Fine- and Coarse-Granularity Hybrid Self-Attention for Efficient BERT
This addresses efficiency for deploying large NLP models, but is incremental as it builds on existing attention mechanisms.
The paper tackles the high computational cost of BERT's self-attention by proposing FCA, a hybrid self-attention method that reduces FLOPs by 2x with less than 1% accuracy loss on GLUE and RACE datasets.
Transformer-based pre-trained models, such as BERT, have shown extraordinary success in achieving state-of-the-art results in many natural language processing applications. However, deploying these models can be prohibitively costly, as the standard self-attention mechanism of the Transformer suffers from quadratic computational cost in the input sequence length. To confront this, we propose FCA, a fine- and coarse-granularity hybrid self-attention that reduces the computation cost through progressively shortening the computational sequence length in self-attention. Specifically, FCA conducts an attention-based scoring strategy to determine the informativeness of tokens at each layer. Then, the informative tokens serve as the fine-granularity computing units in self-attention and the uninformative tokens are replaced with one or several clusters as the coarse-granularity computing units in self-attention. Experiments on GLUE and RACE datasets show that BERT with FCA achieves 2x reduction in FLOPs over original BERT with <1% loss in accuracy. We show that FCA offers a significantly better trade-off between accuracy and FLOPs compared to prior methods.