Interpolating Between BSDEs and PINNs: Deep Learning for Elliptic and Parabolic Boundary Value Problems

Nikolas Nusken, Lorenz Richter

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Abstract

Solving high-dimensional partial differential equations is a recurrent challenge in economics, science and engineering. In recent years, a great number of computational approaches have been developed, most of them relying on a combination of Monte Carlo sampling and deep learning based approximation. For elliptic and parabolic problems, existing methods can broadly be classified into those resting on reformulations in terms of backward stochastic differential equations (BSDEs) and those aiming to minimize a regression-type L2-error (physics-informed neural networks, PINNs). In this paper, we review the literature and suggest a methodology based on the novel diffusion loss that interpolates between BSDEs and PINNs. Our contribution opens the door towards a unified understanding of numerical approaches for high-dimensional PDEs, as well as for implementations that combine the strengths of BSDEs and PINNs. The diffusion loss furthermore bears close similarities to (least squares) temporal difference objectives found in reinforcement learning. We also discuss eigenvalue problems and perform extensive numerical studies, including calculations of the ground state for nonlinear Schrödinger operators and committor functions relevant in molecular dynamics.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)31-64
JournalJournal of Machine Learning
Volume2
Issue number1
Publication statusPublished - Mar 2023

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