Partial Hypernetworks for Continual Learning
This work addresses the problem of computational efficiency and forgetting in continual learning for neural network practitioners, offering an incremental improvement over existing hypernetwork methods.
The paper tackles the computational expense of hypernetworks in continual learning by proposing partial weight generation for final layers while freezing initial layers, showing that the number of freezeable layers depends on distributional similarity and that this approach maintains accuracy on previous tasks with less forgetting compared to latent replay methods, especially in noisy streams.
Hypernetworks mitigate forgetting in continual learning (CL) by generating task-dependent weights and penalizing weight changes at a meta-model level. Unfortunately, generating all weights is not only computationally expensive for larger architectures, but also, it is not well understood whether generating all model weights is necessary. Inspired by latent replay methods in CL, we propose partial weight generation for the final layers of a model using hypernetworks while freezing the initial layers. With this objective, we first answer the question of how many layers can be frozen without compromising the final performance. Through several experiments, we empirically show that the number of layers that can be frozen is proportional to the distributional similarity in the CL stream. Then, to demonstrate the effectiveness of hypernetworks, we show that noisy streams can significantly impact the performance of latent replay methods, leading to increased forgetting when features from noisy experiences are replayed with old samples. In contrast, partial hypernetworks are more robust to noise by maintaining accuracy on previous experiences. Finally, we conduct experiments on the split CIFAR-100 and TinyImagenet benchmarks and compare different versions of partial hypernetworks to latent replay methods. We conclude that partial weight generation using hypernetworks is a promising solution to the problem of forgetting in neural networks. It can provide an effective balance between computation and final test accuracy in CL streams.