CVAIMLFeb 8, 2024

Memory-Efficient Vision Transformers: An Activation-Aware Mixed-Rank Compression Strategy

arXiv:2402.06004v15 citationsh-index: 33ECCV Workshops
Originality Highly original
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This addresses the problem of deploying large ViTs in memory-constrained environments for computer vision applications, offering a significant improvement over existing compression methods.

The paper tackles the memory limitations of Vision Transformers (ViTs) for deployment by introducing an activation-aware mixed-rank compression strategy, achieving a 60% parameter reduction in DeiT-B with less than 1% accuracy drop on ImageNet and up to 1.8% accuracy gain when compressing to smaller model sizes.

As Vision Transformers (ViTs) increasingly set new benchmarks in computer vision, their practical deployment on inference engines is often hindered by their significant memory bandwidth and (on-chip) memory footprint requirements. This paper addresses this memory limitation by introducing an activation-aware model compression methodology that uses selective low-rank weight tensor approximations of different layers to reduce the parameter count of ViTs. The key idea is to decompose the weight tensors into a sum of two parameter-efficient tensors while minimizing the error between the product of the input activations with the original weight tensor and the product of the input activations with the approximate tensor sum. This approximation is further refined by adopting an efficient layer-wise error compensation technique that uses the gradient of the layer's output loss. The combination of these techniques achieves excellent results while it avoids being trapped in a shallow local minimum early in the optimization process and strikes a good balance between the model compression and output accuracy. Notably, the presented method significantly reduces the parameter count of DeiT-B by 60% with less than 1% accuracy drop on the ImageNet dataset, overcoming the usual accuracy degradation seen in low-rank approximations. In addition to this, the presented compression technique can compress large DeiT/ViT models to have about the same model size as smaller DeiT/ViT variants while yielding up to 1.8% accuracy gain. These results highlight the efficacy of our approach, presenting a viable solution for embedding ViTs in memory-constrained environments without compromising their performance.

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