DCLGSPJul 28, 2020

Accelerating Federated Learning over Reliability-Agnostic Clients in Mobile Edge Computing Systems

arXiv:2007.14374v3102 citations
AI Analysis

This addresses the problem of slow and inefficient federated learning for mobile edge computing applications, with incremental improvements in client selection and aggregation strategies.

The paper tackles the challenge of optimizing federated learning efficiency and effectiveness in Mobile Edge Computing systems with unreliable clients, resulting in up to 12X faster convergence and 58% reduced energy consumption.

Mobile Edge Computing (MEC), which incorporates the Cloud, edge nodes and end devices, has shown great potential in bringing data processing closer to the data sources. Meanwhile, Federated learning (FL) has emerged as a promising privacy-preserving approach to facilitating AI applications. However, it remains a big challenge to optimize the efficiency and effectiveness of FL when it is integrated with the MEC architecture. Moreover, the unreliable nature (e.g., stragglers and intermittent drop-out) of end devices significantly slows down the FL process and affects the global model's quality Xin such circumstances. In this paper, a multi-layer federated learning protocol called HybridFL is designed for the MEC architecture. HybridFL adopts two levels (the edge level and the cloud level) of model aggregation enacting different aggregation strategies. Moreover, in order to mitigate stragglers and end device drop-out, we introduce regional slack factors into the stage of client selection performed at the edge nodes using a probabilistic approach without identifying or probing the state of end devices (whose reliability is agnostic). We demonstrate the effectiveness of our method in modulating the proportion of clients selected and present the convergence analysis for our protocol. We have conducted extensive experiments with machine learning tasks in different scales of MEC system. The results show that HybridFL improves the FL training process significantly in terms of shortening the federated round length, speeding up the global model's convergence (by up to 12X) and reducing end device energy consumption (by up to 58%).

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

Your Notes