CVAIFeb 25, 2024

One-stage Prompt-based Continual Learning

arXiv:2402.16189v122 citationsh-index: 38ECCV
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses efficiency issues in continual learning for AI systems, though it is incremental as it builds on existing prompt-based methods.

The paper tackles the computational burden in prompt-based continual learning by introducing a one-stage framework that reduces computational cost by ~50% with a marginal accuracy drop of <1%, and with a regularization loss, it outperforms prior methods by ~1.4% on benchmarks.

Prompt-based Continual Learning (PCL) has gained considerable attention as a promising continual learning solution as it achieves state-of-the-art performance while preventing privacy violation and memory overhead issues. Nonetheless, existing PCL approaches face significant computational burdens because of two Vision Transformer (ViT) feed-forward stages; one is for the query ViT that generates a prompt query to select prompts inside a prompt pool; the other one is a backbone ViT that mixes information between selected prompts and image tokens. To address this, we introduce a one-stage PCL framework by directly using the intermediate layer's token embedding as a prompt query. This design removes the need for an additional feed-forward stage for query ViT, resulting in ~50% computational cost reduction for both training and inference with marginal accuracy drop < 1%. We further introduce a Query-Pool Regularization (QR) loss that regulates the relationship between the prompt query and the prompt pool to improve representation power. The QR loss is only applied during training time, so there is no computational overhead at inference from the QR loss. With the QR loss, our approach maintains ~ 50% computational cost reduction during inference as well as outperforms the prior two-stage PCL methods by ~1.4% on public class-incremental continual learning benchmarks including CIFAR-100, ImageNet-R, and DomainNet.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

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