FedUTN: federated self-supervised learning with updating target network

Self-supervised learning (SSL) is capable of learning noteworthy representations from unlabeled data, which has mitigated the problem of insufficient labeled data to a certain extent. The original SSL method centered on centralized data, but the growing awareness of privacy protection restricts the...

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Veröffentlicht in:Applied intelligence (Dordrecht, Netherlands) Netherlands), 2023-05, Vol.53 (9), p.10879-10892
Hauptverfasser: Li, Simou, Mao, Yuxing, Li, Jian, Xu, Yihang, Li, Jinsen, Chen, Xueshuo, Liu, Siyang, Zhao, Xianping
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Self-supervised learning (SSL) is capable of learning noteworthy representations from unlabeled data, which has mitigated the problem of insufficient labeled data to a certain extent. The original SSL method centered on centralized data, but the growing awareness of privacy protection restricts the sharing of decentralized, unlabeled data generated by a variety of mobile devices, such as cameras, phones, and other terminals. Federated Self-supervised Learning (FedSSL) is the result of recent efforts to create Federated learning, which is always used for supervised learning using SSL. Informed by past work, we propose a new FedSSL framework, FedUTN. This framework aims to permit each client to train a model that works well on both independent and identically distributed (IID) and independent and non-identically distributed (non-IID) data. Each party possesses two asymmetrical networks, a target network and an online network. FedUTN first aggregates the online network parameters of each terminal and then updates the terminals’ target network with the aggregated parameters, which is a radical departure from the update technique utilized in earlier studies. In conjunction with this method, we offer a novel control algorithm to replace EMA for the training operation. After extensive trials, we demonstrate that: (1) the feasibility of utilizing the aggregated online network to update the target network. (2) FedUTN’s aggregation strategy is simpler, more effective, and more robust. (3) FedUTN outperforms all other prevalent FedSSL algorithms and outperforms the SOTA algorithm by 0.5% ∼ 1.6% under regular experiment con1ditions.
ISSN:0924-669X
1573-7497
DOI:10.1007/s10489-022-04070-6