Neural Architecture Search without Training

8 Jun 2020  ·  Joseph Mellor, Jack Turner, Amos Storkey, Elliot J. Crowley ·

The time and effort involved in hand-designing deep neural networks is immense. This has prompted the development of Neural Architecture Search (NAS) techniques to automate this design. However, NAS algorithms tend to be slow and expensive; they need to train vast numbers of candidate networks to inform the search process. This could be alleviated if we could partially predict a network's trained accuracy from its initial state. In this work, we examine the overlap of activations between datapoints in untrained networks and motivate how this can give a measure which is usefully indicative of a network's trained performance. We incorporate this measure into a simple algorithm that allows us to search for powerful networks without any training in a matter of seconds on a single GPU, and verify its effectiveness on NAS-Bench-101, NAS-Bench-201, NATS-Bench, and Network Design Spaces. Our approach can be readily combined with more expensive search methods; we examine a simple adaptation of regularised evolutionary search. Code for reproducing our experiments is available at https://github.com/BayesWatch/nas-without-training.

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Task Dataset Model Metric Name Metric Value Global Rank Result Benchmark
Neural Architecture Search NAS-Bench-201, ImageNet-16-120 NAS without training (N=100) Accuracy (Test) 36.37 # 38
Search time (s) 17.4 # 4
Neural Architecture Search NAS-Bench-201, ImageNet-16-120 NAS without training (N=10) Accuracy (Test) 38.33 # 37
Search time (s) 1.7 # 1

Methods