CVLGApr 28

Sample Selection Using Multi-Task Autoencoders in Federated Learning with Non-IID Data

arXiv:2604.2611615.73 citationsh-index: 21
Predicted impact top 98% in CV · last 90 daysOriginality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

It addresses the problem of noisy samples in federated learning for image classification, but the gains are incremental and limited to specific datasets and noise conditions.

The paper proposes sample selection methods using multi-task autoencoders to filter noisy samples in federated learning with non-IID data, achieving accuracy gains of up to 7.02% on CIFAR10 and 1.83% on MNIST.

Federated learning is a machine learning paradigm in which multiple devices collaboratively train a model under the supervision of a central server while ensuring data privacy. However, its performance is often hindered by redundant, malicious, or abnormal samples, leading to model degradation and inefficiency. To overcome these issues, we propose novel sample selection methods for image classification, employing a multitask autoencoder to estimate sample contributions through loss and feature analysis. Our approach incorporates unsupervised outlier detection, using one-class support vector machine (OCSVM), isolation forest (IF), and adaptive loss threshold (AT) methods managed by a central server to filter noisy samples on clients. We also propose a multi-class deep support vector data description (SVDD) loss controlled by a central server to enhance feature-based sample selection. We validate our methods on CIFAR10 and MNIST datasets across varying numbers of clients, non-IID distributions, and noise levels up to 40%. The results show significant accuracy improvements with loss-based sample selection, achieving gains of up to 7.02% on CIFAR10 with OCSVM and 1.83% on MNIST with AT. Additionally, our federated SVDD loss further improves feature-based sample selection, yielding accuracy gains of up to 0.99% on CIFAR10 with OCSVM. These results show the effectiveness of our methods in improving model accuracy across various client counts and noise conditions.

Foundations

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

Your Notes