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Moreno Álvarez, Sergio

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Moreno Álvarez
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Mostrando 1 - 10 de 13
  • Publicación
    Heterogeneous gradient computing optimization for scalable deep neural networks
    (Springer, 2022) Moreno Álvarez, Sergio; Paoletti, Mercedes Eugenia; Rico Gallego, Juan Antonio; Haut, Juan M.; https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1030-3729; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4264-7473; https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6701-961X
    Nowadays, data processing applications based on neural networks cope with the growth in the amount of data to be processed and with the increase in both the depth and complexity of the neural networks architectures, and hence in the number of parameters to be learned. High-performance computing platforms are provided with fast computing resources, including multi-core processors and graphical processing units, to manage such computational burden of deep neural network applications. A common optimization technique is to distribute the workload between the processes deployed on the resources of the platform. This approach is known as data-parallelism. Each process, known as replica, trains its own copy of the model on a disjoint data partition. Nevertheless, the heterogeneity of the computational resources composing the platform requires to unevenly distribute the workload between the replicas according to its computational capabilities, to optimize the overall execution performance. Since the amount of data to be processed is different in each replica, the influence of the gradients computed by the replicas in the global parameter updating should be different. This work proposes a modification of the gradient computation method that considers the different speeds of the replicas, and hence, its amount of data assigned. The experimental results have been conducted on heterogeneous high-performance computing platforms for a wide range of models and datasets, showing an improvement in the final accuracy with respect to current techniques, with a comparable performance.
  • Publicación
    Cloud-Based Analysis of Large-Scale Hyperspectral Imagery for Oil Spill Detection
    (IEEE, 2024) Haut, Juan M.; Moreno Álvarez, Sergio; Pastor Vargas, Rafael; Pérez García, Ámbar; Paoletti, Mercedes Eugenia; https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6701-961X; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4089-9538; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2943-6348; https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1030-3729
    Spectral indices are of fundamental importance in providing insights into the distinctive characteristics of oil spills, making them indispensable tools for effective action planning. The normalized difference oil index (NDOI) is a reliable metric and suitable for the detection of coastal oil spills, effectively leveraging the visible and near-infrared (VNIR) spectral bands offered by commercial sensors. The present study explores the calculation of NDOI with a primary focus on leveraging remotely sensed imagery with rich spectral data. This undertaking necessitates a robust infrastructure to handle and process large datasets, thereby demanding significant memory resources and ensuring scalability. To overcome these challenges, a novel cloud-based approach is proposed in this study to conduct the distributed implementation of the NDOI calculation. This approach offers an accessible and intuitive solution, empowering developers to harness the benefits of cloud platforms. The evaluation of the proposal is conducted by assessing its performance using the scene acquired by the airborne visible infrared imaging spectrometer (AVIRIS) sensor during the 2010 oil rig disaster in the Gulf of Mexico. The catastrophic nature of the event and the subsequent challenges underscore the importance of remote sensing (RS) in facilitating decision-making processes. In this context, cloud-based approaches have emerged as a prominent technological advancement in the RS field. The experimental results demonstrate noteworthy performance by the proposed cloud-based approach and pave the path for future research for fast decision-making applications in scalable environments.
  • Publicación
    Self-Supervised Learning on Small In-Domain Datasets Can Overcome Supervised Learning in Remote Sensing
    (IEEE, 2024) Sanchez-Fernandez, Andres J.; Moreno Álvarez, Sergio; Rico Gallego, Juan Antonio; Tabik, Siham; https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6743-3570; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4264-7473; https://orcid.org/0000-0003-4093-5356
    The availability of high-resolution satellite images has accelerated the creation of new datasets designed to tackle broader remote sensing (RS) problems. Although popular tasks, such as scene classification, have received significant attention, the recent release of the Land-1.0 RS dataset marks the initiation of endeavors to estimate land-use and land-cover (LULC) fraction values per RGB satellite image. This challenging problem involves estimating LULC composition, i.e., the proportion of different LULC classes from satellite imagery, with major applications in environmental monitoring, agricultural/urban planning, and climate change studies. Currently, supervised deep learning models—the state-of-the-art in image classification—require large volumes of labeled training data to provide good generalization. To face the challenges posed by the scarcity of labeled RS data, self-supervised learning (SSL) models have recently emerged, learning directly from unlabeled data by leveraging the underlying structure. This is the first article to investigate the performance of SSL in LULC fraction estimation on RGB satellite patches using in-domain knowledge. We also performed a complementary analysis on LULC scene classification. Specifically, we pretrained Barlow Twins, MoCov2, SimCLR, and SimSiam SSL models with ResNet-18 using the Sentinel2GlobalLULC small RS dataset and then performed transfer learning to downstream tasks on Land-1.0. Our experiments demonstrate that SSL achieves competitive or slightly better results when trained on a smaller high-quality in-domain dataset of 194 877 samples compared to the supervised model trained on ImageNet-1k with 1 281 167 samples. This outcome highlights the effectiveness of SSL using in-distribution datasets, demonstrating efficient learning with fewer but more relevant data.
  • Publicación
    Training deep neural networks: a static load balancing approach
    (Springer, 2020-03-02) Moreno Álvarez, Sergio; Haut, Juan Mario; Paoletti, Mercedes Eugenia; Rico Gallego, Juan Antonio; Díaz Martín, Juan Carlos; Plaza, Javier; https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1030-3729; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4264-7473; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8435-3844; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8908-1606
    Deep neural networks are currently trained under data-parallel setups on high-performance computing (HPC) platforms, so that a replica of the full model is charged to each computational resource using non-overlapped subsets known as batches. Replicas combine the computed gradients to update their local copies at the end of each batch. However, differences in performance of resources assigned to replicas in current heterogeneous platforms induce waiting times when synchronously combining gradients, leading to an overall performance degradation. Albeit asynchronous communication of gradients has been proposed as an alternative, it suffers from the so-called staleness problem. This is due to the fact that the training in each replica is computed using a stale version of the parameters, which negatively impacts the accuracy of the resulting model. In this work, we study the application of well-known HPC static load balancing techniques to the distributed training of deep models. Our approach is assigning a different batch size to each replica, proportional to its relative computing capacity, hence minimizing the staleness problem. Our experimental results (obtained in the context of a remotely sensed hyperspectral image processing application) show that, while the classification accuracy is kept constant, the training time substantially decreases with respect to unbalanced training. This is illustrated using heterogeneous computing platforms, made up of CPUs and GPUs with different performance.
  • Publicación
    Deep mixed precision for hyperspectral image classification
    (Springer, 2021-02-03) Paoletti, Mercedes Eugenia; X. Tao; Haut, Juan Mario; Moreno Álvarez, Sergio; Plaza, Antonio; https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1030-3729; https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6701-961X; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9613-1659
    Hyperspectral images (HSIs) record scenes at different wavelength channels, providing detailed spatial and spectral information. How to storage and process this highdimensional data plays a vital role in many practical applications, where classification technologies have emerged as excellent processing tools. However, their high computational complexity and energy requirements bring some challenges. Adopting low-power consumption architectures and deep learning (DL) approaches has to provide acceptable computing capabilities without reducing accuracy demand. However, most DL architectures employ single-precision (FP32) to train models, and some big DL architectures will have a limitation on memory and computation resources. This can negatively affect the network learning process. This letter leads these challenges by using mixed precision into DL architectures for HSI classification to speed up the training process and reduce the memory consumption/access. Proposed models are evaluated on four widely used data sets. Also, low and highpower consumption devices are compared, considering NVIDIA Jetson Xavier and Titan RTX GPUs, to evaluate the proposal viability in on-board processing devices. Obtained results demonstrate the efficiency and effectiveness of these models within HSI classification task for both devices. Source codes: https ://githu b.com/mhaut / CNN-MP-HSI.
  • Publicación
    A tool to assess the communication cost of parallel kernels on heterogeneous platforms
    (Springer, 2020) Rico Gallego, Juan Antonio; Moreno Álvarez, Sergio; Díaz Martín, Juan Carlos; Lastovetsky, Alexey L.; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4264-7473; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8435-3844; https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9460-3897
    Ensuring applications to achieve an efficient usage of resources and fast execution time in the complex current heterogeneous high-performance computing platforms is a paramount problem. Essential efforts to reach the goal are the optimal partitioning of the data space between the processes composing a typical task/data-parallel application, and their right mapping and deployment on the platform. The computational and communication performance modeling describing the platform and the application behaviors is an increasingly recognized approach. This paper discusses the utility of the τ–Lop analytic communication performance model in facing these issues and contributes with a practical symbolic computation tool that represents, manipulates and accurately evaluates the formal communication cost expression derived from a hybrid kernel. We identify a set of scenarios where the tool could be applied, provide with both basic and advanced use examples and evaluate the tool on real-life kernels.
  • Publicación
    Federated learning meets remote sensing
    (ELSEVIER, 2024-12-01) Moreno Álvarez, Sergio; Paoletti, Mercedes Eugenia; Sanchez Fernandez, Andres J.; Rico Gallego, Juan Antonio; han, lirong; Haut, Juan M.; https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1030-3729; https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6743-3570; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4264-7473; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8613-7037; https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6701-961X
    Remote sensing (RS) imagery provides invaluable insights into characterizing the Earth’s land surface within the scope of Earth observation (EO). Technological advances in capture instrumentation, coupled with the rise in the number of EO missions aimed at data acquisition, have significantly increased the volume of accessible RS data. This abundance of information has alleviated the challenge of insufficient training samples, a common issue in the application of machine learning (ML) techniques. In this context, crowd-sourced data play a crucial role in gathering diverse information from multiple sources, resulting in heterogeneous datasets that enable applications to harness a more comprehensive spatial coverage of the surface. However, the sensitive nature of RS data requires ensuring the privacy of the complete collection. Consequently, federated learning (FL) emerges as a privacy-preserving solution, allowing collaborators to combine such information from decentralized private data collections to build efficient global models. This paper explores the convergence between the FL and RS domains, specifically in developing data classifiers. To this aim, an extensive set of experiments is conducted to analyze the properties and performance of novel FL methodologies. The main emphasis is on evaluating the influence of such heterogeneous and disjoint data among collaborating clients. Moreover, scalability is evaluated for a growing number of clients, and resilience is assessed against Byzantine attacks. Finally, the work concludes with future directions and serves as the opening of a new research avenue for developing efficient RS applications under the FL paradigm. The source code is publicly available at https://github.com/hpc-unex/FLmeetsRS.
  • Publicación
    Hyperspectral Image Analysis Using Cloud-Based Support Vector Machines
    (Springer, 2024) Haut, Juan M.; Franco Valiente, José M.; Paoletti, Mercedes Eugenia; Moreno Álvarez, Sergio; Pardo-Diaz, Alfonso; https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6701-961X; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3880-6697; https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1030-3729
    Hyperspectral image processing techniques involve time-consuming calculations due to the large volume and complexity of the data. Indeed, hyperspectral scenes contain a wealth of spatial and spectral information thanks to the hundreds of narrow and continuous bands collected across the electromagnetic spectrum. Predictive models, particularly supervised machine learning classifiers, take advantage of this information to predict the pixel categories of images through a training set of real observations. Most notably, the Support Vector Machine (SVM) has demonstrate impressive accuracy results for image classification. Notwithstanding the performance offered by SVMs, dealing with such a large volume of data is computationally challenging. In this paper, a scalable and high-performance cloud-based approach for distributed training of SVM is proposed. The proposal address the overwhelming amount of remote sensing (RS) data information through a parallel training allocation. The implementation is performed over a memory-efficient Apache Spark distributed environment. Experiments are performed on a benchmark of real hyperspectral scenes to show the robustness of the proposal. Obtained results demonstrate efficient classification whilst optimising data processing in terms of training times.
  • Publicación
    Distributed Deep Learning for Remote Sensing Data Interpretation
    (IEEE, 2021-03-15) Haut, Juan Mario; Paoletti, Mercedes Eugenia; Moreno Álvarez, Sergio; Plaza, Javier; Rico Gallego, Juan Antonio; Plaza, Antonio; https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6701-961X; https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1030-3729; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2384-9141; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4264-7473; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9613-1659
    As a newly emerging technology, deep learning (DL) is a very promising field in big data applications. Remote sensing often involves huge data volumes obtained daily by numerous in-orbit satellites. This makes it a perfect target area for data-driven applications. Nowadays, technological advances in terms of software and hardware have a noticeable impact on Earth observation applications, more specifically in remote sensing techniques and procedures, allowing for the acquisition of data sets with greater quality at higher acquisition ratios. This results in the collection of huge amounts of remotely sensed data, characterized by their large spatial resolution (in terms of the number of pixels per scene), and very high spectral dimensionality, with hundreds or even thousands of spectral bands. As a result, remote sensing instruments on spaceborne and airborne platforms are now generating data cubes with extremely high dimensionality, imposing several restrictions in terms of both processing runtimes and storage capacity. In this article, we provide a comprehensive review of the state of the art in DL for remote sensing data interpretation, analyzing the strengths and weaknesses of the most widely used techniques in the literature, as well as an exhaustive description of their parallel and distributed implementations (with a particular focus on those conducted using cloud computing systems). We also provide quantitative results, offering an assessment of a DL technique in a specific case study (source code available: https://github.com/mhaut/cloud-dnn-HSI). This article concludes with some remarks and hints about future challenges in the application of DL techniques to distributed remote sensing data interpretation problems. We emphasize the role of the cloud in providing a powerful architecture that is now able to manage vast amounts of remotely sensed data due to its implementation simplicity, low cost, and high efficiency compared to other parallel and distributed architectures, such as grid computing or dedicated clusters.
  • Publicación
    A Comprehensive Survey of Imbalance Correction Techniques for Hyperspectral Data Classification
    (IEEE, 2023) Paoletti, Mercedes Eugenia; Mogollón Gutiérrez, Óscar; Moreno Álvarez, Sergio; Sancho, José Carlos; Haut, Juan M.; https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1030-3729; https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2980-9236; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4584-6945; https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6701-961X
    Land-cover classification is an important topic for remotely sensed hyperspectral (HS) data exploitation. In this regard, HS classifiers have to face important challenges, such as the high spectral redundancy, as well as noise, present in the data, and the fact that obtaining accurate labeled training data for supervised classification is expensive and time-consuming. As a result, the availability of large amounts of training samples, needed to alleviate the so-called Hughes phenomenon, is often unfeasible in practice. The class-imbalance problem, which results from the uneven distribution of labeled samples per class, is also a very challenging factor for HS classifiers. In this article, a comprehensive review of oversampling techniques is provided, which mitigate the aforementioned issues by generating new samples for the minority classes. More specifically, this article pursues a twofold objective. First, it reviews the most relevant oversampling methods that can be adopted according to the nature of HS data. Second, it provides a comprehensive experimental study and comparison, which are useful to derive practical conclusions about the performance of oversampling techniques in different HS image-based applications.