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Accelerated Predictive Coding Networks via Direct Kolen-Pollack Feedback Alignment

Machine Learning 2026-03-10 v2

Abstract

Predictive coding (PC) is a biologically inspired algorithm for training neural networks that relies only on local updates, allowing parallel learning across layers. However, practical implementations face two key limitations: error signals must still propagate from the output to early layers through multiple inference-phase steps, and feedback decays exponentially during this process, leading to vanishing updates in early layers. We propose direct Kolen-Pollack predictive coding (DKP-PC), which simultaneously addresses both feedback delay and exponential decay, yielding a more efficient and scalable variant of PC while preserving update locality. Leveraging direct feedback alignment and direct Kolen-Pollack algorithms, DKP-PC introduces learnable feedback connections from the output layer to all hidden layers, establishing a direct pathway for error transmission. This yields an algorithm that reduces the theoretical error propagation time complexity from O(L), with L being the network depth, to O(1), removing depth-dependent delay in error signals. Moreover, empirical results demonstrate that DKP-PC achieves performance at least comparable to, and often exceeding, that of standard PC, while offering improved latency and computational performance, supporting its potential for custom hardware-efficient implementations.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2602.15571,
  title  = {Accelerated Predictive Coding Networks via Direct Kolen-Pollack Feedback Alignment},
  author = {Davide Casnici and Martin Lefebvre and Justin Dauwels and Charlotte Frenkel},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2602.15571},
  year   = {2026}
}
R2 v1 2026-07-01T10:39:54.723Z