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What is the intuition of using tanh in LSTM? [closed]

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In an LSTM network (Understanding LSTMs), why does the input gate and output gate use tanh?

What is the intuition behind this?

It is just a nonlinear transformation? If it is, can I change both to another activation function (e.g., ReLU)?

Neither input gate nor output gate use tanh function for activation. I guess that there is a misunderstanding. Both input gate (i_{t}) and output gate (o_{t}) use sigmoid function. In LSTM network, tanh activation function is used to determine candidate cell state (internal state) values (\tilde{C}_{t}) and update the hidden state (h_{t}).

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Peter Mortensen

Sigmoid specifically, is used as the gating function for the three gates (in, out, and forget) in LSTM, since it outputs a value between 0 and 1, and it can either let no flow or complete flow of information throughout the gates.

On the other hand, to overcome the vanishing gradient problem, we need a function whose second derivative can sustain for a long range before going to zero. Tanh is a good function with the above property.

A good neuron unit should be bounded, easily differentiable, monotonic (good for convex optimization) and easy to handle. If you consider these qualities, then I believe you can use ReLU in place of the tanh function since they are very good alternatives of each other.

But before making a choice for activation functions, you must know what the advantages and disadvantages of your choice over others are. I am shortly describing some of the activation functions and their advantages.

Sigmoid

Mathematical expression: sigmoid(z) = 1 / (1 + exp(-z))

First-order derivative: sigmoid'(z) = -exp(-z) / 1 + exp(-z)^2

Advantages:

(1) The sigmoid function has all the fundamental properties of a good activation function.

Tanh

Mathematical expression: tanh(z) = [exp(z) - exp(-z)] / [exp(z) + exp(-z)]

First-order derivative: tanh'(z) = 1 - ([exp(z) - exp(-z)] / [exp(z) + exp(-z)])^2 = 1 - tanh^2(z)

Advantages:

(1) Often found to converge faster in practice
(2) Gradient computation is less expensive

Hard Tanh

Mathematical expression: hardtanh(z) = -1 if z < -1; z if -1 <= z <= 1; 1 if z > 1

First-order derivative: hardtanh'(z) = 1 if -1 <= z <= 1; 0 otherwise

Advantages:

(1) Computationally cheaper than Tanh
(2) Saturate for magnitudes of z greater than 1

ReLU

Mathematical expression: relu(z) = max(z, 0)

First-order derivative: relu'(z) = 1 if z > 0; 0 otherwise

Advantages:

(1) Does not saturate even for large values of z
(2) Found much success in computer vision applications

Leaky ReLU

Mathematical expression: leaky(z) = max(z, k dot z) where 0 < k < 1

First-order derivative: relu'(z) = 1 if z > 0; k otherwise

Advantages:

(1) Allows propagation of error for non-positive z which ReLU doesn't

This paper explains some fun activation function. You may consider to read it.


so, say i want to change the activation to RelU, i must change both tanh in input gate activation and in output multiplication, is that correct @Wasi Ahmad?
The paper link above doesn't seem to work any more, but I believe it is referring to: pdfs.semanticscholar.org/a26f/… / citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.43.6996 .
There is a small mistake in sigmoid first derivative. It actually equals: sigmoid'(z) = exp(-z) / (1 + exp(-z))^2
Where the above answer is correct, it is not relevant to the question. Derivatives do not distinguish tanh from sigmoid, as tanh is just a rescaled and shifted sigmoid. (See: cs224d.stanford.edu/lectures/CS224d-Lecture6.pdf)
"On the other hand, to overcome the vanishing gradient problem, we need a function whose second derivative can sustain for a long range before going to zero." - why??
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Aaron Schumacher

LSTMs manage an internal state vector whose values should be able to increase or decrease when we add the output of some function. Sigmoid output is always non-negative; values in the state would only increase. The output from tanh can be positive or negative, allowing for increases and decreases in the state.

That's why tanh is used to determine candidate values to get added to the internal state. The GRU cousin of the LSTM doesn't have a second tanh, so in a sense the second one is not necessary. Check out the diagrams and explanations in Chris Olah's Understanding LSTM Networks for more.

The related question, "Why are sigmoids used in LSTMs where they are?" is also answered based on the possible outputs of the function: "gating" is achieved by multiplying by a number between zero and one, and that's what sigmoids output.

There aren't really meaningful differences between the derivatives of sigmoid and tanh; tanh is just a rescaled and shifted sigmoid: see Richard Socher's Neural Tips and Tricks. If second derivatives are relevant, I'd like to know how.


@End-2-End that sounds right to me, with the possibly unnecessary clarification that in general the whole thing is operating on vectors, so the bounds are on each component.
@AaronSchumacher, you mentioned that values in the state should be able to both increase and decrease and since sigmoid always has non-negative output, tanh is preferred activation function for output. Then wouldn't it be the same with ReLU since those are also always non-negative? Does it mean LSTMs wouldn't work as expected if we replace tanh with ReLU?
@End-2-End that sounds right to me. ReLU is non-negative.
@Quastiat We can think about the additive and multiplicative parts separately: "values should be able to increase or decrease when we add the output of some function. Sigmoid output is always non-negative; values in the state would only increase." That's true of the additive part. But yes, multiplying by a number between zero and one does decrease the absolute value. (It still can't change the sign.)
While this explains the state update rule, this fails to address the fact that the output gate of the LSTM incorporates a tanh layer, h_t = o_t * tanh(C_t).. The reason for this is that it can renormalize the hidden state to lie between [-1,1] after the state update addtition operation.