Across-Task Neural Architecture Search via Meta Learning

12 Oct 2021  ·  Jingtao Rong, Xinyi Yu, Mingyang Zhang, Linlin Ou ·

Adequate labeled data and expensive compute resources are the prerequisites for the success of neural architecture search(NAS). It is challenging to apply NAS in meta-learning scenarios with limited compute resources and data. In this paper, an across-task neural architecture search (AT-NAS) is proposed to address the problem through combining gradient-based meta-learning with EA-based NAS to learn over the distribution of tasks. The supernet is learned over an entire set of tasks by meta-learning its weights. Architecture encodes of subnets sampled from the supernet are iteratively adapted by evolutionary algorithms while simultaneously searching for a task-sensitive meta-network. Searched meta-network can be adapted to a novel task via a few learning steps and only costs a little search time. Empirical results show that AT-NAS surpasses the related approaches on few-shot classification accuracy. The performance of AT-NAS on classification benchmarks is comparable to that of models searched from scratch, by adapting the architecture in less than an hour from a 5-GPU-day pretrained meta-network.

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