Dataset Distillation
Abstract
Model distillation aims to distill the knowledge of a complex model into a simpler one. In this paper, we consider an alternative formulation called dataset distillation: we keep the model fixed and instead attempt to distill the knowledge from a large training dataset into a small one. The idea is to synthesize a small number of data points that do not need to come from the correct data distribution, but will, when given to the learning algorithm as training data, approximate the model trained on the original data. For example, we show that it is possible to compress 60,000 MNIST training images into just 10 synthetic distilled images (one per class) and achieve close to original performance with only a few gradient descent steps, given a fixed network initialization. We evaluate our method in various initialization settings and with different learning objectives. Experiments on multiple datasets show the advantage of our approach compared to alternative methods.
revised version, 24 Feb 2020
BibTeX
@misc{Wang-2018-125682,author = {Tongzhou Wang and Jun-Yan Zhu and Antonio Torralba and Alexei A. Efros},
title = {Dataset Distillation},
booktitle = {arXiv: 1811.10959},
month = {December},
year = {2018},
pages = {1 - 14},
}