HiLoRA: Hierarchical Low-Rank Adaptation for Personalized Federated Learning
This work addresses the problem of efficient and effective adaptation in Federated Learning for clients with diverse data distributions, which is significant for real-world applications where communication efficiency and personalization are crucial.
The authors tackled the problem of efficient adaptation in Federated Learning for Vision Transformers, achieving consistent improvements in personalization and generalization through their proposed HiLoRA framework. The framework demonstrates better performance on CIFAR-100 and DomainNet datasets.
Vision Transformers (ViTs) have been widely adopted in vision tasks due to their strong transferability. In Federated Learning (FL), where full fine-tuning is communication heavy, Low-Rank Adaptation (LoRA) provides an efficient and communication-friendly way to adapt ViTs. However, existing LoRA-based federated tuning methods overlook latent client structures in real-world settings, limiting shared representation learning and hindering effective adaptation to unseen clients. To address this, we propose HiLoRA, a hierarchical LoRA framework that places adapters at three levels: root, cluster, and leaf, each designed to capture global, subgroup, and client-specific knowledge, respectively. Through cross-tier orthogonality and cascaded optimization, HiLoRA separates update subspaces and aligns each tier with its residual personalized objective. In particular, we develop a LoRA-Subspace Adaptive Clustering mechanism that infers latent client groups via subspace similarity analysis, thereby facilitating knowledge sharing across structurally aligned clients. Theoretically, we establish a tier-wise generalization analysis that supports HiLoRA's design. Experiments on ViT backbones with CIFAR-100 and DomainNet demonstrate consistent improvements in both personalization and generalization.