Abstract
Applying Federated Learning (FL) on Internet-of-Things devices is necessitated by the large volumes of data they produce and growing concerns of data privacy. However, there are three challenges that need to be addressed to make FL efficient: (i) execution on devices with limited computational capabilities, (ii) accounting for stragglers due to computational heterogeneity of devices, and (iii) adaptation to the changing network bandwidths. This paper presents FedAdapt, an adaptive offloading FL framework to mitigate the aforementioned challenges. FedAdapt accelerates local training in computationally constrained devices by leveraging layer offloading of deep neural networks (DNNs) to servers. Further, FedAdapt adopts reinforcement learning based optimization and clustering to adaptively identify which layers of the DNN should be offloaded for each individual device on to a server to tackle the challenges of computational heterogeneity and changing network bandwidth. Experimental studies are carried out on a lab-based testbed and it is demonstrated that by offloading a DNN from the device to the server FedAdapt reduces the training time of a typical IoT device by over half compared to classic FL. The training time of extreme stragglers and the overall training time can be reduced by up to 57%. Furthermore, with changing network bandwidth, FedAdapt is demonstrated to reduce the training time by up to 40% when compared to classic FL, without sacrificing accuracy.
Original language | English |
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Journal | IEEE Internet of Things Journal |
Early online date | 19 May 2022 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Early online date - 19 May 2022 |
Bibliographical note
Publisher Copyright:IEEE
Keywords
- Adaptation models
- Bandwidth
- Computational modeling
- Data models
- Edge Computing
- Federated Learning
- Internet of Things
- Internet-of-Things
- Reinforcement Learning.
- Servers
- Training
ASJC Scopus subject areas
- Signal Processing
- Information Systems
- Hardware and Architecture
- Computer Science Applications
- Computer Networks and Communications