Surrogate-assisted Particle Swarm Optimisation for Evolving Variable-length Transferable Blocks for Image Classification
This work addresses the efficiency problem in automated neural network design for image classification, offering a more practical approach compared to prior methods.
The paper tackles the high computational cost of neural architecture search for convolutional neural networks by proposing a surrogate-assisted particle swarm optimization algorithm, achieving competitive error rates (e.g., 3.49% on CIFAR-10) and reducing search time to 3 GPU-days while enabling transferable blocks.
Deep convolutional neural networks have demonstrated promising performance on image classification tasks, but the manual design process becomes more and more complex due to the fast depth growth and the increasingly complex topologies of convolutional neural networks. As a result, neural architecture search has emerged to automatically design convolutional neural networks that outperform handcrafted counterparts. However, the computational cost is immense, e.g. 22,400 GPU-days and 2,000 GPU-days for two outstanding neural architecture search works named NAS and NASNet, respectively, which motivates this work. A new effective and efficient surrogate-assisted particle swarm optimisation algorithm is proposed to automatically evolve convolutional neural networks. This is achieved by proposing a novel surrogate model, a new method of creating a surrogate dataset and a new encoding strategy to encode variable-length blocks of convolutional neural networks, all of which are integrated into a particle swarm optimisation algorithm to form the proposed method. The proposed method shows its effectiveness by achieving competitive error rates of 3.49% on the CIFAR-10 dataset, 18.49% on the CIFAR-100 dataset, and 1.82% on the SVHN dataset. The convolutional neural network blocks are efficiently learned by the proposed method from CIFAR-10 within 3 GPU-days due to the acceleration achieved by the surrogate model and the surrogate dataset to avoid the training of 80.1% of convolutional neural network blocks represented by the particles. Without any further search, the evolved blocks from CIFAR-10 can be successfully transferred to CIFAR-100 and SVHN, which exhibits the transferability of the block learned by the proposed method.