Research

PonderNet: Learning to Ponder by DeepMind

November 10, 2021
3 min read

Machine Learning Whiteboard (MLW) Open-source Series

For our new visitors, we started our machine learning whiteboard (MLW) series earlier this year as an open-invite space to brainstorm ideas and discuss the latest papers, techniques, and workflows in the AI space. In which, we emphasize an informal and open environment to everyone interested in learning about machine learning. So, if you are interested in learning about ML, we encourage you to join us on our next ML whiteboard.In this episode, Curtis Giddings, a machine learning engineer with our information extraction team, focuses on “PonderNet: Learning to Ponder,” by Andrea Banino, Jan Balaguer, and Charles Blundell, one of the most recent DeepMind papers presented at ICML 2021. As you may know, DeepMind usually comes up with many exciting ideas and new state-of-the-art research, and PonderNet is no exception. This episode is part of the #MLwhiteboard video series hosted by Snorkel AI. Check out the episode here:

Some of the primary facts that are exciting about PonderNet are:

  • PonderNet represents a general technique that can be applied to a wide variety of methods, techniques, network architectures, etc.
  • Intuitively makes some sense—it is easier to understand over other black-box-related methods and research.
  • Potentially able to save on computational costs.
  • Generate dramatically improved SotA results over previous SotA adaptive computation methods. 

Abstract: 

In standard neural networks, the amount of computation used is directly proportional to the size of the inputs, instead of the complexity of the problem being learned. To overcome this limitation, we introduce PonderNet, a new algorithm that learns to adapt the amount of computation based on the complexity of the problem at hand. PonderNet requires minimal changes to the network architecture and learns end-to-end the number of computational steps to achieve an effective compromise between training prediction accuracy, computational cost and generalization. On a complex synthetic problem, PonderNet dramatically improves performance over previous state-of-the-art adaptive computation methods by also succeeding at extrapolation tests where traditional neural networks fail. Finally, we tested our method on a real-world question and answering dataset where we matched the current state-of-the-art results using less compute. Ultimately, PonderNet reached state-of-the-art results on a complex task designed to test the reasoning capabilities of neural networks.


If you are interested in learning with us, consider joining us at our biweekly ML whiteboard.Stay in touch with Snorkel AI, follow us on TwitterLinkedInFacebookYoutube, or Instagram, and if you’re interested in joining the Snorkel team, we’re hiring! Please apply on our careers page.

Share this article

Recommended articles

View all articles
Image
Agents’ Last Exam: AI Benchmarking for Real Work
At our latest Snorkel AI Reading Group, Yiyou Sun and David (Xinyang) Han (UC Berkeley, Center for Responsible and Decentralized Intelligence) presented Agents’ Last Exam (ALE) — a benchmark designed to evaluate AI agents on long-horizon, economically valuable, real-world tasks with verifiable outcomes. ALE is a collaboration between Berkeley RDI, Snorkel AI, and 300+ expert contributors across 55 professional subfields. ALE asks a deceptively simple question: can
June 29, 2026
Snorkel Team
alex-ratner-talk
Agentic AI Evaluation: Closing the Gap with Better Benchmarks and Data
Alex Ratner, co-founder and CEO of Snorkel AI, spoke at @Scale: Systems & Reliability about one of the most underappreciated problems in AI deployment: our ability to measure agents has been outpaced — arguably for the first time in the history of the field — by our ability to build them. The talk digs into what it actually takes to
June 22, 2026
Snorkel Team
Image
Benchtalks #3: We taught AI everything except how to learn
For our third Benchtalks, the series dedicated to the researchers building the measurement toolkits that frontier labs hill-climb on, Snorkel AI co-founder Vincent Sunn Chen sat down with Parth Asawa, a PhD student at UC Berkeley advised by Matei Zaharia and Joey Gonzalez. Parth leads research on continual learning and is the creator of Continual Learning Bench, developed in collaboration
June 20, 2026
Vincent Sunn Chen
Image
Image

Join our newsletter

For expert advice, the latest research, and exclusive events.
By submitting this form, I acknowledge I will receive email updates from Snorkel AI, and I agree to the Terms of Use and acknowledge that my information will be used in accordance with the Privacy Policy.