LGMay 2, 2024

Efficient and Flexible Method for Reducing Moderate-size Deep Neural Networks with Condensation

arXiv:2405.01041v22 citationsh-index: 2Entropy
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses the need for faster neural network inference in scientific domains where moderate-size networks are common, offering a flexible reduction method, though it appears incremental as it builds on existing condensation theory.

The paper tackles the problem of reducing moderate-size deep neural networks to improve inference speed in scientific applications, proposing a condensation reduction algorithm that reduces network size to 41.7% in combustion tasks and 11.5% in CIFAR10 classification while maintaining accuracy.

Neural networks have been extensively applied to a variety of tasks, achieving astounding results. Applying neural networks in the scientific field is an important research direction that is gaining increasing attention. In scientific applications, the scale of neural networks is generally moderate-size, mainly to ensure the speed of inference during application. Additionally, comparing neural networks to traditional algorithms in scientific applications is inevitable. These applications often require rapid computations, making the reduction of neural network sizes increasingly important. Existing work has found that the powerful capabilities of neural networks are primarily due to their non-linearity. Theoretical work has discovered that under strong non-linearity, neurons in the same layer tend to behave similarly, a phenomenon known as condensation. Condensation offers an opportunity to reduce the scale of neural networks to a smaller subnetwork with similar performance. In this article, we propose a condensation reduction algorithm to verify the feasibility of this idea in practical problems. Our reduction method can currently be applied to both fully connected networks and convolutional networks, achieving positive results. In complex combustion acceleration tasks, we reduced the size of the neural network to 41.7% of its original scale while maintaining prediction accuracy. In the CIFAR10 image classification task, we reduced the network size to 11.5% of the original scale, still maintaining a satisfactory validation accuracy. Our method can be applied to most trained neural networks, reducing computational pressure and improving inference speed.

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