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Towards Better Accuracy-efficiency Trade-offs: Divide and Co-training

The width of a neural network matters since increasing the width will necessarily increase the model capacity. However, the performance of a network does not improve linearly with the width and soon gets saturated. In this case, we argue that increasing the number of networks (ensemble) can achieve better accuracy-efficiency trade-offs than purely increasing the width. To prove it, one large network is divided into several small ones regarding its parameters and regularization components. Each of these small networks has a fraction of the original one's parameters. We then train these small networks together and make them see various views of the same data to increase their diversity. During this co-training process, networks can also learn from each other. As a result, small networks can achieve better ensemble performance than the large one with few or no extra parameters or FLOPs, \ie, achieving better accuracy-efficiency trade-offs. Small networks can also achieve faster inference speed than the large one by concurrent running. All of the above shows that the number of networks is a new dimension of model scaling. We validate our argument with 8 different neural architectures on common benchmarks through extensive experiments. The code is available at \url{https://github.com/FreeformRobotics/Divide-and-Co-training}.

preprint2022arXivOpen access
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