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Searching for exotic particles in high-energy physics with deep learning

Author

Listed:
  • P. Baldi

    (UC Irvine)

  • P. Sadowski

    (UC Irvine)

  • D. Whiteson

    (UC Irvine)

Abstract

Collisions at high-energy particle colliders are a traditionally fruitful source of exotic particle discoveries. Finding these rare particles requires solving difficult signal-versus-background classification problems, hence machine-learning approaches are often used. Standard approaches have relied on ‘shallow’ machine-learning models that have a limited capacity to learn complex nonlinear functions of the inputs, and rely on a painstaking search through manually constructed nonlinear features. Progress on this problem has slowed, as a variety of techniques have shown equivalent performance. Recent advances in the field of deep learning make it possible to learn more complex functions and better discriminate between signal and background classes. Here, using benchmark data sets, we show that deep-learning methods need no manually constructed inputs and yet improve the classification metric by as much as 8% over the best current approaches. This demonstrates that deep-learning approaches can improve the power of collider searches for exotic particles.

Suggested Citation

  • P. Baldi & P. Sadowski & D. Whiteson, 2014. "Searching for exotic particles in high-energy physics with deep learning," Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 5(1), pages 1-9, September.
  • Handle: RePEc:nat:natcom:v:5:y:2014:i:1:d:10.1038_ncomms5308
    DOI: 10.1038/ncomms5308
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    8. Da Liu & Ming Xu & Dongxiao Niu & Shoukai Wang & Sai Liang, 2016. "Forecast Modelling via Variations in Binary Image-Encoded Information Exploited by Deep Learning Neural Networks," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 11(6), pages 1-9, June.

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