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Evolve a neural net from scratch

Features

  • Supports Keras
  • Has a flexible way to define the constraints
  • Visualization
  • Interface has full type hint
  • Train multiple sessions in parallel

How it works

In order to evolve a neural network, we need to solve two problems:

  1. Representing the network architecture in a way that can be easily changed
  2. Finding an algorithm to decide on when should we mutate a population of networks.

The second problem is relatively easier to resolve. There are numerous algorithms proposed to evolve neural networks. For example, (Real et al., 2018) proposed an evolution algorithm using age as a regularization, and (Lui et al., 2017) used an asynchronous algorithm to evolve networks. In this project, I decided to go with (Real et al., 2018) as the approach of using age as a regularization looks interesting. The implementation of the evolution algorithm is the aging_evolution in evolution/evolve/evolve_strategy.py

The first problem, on the other hand, is much harder. The challenges are mainly due to the diverse nature of different neural network layers, the building blocks of modern deep neural net. They could give out tensor with different shapes on the same input, depending on the parameters. For example, the output of a convolution layer with kernel shape 3 x 3, 10 output channels, stride of 1 and no padding on an input tensor with shape 10 x 10 x 3 will be 8 x 8 x 10 while one with kernel shape 5 x 5 and 20 output channels will give an output with shape 6 x 6 x 20. Since for most of the tasks, there will be a fixed input shape (32 x 32 x 3 for CIFAR10 for example) and fixed output shape (10 for CIFAR10), it's challenging to make sure each layer has a correct set of parameters.

Further, there are special connections such as skip connections for residual learning. Normally, neural nets layers follow a nice sequential order, meaning that each layer's output will only go to the next layer, and each layer will only take input from the previous layer. However, as (He et al., 2016) introduced residual learning to deep convolution network, the connection are not as simple as sequential anymore. This requires the encoding scheme to be flexible enough to accommodate skip connections.

There are several papers describing ways to encode network architectures, but I found the hierarchical representation introduced in (Lui et al., 2017) most flexible and interesting. In this project, I based the idea on that paper, with more detailed specifications. For instance, to ensure the encoded architecture is valid, I enforced several graph invariants on the higher level edges (in evolution/encoding/complex_edge.py):

  1. The graph has no circle
  2. Output is always reachable from input (implied from 3)
  3. All the vertices should be reachable from input
  4. All the vertices could reach output

And invariants for the class properties:

  • input_vertex is not None
  • output_vertex is not None
  • vertices_topo_order always contains vertices sorted in topological order
  • Each edge's end_vertex should point to the the end vertex of this edge, when the edge is in the graph

These invariants are thoroughly tested in the corresponding unit tests test/complex_edge_test.py and test/mutatble_edge_test.py. For more details about the hierarchical graph, take a look at Figure 1 in (Lui et al., 2017) for an illustration.

Run the example

  1. Install the dependencies in run-requirements.txt by pip3 install -r run-requirements.txt. Note that if you have Nvidia GPU, you should manually install Tensorflow with GPU instead.
  2. Run the CIFAR10 example: python3 -m examples.cifar10 -o logs under project root directory.
  3. Start Tensorboard: tensorboard --logdir logs to observe progress, and visualize models.

References

  • Real, E., Aggarwal, A., Huang, Y., & Le, Q. V. (2018). Regularized evolution for image classifier architecture search. arXiv preprint arXiv:1802.01548.
  • He, K., Zhang, X., Ren, S., & Sun, J. (2016). Deep residual learning for image recognition. In Proceedings of the IEEE conference on computer vision and pattern recognition (pp. 770-778).
  • Liu, H., Simonyan, K., Vinyals, O., Fernando, C., & Kavukcuoglu, K. (2017). Hierarchical representations for efficient architecture search. arXiv preprint arXiv:1711.00436.