Towards Less Constrained Macro-Neural Architecture Search
This work addresses the need for more flexible and automated NAS methods for machine learning practitioners, reducing reliance on human expertise, though it is incremental in advancing macro-search techniques.
The paper tackles the problem of Neural Architecture Search (NAS) being overly constrained by human-defined assumptions and limited search spaces, proposing LCMNAS to perform macro-search without pre-defined heuristics, achieving state-of-the-art results across 13 datasets with minimal GPU computation.
Networks found with Neural Architecture Search (NAS) achieve state-of-the-art performance in a variety of tasks, out-performing human-designed networks. However, most NAS methods heavily rely on human-defined assumptions that constrain the search: architecture's outer-skeletons, number of layers, parameter heuristics and search spaces. Additionally, common search spaces consist of repeatable modules (cells) instead of fully exploring the architecture's search space by designing entire architectures (macro-search). Imposing such constraints requires deep human expertise and restricts the search to pre-defined settings. In this paper, we propose LCMNAS, a method that pushes NAS to less constrained search spaces by performing macro-search without relying on pre-defined heuristics or bounded search spaces. LCMNAS introduces three components for the NAS pipeline: i) a method that leverages information about well-known architectures to autonomously generate complex search spaces based on Weighted Directed Graphs with hidden properties, ii) an evolutionary search strategy that generates complete architectures from scratch, and iii) a mixed-performance estimation approach that combines information about architectures at initialization stage and lower fidelity estimates to infer their trainability and capacity to model complex functions. We present experiments in 13 different data sets showing that LCMNAS is capable of generating both cell and macro-based architectures with minimal GPU computation and state-of-the-art results. More, we conduct extensive studies on the importance of different NAS components in both cell and macro-based settings. Code for reproducibility is public at https://github.com/VascoLopes/LCMNAS.