LGAIITFeb 19, 2025

A General Error-Theoretical Analysis Framework for Constructing Compression Strategies

arXiv:2502.15802v13 citationsh-index: 4
Originality Highly original
AI Analysis

This work addresses the problem of efficient deployment of large deep learning models for practitioners, offering a novel theoretical framework for compression.

The paper tackles the challenge of efficiently compressing deep models by addressing the varying tolerance of different layers to compression, proposing a Compression Error Theory (CET) framework that determines optimal compression levels per layer, resulting in nearly 11× parameter compression on ResNet-34 with performance comparable to or better than the original model.

The exponential growth in parameter size and computational complexity of deep models poses significant challenges for efficient deployment. The core problem of existing compression methods is that different layers of the model have significant differences in their tolerance to compression levels. For instance, the first layer of a model can typically sustain a higher compression level compared to the last layer without compromising performance. Thus, the key challenge lies in how to allocate compression levels across layers in a way that minimizes performance loss while maximizing parameter reduction. To address this challenge, we propose a Compression Error Theory (CET) framework, designed to determine the optimal compression level for each layer. Taking quantization as an example, CET leverages differential expansion and algebraic geometry to reconstruct the quadratic form of quantization error as ellipsoids and hyperbolic paraboloids, and utilizes their geometric structures to define an error subspace. To identify the error subspace with minimal performance loss, by performing orthogonal decomposition of the geometric space, CET transforms the optimization process of the error subspace into a complementary problem. The final theoretical analysis shows that constructing the quantization subspace along the major axis results in minimal performance degradation. Through experimental verification of the theory, CET can greatly retain performance while compressing. Specifically, on the ResNet-34 model, CET achieves nearly 11$\times$ parameter compression while even surpassing performance comparable to the original model.

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