CVApr 3, 2020

Gradient Centralization: A New Optimization Technique for Deep Neural Networks

arXiv:2004.01461v2220 citationsHas Code
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This addresses optimization challenges in deep learning for researchers and practitioners, offering a simple, incremental improvement to existing gradient-based methods.

The paper tackles the problem of improving deep neural network training by introducing gradient centralization (GC), a technique that centralizes gradient vectors to have zero mean, resulting in enhanced generalization, efficiency, and stability across various applications like image classification, detection, and segmentation.

Optimization techniques are of great importance to effectively and efficiently train a deep neural network (DNN). It has been shown that using the first and second order statistics (e.g., mean and variance) to perform Z-score standardization on network activations or weight vectors, such as batch normalization (BN) and weight standardization (WS), can improve the training performance. Different from these existing methods that mostly operate on activations or weights, we present a new optimization technique, namely gradient centralization (GC), which operates directly on gradients by centralizing the gradient vectors to have zero mean. GC can be viewed as a projected gradient descent method with a constrained loss function. We show that GC can regularize both the weight space and output feature space so that it can boost the generalization performance of DNNs. Moreover, GC improves the Lipschitzness of the loss function and its gradient so that the training process becomes more efficient and stable. GC is very simple to implement and can be easily embedded into existing gradient based DNN optimizers with only one line of code. It can also be directly used to fine-tune the pre-trained DNNs. Our experiments on various applications, including general image classification, fine-grained image classification, detection and segmentation, demonstrate that GC can consistently improve the performance of DNN learning. The code of GC can be found at https://github.com/Yonghongwei/Gradient-Centralization.

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