LGDec 16, 2022
Addressing Data Heterogeneity in Decentralized Learning via Topological Pre-processingWaqwoya Abebe, Ali Jannesari
Recently, local peer topology has been shown to influence the overall convergence of decentralized learning (DL) graphs in the presence of data heterogeneity. In this paper, we demonstrate the advantages of constructing a proxy-based locally heterogeneous DL topology to enhance convergence and maintain data privacy. In particular, we propose a novel peer clumping strategy to efficiently cluster peers before arranging them in a final training graph. By showing how locally heterogeneous graphs outperform locally homogeneous graphs of similar size and from the same global data distribution, we present a strong case for topological pre-processing. Moreover, we demonstrate the scalability of our approach by showing how the proposed topological pre-processing overhead remains small in large graphs while the performance gains get even more pronounced. Furthermore, we show the robustness of our approach in the presence of network partitions.
LGFeb 3, 2024
The Landscape and Challenges of HPC Research and LLMsLe Chen, Nesreen K. Ahmed, Akash Dutta et al.
Recently, language models (LMs), especially large language models (LLMs), have revolutionized the field of deep learning. Both encoder-decoder models and prompt-based techniques have shown immense potential for natural language processing and code-based tasks. Over the past several years, many research labs and institutions have invested heavily in high-performance computing, approaching or breaching exascale performance levels. In this paper, we posit that adapting and utilizing such language model-based techniques for tasks in high-performance computing (HPC) would be very beneficial. This study presents our reasoning behind the aforementioned position and highlights how existing ideas can be improved and adapted for HPC tasks.
MTRL-SCIApr 9, 2024
SAM-I-Am: Semantic Boosting for Zero-shot Atomic-Scale Electron Micrograph SegmentationWaqwoya Abebe, Jan Strube, Luanzheng Guo et al.
Image segmentation is a critical enabler for tasks ranging from medical diagnostics to autonomous driving. However, the correct segmentation semantics - where are boundaries located? what segments are logically similar? - change depending on the domain, such that state-of-the-art foundation models can generate meaningless and incorrect results. Moreover, in certain domains, fine-tuning and retraining techniques are infeasible: obtaining labels is costly and time-consuming; domain images (micrographs) can be exponentially diverse; and data sharing (for third-party retraining) is restricted. To enable rapid adaptation of the best segmentation technology, we propose the concept of semantic boosting: given a zero-shot foundation model, guide its segmentation and adjust results to match domain expectations. We apply semantic boosting to the Segment Anything Model (SAM) to obtain microstructure segmentation for transmission electron microscopy. Our booster, SAM-I-Am, extracts geometric and textural features of various intermediate masks to perform mask removal and mask merging operations. We demonstrate a zero-shot performance increase of (absolute) +21.35%, +12.6%, +5.27% in mean IoU, and a -9.91%, -18.42%, -4.06% drop in mean false positive masks across images of three difficulty classes over vanilla SAM (ViT-L).
CVJan 15, 2025
SuperSAM: Crafting a SAM Supernetwork via Structured Pruning and Unstructured Parameter PrioritizationWaqwoya Abebe, Sadegh Jafari, Sixing Yu et al.
Neural Architecture Search (NAS) is a powerful approach of automating the design of efficient neural architectures. In contrast to traditional NAS methods, recently proposed one-shot NAS methods prove to be more efficient in performing NAS. One-shot NAS works by generating a singular weight-sharing supernetwork that acts as a search space (container) of subnetworks. Despite its achievements, designing the one-shot search space remains a major challenge. In this work we propose a search space design strategy for Vision Transformer (ViT)-based architectures. In particular, we convert the Segment Anything Model (SAM) into a weight-sharing supernetwork called SuperSAM. Our approach involves automating the search space design via layer-wise structured pruning and parameter prioritization. While the structured pruning applies probabilistic removal of certain transformer layers, parameter prioritization performs weight reordering and slicing of MLP-blocks in the remaining layers. We train supernetworks on several datasets using the sandwich rule. For deployment, we enhance subnetwork discovery by utilizing a program autotuner to identify efficient subnetworks within the search space. The resulting subnetworks are 30-70% smaller in size compared to the original pre-trained SAM ViT-B, yet outperform the pretrained model. Our work introduces a new and effective method for ViT NAS search-space design.
LGDec 29, 2023
LEFL: Low Entropy Client Sampling in Federated LearningWaqwoya Abebe, Pablo Munoz, Ali Jannesari
Federated learning (FL) is a machine learning paradigm where multiple clients collaborate to optimize a single global model using their private data. The global model is maintained by a central server that orchestrates the FL training process through a series of training rounds. In each round, the server samples clients from a client pool before sending them its latest global model parameters for further optimization. Naive sampling strategies implement random client sampling and fail to factor client data distributions for privacy reasons. Hence we propose LEFL, an alternative sampling strategy by performing a one-time clustering of clients based on their model's learned high-level features while respecting data privacy. This enables the server to perform stratified client sampling across clusters in every round. We show datasets of sampled clients selected with this approach yield a low relative entropy with respect to the global data distribution. Consequently, the FL training becomes less noisy and significantly improves the convergence of the global model by as much as 7.4% in some experiments. Furthermore, it also significantly reduces the communication rounds required to achieve a target accuracy.
LGNov 29, 2021
SPATL: Salient Parameter Aggregation and Transfer Learning for Heterogeneous Clients in Federated LearningSixing Yu, Phuong Nguyen, Waqwoya Abebe et al.
Federated learning~(FL) facilitates the training and deploying AI models on edge devices. Preserving user data privacy in FL introduces several challenges, including expensive communication costs, limited resources, and data heterogeneity. In this paper, we propose SPATL, an FL method that addresses these issues by: (a) introducing a salient parameter selection agent and communicating selected parameters only; (b) splitting a model into a shared encoder and a local predictor, and transferring its knowledge to heterogeneous clients via the locally customized predictor. Additionally, we leverage a gradient control mechanism to further speed up model convergence and increase robustness of training processes. Experiments demonstrate that SPATL reduces communication overhead, accelerates model inference, and enables stable training processes with better results compared to state-of-the-art methods. Our approach reduces communication cost by up to $86.45\%$, accelerates local inference by reducing up to $39.7\%$ FLOPs on VGG-11, and requires $7.4 \times$ less communication overhead when training ResNet-20.