Paper ID: 2403.07404

Auxiliary Classifiers Improve Stability and Efficiency in Continual Learning

Filip Szatkowski, Fei Yang, Bartłomiej Twardowski, Tomasz Trzciński, Joost van de Weijer

Continual learning is crucial for applications in dynamic environments, where machine learning models must adapt to changing data distributions while retaining knowledge of previous tasks. Despite significant advancements, catastrophic forgetting - where performance on earlier tasks degrades as new information is learned - remains a key challenge. In this work, we investigate the stability of intermediate neural network layers during continual learning and explore how auxiliary classifiers (ACs) can leverage this stability to improve performance. We show that early network layers remain more stable during learning, particularly for older tasks, and that ACs applied to these layers can outperform standard classifiers on past tasks. By integrating ACs into several continual learning algorithms, we demonstrate consistent and significant performance improvements on standard benchmarks. Additionally, we explore dynamic inference, showing that AC-augmented continual learning methods can reduce computational costs by up to 60\% while maintaining or exceeding the accuracy of standard methods. Our findings suggest that ACs offer a promising avenue for enhancing continual learning models, providing both improved performance and the ability to adapt the network computation in environments where such flexibility might be required.

Submitted: Mar 12, 2024