407

Benefits of Learning Rate Annealing for Tuning-Robustness in Stochastic Optimization

Main:10 Pages
4 Figures
Bibliography:4 Pages
Appendix:9 Pages
Abstract

The learning rate in stochastic gradient methods is a critical hyperparameter that is notoriously costly to tune via standard grid search, especially for training modern large-scale models with billions of parameters. We identify a theoretical advantage of learning rate annealing schemes that decay the learning rate to zero at a polynomial rate, such as the widely-used cosine schedule, by demonstrating their increased robustness to initial parameter misspecification due to a coarse grid search. We present an analysis in a stochastic convex optimization setup demonstrating that the convergence rate of stochastic gradient descent with annealed schedules depends sublinearly on the multiplicative misspecification factor ρ\rho (i.e., the grid resolution), achieving a rate of O(ρ1/(2p+1)/T)O(\rho^{1/(2p+1)}/\sqrt{T}) where pp is the degree of polynomial decay and TT is the number of steps, in contrast to the O(ρ/T)O(\rho/\sqrt{T}) rate that arises with fixed stepsizes and exhibits a linear dependence on ρ\rho. Experiments confirm the increased robustness compared to tuning with a fixed stepsize, that has significant implications for the computational overhead of hyperparameter search in practical training scenarios.

View on arXiv
Comments on this paper