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 slimtrain


Online Learning Under A Separable Stochastic Approximation Framework

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

We propose an online learning algorithm for a class of machine learning models under a separable stochastic approximation framework. The essence of our idea lies in the observation that certain parameters in the models are easier to optimize than others. In this paper, we focus on models where some parameters have a linear nature, which is common in machine learning. In one routine of the proposed algorithm, the linear parameters are updated by the recursive least squares (RLS) algorithm, which is equivalent to a stochastic Newton method; then, based on the updated linear parameters, the nonlinear parameters are updated by the stochastic gradient method (SGD). The proposed algorithm can be understood as a stochastic approximation version of block coordinate gradient descent approach in which one part of the parameters is updated by a second-order SGD method while the other part is updated by a first-order SGD. Global convergence of the proposed online algorithm for non-convex cases is established in terms of the expected violation of a first-order optimality condition. Numerical experiments show that the proposed method accelerates convergence significantly and produces more robust training and test performance when compared to other popular learning algorithms. Moreover, our algorithm is less sensitive to the learning rate and outperforms the recently proposed slimTrain algorithm (Newman et al., 2022). The code has been uploaded to GitHub for validation.


slimTrain -- A Stochastic Approximation Method for Training Separable Deep Neural Networks

arXiv.org Machine Learning

Deep neural networks (DNNs) have shown their success as high-dimensional function approximators in many applications; however, training DNNs can be challenging in general. DNN training is commonly phrased as a stochastic optimization problem whose challenges include non-convexity, non-smoothness, insufficient regularization, and complicated data distributions. Hence, the performance of DNNs on a given task depends crucially on tuning hyperparameters, especially learning rates and regularization parameters. In the absence of theoretical guidelines or prior experience on similar tasks, this requires solving many training problems, which can be time-consuming and demanding on computational resources. This can limit the applicability of DNNs to problems with non-standard, complex, and scarce datasets, e.g., those arising in many scientific applications. To remedy the challenges of DNN training, we propose slimTrain, a stochastic optimization method for training DNNs with reduced sensitivity to the choice hyperparameters and fast initial convergence. The central idea of slimTrain is to exploit the separability inherent in many DNN architectures; that is, we separate the DNN into a nonlinear feature extractor followed by a linear model. This separability allows us to leverage recent advances made for solving large-scale, linear, ill-posed inverse problems. Crucially, for the linear weights, slimTrain does not require a learning rate and automatically adapts the regularization parameter. Since our method operates on mini-batches, its computational overhead per iteration is modest. In our numerical experiments, slimTrain outperforms existing DNN training methods with the recommended hyperparameter settings and reduces the sensitivity of DNN training to the remaining hyperparameters.