While neural networks have advanced the frontiers in many applications, they often come at a high computational cost. Reducing the power and latency of neural network inference is key if we want to integrate modern networks into edge devices with strict power and compute requirements. Neural network quantization is one of the most effective ways of achieving these savings but the additional noise it induces can lead to accuracy degradation. In this white paper, we introduce state-of-the-art algorithms for mitigating the impact of quantization noise on the network's performance while maintaining low-bit weights and activations. We start with a hardware motivated introduction to quantization and then consider two main classes of algorithms: Post-Training Quantization (PTQ) and Quantization-Aware-Training (QAT). PTQ requires no re-training or labelled data and is thus a lightweight push-button approach to quantization. In most cases, PTQ is sufficient for achieving 8-bit quantization with close to floating-point accuracy. QAT requires fine-tuning and access to labeled training data but enables lower bit quantization with competitive results. For both solutions, we provide tested pipelines based on existing literature and extensive experimentation that lead to state-of-the-art performance for common deep learning models and tasks.
While neural networks have advanced the frontiers in many machine learning applications, they often come at a high computational cost. Reducing the power and latency of neural network inference is vital to integrating modern networks into edge devices with strict power and compute requirements. Neural network quantization is one of the most effective ways of achieving these savings, but the additional noise it induces can lead to accuracy degradation. In this white paper, we present an overview of neural network quantization using AI Model Efficiency Toolkit (AIMET). AIMET is a library of state-of-the-art quantization and compression algorithms designed to ease the effort required for model optimization and thus drive the broader AI ecosystem towards lowlatency and energy-efficient inference. AIMET provides users with the ability to simulate as well as optimize PyTorch and TensorFlow models. Specifically for quantization, AIMET includes various post-training quantization (PTQ, cf. chapter 4) and quantization-aware training (QAT, cf. chapter 5) techniques that guarantee near floating-point accuracy for 8-bit fixed-point inference. We provide a practical guide to quantization via AIMET by covering PTQ and QAT workflows, code examples and practical tips that enable users to efficiently and effectively quantize models using AIMET and reap the benefits of low-bit integer inference.
Quantization techniques applied to the inference of deep neural networks have enabled fast and efficient execution on resource-constraint devices. The success of quantization during inference has motivated the academic community to explore fully quantized training, i.e. quantizing backpropagation as well. However, effective gradient quantization is still an open problem. Gradients are unbounded and their distribution changes significantly during training, which leads to the need for dynamic quantization. As we show, dynamic quantization can lead to significant memory overhead and additional data traffic slowing down training. We propose a simple alternative to dynamic quantization, in-hindsight range estimation, that uses the quantization ranges estimated on previous iterations to quantize the present. Our approach enables fast static quantization of gradients and activations while requiring only minimal hardware support from the neural network accelerator to keep track of output statistics in an online fashion. It is intended as a drop-in replacement for estimating quantization ranges and can be used in conjunction with other advances in quantized training. We compare our method to existing methods for range estimation from the quantized training literature and demonstrate its effectiveness with a range of architectures, including MobileNetV2, on image classification benchmarks (Tiny ImageNet & ImageNet).
When training neural networks with simulated quantization, we observe that quantized weights can, rather unexpectedly, oscillate between two grid-points. The importance of this effect and its impact on quantization-aware training are not well-understood or investigated in literature. In this paper, we delve deeper into the phenomenon of weight oscillations and show that it can lead to a significant accuracy degradation due to wrongly estimated batch-normalization statistics during inference and increased noise during training. These effects are particularly pronounced in low-bit (≤ 4-bits) quantization of efficient networks with depth-wise separable layers, such as MobileNets and EfficientNets. In our analysis we investigate several previously proposed quantization-aware training (QAT) algorithms and show that most of these are unable to overcome oscillations. Finally, we propose two novel QAT algorithms to overcome oscillations during training: oscillation dampening and iterative weight freezing. We demonstrate that our algorithms achieve state-of-the-art accuracy for low-bit (3 & 4 bits) weight and activation quantization of efficient architectures, such as MobileNetV2, MobileNetV3, and EfficentNet-lite on ImageNet.
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