Abstract:Filter pruning has been widely used in the compression and acceleration of convolutional neural networks (CNNs). However, most existing methods are still challenged by heavy compute cost and biased filter selection. Moreover, most designs for filter evaluation miss interpretability due to the lack of appropriate theoretical guidance. In this paper, we propose a novel filter pruning method which evaluates filters in a interpretable, multi-persepective and data-free manner. We introduce information capacity, a metric that represents the amount of information contained in a filter. Based on the interpretability and validity of information entropy, we propose to use that as a quantitative index of information quantity. Besides, we experimently show that the obvious correlation between the entropy of the feature map and the corresponding filter, so as to propose an interpretable, data-driven scheme to measure the information capacity of the filter. Further, we introduce information independence, another metric that represents the correlation among differrent filters. Consequently, the least impotant filters, which have less information capacity and less information independence, will be pruned. We evaluate our method on two benchmarks using multiple representative CNN architectures, including VGG-16 and ResNet. On CIFAR-10, we reduce 71.9% of floating-point operations (FLOPs) and 69.4% of parameters for ResNet-110 with 0.28% accuracy increase. On ILSVRC-2012, we reduce 76.6% of floating-point operations (FLOPs) and 68.6% of parameters for ResNet-50 with only 2.80% accuracy decrease, which outperforms the state-of-the-arts.