Shapley value and variational importance switch methods produce consistent rankings of filter importance in CNNs, enabling compression and interpretability.
FLOPs as a Direct Optimization Objective for Learning Sparse Neural Networks
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abstract
There exists a plethora of techniques for inducing structured sparsity in parametric models during the optimization process, with the final goal of resource-efficient inference. However, few methods target a specific number of floating-point operations (FLOPs) as part of the optimization objective, despite many reporting FLOPs as part of the results. Furthermore, a one-size-fits-all approach ignores realistic system constraints, which differ significantly between, say, a GPU and a mobile phone -- FLOPs on the former incur less latency than on the latter; thus, it is important for practitioners to be able to specify a target number of FLOPs during model compression. In this work, we extend a state-of-the-art technique to directly incorporate FLOPs as part of the optimization objective and show that, given a desired FLOPs requirement, different neural networks can be successfully trained for image classification.
fields
cs.LG 1years
2019 1verdicts
UNVERDICTED 1representative citing papers
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Neuron ranking -- an informed way to condense convolutional neural networks architecture
Shapley value and variational importance switch methods produce consistent rankings of filter importance in CNNs, enabling compression and interpretability.