Tanir Ozcelebi

LG
h-index37
14papers
605citations
Novelty51%
AI Score38

14 Papers

LGAug 19, 2022
Labeling Chaos to Learning Harmony: Federated Learning with Noisy Labels

Vasileios Tsouvalas, Aaqib Saeed, Tanir Ozcelebi et al.

Federated Learning (FL) is a distributed machine learning paradigm that enables learning models from decentralized private datasets, where the labeling effort is entrusted to the clients. While most existing FL approaches assume high-quality labels are readily available on users' devices; in reality, label noise can naturally occur in FL and is closely related to clients' characteristics. Due to scarcity of available data and significant label noise variations among clients in FL, existing state-of-the-art centralized approaches exhibit unsatisfactory performance, while prior FL studies rely on excessive on-device computational schemes or additional clean data available on server. Here, we propose FedLN, a framework to deal with label noise across different FL training stages; namely, FL initialization, on-device model training, and server model aggregation, able to accommodate the diverse computational capabilities of devices in a FL system. Specifically, FedLN computes per-client noise-level estimation in a single federated round and improves the models' performance by either correcting or mitigating the effect of noisy samples. Our evaluation on various publicly available vision and audio datasets demonstrate a 22% improvement on average compared to other existing methods for a label noise level of 60%. We further validate the efficiency of FedLN in human-annotated real-world noisy datasets and report a 4.8% increase on average in models' recognition performance, highlighting that~\method~can be useful for improving FL services provided to everyday users.

LGNov 15, 2023
FedCode: Communication-Efficient Federated Learning via Transferring Codebooks

Saeed Khalilian, Vasileios Tsouvalas, Tanir Ozcelebi et al.

Federated Learning (FL) is a distributed machine learning paradigm that enables learning models from decentralized local data. While FL offers appealing properties for clients' data privacy, it imposes high communication burdens for exchanging model weights between a server and the clients. Existing approaches rely on model compression techniques, such as pruning and weight clustering to tackle this. However, transmitting the entire set of weight updates at each federated round, even in a compressed format, limits the potential for a substantial reduction in communication volume. We propose FedCode where clients transmit only codebooks, i.e., the cluster centers of updated model weight values. To ensure a smooth learning curve and proper calibration of clusters between the server and the clients, FedCode periodically transfers model weights after multiple rounds of solely communicating codebooks. This results in a significant reduction in communication volume between clients and the server in both directions, without imposing significant computational overhead on the clients or leading to major performance degradation of the models. We evaluate the effectiveness of FedCode using various publicly available datasets with ResNet-20 and MobileNet backbone model architectures. Our evaluations demonstrate a 12.2-fold data transmission reduction on average while maintaining a comparable model performance with an average accuracy loss of 1.3% compared to FedAvg. Further validation of FedCode performance under non-IID data distributions showcased an average accuracy loss of 2.0% compared to FedAvg while achieving approximately a 12.7-fold data transmission reduction.

LGFeb 10, 2025
Many-Task Federated Fine-Tuning via Unified Task Vectors

Vasileios Tsouvalas, Tanir Ozcelebi, Nirvana Meratnia

Federated Learning (FL) traditionally assumes homogeneous client tasks; however, in real-world scenarios, clients often specialize in diverse tasks, introducing task heterogeneity. To address this challenge, Many-Task FL (MaT-FL) has emerged, enabling clients to collaborate effectively despite task diversity. Existing MaT-FL approaches rely on client grouping or personalized layers, requiring the server to manage individual models and failing to account for clients handling multiple tasks. We propose MaTU, a MaT-FL approach that enables joint learning of task vectors across clients, eliminating the need for clustering or client-specific weight storage at the server. Our method introduces a novel aggregation mechanism that determines task similarity based on the direction of clients task vectors and constructs a unified task vector encapsulating all tasks. To address task-specific requirements, we augment the unified task vector with lightweight modulators that facilitate knowledge transfer among related tasks while disentangling dissimilar ones. Evaluated across 30 datasets, MaTU achieves superior performance over state-of-the-art MaT-FL approaches, with results comparable to per-task fine-tuning, while delivering significant communication savings.

CRAug 11, 2025
EFU: Enforcing Federated Unlearning via Functional Encryption

Samaneh Mohammadi, Vasileios Tsouvalas, Iraklis Symeonidis et al.

Federated unlearning (FU) algorithms allow clients in federated settings to exercise their ''right to be forgotten'' by removing the influence of their data from a collaboratively trained model. Existing FU methods maintain data privacy by performing unlearning locally on the client-side and sending targeted updates to the server without exposing forgotten data; yet they often rely on server-side cooperation, revealing the client's intent and identity without enforcement guarantees - compromising autonomy and unlearning privacy. In this work, we propose EFU (Enforced Federated Unlearning), a cryptographically enforced FU framework that enables clients to initiate unlearning while concealing its occurrence from the server. Specifically, EFU leverages functional encryption to bind encrypted updates to specific aggregation functions, ensuring the server can neither perform unauthorized computations nor detect or skip unlearning requests. To further mask behavioral and parameter shifts in the aggregated model, we incorporate auxiliary unlearning losses based on adversarial examples and parameter importance regularization. Extensive experiments show that EFU achieves near-random accuracy on forgotten data while maintaining performance comparable to full retraining across datasets and neural architectures - all while concealing unlearning intent from the server. Furthermore, we demonstrate that EFU is agnostic to the underlying unlearning algorithm, enabling secure, function-hiding, and verifiable unlearning for any client-side FU mechanism that issues targeted updates.

CRJun 13, 2024
EncCluster: Scalable Functional Encryption in Federated Learning through Weight Clustering and Probabilistic Filters

Vasileios Tsouvalas, Samaneh Mohammadi, Ali Balador et al.

Federated Learning (FL) enables model training across decentralized devices by communicating solely local model updates to an aggregation server. Although such limited data sharing makes FL more secure than centralized approached, FL remains vulnerable to inference attacks during model update transmissions. Existing secure aggregation approaches rely on differential privacy or cryptographic schemes like Functional Encryption (FE) to safeguard individual client data. However, such strategies can reduce performance or introduce unacceptable computational and communication overheads on clients running on edge devices with limited resources. In this work, we present EncCluster, a novel method that integrates model compression through weight clustering with recent decentralized FE and privacy-enhancing data encoding using probabilistic filters to deliver strong privacy guarantees in FL without affecting model performance or adding unnecessary burdens to clients. We performed a comprehensive evaluation, spanning various datasets and architectures, to demonstrate EncCluster's scalability across encryption levels. Our findings reveal that EncCluster significantly reduces communication costs - below even conventional FedAvg - and accelerates encryption by more than four times over all baselines; at the same time, it maintains high model accuracy and enhanced privacy assurances.

LGJan 25, 2024
Communication-Efficient Federated Learning through Adaptive Weight Clustering and Server-Side Distillation

Vasileios Tsouvalas, Aaqib Saeed, Tanir Ozcelebi et al.

Federated Learning (FL) is a promising technique for the collaborative training of deep neural networks across multiple devices while preserving data privacy. Despite its potential benefits, FL is hindered by excessive communication costs due to repeated server-client communication during training. To address this challenge, model compression techniques, such as sparsification and weight clustering are applied, which often require modifying the underlying model aggregation schemes or involve cumbersome hyperparameter tuning, with the latter not only adjusts the model's compression rate but also limits model's potential for continuous improvement over growing data. In this paper, we propose FedCompress, a novel approach that combines dynamic weight clustering and server-side knowledge distillation to reduce communication costs while learning highly generalizable models. Through a comprehensive evaluation on diverse public datasets, we demonstrate the efficacy of our approach compared to baselines in terms of communication costs and inference speed.

LGFeb 5, 2022
Privacy-preserving Speech Emotion Recognition through Semi-Supervised Federated Learning

Vasileios Tsouvalas, Tanir Ozcelebi, Nirvana Meratnia

Speech Emotion Recognition (SER) refers to the recognition of human emotions from natural speech. If done accurately, it can offer a number of benefits in building human-centered context-aware intelligent systems. Existing SER approaches are largely centralized, without considering users' privacy. Federated Learning (FL) is a distributed machine learning paradigm dealing with decentralization of privacy-sensitive personal data. In this paper, we present a privacy-preserving and data-efficient SER approach by utilizing the concept of FL. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first federated SER approach, which utilizes self-training learning in conjunction with federated learning to exploit both labeled and unlabeled on-device data. Our experimental evaluations on the IEMOCAP dataset shows that our federated approach can learn generalizable SER models even under low availability of data labels and highly non-i.i.d. distributions. We show that our approach with as few as 10% labeled data, on average, can improve the recognition rate by 8.67% compared to the fully-supervised federated counterparts.

LGJul 14, 2021
Federated Self-Training for Semi-Supervised Audio Recognition

Vasileios Tsouvalas, Aaqib Saeed, Tanir Ozcelebi

Federated Learning is a distributed machine learning paradigm dealing with decentralized and personal datasets. Since data reside on devices like smartphones and virtual assistants, labeling is entrusted to the clients, or labels are extracted in an automated way. Specifically, in the case of audio data, acquiring semantic annotations can be prohibitively expensive and time-consuming. As a result, an abundance of audio data remains unlabeled and unexploited on users' devices. Most existing federated learning approaches focus on supervised learning without harnessing the unlabeled data. In this work, we study the problem of semi-supervised learning of audio models via self-training in conjunction with federated learning. We propose FedSTAR to exploit large-scale on-device unlabeled data to improve the generalization of audio recognition models. We further demonstrate that self-supervised pre-trained models can accelerate the training of on-device models, significantly improving convergence to within fewer training rounds. We conduct experiments on diverse public audio classification datasets and investigate the performance of our models under varying percentages of labeled and unlabeled data. Notably, we show that with as little as 3% labeled data available, FedSTAR on average can improve the recognition rate by 13.28% compared to the fully supervised federated model.

SPDec 26, 2020
Millimeter Wave Sensing: A Review of Application Pipelines and Building Blocks

Bram van Berlo, Amany Elkelany, Tanir Ozcelebi et al.

The increasing bandwidth requirement of new wireless applications has lead to standardization of the millimeter wave spectrum for high-speed wireless communication. The millimeter wave spectrum is part of 5G and covers frequencies between 30 and 300 GHz corresponding to wavelengths ranging from 10 to 1 mm. Although millimeter wave is often considered as a communication medium, it has also proved to be an excellent 'sensor', thanks to its narrow beams, operation across a wide bandwidth, and interaction with atmospheric constituents. In this paper, which is to the best of our knowledge the first review that completely covers millimeter wave sensing application pipelines, we provide a comprehensive overview and analysis of different basic application pipeline building blocks, including hardware, algorithms, analytical models, and model evaluation techniques. The review also provides a taxonomy that highlights different millimeter wave sensing application domains. By performing a thorough analysis, complying with the systematic literature review methodology and reviewing 165 papers, we not only extend previous investigations focused only on communication aspects of the millimeter wave technology and using millimeter wave technology for active imaging, but also highlight scientific and technological challenges and trends, and provide a future perspective for applications of millimeter wave as a sensing technology.

LGJul 25, 2020
Federated Self-Supervised Learning of Multi-Sensor Representations for Embedded Intelligence

Aaqib Saeed, Flora D. Salim, Tanir Ozcelebi et al.

Smartphones, wearables, and Internet of Things (IoT) devices produce a wealth of data that cannot be accumulated in a centralized repository for learning supervised models due to privacy, bandwidth limitations, and the prohibitive cost of annotations. Federated learning provides a compelling framework for learning models from decentralized data, but conventionally, it assumes the availability of labeled samples, whereas on-device data are generally either unlabeled or cannot be annotated readily through user interaction. To address these issues, we propose a self-supervised approach termed \textit{scalogram-signal correspondence learning} based on wavelet transform to learn useful representations from unlabeled sensor inputs, such as electroencephalography, blood volume pulse, accelerometer, and WiFi channel state information. Our auxiliary task requires a deep temporal neural network to determine if a given pair of a signal and its complementary viewpoint (i.e., a scalogram generated with a wavelet transform) align with each other or not through optimizing a contrastive objective. We extensively assess the quality of learned features with our multi-view strategy on diverse public datasets, achieving strong performance in all domains. We demonstrate the effectiveness of representations learned from an unlabeled input collection on downstream tasks with training a linear classifier over pretrained network, usefulness in low-data regime, transfer learning, and cross-validation. Our methodology achieves competitive performance with fully-supervised networks, and it outperforms pre-training with autoencoders in both central and federated contexts. Notably, it improves the generalization in a semi-supervised setting as it reduces the volume of labeled data required through leveraging self-supervised learning.

LGJul 27, 2019
Multi-task Self-Supervised Learning for Human Activity Detection

Aaqib Saeed, Tanir Ozcelebi, Johan Lukkien

Deep learning methods are successfully used in applications pertaining to ubiquitous computing, health, and well-being. Specifically, the area of human activity recognition (HAR) is primarily transformed by the convolutional and recurrent neural networks, thanks to their ability to learn semantic representations from raw input. However, to extract generalizable features, massive amounts of well-curated data are required, which is a notoriously challenging task; hindered by privacy issues, and annotation costs. Therefore, unsupervised representation learning is of prime importance to leverage the vast amount of unlabeled data produced by smart devices. In this work, we propose a novel self-supervised technique for feature learning from sensory data that does not require access to any form of semantic labels. We learn a multi-task temporal convolutional network to recognize transformations applied on an input signal. By exploiting these transformations, we demonstrate that simple auxiliary tasks of the binary classification result in a strong supervisory signal for extracting useful features for the downstream task. We extensively evaluate the proposed approach on several publicly available datasets for smartphone-based HAR in unsupervised, semi-supervised, and transfer learning settings. Our method achieves performance levels superior to or comparable with fully-supervised networks, and it performs significantly better than autoencoders. Notably, for the semi-supervised case, the self-supervised features substantially boost the detection rate by attaining a kappa score between 0.7-0.8 with only 10 labeled examples per class. We get similar impressive performance even if the features are transferred from a different data source. While this paper focuses on HAR as the application domain, the proposed technique is general and could be applied to a wide variety of problems in other areas.

LGAug 27, 2018
Learning behavioral context recognition with multi-stream temporal convolutional networks

Aaqib Saeed, Tanir Ozcelebi, Stojan Trajanovski et al.

Smart devices of everyday use (such as smartphones and wearables) are increasingly integrated with sensors that provide immense amounts of information about a person's daily life such as behavior and context. The automatic and unobtrusive sensing of behavioral context can help develop solutions for assisted living, fitness tracking, sleep monitoring, and several other fields. Towards addressing this issue, we raise the question: can a machine learn to recognize a diverse set of contexts and activities in a real-life through joint learning from raw multi-modal signals (e.g. accelerometer, gyroscope and audio etc.)? In this paper, we propose a multi-stream temporal convolutional network to address the problem of multi-label behavioral context recognition. A four-stream network architecture handles learning from each modality with a contextualization module which incorporates extracted representations to infer a user's context. Our empirical evaluation suggests that a deep convolutional network trained end-to-end achieves an optimal recognition rate. Furthermore, the presented architecture can be extended to include similar sensors for performance improvements and handles missing modalities through multi-task learning without any manual feature engineering on highly imbalanced and sparsely labeled dataset.

SYJul 1, 2015
Proactive Dependability Framework for Smart Environment Applications

Ehsan Ullah Warriach, Tanir Ozcelebi, Johan J. Lukkien

Smart environment applications demand novel solutions for managing quality of services, especially availability and reliability at run-time. The underlying systems are changing dynamically due to addition and removal of system components, changing execution environments, and resources depletion. Therefore, in such dynamic systems, the functionality and the performance of smart environment applications can be hampered by faults. In this paper, we follow a proactive approach to anticipate system state at runtime. We present a proactive dependability framework to prevent faults at runtime based on predictive analysis to increase availability and reliability of smart environment applications, and reduce manual user interventions.

MLMar 28, 2013
Relevance As a Metric for Evaluating Machine Learning Algorithms

Aravind Kota Gopalakrishna, Tanir Ozcelebi, Antonio Liotta et al.

In machine learning, the choice of a learning algorithm that is suitable for the application domain is critical. The performance metric used to compare different algorithms must also reflect the concerns of users in the application domain under consideration. In this work, we propose a novel probability-based performance metric called Relevance Score for evaluating supervised learning algorithms. We evaluate the proposed metric through empirical analysis on a dataset gathered from an intelligent lighting pilot installation. In comparison to the commonly used Classification Accuracy metric, the Relevance Score proves to be more appropriate for a certain class of applications.