LGDCFeb 17, 2024

Achieving Linear Speedup in Asynchronous Federated Learning with Heterogeneous Clients

arXiv:2402.11198v115 citationsh-index: 5IEEE Trans Mob Comput
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses scalability issues in federated learning for applications with diverse client capabilities, representing a significant but incremental improvement over existing methods.

The paper tackles the inefficiency of synchronous federated learning with heterogeneous clients by proposing DeFedAvg, an asynchronous framework that allows clients to train at their own paces with stale models, achieving asymptotic convergence rates comparable to FedAvg and provably attaining linear speedup, as validated through experiments on real datasets.

Federated learning (FL) is an emerging distributed training paradigm that aims to learn a common global model without exchanging or transferring the data that are stored locally at different clients. The Federated Averaging (FedAvg)-based algorithms have gained substantial popularity in FL to reduce the communication overhead, where each client conducts multiple localized iterations before communicating with a central server. In this paper, we focus on FL where the clients have diverse computation and/or communication capabilities. Under this circumstance, FedAvg can be less efficient since it requires all clients that participate in the global aggregation in a round to initiate iterations from the latest global model, and thus the synchronization among fast clients and straggler clients can severely slow down the overall training process. To address this issue, we propose an efficient asynchronous federated learning (AFL) framework called Delayed Federated Averaging (DeFedAvg). In DeFedAvg, the clients are allowed to perform local training with different stale global models at their own paces. Theoretical analyses demonstrate that DeFedAvg achieves asymptotic convergence rates that are on par with the results of FedAvg for solving nonconvex problems. More importantly, DeFedAvg is the first AFL algorithm that provably achieves the desirable linear speedup property, which indicates its high scalability. Additionally, we carry out extensive numerical experiments using real datasets to validate the efficiency and scalability of our approach when training deep neural networks.

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