4.7 Article

FedBnR: Mitigating federated learning Non-IID problem by breaking the skewed task and reconstructing representation

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.future.2023.11.020

Keywords

Distributed machine learning; Federated learning; Data heterogeneity; Non-IID data; Unbalanced data; Personalized federated learning

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This paper introduces a Federated Learning framework called FedBnR to address the issue of potential data heterogeneity in distributed entities. By breaking up the original task into multiple subtasks and reconstructing the representation using feature extractors, the framework improves the learning performance on heterogeneous datasets.
Federated Learning (FL), as a novel distributed machine learning paradigm, offers infinite possibilities for collaborative use of decentralized data among distributed entities. However, the potential data heterogeneity in distributed entities poses a great challenge to deploying FL for real-world practical applications. Inspired by the observed phenomenon of data heterogeneity simulation, we propose a FL framework to mitigate the non-iid problem by breaking the skewed task and reconstructing representation, called FedBnR. The basic idea of FedBnR is to break up the original skewed (unbalanced) task into multiple unskewed (balanced) subtasks and then reconstruct the representation of the original task using the unskewed subtask feature extractors. We design the FedBnR-SUR algorithm within the framework to verify its feasibility. We simulate the heterogeneous setup using the Dirichlet distribution. We conduct comparative experiments on MNIST, Cifar10, Cifar100, Cinic10, and Tiny-Imagenet. FedBnR-SUR outperforms the best baseline algorithms by about 0.96%, 1.49%, 3.53%, 1.77%, and 1.24%, respectively.

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