LGITNIApr 28, 2024

Joint Energy and Latency Optimization in Federated Learning over Cell-Free Massive MIMO Networks

arXiv:2404.18287v16 citationsh-index: 4WCNC
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses energy and latency bottlenecks for federated learning users in wireless networks, representing an incremental optimization.

The paper tackles the problem of high latency and energy consumption in federated learning over cell-free massive MIMO networks by proposing an uplink power allocation scheme that jointly minimizes energy and latency, resulting in up to 27% and 21% improvements in test accuracy compared to baseline methods.

Federated learning (FL) is a distributed learning paradigm wherein users exchange FL models with a server instead of raw datasets, thereby preserving data privacy and reducing communication overhead. However, the increased number of FL users may hinder completing large-scale FL over wireless networks due to high imposed latency. Cell-free massive multiple-input multiple-output~(CFmMIMO) is a promising architecture for implementing FL because it serves many users on the same time/frequency resources. While CFmMIMO enhances energy efficiency through spatial multiplexing and collaborative beamforming, it remains crucial to meticulously allocate uplink transmission powers to the FL users. In this paper, we propose an uplink power allocation scheme in FL over CFmMIMO by considering the effect of each user's power on the energy and latency of other users to jointly minimize the users' uplink energy and the latency of FL training. The proposed solution algorithm is based on the coordinate gradient descent method. Numerical results show that our proposed method outperforms the well-known max-sum rate by increasing up to~$27$\% and max-min energy efficiency of the Dinkelbach method by increasing up to~$21$\% in terms of test accuracy while having limited uplink energy and latency budget for FL over CFmMIMO.

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