High Energy Physics - Experiment
[Submitted on 18 Nov 2022 (v1), last revised 21 Apr 2023 (this version, v2)]
Title:Evaluating generative models in high energy physics
View PDFAbstract:There has been a recent explosion in research into machine-learning-based generative modeling to tackle computational challenges for simulations in high energy physics (HEP). In order to use such alternative simulators in practice, we need well-defined metrics to compare different generative models and evaluate their discrepancy from the true distributions. We present the first systematic review and investigation into evaluation metrics and their sensitivity to failure modes of generative models, using the framework of two-sample goodness-of-fit testing, and their relevance and viability for HEP. Inspired by previous work in both physics and computer vision, we propose two new metrics, the Fréchet and kernel physics distances (FPD and KPD, respectively), and perform a variety of experiments measuring their performance on simple Gaussian-distributed, and simulated high energy jet datasets. We find FPD, in particular, to be the most sensitive metric to all alternative jet distributions tested and recommend its adoption, along with the KPD and Wasserstein distances between individual feature distributions, for evaluating generative models in HEP. We finally demonstrate the efficacy of these proposed metrics in evaluating and comparing a novel attention-based generative adversarial particle transformer to the state-of-the-art message-passing generative adversarial network jet simulation model. The code for our proposed metrics is provided in the open source JetNet Python library.
Submission history
From: Raghav Kansal [view email][v1] Fri, 18 Nov 2022 15:36:28 UTC (3,165 KB)
[v2] Fri, 21 Apr 2023 16:14:36 UTC (3,273 KB)
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