LGJun 17, 2020
Communication-Efficient Robust Federated Learning Over Heterogeneous DatasetsYanjie Dong, Georgios B. Giannakis, Tianyi Chen et al.
This work investigates fault-resilient federated learning when the data samples are non-uniformly distributed across workers, and the number of faulty workers is unknown to the central server. In the presence of adversarially faulty workers who may strategically corrupt datasets, the local messages exchanged (e.g., local gradients and/or local model parameters) can be unreliable, and thus the vanilla stochastic gradient descent (SGD) algorithm is not guaranteed to converge. Recently developed algorithms improve upon vanilla SGD by providing robustness to faulty workers at the price of slowing down convergence. To remedy this limitation, the present work introduces a fault-resilient proximal gradient (FRPG) algorithm that relies on Nesterov's acceleration technique. To reduce the communication overhead of FRPG, a local (L) FRPG algorithm is also developed to allow for intermittent server-workers parameter exchanges. For strongly convex loss functions, FRPG and LFRPG have provably faster convergence rates than a benchmark robust stochastic aggregation algorithm. Moreover, LFRPG converges faster than FRPG while using the same communication rounds. Numerical tests performed on various real datasets confirm the accelerated convergence of FRPG and LFRPG over the robust stochastic aggregation benchmark and competing alternatives.
LGJun 3, 2019
Secure Distributed On-Device Learning Networks With Byzantine AdversariesYanjie Dong, Julian Cheng, Md. Jahangir Hossain et al.
The privacy concern exists when the central server has the copies of datasets. Hence, there is a paradigm shift for the learning networks to change from centralized in-cloud learning to distributed \mbox{on-device} learning. Benefit from the parallel computing, the on-device learning networks have a lower bandwidth requirement than the in-cloud learning networks. Moreover, the on-device learning networks also have several desirable characteristics such as privacy preserving and flexibility. However, the \mbox{on-device} learning networks are vulnerable to the malfunctioning terminals across the networks. The worst-case malfunctioning terminals are the Byzantine adversaries, that can perform arbitrary harmful operations to compromise the learned model based on the full knowledge of the networks. Hence, the design of secure learning algorithms becomes an emerging topic in the on-device learning networks with Byzantine adversaries. In this article, we present a comprehensive overview of the prevalent secure learning algorithms for the two promising on-device learning networks: Federated-Learning networks and decentralized-learning networks. We also review several future research directions in the \mbox{Federated-Learning} and decentralized-learning networks.