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Federated Learning of Models Pretrained on Different Features with Consensus Graphs

In: Handbook of Trustworthy Federated Learning

Author

Listed:
  • Tengfei Ma

    (Stony Brook University)

  • Jie Chen

    (IBM Research)

  • Trong Nghia Hoang

    (Washington State University)

Abstract

Learning an effective global model on private and decentralized data sets has become an increasingly important challenge of machine learning in practice. Existing federated learning paradigms enable this via model aggregation that enforces a strong form of modeling homogeneity and synchronicity across clients. This is however not suitable to many practical scenarios. For example, in distributed sensing, heterogeneous sensors reading data from different views of the same phenomenon would need to use different models for different data modalities. Local learning therefore happens in isolation, but inference requires merging the local models to achieve consensus. This can be addressed with a feature fusion scheme that extracts local representations from local models and incorporates them into a global representation that improves the prediction performance. Achieving this in turn requires addressing two problems: (1) learning how to align similar feature components, which are arbitrarily arranged across clients, to enable representation aggregation and (2) constructing a consensus graph that captures the high-order interactions between local feature spaces and how to combine them to achieve a better prediction. This chapter will discuss recently developed solutions to these problems and illustrate their real-world applications in domains such as power grids and traffic networks, which are represented with time series data.

Suggested Citation

  • Tengfei Ma & Jie Chen & Trong Nghia Hoang, 2025. "Federated Learning of Models Pretrained on Different Features with Consensus Graphs," Springer Optimization and Its Applications, in: My T. Thai & Hai N. Phan & Bhavani Thuraisingham (ed.), Handbook of Trustworthy Federated Learning, pages 289-319, Springer.
  • Handle: RePEc:spr:spochp:978-3-031-58923-2_10
    DOI: 10.1007/978-3-031-58923-2_10
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