English

Anticipating synchronization with machine learning

Adaptation and Self-Organizing Systems 2021-06-30 v1 Machine Learning

Abstract

In applications of dynamical systems, situations can arise where it is desired to predict the onset of synchronization as it can lead to characteristic and significant changes in the system performance and behaviors, for better or worse. In experimental and real settings, the system equations are often unknown, raising the need to develop a prediction framework that is model free and fully data driven. We contemplate that this challenging problem can be addressed with machine learning. In particular, exploiting reservoir computing or echo state networks, we devise a "parameter-aware" scheme to train the neural machine using asynchronous time series, i.e., in the parameter regime prior to the onset of synchronization. A properly trained machine will possess the power to predict the synchronization transition in that, with a given amount of parameter drift, whether the system would remain asynchronous or exhibit synchronous dynamics can be accurately anticipated. We demonstrate the machine-learning based framework using representative chaotic models and small network systems that exhibit continuous (second-order) or abrupt (first-order) transitions. A remarkable feature is that, for a network system exhibiting an explosive (first-order) transition and a hysteresis loop in synchronization, the machine learning scheme is capable of accurately predicting these features, including the precise locations of the transition points associated with the forward and backward transition paths.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2103.13358,
  title  = {Anticipating synchronization with machine learning},
  author = {Huawei Fan and Ling-Wei Kong and Ying-Cheng Lai and Xingang Wang},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2103.13358},
  year   = {2021}
}

Comments

13 pages; 12 figures