Matthew Tancik*1,
Pratul P. Srinivasan*1,2,
Ben Mildenhall*1,
Sara Fridovich-Keil1,
Nithin Raghavan1,
Utkarsh Singhal1,
Ravi Ramamoorthi3,
Jonathan T. Barron2,
Ren Ng1
1UC Berkeley, 2Google Research, 3UC San Diego
*denotes equal contribution
We show that passing input points through a simple Fourier feature mapping enables a multilayer perceptron (MLP) to learn high-frequency functions in low-dimensional problem domains. These results shed light on recent advances in computer vision and graphics that achieve state-of-the-art results by using MLPs to represent complex 3D objects and scenes. Using tools from the neural tangent kernel (NTK) literature, we show that a standard MLP fails to learn high frequencies both in theory and in practice. To overcome this spectral bias, we use a Fourier feature mapping to transform the effective NTK into a stationary kernel with a tunable bandwidth. We suggest an approach for selecting problem-specific Fourier features that greatly improves the performance of MLPs for low-dimensional regression tasks relevant to the computer vision and graphics communities.
We provide a demo IPython notebook as a simple reference for the core idea. The scripts used to generate the paper plots and tables are located in the Experiments directory.