LGAICVOct 19, 2020

MimicNorm: Weight Mean and Last BN Layer Mimic the Dynamic of Batch Normalization

arXiv:2010.09278v3Has Code
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses the problem of high memory usage and computational cost in BN for deep learning practitioners, offering an incremental improvement.

The paper tackles the computational and memory inefficiencies of Batch Normalization (BN) by proposing MimicNorm, a simplified method that reduces memory consumption by about 20% while achieving similar accuracy across various network architectures like ResNets and ShuffleNet.

Substantial experiments have validated the success of Batch Normalization (BN) Layer in benefiting convergence and generalization. However, BN requires extra memory and float-point calculation. Moreover, BN would be inaccurate on micro-batch, as it depends on batch statistics. In this paper, we address these problems by simplifying BN regularization while keeping two fundamental impacts of BN layers, i.e., data decorrelation and adaptive learning rate. We propose a novel normalization method, named MimicNorm, to improve the convergence and efficiency in network training. MimicNorm consists of only two light operations, including modified weight mean operations (subtract mean values from weight parameter tensor) and one BN layer before loss function (last BN layer). We leverage the neural tangent kernel (NTK) theory to prove that our weight mean operation whitens activations and transits network into the chaotic regime like BN layer, and consequently, leads to an enhanced convergence. The last BN layer provides autotuned learning rates and also improves accuracy. Experimental results show that MimicNorm achieves similar accuracy for various network structures, including ResNets and lightweight networks like ShuffleNet, with a reduction of about 20% memory consumption. The code is publicly available at https://github.com/Kid-key/MimicNorm.

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