SPLGJul 7, 2021

Energy Efficient Federated Learning in Integrated Fog-Cloud Computing Enabled Internet-of-Things Networks

arXiv:2107.03520v18 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses energy efficiency in federated learning for IoT networks, which is an incremental improvement in resource optimization.

The paper tackles the problem of reducing energy consumption in federated learning for IoT networks by proposing resource allocation schemes for two scenarios: training at IoT devices or at fog access points, and it shows that training at IoT devices is more energy-efficient for large-scale setups.

We investigate resource allocation scheme to reduce the energy consumption of federated learning (FL) in the integrated fog-cloud computing enabled Internet-of-things (IoT) networks. In the envisioned system, IoT devices are connected with the centralized cloud server (CS) via multiple fog access points (F-APs). We consider two different scenarios for training the local models. In the first scenario, local models are trained at the IoT devices and the F-APs upload the local model parameters to the CS. In the second scenario, local models are trained at the F-APs based on the collected data from the IoT devices and the F-APs collaborate with the CS for updating the model parameters. Our objective is to minimize the overall energy-consumption of both scenarios subject to FL time constraint. Towards this goal, we devise a joint optimization of scheduling of IoT devices with the F-APs, transmit power allocation, computation frequency allocation at the devices and F-APs and decouple it into two subproblems. In the first subproblem, we optimize the IoT device scheduling and power allocation, while in the second subproblem, we optimize the computation frequency allocation. For each scenario, we develop a conflict graph based solution to iteratively solve the two subproblems. Simulation results show that the proposed two schemes achieve a considerable performance gain in terms of the energy consumption minimization. The presented simulation results interestingly reveal that for a large number of IoT devices and large data sizes, it is more energy efficient to train the local models at the IoT devices instead of the F-APs.

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