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Switch EMA: A Free Lunch for Better Flatness and Sharpness

Switch EMA (SEMA) enhances deep neural network generalization by improving trade-offs between flatness and sharpness without additional computational costs, demonstrating superior performance and faster convergence across various tasks.

Year
2024
Venue
arXiv 2024
Authors
12
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arxiv.org/abs/2402.09240v2ARXIV-DEFAULT
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Abstract

Exponential Moving Average (EMA) is a widely used weight averaging (WA) regularization to learn flat optima for better generalizations without extra cost in deep neural network (DNN) optimization. Despite achieving better flatness, existing WA methods might fall into worse final performances or require extra test-time computations. This work unveils the full potential of EMA with a single line of modification, i.e., switching the EMA parameters to the original model after each epoch, dubbed as Switch EMA (SEMA). From both theoretical and empirical aspects, we demonstrate that SEMA can help DNNs to reach generalization optima that better trade-off between flatness and sharpness. To verify the effectiveness of SEMA, we conduct comparison experiments with discriminative, generative, and regression tasks on vision and language datasets, including image classification, self-supervised learning, object detection and segmentation, image generation, video prediction, attribute regression, and language modeling. Comprehensive results with popular optimizers and networks show that SEMA is a free lunch for DNN training by improving performances and boosting convergence speeds.

Authors

12