LGMay 22, 2022

GraB: Finding Provably Better Data Permutations than Random Reshuffling

arXiv:2205.10733v318 citationsh-index: 33
Originality Highly original
AI Analysis

This addresses the need for faster and more memory-efficient training in machine learning, offering a theoretically justified improvement over common practices.

The paper tackles the problem of inefficient data ordering in SGD training by proposing GraB, an online Gradient Balancing algorithm that provably converges faster than random reshuffling, with empirical results showing it outperforms state-of-the-art greedy ordering while reducing memory usage over 100× on datasets like MNIST and CIFAR10.

Random reshuffling, which randomly permutes the dataset each epoch, is widely adopted in model training because it yields faster convergence than with-replacement sampling. Recent studies indicate greedily chosen data orderings can further speed up convergence empirically, at the cost of using more computation and memory. However, greedy ordering lacks theoretical justification and has limited utility due to its non-trivial memory and computation overhead. In this paper, we first formulate an example-ordering framework named herding and answer affirmatively that SGD with herding converges at the rate $O(T^{-2/3})$ on smooth, non-convex objectives, faster than the $O(n^{1/3}T^{-2/3})$ obtained by random reshuffling, where $n$ denotes the number of data points and $T$ denotes the total number of iterations. To reduce the memory overhead, we leverage discrepancy minimization theory to propose an online Gradient Balancing algorithm (GraB) that enjoys the same rate as herding, while reducing the memory usage from $O(nd)$ to just $O(d)$ and computation from $O(n^2)$ to $O(n)$, where $d$ denotes the model dimension. We show empirically on applications including MNIST, CIFAR10, WikiText and GLUE that GraB can outperform random reshuffling in terms of both training and validation performance, and even outperform state-of-the-art greedy ordering while reducing memory usage over $100\times$.

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