Federated Optimization Under Intermittent Client Availability

Author:

Yan Yikai1ORCID,Niu Chaoyue1ORCID,Ding Yucheng1ORCID,Zheng Zhenzhe1ORCID,Tang Shaojie2ORCID,Li Qinya1ORCID,Wu Fan1ORCID,Lyu Chengfei3,Feng Yanghe4ORCID,Chen Guihai1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Computer Science and Engineering, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, Shanghai 200240, China;

2. Department of Information Systems, University of Texas at Dallas, Richardson, Texas 75080;

3. Taobao Tmall Commerce Group, Alibaba Group, Hangzhou, Zhejiang 310023, China;

4. College of Systems Engineering, National University of Defense Technology, Changsha, Hunan 410073, China

Abstract

Federated learning is a new distributed machine learning framework, where numerous heterogeneous clients collaboratively train a model without sharing training data. In this work, we consider a practical and ubiquitous issue when deploying federated learning in mobile environments: intermittent client availability, where the set of eligible clients may change during the training process. Such intermittent client availability would seriously deteriorate the performance of the classical federated averaging algorithm (FedAvg). Thus, we propose a simple distributed nonconvex optimization algorithm, called federated latest averaging (FedLaAvg), which leverages the latest gradients of all clients, even when the clients are not available, to jointly update the global model in each iteration. Our theoretical analysis shows that FedLaAvg achieves guaranteed convergence and a sublinear speedup with respect to the total number of clients. We implement FedLaAvg along with several baselines and evaluate them over the benchmarking MNIST and Sentiment140 data sets. The evaluation results demonstrate that FedLaAvg achieves more stable training than FedAvg in both convex and nonconvex settings and reaches a sublinear speedup. Source code and online supplement are available at the IJOC GitHub site ( http://dx.doi.org/10.1287/ijoc.2022.0057.cd , https://github.com/INFORMSJoC/2022.0057 ). History: Accepted by Ram Ramesh, Area Editor for Data Science & Machine Leaning. Funding: This work was supported by the National Key R&D Program of China [Grant 2022ZD0119100], the National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC) [Grants 61972252, 61972254, 62072303, 62025204, 62132018, 62202296, and 62202297], the Alibaba Innovation Research (AIR) Program, and the Tencent Rhino Bird Key Research Project. Supplemental Material: The software that supports the findings of this study is available within the paper and its Supplemental Information ( https://pubsonline.informs.org/doi/suppl/10.1287/ijoc.2022.0057 ) as well as from the IJOC GitHub software repository ( https://github.com/INFORMSJoC/2022.0057 ). The complete IJOC Software and Data Repository is available at https://informsjoc.github.io/ .

Publisher

Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences (INFORMS)

Subject

General Engineering

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