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Main Authors: Wang, Haolin, Liu, Xuefeng, Niu, Jianwei, Guo, Wenkai, Tang, Shaojie
Format: Preprint
Published: 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2410.11559
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author Wang, Haolin
Liu, Xuefeng
Niu, Jianwei
Guo, Wenkai
Tang, Shaojie
author_facet Wang, Haolin
Liu, Xuefeng
Niu, Jianwei
Guo, Wenkai
Tang, Shaojie
contents Federated learning is a distributed machine learning paradigm designed to protect user data privacy, which has been successfully implemented across various scenarios. In traditional federated learning, the entire parameter set of local models is updated and averaged in each training round. Although this full network update method maximizes knowledge acquisition and sharing for each model layer, it prevents the layers of the global model from cooperating effectively to complete the tasks of each client, a challenge we refer to as layer mismatch. This mismatch problem recurs after every parameter averaging, consequently slowing down model convergence and degrading overall performance. To address the layer mismatch issue, we introduce the FedPart method, which restricts model updates to either a single layer or a few layers during each communication round. Furthermore, to maintain the efficiency of knowledge acquisition and sharing, we develop several strategies to select trainable layers in each round, including sequential updating and multi-round cycle training. Through both theoretical analysis and experiments, our findings demonstrate that the FedPart method significantly surpasses conventional full network update strategies in terms of convergence speed and accuracy, while also reducing communication and computational overheads.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2410_11559
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Why Go Full? Elevating Federated Learning Through Partial Network Updates
Wang, Haolin
Liu, Xuefeng
Niu, Jianwei
Guo, Wenkai
Tang, Shaojie
Machine Learning
Federated learning is a distributed machine learning paradigm designed to protect user data privacy, which has been successfully implemented across various scenarios. In traditional federated learning, the entire parameter set of local models is updated and averaged in each training round. Although this full network update method maximizes knowledge acquisition and sharing for each model layer, it prevents the layers of the global model from cooperating effectively to complete the tasks of each client, a challenge we refer to as layer mismatch. This mismatch problem recurs after every parameter averaging, consequently slowing down model convergence and degrading overall performance. To address the layer mismatch issue, we introduce the FedPart method, which restricts model updates to either a single layer or a few layers during each communication round. Furthermore, to maintain the efficiency of knowledge acquisition and sharing, we develop several strategies to select trainable layers in each round, including sequential updating and multi-round cycle training. Through both theoretical analysis and experiments, our findings demonstrate that the FedPart method significantly surpasses conventional full network update strategies in terms of convergence speed and accuracy, while also reducing communication and computational overheads.
title Why Go Full? Elevating Federated Learning Through Partial Network Updates
topic Machine Learning
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2410.11559