Abstract

Learning both hierarchical and temporal dependencies can be crucial for recurrent neural networks (RNNs) to deeply understand sequences. To this end, a unified RNN framework is required that can ease the learning of both the deep hierarchical and temporal structures by allowing gradients to propagate back from both ends without being vanished. The residual learning (RL) has appeared as an effective and less-costly method to facilitate backward propagation of gradients. The significance of the RL is exclusively shown for learning deep hierarchical representations and temporal dependencies. Nevertheless, there is lack of efforts to unify these finding into a single framework for learning deep RNNs. In this study, we aim to prove that approximating identity mapping is crucial for optimizing both hierarchical and temporal structures. We propose a framework called hierarchical and temporal residual RNNs, to learn RNNs by approximating identity mappings across hierarchical and temporal structures. To validate the proposed method, we explore the efficacy of employing shortcut connections for training deep RNNs structures for sequence learning problems. Experiments are performed on Penn Treebank, Hutter Prize and IAM-OnDB datasets and results demonstrate the utility of the framework in terms of accuracy and computational complexity. We demonstrate that even for large datasets exploiting parameters for increasing network depth can gain computational benefits with reduced size of the RNN "state".

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