Abstract

The past decade has witnessed the superior power of deep neural networks (DNNs) in applications across various domains. However, training a high-quality DNN remains a non-trivial task due to its massive number of parameters. Visualization has shown great potential in addressing this situation, as evidenced by numerous recent visualization works that aid in DNN training and interpretation. These works commonly employ a strategy of logging training-related data and conducting post-hoc analysis. Based on the results of offline analysis, the model can be further trained or fine-tuned. This strategy, however, does not cope with the increasing complexity of DNNs, because (1) the time-series data collected over the training are usually too large to be stored entirely; (2) the huge I/O overhead significantly impacts the training efficiency; (3) post-hoc analysis does not allow rapid human-interventions (e.g., stop training with improper hyper-parameter settings to save computational resources). To address these challenges, we propose an in-situ visualization and analysis framework for the training of DNNs. Specifically, we employ feature extraction algorithms to reduce the size of training-related data in-situ and use the reduced data for real-time visual analytics. The states of model training are disclosed to model designers in real-time, enabling human interventions on demand to steer the training. Through concrete case studies, we demonstrate how our in-situ framework helps deep learning experts optimize DNNs and improve their analysis efficiency.

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