DCLGApr 9, 2020

Client Selection and Bandwidth Allocation in Wireless Federated Learning Networks: A Long-Term Perspective

arXiv:2004.04314v1444 citations
AI Analysis

This work addresses resource allocation challenges in wireless federated learning for improved learning performance, though it is incremental as it builds on existing methods by adding a long-term view.

The paper tackles the problem of optimizing client selection and bandwidth allocation in wireless federated learning networks by introducing a long-term perspective, showing that their algorithm outperforms benchmarks and adapts to changing network environments.

This paper studies federated learning (FL) in a classic wireless network, where learning clients share a common wireless link to a coordinating server to perform federated model training using their local data. In such wireless federated learning networks (WFLNs), optimizing the learning performance depends crucially on how clients are selected and how bandwidth is allocated among the selected clients in every learning round, as both radio and client energy resources are limited. While existing works have made some attempts to allocate the limited wireless resources to optimize FL, they focus on the problem in individual learning rounds, overlooking an inherent yet critical feature of federated learning. This paper brings a new long-term perspective to resource allocation in WFLNs, realizing that learning rounds are not only temporally interdependent but also have varying significance towards the final learning outcome. To this end, we first design data-driven experiments to show that different temporal client selection patterns lead to considerably different learning performance. With the obtained insights, we formulate a stochastic optimization problem for joint client selection and bandwidth allocation under long-term client energy constraints, and develop a new algorithm that utilizes only currently available wireless channel information but can achieve long-term performance guarantee. Further experiments show that our algorithm results in the desired temporal client selection pattern, is adaptive to changing network environments and far outperforms benchmarks that ignore the long-term effect of FL.

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