Branched Multi-Task Networks: Deciding What Layers To Share

Bibliographic Details
Title: Branched Multi-Task Networks: Deciding What Layers To Share
Authors: Vandenhende, Simon, Georgoulis, Stamatios, De Brabandere, Bert, Van Gool, Luc
Publication Year: 2019
Collection: Computer Science
Subject Terms: Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition
More Details: In the context of multi-task learning, neural networks with branched architectures have often been employed to jointly tackle the tasks at hand. Such ramified networks typically start with a number of shared layers, after which different tasks branch out into their own sequence of layers. Understandably, as the number of possible network configurations is combinatorially large, deciding what layers to share and where to branch out becomes cumbersome. Prior works have either relied on ad hoc methods to determine the level of layer sharing, which is suboptimal, or utilized neural architecture search techniques to establish the network design, which is considerably expensive. In this paper, we go beyond these limitations and propose an approach to automatically construct branched multi-task networks, by leveraging the employed tasks' affinities. Given a specific budget, i.e. number of learnable parameters, the proposed approach generates architectures, in which shallow layers are task-agnostic, whereas deeper ones gradually grow more task-specific. Extensive experimental analysis across numerous, diverse multi-tasking datasets shows that, for a given budget, our method consistently yields networks with the highest performance, while for a certain performance threshold it requires the least amount of learnable parameters.
Comment: Accepted at BMVC 2020
Document Type: Working Paper
Access URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/1904.02920
Accession Number: edsarx.1904.02920
Database: arXiv
More Details
Description not available.