Loading a trained Keras model and continue training

廉价感情. 提交于 2019-11-27 02:45:12

Actually - model.save saves all information need for restarting training in your case. The only thing which could be spoiled by reloading model is your optimizer state. To check that - try to save and reload model and train it on training data.

Wolfgang

The problem might be that you use a different optimizer - or different arguments to your optimizer. I just had the same issue with a custom pretrained model, using

reduce_lr = ReduceLROnPlateau(monitor='loss', factor=lr_reduction_factor,
                              patience=patience, min_lr=min_lr, verbose=1)

for the pretrained model, whereby the original learning rate starts at 0.0003 and during pre-training it is reduced to the min_learning rate, which is 0.000003

I just copied that line over to the script which uses the pre-trained model and got really bad accuracies. Until I noticed that the last learning rate of the pretrained model was the min learning rate, i.e. 0.000003. And if I start with that learning rate, I get exactly the same accuracies to start with as the output of the pretrained model - which makes sense, as starting with a learning rate that is 100 times bigger than the last learning rate used in the pretrained model will result in a huge overshoot of GD and hence in heavily decreased accuracies.

Notice that Keras sometimes has issues with loaded models, as in here. This might explain cases in which you don't start from the same trained accuracy.

All above helps, you must resume from same learning rate() as the LR when the model and weights were saved. Set it directly on the optimizer.

Note that improvement from there is not guaranteed, because the model may have reached the local minimum, which may be global. There is no point to resume a model in order to search for another local minimum, unless you intent to increase the learning rate in a controlled fashion and nudge the model into a possibly better minimum not far away.

You might also be hitting Concept Drift, see Should you retrain a model when new observations are available. There's also the concept of catastrophic forgetting which a bunch of academic papers discuss. Here's one with MNIST Empirical investigation of catastrophic forgetting

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