman, Ariel
Machine Learning in High Energy Physics Community White Paper
Albertsson, Kim, Altoe, Piero, Anderson, Dustin, Andrews, Michael, Espinosa, Juan Pedro Araque, Aurisano, Adam, Basara, Laurent, Bevan, Adrian, Bhimji, Wahid, Bonacorsi, Daniele, Calafiura, Paolo, Campanelli, Mario, Capps, Louis, Carminati, Federico, Carrazza, Stefano, Childers, Taylor, Coniavitis, Elias, Cranmer, Kyle, David, Claire, Davis, Douglas, Duarte, Javier, Erdmann, Martin, Eschle, Jonas, Farbin, Amir, Feickert, Matthew, Castro, Nuno Filipe, Fitzpatrick, Conor, Floris, Michele, Forti, Alessandra, Garra-Tico, Jordi, Gemmler, Jochen, Girone, Maria, Glaysher, Paul, Gleyzer, Sergei, Gligorov, Vladimir, Golling, Tobias, Graw, Jonas, Gray, Lindsey, Greenwood, Dick, Hacker, Thomas, Harvey, John, Hegner, Benedikt, Heinrich, Lukas, Hooberman, Ben, Junggeburth, Johannes, Kagan, Michael, Kane, Meghan, Kanishchev, Konstantin, Karpiński, Przemysław, Kassabov, Zahari, Kaul, Gaurav, Kcira, Dorian, Keck, Thomas, Klimentov, Alexei, Kowalkowski, Jim, Kreczko, Luke, Kurepin, Alexander, Kutschke, Rob, Kuznetsov, Valentin, Köhler, Nicolas, Lakomov, Igor, Lannon, Kevin, Lassnig, Mario, Limosani, Antonio, Louppe, Gilles, Mangu, Aashrita, Mato, Pere, Meenakshi, Narain, Meinhard, Helge, Menasce, Dario, Moneta, Lorenzo, Moortgat, Seth, Neubauer, Mark, Newman, Harvey, Pabst, Hans, Paganini, Michela, Paulini, Manfred, Perdue, Gabriel, Perez, Uzziel, Picazio, Attilio, Pivarski, Jim, Prosper, Harrison, Psihas, Fernanda, Radovic, Alexander, Reece, Ryan, Rinkevicius, Aurelius, Rodrigues, Eduardo, Rorie, Jamal, Rousseau, David, Sauers, Aaron, Schramm, Steven, Schwartzman, Ariel, Severini, Horst, Seyfert, Paul, Siroky, Filip, Skazytkin, Konstantin, Sokoloff, Mike, Stewart, Graeme, Stienen, Bob, Stockdale, Ian, Strong, Giles, Thais, Savannah, Tomko, Karen, Upfal, Eli, Usai, Emanuele, Ustyuzhanin, Andrey, Vala, Martin, Vallecorsa, Sofia, Verzetti, Mauro, Vilasís-Cardona, Xavier, Vlimant, Jean-Roch, Vukotic, Ilija, Wang, Sean-Jiun, Watts, Gordon, Williams, Michael, Wu, Wenjing, Wunsch, Stefan, Zapata, Omar
Machine learning is an important research area in particle physics, beginning with applications to high-level physics analysis in the 1990s and 2000s, followed by an explosion of applications in particle and event identification and reconstruction in the 2010s. In this document we discuss promising future research and development areas in machine learning in particle physics with a roadmap for their implementation, software and hardware resource requirements, collaborative initiatives with the data science community, academia and industry, and training the particle physics community in data science. The main objective of the document is to connect and motivate these areas of research and development with the physics drivers of the High-Luminosity Large Hadron Collider and future neutrino experiments and identify the resource needs for their implementation. Additionally we identify areas where collaboration with external communities will be of great benefit.
Weakly Supervised Classification in High Energy Physics
Dery, Lucio Mwinmaarong, Nachman, Benjamin, Rubbo, Francesco, Schwartzman, Ariel
As machine learning algorithms become increasingly sophisticated to exploit subtle features of the data, they often become more dependent on simulations. This paper presents a new approach called weakly supervised classification in which class proportions are the only input into the machine learning algorithm. Using one of the most challenging binary classification tasks in high energy physics - quark versus gluon tagging - we show that weakly supervised classification can match the performance of fully supervised algorithms. Furthermore, by design, the new algorithm is insensitive to any mis-modeling of discriminating features in the data by the simulation. Weakly supervised classification is a general procedure that can be applied to a wide variety of learning problems to boost performance and robustness when detailed simulations are not reliable or not available.
Jet-Images -- Deep Learning Edition
de Oliveira, Luke, Kagan, Michael, Mackey, Lester, Nachman, Benjamin, Schwartzman, Ariel
Building on the notion of a particle physics detector as a camera and the collimated streams of high energy particles, or jets, it measures as an image, we investigate the potential of machine learning techniques based on deep learning architectures to identify highly boosted W bosons. Modern deep learning algorithms trained on jet images can out-perform standard physically-motivated feature driven approaches to jet tagging. We develop techniques for visualizing how these features are learned by the network and what additional information is used to improve performance. This interplay between physically-motivated feature driven tools and supervised learning algorithms is general and can be used to significantly increase the sensitivity to discover new particles and new forces, and gain a deeper understanding of the physics within jets.
Fuzzy Jets
Mackey, Lester, Nachman, Benjamin, Schwartzman, Ariel, Stansbury, Conrad
Collimated streams of particles produced in high energy physics experiments are organized using clustering algorithms to form jets. To construct jets, the experimental collaborations based at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) primarily use agglomerative hierarchical clustering schemes known as sequential recombination. We propose a new class of algorithms for clustering jets that use infrared and collinear safe mixture models. These new algorithms, known as fuzzy jets, are clustered using maximum likelihood techniques and can dynamically determine various properties of jets like their size. We show that the fuzzy jet size adds additional information to conventional jet tagging variables. Furthermore, we study the impact of pileup and show that with some slight modifications to the algorithm, fuzzy jets can be stable up to high pileup interaction multiplicities.