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Benchopt: Reproducible, efficient and collaborative optimization benchmarks

27 June 2022
Thomas Moreau
Mathurin Massias
Alexandre Gramfort
Pierre Ablin
Pierre-Antoine Bannier Benjamin Charlier
Benjamin Charlier
Mathieu Dagréou
Tom Dupré la Tour
G. Durif
C. Dantas
Quentin Klopfenstein
Johan Larsson
En-Hung Lai
Tanguy Lefort
Benoit Malézieux
Badr Moufad
Binh Duc Nguyen
A. Rakotomamonjy
Zaccharie Ramzi
Joseph Salmon
Samuel Vaiter
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Abstract

Numerical validation is at the core of machine learning research as it allows to assess the actual impact of new methods, and to confirm the agreement between theory and practice. Yet, the rapid development of the field poses several challenges: researchers are confronted with a profusion of methods to compare, limited transparency and consensus on best practices, as well as tedious re-implementation work. As a result, validation is often very partial, which can lead to wrong conclusions that slow down the progress of research. We propose Benchopt, a collaborative framework to automate, reproduce and publish optimization benchmarks in machine learning across programming languages and hardware architectures. Benchopt simplifies benchmarking for the community by providing an off-the-shelf tool for running, sharing and extending experiments. To demonstrate its broad usability, we showcase benchmarks on three standard learning tasks: ℓ2\ell_2ℓ2​-regularized logistic regression, Lasso, and ResNet18 training for image classification. These benchmarks highlight key practical findings that give a more nuanced view of the state-of-the-art for these problems, showing that for practical evaluation, the devil is in the details. We hope that Benchopt will foster collaborative work in the community hence improving the reproducibility of research findings.

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