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Federated learning facilitates learning across clients without transferring local data on these clients to a central server. Despite the success of the federated learning method, it remains to improve further w.r.t communicating the most critical information to update a model under limited communication conditions, which can benefit this learning scheme into a wide range of application scenarios. In this work, we propose a nonlinear quantization for compressed stochastic gradient descent, which can be easily utilized in federated learning. Based on the proposed quantization, our system significantly reduces the communication cost by up to three orders of magnitude, while maintaining convergence and accuracy of the training process to a large extent. Extensive experiments are conducted on image classification and brain tumor semantic segmentation using the MNIST, CIFAR-10 and BraTS datasets where we show state-of-the-art effectiveness and impressive communication efficiency.
Communication of model updates between client nodes and the central aggregating server is a major bottleneck in federated learning, especially in bandwidth-limited settings and high-dimensional models. Gradient quantization is an effective way of red
Federated learning (FL) has attracted tremendous attentions in recent years due to its privacy preserving measures and great potentials in some distributed but privacy-sensitive applications like finance and health. However, high communication overlo
Federated learning (FL) offers a solution to train a global machine learning model while still maintaining data privacy, without needing access to data stored locally at the clients. However, FL suffers performance degradation when client data distri
Existing approaches to federated learning suffer from a communication bottleneck as well as convergence issues due to sparse client participation. In this paper we introduce a novel algorithm, called FetchSGD, to overcome these challenges. FetchSGD c
Petabytes of data are generated each day by emerging Internet of Things (IoT), but only few of them can be finally collected and used for Machine Learning (ML) purposes due to the apprehension of data & privacy leakage, which seriously retarding MLs