Bilkent University
Department of Computer Engineering
MS THESIS PRESENTATION

 

Fast and Efficient Model Parallelism for Deep Convolutional Neural Nerworks

 

Burak Eserol
MS Student
(Supervisor: Assoc. Prof. Dr. M. Mustafa Özdal)
(Co-supervisor: Prof. Dr. Cevdet Aykanat)
Computer Engineering Department
Bilkent University

Convolutional Neural Networks (CNNs) have become very popular and successful in recent years. Increasing the depth and number of parameters of CNNs has crucial importance on this success. However, it is hard to fit deep convolutional neural networks into a single machine's memory and it takes a very long time to train these deep convolutional neural networks. There are two parallelism methods to solve this problem: data parallelism and model parallelism.

In data parallelism, the neural network model is replicated among different machines and data is partitioned among them. Each replica trains its data and communicates parameters and their gradients with other replicas. This process results in a huge communication volume in data parallelism, which slows down the training and convergence of the deep neural network. In model parallelism, a deep neural network model is partitioned among different machines and trained in a pipelined manner. However, it requires a human expert to partition the network and it is hard to obtain low communication volume as well as a low computational load balance ratio by using known partitioning methods.

In this thesis, a new model parallelism method called hypergraph partitioned model parallelism is proposed. It does not require a human expert to partition the network and obtains a better computational load balance ratio along with better communication volume compared to the existing model parallelism techniques. Besides, the proposed method also reduces the communication volume overhead in data parallelism by ~93%. Finally, it is also shown that distributing a deep neural network using the proposed hypergraph partitioned model rather than the existing parallelism methods causes the network to converge faster to the target accuracy.

 

DATE: 07 August 2019, Wednesday @ 14:00
PLACE: EA-409