Abstract:The Government of Kerala had increased the frequency of supply of free food kits owing to the pandemic, however, these items were static and not indicative of the personal preferences of the consumers. This paper conducts a comparative analysis of various clustering techniques on a scaled-down version of a real-world dataset obtained through a conjoint analysis-based survey. Clustering carried out by centroid-based methods such as k means is analyzed and the results are plotted along with SVD, and finally, a conclusion is reached as to which among the two is better. Once the clusters have been formulated, commodities are also decided upon for each cluster. Also, clustering is further enhanced by reassignment, based on a specific cluster loss threshold. Thus, the most efficacious clustering technique for designing a food kit tailored to the needs of individuals is finally obtained.
Abstract:Quantizing weights and activations of deep neural networks is essential for deploying them in resource-constrained devices, or cloud platforms for at-scale services. While binarization is a special case of quantization, this extreme case often leads to several training difficulties, and necessitates specialized models and training methods. As a result, recent quantization methods do not provide binarization, thus losing the most resource-efficient option, and quantized and binarized networks have been distinct research areas. We examine binarization difficulties in a quantization framework and find that all we need to enable the binary training are a symmetric quantizer, good initialization, and careful hyperparameter selection. These techniques also lead to substantial improvements in multi-bit quantization. We demonstrate our unified quantization framework, denoted as UniQ, on the ImageNet dataset with various architectures such as ResNet-18,-34 and MobileNetV2. For multi-bit quantization, UniQ outperforms existing methods to achieve the state-of-the-art accuracy. In binarization, the achieved accuracy is comparable to existing state-of-the-art methods even without modifying the original architectures.