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Masked Autoencoders are PDE Learners

Machine Learning 2024-12-06 v3

Abstract

Neural solvers for partial differential equations (PDEs) have great potential to generate fast and accurate physics solutions, yet their practicality is currently limited by their generalizability. PDEs evolve over broad scales and exhibit diverse behaviors; predicting these phenomena will require learning representations across a wide variety of inputs which may encompass different coefficients, boundary conditions, resolutions, or even equations. As a step towards generalizable PDE modeling, we adapt masked pretraining for physics problems. Through self-supervised learning across PDEs, masked autoencoders can consolidate heterogeneous physics to learn rich latent representations. We show that learned representations can generalize to a limited set of unseen equations or parameters and are meaningful enough to regress PDE coefficients or the classify PDE features. Furthermore, conditioning neural solvers on learned latent representations can improve time-stepping and super-resolution performance across a variety of coefficients, discretizations, or boundary conditions, as well as on certain unseen PDEs. We hope that masked pretraining can emerge as a unifying method across large, unlabeled, and heterogeneous datasets to learn latent physics at scale.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2403.17728,
  title  = {Masked Autoencoders are PDE Learners},
  author = {Anthony Zhou and Amir Barati Farimani},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2403.17728},
  year   = {2024}
}

Comments

29 pages, 9 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-28T15:34:13.167Z