CVLGJul 22, 2019

Switchable Normalization for Learning-to-Normalize Deep Representation

arXiv:1907.10473v189 citations
AI Analysis

It addresses the challenge of manual tuning in normalization techniques for deep learning practitioners, offering a more automated and robust approach.

The paper tackles the problem of selecting appropriate normalization methods for different layers in deep neural networks by proposing Switchable Normalization (SN), which learns to choose between channel, layer, and minibatch scopes, resulting in improved performance on benchmarks like ImageNet and COCO.

We address a learning-to-normalize problem by proposing Switchable Normalization (SN), which learns to select different normalizers for different normalization layers of a deep neural network. SN employs three distinct scopes to compute statistics (means and variances) including a channel, a layer, and a minibatch. SN switches between them by learning their importance weights in an end-to-end manner. It has several good properties. First, it adapts to various network architectures and tasks. Second, it is robust to a wide range of batch sizes, maintaining high performance even when small minibatch is presented (e.g. 2 images/GPU). Third, SN does not have sensitive hyper-parameter, unlike group normalization that searches the number of groups as a hyper-parameter. Without bells and whistles, SN outperforms its counterparts on various challenging benchmarks, such as ImageNet, COCO, CityScapes, ADE20K, MegaFace, and Kinetics. Analyses of SN are also presented to answer the following three questions: (a) Is it useful to allow each normalization layer to select its own normalizer? (b) What impacts the choices of normalizers? (c) Do different tasks and datasets prefer different normalizers? We hope SN will help ease the usage and understand the normalization techniques in deep learning. The code of SN has been released at https://github.com/switchablenorms.

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