Cohort Squeeze: Beyond a Single Communication Round per Cohort in Cross-Device Federated Learning

ICLR 2025 Conference Submission398 Authors

13 Sept 2024 (modified: 13 Oct 2024)ICLR 2025 Conference SubmissionEveryoneRevisionsBibTeXCC BY 4.0
Keywords: stochastic proximal point methods, federated learning, cross-device setting, arbitrary sampling
TL;DR: Contrary to current practice of federated learning, we show that it's better for a cohort to be involved in more than a single communication round.
Abstract: Virtually all federated learning (FL) methods, including FedAvg, operate in the following manner: i) an orchestrating server sends the current model parameters to a cohort of clients selected via certain rule, ii) these clients then independently perform a local training procedure (e.g., via SGD or Adam) using their own training data, and iii) the resulting models are shipped to the server for aggregation. This process is repeated until a model of suitable quality is found. A notable feature of these methods is that each cohort is involved in a single communication round with the server only. In this work we challenge this algorithmic design primitive and investigate whether it is possible to “squeeze more juice” out of each cohort than what is possible in a single communication round. Surprisingly, we find that this is indeed the case, and our approach leads to up to 74% reduction in the total communication cost needed to train a FL model in the cross-device setting. Our method is based on a novel variant of the stochastic proximal point method (SPPM-AS) which supports a large collection of client sampling procedures some of which lead to further gains when compared to classical client selection approaches.
Supplementary Material: zip
Primary Area: optimization
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Submission Number: 398
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