AI-generated summaries
Today's ML research,
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Daily summaries of the latest machine learning papers from arXiv, processed every 8 hours.
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Meta-Ensemble Learning with Diverse Data Splits for Improved Respiratory Sound Classification
Audio & Speech
- Introduction of a meta-ensemble learning method that leverages data diversity through distinct data splits.
- Evaluation of various meta-model architectures, including feedforward and Transformer-based models.
- Demonstration that data diversity at the base model level significantly enhances generalization.
- Achievement of state-of-the-art performance on the ICBHI dataset and robust results on clinical validation datasets.
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Meta-Ensemble Learning with Diverse Data Splits for Improved Respiratory Sound Classification
Summary
This paper addresses the challenges in training robust respiratory sound classification (RSC) models due to limited dataset size and subject diversity. The authors propose a novel meta-ensemble learning methodology that enhances prediction diversity by training base models on diverse data splits. They utilize two data split settings: a fixed 80-20% split and a five-fold cross-validation split, along with two granularity levels: patient-level and sample-level. This results in four distinct partitioning strategies for training base models. The meta-model then combines the outputs of these diverse base models to improve generalization. The proposed method achieves state-of-the-art performance on the ICBHI benchmark with a score of 66.49% and demonstrates improved generalization on two out-of-distribution datasets, indicating its potential for real-world clinical applications.
Methodology
The authors implemented a meta-ensemble learning framework that trains base classifiers on diverse data splits, specifically using fixed and cross-validation splits at both patient and sample levels. The outputs of these base models are then aggregated by a trained meta-model to optimize prediction accuracy.
Results
The proposed approach achieved a score of 66.49% on the ICBHI benchmark, surpassing previous state-of-the-art results. Additionally, the method showed improved generalization capabilities on two out-of-distribution datasets, indicating its robustness and applicability in clinical settings.
Implications
The findings suggest that incorporating diverse data splits in ensemble learning can significantly enhance the performance of respiratory sound classification models, making them more applicable in real-world clinical scenarios where data diversity is crucial.
GraphPL: Leveraging GNN for Efficient and Robust Modalities Imputation in Patchwork Learning
Graph Learning
Multimodal
- GraphPL effectively addresses the modality collapse issue prevalent in existing methods.
- The framework leverages GNNs for dynamic and adaptive fusion of modalities.
- GraphPL shows an average improvement of 9.2% in imputation tasks across simulated datasets.
- On the real-world EHR dataset eICU, it achieves an average improvement of 8.7% over baseline methods.
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GraphPL: Leveraging GNN for Efficient and Robust Modalities Imputation in Patchwork Learning
Summary
The paper addresses the challenges of multi-modal learning in distributed environments where clients have incomplete access to various modalities due to privacy concerns. It introduces GraphPL, a novel framework that utilizes Graph Neural Networks (GNNs) to enhance modality imputation in patchwork learning scenarios. The authors highlight the limitations of existing methods that often rely on a subset of observed modalities, leading to modality collapse and suboptimal performance. GraphPL constructs a modality-modality graph to dynamically fuse information from all available modalities, thereby improving robustness against noise and enhancing the quality of imputed modalities. Experimental results demonstrate that GraphPL outperforms state-of-the-art methods on benchmark datasets and real-world electronic health record data, achieving significant improvements in downstream tasks such as disease prediction and treatment recommendation.
Methodology
GraphPL employs a GNN-based fusion module that constructs a modality-modality graph, where each modality is represented as a node. The framework utilizes Variational Autoencoders (VAEs) for encoding observed modalities into latent representations, which are then fused through a message-passing mechanism in the GNN. This allows for flexible integration of information from all available modalities, facilitating effective imputation of missing modalities.
Results
GraphPL achieves state-of-the-art performance on benchmark datasets, with improvements of 8.8%, 13.9%, and 4.8% in generation quality on simulated datasets. In real-world applications on the eICU dataset, it shows gains of 11.5%, 6.5%, and 8.0% in disease diagnosis, drug recommendation, and treatment recommendation tasks, respectively.
Implications
The findings suggest that GraphPL can significantly enhance the capabilities of multi-modal learning systems in healthcare and other domains where data privacy is a concern. Its robust modality imputation can improve decision-making processes in clinical settings, potentially leading to better patient outcomes.
Perfecting Aircraft Maneuvers with Reinforcement Learning
Reinforcement Learning
Robotics
- The proposed RL algorithm can be applied to any physically acceptable maneuver with available trajectory data.
- Real pilot data was utilized, demonstrating that AI can achieve performance comparable to professional pilots.
- The study addresses stability issues commonly found in supervised learning approaches for aerobatic maneuvers.
- The algorithm allows for the generation of scaled versions of maneuvers using the same reference trajectory.
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Perfecting Aircraft Maneuvers with Reinforcement Learning
Summary
This paper explores the application of reinforcement learning (RL) to enhance aircraft aerobatic maneuvers, aiming to develop an AI-assisted pilot training module. The authors implemented two distinct RL methodologies utilizing soft-actor critic (SAC) models and hyper-parameter optimization to simulate various aircraft maneuvers. The first method leverages flight records from expert pilots to train the AI to replicate their maneuvers, while the second method uses mathematical models of intended maneuvers when pilot data is unavailable. Both approaches utilize a reward/punishment paradigm to guide the learning process, focusing on achieving target states for roll, gamma, yaw, and speed while minimizing oscillations and vibrations. The results indicate that the developed models can match the performance of professional pilots, showcasing the potential of AI in pilot training scenarios. The research also highlights the generality of the proposed algorithm, its ability to use real pilot data, and the stability and scalability of the maneuvers generated. Furthermore, the authors demonstrate that domain knowledge can help create noise-free trajectories, leading to more accurate maneuvers compared to those performed by real pilots.
Methodology
The authors developed two RL-based methods for training AI models to perform aircraft maneuvers. The first method uses flight data from expert pilots to train the model to replicate their maneuvers, while the second method constructs mathematical models of maneuvers when pilot data is not available. Both methods employ a reward/punishment system based on the proximity of the aircraft's state to target values.
Results
The final models were evaluated using simulation data and test pilots, achieving performance levels comparable to those of professional pilots. The research demonstrated the effectiveness of RL in training for aerobatic maneuvers, addressing stability and scalability issues, and allowing for the generation of complex maneuvers.
Implications
The findings suggest that RL can significantly enhance pilot training programs by providing realistic simulations of aircraft maneuvers. This could lead to improved training efficiency and effectiveness, ultimately enhancing pilot performance in real-world scenarios.
Dynamic Regret for Online Regression in RKHS via Discounted VAW and Subspace Approximation
Theory
Optimization
- The paper extends the discounted VAW approach to the RKHS setting for online regression.
- It introduces a general orthogonal truncation method for constructing RKHS from feature expansions.
- Dynamic regret bounds are derived for both fast and slow regimes based on eigenvalue decay.
- The method controls approximation errors through uniform projection errors of kernel sections.
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Dynamic Regret for Online Regression in RKHS via Discounted VAW and Subspace Approximation
Summary
This paper investigates online regression with square loss in a reproducing kernel Hilbert space (RKHS) under a dynamic regret framework. The authors propose a method that adapts the finite-dimensional discounted Vovk–Azoury–Warmuth (VAW) approach to the RKHS setting using finite-dimensional subspace approximations. The method involves running a VAW-based ensemble of forecasters over a geometric grid of discount factors while controlling the approximation error through the uniform projection error of kernel sections. The paper introduces a general orthogonal truncation method to construct RKHS from feature expansions, ensuring orthonormality of feature functions. The authors derive fast-regime bounds for Gaussian and analytic dot-product kernels and provide a spectral approximation method using Mercer truncations, leading to dynamic regret bounds that vary with eigenvalue decay. The study also explores subspaces spanned by kernel sections, applying the construction to Matérn kernels, thereby extending the understanding of dynamic regret in RKHS settings.
Methodology
The authors adapt the discounted VAW methodology to RKHS by approximating it with finite-dimensional subspaces. They utilize VAW-based ensembles to manage both the discount parameter and the approximation dimension, while controlling approximation errors through a comparison of losses between the comparator function and its projection onto the chosen subspace.
Results
The paper establishes dynamic regret bounds that depend on the path length of the comparator sequence in RKHS. It demonstrates that the proposed method yields fast-regime bounds for Gaussian and analytic dot-product kernels, as well as dynamic regret bounds in varying regimes based on eigenvalue decay for Mercer truncations.
Implications
The findings have significant implications for online learning in nonstationary environments, where the target predictor may change over time. The methods developed can enhance the performance of online regression tasks in machine learning applications, particularly those involving kernel methods.
Gradient-Direction Sensitivity Reveals Linear-Centroid Coupling Hidden by Optimizer Trajectories
Theory
Interpretability
Optimization
- Traditional optimizer trajectory analysis often fails to capture feature-relevant directions in parameter space.
- Gradient-based SED provides a more accurate representation of feature formation compared to update-based SED.
- In multitask settings, gradient aggregation obscures important structure, necessitating task-resolved analysis.
- Causal interventions reveal that low-rank structures, rather than specific directions, are crucial for understanding feature formation.
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Gradient-Direction Sensitivity Reveals Linear-Centroid Coupling Hidden by Optimizer Trajectories
Summary
This paper investigates the limitations of traditional optimizer trajectory analysis in understanding feature formation in deep learning models. The authors highlight that common diagnostics, such as the top right singular vectors of parameter updates (update SED), fail to accurately capture the directions in parameter space that correspond to feature formation. They propose an alternative approach using gradient-based SED, which performs singular value decomposition (SVD) on gradients rather than optimizer updates. This method reveals a significantly stronger coupling to the Linear Centroids Hypothesis (LCH) across both single-task and multitask settings. In multitask scenarios, the update-based diagnostics collapse, while the gradient-based analysis recovers consistent and informative directions. The authors also conduct causal interventions, demonstrating that constraining updates to low-rank subspaces accelerates learning, indicating that the observed directions are diagnostic of feature formation but not uniquely causal. The findings suggest a methodological shift towards analyzing gradient structures, particularly in multitask settings, to better understand feature formation in neural networks.
Methodology
The authors compare two types of spectral-edge diagnostics: update-based SED, which analyzes optimizer updates, and gradient-based SED, which analyzes gradients at current parameters. They apply these methods to a multitask transformer model trained on modular arithmetic tasks, employing singular value decomposition (SVD) to extract low-rank structures from both types of data. Causal interventions are also performed by constraining updates to low-rank subspaces to assess their impact on learning speed.
Results
The study finds that gradient-based SED significantly outperforms update-based SED, with peak ratios of feature relevance (Rk) increasing by 30-100 times across tasks. In single-task settings, Rk ranges from 100 to 650, while in multitask settings, it achieves 20-45 times. Causal interventions show that constraining updates to a rank-3 subspace accelerates learning by approximately 2.3 times, indicating that low-rank structures are key to feature formation.
Implications
These findings have significant implications for the interpretability of deep learning models, particularly in multitask settings. By emphasizing gradient analysis over optimizer trajectories, researchers and practitioners can gain better insights into feature formation, potentially leading to improved model design and training strategies.
Laplace-Bridged Randomized Smoothing for Fast Certified Robustness
Computer Vision
Efficient ML
Theory
- Introduction of Laplace-Bridged Smoothing (LBS) as a reformulation of Randomized Smoothing (RS).
- LBS eliminates the need for noise-augmented training, reducing training costs and improving clean accuracy.
- Significant reduction in certification costs, achieving speedups of up to 494× on edge devices.
- Demonstrated stronger certified robustness on CIFAR-10 and ImageNet datasets compared to traditional RS.
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Laplace-Bridged Randomized Smoothing for Fast Certified Robustness
Summary
This paper introduces Laplace-Bridged Smoothing (LBS), a novel approach to Randomized Smoothing (RS) that addresses two significant limitations of traditional RS methods: the reliance on noise-augmented training and the high computational cost associated with certification. LBS reformulates RS by utilizing a low-dimensional probability space, specifically through a Gaussian–Dirichlet bridge, to enable efficient and statistically grounded robustness certification within an ℓ2 radius. This approach eliminates the need for extensive noisy forward passes, thus reducing the certification burden significantly. The authors demonstrate that LBS achieves stronger certified robustness on benchmark datasets such as CIFAR-10 and ImageNet while decreasing per-sample certification costs by nearly an order of magnitude. Additionally, LBS shows remarkable performance on resource-constrained devices, achieving speedups of up to 494× compared to traditional RS methods, making it feasible for practical deployment in real-world applications. The theoretical foundation of LBS is also established, providing a closed-form mapping from linearized Gaussian logit statistics to Dirichlet parameters, which supports the validity of the certification process.
Methodology
The authors propose LBS, which analytically propagates input noise through a locally linearized feature extractor to approximate the noisy logit distribution. It then applies a Gaussian–Dirichlet bridge to derive a tractable Dirichlet surrogate for the smoothed predictive distribution. Certification is achieved through Monte Carlo sampling in this low-dimensional Dirichlet space, significantly reducing computational overhead.
Results
LBS improves certified accuracy on CIFAR-10 and ImageNet while reducing certification costs by nearly an order of magnitude. On resource-constrained devices, LBS achieves speedups of up to 494× compared to traditional RS methods, enabling practical certified deployment.
Implications
The findings suggest that LBS can facilitate the deployment of certified defenses in real-time applications, particularly in edge computing scenarios where computational resources are limited. This advancement could enhance the robustness of deep learning models against adversarial attacks in critical applications such as robotics and autonomous systems.
Diffusion-Guided Feature Selection via Nishimori Temperature: Noise-Based Spectral Embedding
Graph Learning
Efficient ML
Theory
- Introduction of Noise-Based Spectral Embedding (NBSE) for feature selection.
- Utilization of the Nishimori temperature for determining critical points in the Bethe–Hessian matrix.
- Achieves up to 70% feature reduction while preserving classification accuracy.
- Demonstrates robustness against noise through theoretical bounds.
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Diffusion-Guided Feature Selection via Nishimori Temperature: Noise-Based Spectral Embedding
Summary
This paper introduces Noise-Based Spectral Embedding (NBSE), a novel framework for feature selection in high-dimensional data leveraging diffusion processes. NBSE constructs a sparse similarity graph from M objects and D features, determining the Nishimori temperature (βN), which is the critical inverse temperature at which the Bethe–Hessian matrix becomes singular. The smallest eigenvector associated with this matrix identifies the dominant mode of a degree-corrected diffusion process. By applying this method to each feature, the authors generate a D-dimensional spectral fingerprint that quantifies feature importance. Additionally, transposing the data matrix allows for a low-dimensional representation of the feature space, facilitating the identification of redundant or semantically related features. The method enables a principled, non-greedy dimensionality reduction, achieving up to 70% feature reduction while maintaining classification performance. The Bethe–Hessian operator incorporates a degree-dependent diagonal term that mitigates hub dominance in the spectrum. The robustness of the method is established through a perturbation bound. Experimental results demonstrate that NBSE outperforms traditional methods like the ANOVA F-test and random sampling, with significant stability and minimal accuracy loss even under aggressive feature reduction.
Methodology
The methodology involves constructing a sparse quasi-cyclic similarity multigraph from the data, computing the Nishimori temperature to derive the Bethe–Hessian matrix, and extracting the smallest eigenvector to rank features based on their participation in diffusion processes. The process is repeated for both objects and features, allowing for spectral ablation and dimensionality reduction.
Results
Experimental evaluations on deep-network embeddings (MobileNetV2 and EfficientNet-B4) show that NBSE consistently outperforms classical methods. On MobileNetV2, the method maintains accuracy fluctuations within 5% under aggressive feature reduction, while traditional methods experience up to 25% accuracy loss. On EfficientNet-B4, NBSE limits accuracy loss to less than 1% with a 70% reduction in features, outperforming baseline methods by up to 6.8%.
Implications
The proposed NBSE method has significant implications for high-dimensional data analysis, particularly in fields where feature selection is critical, such as genomics, image processing, and natural language processing. Its ability to reduce dimensionality while preserving essential information can enhance model interpretability and reduce computational costs.
Approximating Uniform Random Rotations by Two-Block Structured Hadamard Rotations in High Dimensions
Theory
Efficient ML
- The two-block structured Hadamard rotation converges uniformly for individual coordinates to the distribution of a uniformly rotated vector.
- An explicit Kolmogorov-distance bound of order d−1/5 is established for one-dimensional marginals.
- A significant lower bound on the Wasserstein distance shows that the two-block transform is not a globally accurate surrogate for uniform random rotations.
- The results indicate a clear distinction between marginal behavior and full high-dimensional geometry in terms of approximation quality.
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Approximating Uniform Random Rotations by Two-Block Structured Hadamard Rotations in High Dimensions
Summary
This paper addresses the challenge of approximating uniform random rotations in high-dimensional spaces, which are computationally expensive to generate and apply. The authors propose a two-block structured Hadamard rotation as a practical alternative, built from Walsh-Hadamard transforms and random sign diagonals. They investigate the approximation quality of this method compared to true uniform random rotations. The study reveals that while the two-block transform converges uniformly for individual coordinates, it fails to provide a globally accurate representation of uniform rotations in high dimensions. Specifically, the authors establish a Kolmogorov-distance bound indicating that the approximation improves with dimension for one-dimensional marginals, but they also demonstrate a significant lower bound on the Wasserstein distance for the full vector distributions, indicating a persistent discrepancy. This duality in results highlights the strengths and limitations of structured Hadamard rotations, providing insights into their empirical success in various applications while cautioning against treating them as exact substitutes for uniform random rotations.
Methodology
The authors compare the two-block structured Hadamard rotation and uniform random rotations using two metrics: the Kolmogorov distance for one-dimensional marginals and the Wasserstein distance for the full vector distributions. They derive explicit bounds for both metrics, analyzing specific input vectors to establish their results.
Results
The paper proves that the two-block structured Hadamard rotation converges uniformly for individual coordinates with a Kolmogorov-distance bound of order d−1/5. However, it also establishes a lower bound on the Wasserstein distance, indicating that the two-block transform does not serve as a globally accurate approximation for uniform random rotations, with a persistent discrepancy that remains significant in high dimensions.
Implications
The findings have implications for various applications in randomized algorithms, including fast Johnson-Lindenstrauss embeddings, kernel approximation, and AI compression pipelines. The results clarify the conditions under which structured Hadamard rotations can be effectively utilized while highlighting their limitations.
Sustained Gradient Alignment Mediates Subliminal Learning in a Multi-Step Setting: Evidence from MNIST Auxiliary Logit Distillation Experiment
Theory
Optimization
- Positive gradient alignment between trait and distillation gradients persists throughout multi-step training.
- Removing the trait-aligned component of the distillation gradient effectively stops trait acquisition.
- Liminal training reduces alignment but does not prevent trait acquisition, highlighting the inadequacy of current mitigation methods.
- The study provides empirical evidence supporting the causal relationship between gradient alignment and subliminal learning.
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Sustained Gradient Alignment Mediates Subliminal Learning in a Multi-Step Setting: Evidence from MNIST Auxiliary Logit Distillation Experiment
Summary
This paper investigates the phenomenon of subliminal learning in the context of knowledge distillation (KD), particularly focusing on how a student model can unintentionally acquire traits from a teacher model during training. The authors conduct experiments using the MNIST dataset, specifically examining the auxiliary logit distillation process. They challenge existing theories that suggest gradient alignment between distillation and trait gradients is only relevant in single-step gradient descent scenarios. Through empirical analysis, they demonstrate that this alignment remains weakly but consistently positive throughout multi-step training, contributing to the acquisition of teacher traits. The study also evaluates a mitigation method known as liminal training, which aims to reduce alignment but fails to prevent trait acquisition, indicating that simply attenuating alignment may not be sufficient when first-order effects dominate. The findings underscore the complexities of subliminal learning and the limitations of current mitigation strategies in multi-step training settings.
Methodology
The authors utilized the MNIST MLP classifier auxiliary logit distillation experiment, where a student model is trained to minimize KL divergence on no-class logits while sharing an identical initialization with the teacher model. They monitored gradient alignment throughout the training process and performed ablation experiments to assess the impact of removing trait-aligned components from the distillation gradient.
Results
The experiments revealed that the student model achieved an average final test accuracy of 55.28% with a consistent positive alignment of 0.781 across training steps. Removing the trait-aligned component significantly suppressed trait transfer, dropping accuracy to 10.14%. The study confirmed that gradient alignment mediates trait acquisition, with the first-order effect being dominant.
Implications
The findings have significant implications for the design of knowledge distillation methods, particularly in ensuring that undesired traits are not transmitted from teacher to student models. This research highlights the need for more robust mitigation strategies that can effectively address subliminal learning in multi-step training scenarios.
Negative Ontology of True Target for Machine Learning: Towards Evaluation and Learning under Democratic Supervision
Theory
- Challenges the traditional assumption of the objective existence of the true target in ML.
- Introduces Democratic Supervision as a participatory approach to supervision in ML.
- Defines Multiple Inaccurate True Targets (MIATTs) to facilitate evaluation and learning.
- Proposes the EL-MIATTs framework for ML-based predictive modeling.
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Negative Ontology of True Target for Machine Learning: Towards Evaluation and Learning under Democratic Supervision
Summary
This paper explores the philosophical implications of the assumption regarding the existence of the true target (TT) in machine learning (ML). The author argues that the TT does not objectively exist in the real world, which leads to the development of a new framework termed Democratic Supervision. This framework emphasizes the aggregation of diverse perspectives to construct supervisory signals, rather than relying on a singular authoritative ground truth. The paper introduces the concept of Multiple Inaccurate True Targets (MIATTs) as a practical application of Democratic Supervision, providing principles for their generation and assessment. The proposed evaluation and learning framework, EL-MIATTs, is demonstrated through a real-world application in education and professional development, showcasing its potential to support individual growth in these fields. The work challenges traditional ML paradigms by advocating for a more inclusive and participatory approach to supervision, thereby opening new avenues for research and application in ML.
Methodology
The paper employs a philosophical analysis of existing assumptions about the true target in ML, leading to the formulation of Democratic Supervision and MIATTs. It outlines principles for generating and assessing MIATTs and presents a framework (EL-MIATTs) for evaluation and learning.
Results
The EL-MIATTs framework was successfully applied in a real-world context, demonstrating its effectiveness in supporting education and professional development. The framework allows for a more flexible and inclusive approach to data construction and supervision.
Implications
The findings suggest a shift in ML paradigms towards more democratic and participatory approaches, which could enhance model training and evaluation in various fields, particularly in education and professional development. This could lead to more robust and adaptable ML systems that better reflect the complexities of real-world data.
VLM Judges Can Rank but Cannot Score: Task-Dependent Uncertainty in Multimodal Evaluation
Multimodal
- VLMs can effectively rank responses but struggle with reliable absolute scoring.
- Conformal prediction provides a method to quantify uncertainty in VLM evaluations.
- Evaluation uncertainty is task-dependent, with significant variations in prediction interval widths.
- A failure mode called 'ranking-scoring decoupling' is identified, where high ranking correlation does not guarantee reliable scores.
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VLM Judges Can Rank but Cannot Score: Task-Dependent Uncertainty in Multimodal Evaluation
Summary
This paper addresses the reliability of Vision-Language Models (VLMs) used as automated judges in multimodal evaluation tasks. The authors highlight that while VLMs can rank responses effectively, they struggle to provide reliable absolute scores, leading to significant uncertainty in evaluations. To tackle this issue, the authors employ conformal prediction, a distribution-free framework that transforms point scores into calibrated prediction intervals without requiring retraining. They conduct a systematic analysis across three judges and fourteen visual task categories, revealing that evaluation uncertainty is highly task-dependent. For instance, prediction intervals vary significantly, covering approximately 40% of the score range for aesthetic evaluations but expanding to about 70% for tasks involving charts and mathematical reasoning. The study uncovers a critical failure mode termed 'ranking-scoring decoupling,' where judges may rank responses accurately but produce wide, uninformative score intervals. Additionally, the authors find that the width of these intervals is primarily influenced by task difficulty and the quality of annotations rather than the model itself. They propose task-conditional calibration to improve interval reliability, demonstrating that conditioning on task difficulty can yield narrower intervals for easier tasks while enhancing coverage for more challenging ones.
Methodology
The authors utilize conformal prediction to convert point scores from VLM judges into calibrated prediction intervals. This method operates on score-token log-probabilities and does not require model retraining. The study systematically analyzes the performance of VLM judges across various visual tasks, focusing on the relationship between task characteristics and evaluation uncertainty.
Results
The results indicate that prediction interval widths vary significantly across tasks, with wider intervals for complex tasks like chart comprehension and mathematical reasoning. The study also reveals that high ranking correlation does not equate to reliable scoring, highlighting the importance of understanding task-dependent uncertainty in multimodal evaluations. The authors demonstrate that conditioning on task difficulty can improve the reliability of score intervals.
Implications
The findings suggest that while VLMs can be useful in automated evaluations, their scoring reliability needs to be carefully interpreted, especially in high-stakes applications. The proposed methods for uncertainty quantification could enhance the deployment of VLMs in real-world scenarios, ensuring more trustworthy evaluations in multimodal AI systems.
Optimization-Free Topological Sort for Causal Discovery via the Schur Complement of Score Jacobians
Graph Learning
Theory
Efficient ML
- Introduces SSTS, an optimization-free algorithm for causal discovery.
- Establishes a mathematical equivalence between graph marginalization and Schur complement of SJIM.
- Demonstrates scalability to high-dimensional data (up to 1000 variables) without non-convex optimization.
- Characterizes the expectation gap in non-linear systems and proposes Block-SSTS to mitigate structural errors.
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Optimization-Free Topological Sort for Causal Discovery via the Schur Complement of Score Jacobians
Summary
This paper addresses the challenges of continuous causal discovery, which often involves non-convex optimization that can lead to local optima and scalability issues in high-dimensional settings. The authors propose a novel approach called Score-Schur Topological Sort (SSTS), which decouples representation learning from structural optimization by utilizing statistical score estimation. The SSTS algorithm extracts topological order directly from unconstrained generative models, leveraging the geometric signature of causal hierarchies within the score function. The authors establish a mathematical equivalence between iterative graph marginalization and the Schur complement of the Score-Jacobian Information Matrix (SJIM) under linear conditions, allowing for an efficient O(d^3) operation cost. For non-linear systems, they introduce Block-SSTS to manage extraction depth and control structural error. Empirical results demonstrate that SSTS can effectively analyze causal structures in non-linear graphs with up to 1000 variables, indicating that bypassing the non-convex optimization bottleneck enhances structural fidelity, which is primarily limited by the finite-sample estimation variance of the global score geometry.
Methodology
The methodology involves a two-stage process: first, a generative model is trained to capture the data manifold, and second, the SSTS algorithm is applied to extract causal topological order using algebraic operations based on the Schur complement of the Score-Jacobian Information Matrix. This approach eliminates the need for non-convex optimization, allowing for efficient causal structure extraction.
Results
The SSTS framework successfully enables causal structural analysis on non-linear graphs with up to 1000 variables. The results indicate that once the non-convex optimization bottleneck is bypassed, the structural fidelity of causal discovery is constrained by the finite-sample estimation variance of the score geometry, rather than optimization issues.
Implications
The findings suggest that SSTS could significantly improve the efficiency and accuracy of causal discovery in high-dimensional datasets, making it applicable in various fields such as epidemiology, economics, and social sciences where understanding causal relationships is crucial.
The Last Human-Written Paper: Agent-Native Research Artifacts
Theory
- Introduction of Agent-Native Research Artifacts (ARA) to preserve the full research process.
- Identification of 'Storytelling Tax' and 'Engineering Tax' as critical issues in traditional research publication.
- Development of mechanisms to support the ARA ecosystem, including a Live Research Manager and ARA Compiler.
- Significant improvements in question-answering accuracy and reproduction success rates using ARAs.
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The Last Human-Written Paper: Agent-Native Research Artifacts
Summary
This paper critiques the traditional format of scientific publications, which compresses complex, iterative research processes into linear narratives, leading to the loss of valuable information about failed experiments and implementation details. The authors introduce the concept of Agent-Native Research Artifacts (ARA), a new protocol designed to create machine-executable research packages that preserve the full exploration trajectory of research. ARAs consist of four layers: scientific logic, executable code with specifications, an exploration graph documenting failures, and evidence grounding claims in raw outputs. The paper also presents three supporting mechanisms: a Live Research Manager for capturing development decisions, an ARA Compiler for converting traditional papers into ARAs, and an ARA-native review system for automating objective checks. Experimental results demonstrate that ARAs significantly improve question-answering accuracy and reproduction success rates, while also facilitating open-ended task extensions through preserved failure traces.
Methodology
The authors propose a new research artifact structure (ARA) that includes executable code, an exploration graph, and evidence grounding. They also develop supporting tools like the Live Research Manager and ARA Compiler to facilitate the transition from traditional papers to ARAs. The efficacy of ARAs is evaluated through experiments on PaperBench and RE-Bench datasets.
Results
The implementation of ARAs led to an increase in question-answering accuracy from 72.4% to 93.7% and a rise in reproduction success from 57.4% to 64.4%. Additionally, preserved failure traces in ARAs accelerated progress on open-ended tasks, although they could also constrain agents depending on their capabilities.
Implications
The introduction of ARAs could revolutionize how research is documented and shared, making it more accessible for AI agents. This could lead to more efficient research processes, reduced redundancy in rediscovering failed experiments, and improved collaboration between human researchers and AI.
Measuring the Sensitivity of Classification Models with the Error Sensitivity Profile
Theory
- Introduction of the Error Sensitivity Profile (ESP) for assessing model sensitivity to data errors.
- Development of the Dirtify tool suite to support the computation of ESP and facilitate data cleaning.
- Demonstration of the effectiveness of ESP through experiments on two datasets with 14 classification models.
- ESP provides a detailed, model-specific sensitivity profile that aids in prioritizing data-cleaning efforts.
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Measuring the Sensitivity of Classification Models with the Error Sensitivity Profile
Summary
This paper introduces the Error Sensitivity Profile (ESP), a novel metric designed to quantify the sensitivity of machine learning model performance to errors in training data. The ESP allows for the assessment of how various types of errors in one or more features affect model performance, enabling data-cleaning efforts to be prioritized effectively. The author developed a suite of tools called Dirtify, which includes a Python library named PuckTrick for injecting specific error types into datasets. The paper presents an extensive experimental study using 14 classification models on two widely used datasets, demonstrating that performance degradation is not always predictable from simple correlations with the target variable. The ESP provides a multi-dimensional profile that captures the relationship between error severity and model performance, facilitating a more nuanced understanding of data quality impacts across different models and datasets.
Methodology
The methodology involves defining the Error Sensitivity Profile (ESP) as a tuple that includes Error Performance Correlation (EPC), Area under Curve Error-Performance (AEPC), and a set of behavior metrics for the model under varying error levels. The Dirtify tool suite is utilized to inject controlled errors into datasets, and the performance of various classification models is evaluated against these corrupted datasets.
Results
The experimental results reveal that the ESP effectively captures the relationship between error severity and model performance, showing that different models react differently to the same types of errors. The analysis confirms that the Dirtify suite is a valuable resource for researchers and practitioners in assessing data quality impacts on machine learning models.
Implications
The findings suggest that practitioners can use the ESP to make informed decisions about data cleaning strategies, focusing on the most impactful errors. This approach can lead to improved model performance and more efficient data management practices in machine learning.
Diffusion Templates: A Unified Plugin Framework for Controllable Diffusion
Generative Models
Computer Vision
- Diffusion Templates provide a unified framework for controllable diffusion, addressing fragmentation in existing methods.
- The framework allows for the decoupling of model inference from capability injection, enhancing modularity and reusability.
- A diverse set of Template models is released, covering various controllable generation tasks.
- The system supports heterogeneous control modules through a standardized interface, improving integration across different architectures.
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Diffusion Templates: A Unified Plugin Framework for Controllable Diffusion
Summary
The paper introduces Diffusion Templates, a unified plugin framework designed to enhance controllable diffusion methods, which have become essential for various applications in visual generation. Traditional controllable diffusion methods are often isolated and specific to certain backbone architectures, leading to challenges in reusability and integration. The authors propose a framework that decouples base-model inference from controllable capability injection, allowing for a modular approach to integrating various control methods. The framework consists of three main components: Template models that convert task-specific inputs into an intermediate capability representation, a Template cache that standardizes capability injection, and a Template pipeline that manages the loading and merging of these caches during generation. This design supports diverse control methods, such as structural control and image editing, while maintaining compatibility across different diffusion backbones. The authors demonstrate the framework's effectiveness through a model zoo that includes various controllable generation tasks, showcasing the framework's ability to unify and simplify the integration of multiple controls without compromising performance.
Methodology
The authors developed a plugin framework consisting of Template models, a Template cache, and a Template pipeline. Template models convert task-specific inputs into capability representations, while the Template cache serves as a standardized interface for capability injection. The Template pipeline manages the integration of these caches into the base diffusion model during generation.
Results
The framework was validated through a diverse model zoo that includes capabilities for structural control, brightness and color adjustment, image editing, super-resolution, and more. The results indicate that Diffusion Templates can effectively unify various controllable generation tasks while preserving performance and modularity.
Implications
The proposed framework has the potential to streamline the development and integration of controllable diffusion methods, making it easier for researchers and practitioners to implement and experiment with various control capabilities in visual generation tasks.
Meta-Aligner: Bidirectional Preference-Policy Optimization for Multi-Objective LLMs Alignment
NLP
Large Language Models
Reinforcement Learning
- Introduction of MEAL, a framework for dynamic preference-policy optimization.
- Utilization of a preference-weight-net for generating adaptive preference weights.
- Establishment of a bidirectional feedback loop between preferences and policy responses.
- Demonstration of improved performance on complex multi-objective benchmarks.
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Meta-Aligner: Bidirectional Preference-Policy Optimization for Multi-Objective LLMs Alignment
Summary
The paper introduces MEAL (MEta ALigner), a bi-level meta-learning framework designed to enhance the alignment of Large Language Models (LLMs) with diverse human values through a bidirectional optimization approach. Traditional methods often rely on static preference weights, which overlook valuable intermediate information during training. MEAL addresses this limitation by enabling dynamic adaptation between preference weights and policy responses. The framework incorporates a preference-weight-net that generates adaptive preference weights based on input prompts, while the LLM policy optimizes response generation conditioned on these preferences. This bidirectional interaction allows for a more nuanced understanding of user preferences and improves alignment performance. The authors demonstrate the effectiveness of MEAL through extensive empirical evaluations on multi-objective benchmarks, showing superior performance compared to existing static weighting methods.
Methodology
The methodology involves a bi-level optimization framework where a preference-weight-net acts as a meta-learner to generate adaptive preference weights based on input prompts. The LLM policy serves as a base-learner that optimizes response generation using these dynamic preferences. The framework incorporates rejection sampling and an outer-loop adaptation strategy to continuously update the preference weights based on the evolving performance of the policy.
Results
The empirical results indicate that MEAL outperforms existing multi-objective alignment methods on various benchmarks, validating the effectiveness of the dynamic bidirectional optimization framework in capturing intermediate preference states and improving alignment performance.
Implications
The proposed framework has significant implications for developing more responsive and responsible AI systems that can better navigate the complexities of human values and preferences, potentially leading to improved user satisfaction and trust in AI-generated content.
A Unifying Framework for Unsupervised Concept Extraction
Theory
Generative Models
Interpretability
- Introduction of a new theoretical framework for unsupervised concept extraction based on latent concept generative models (LC-GMs).
- Development of a meta-theorem for identifiability that simplifies proving guarantees for various concept extraction methods.
- Demonstration of the framework's ability to recover existing identifiability results in related fields.
- Discussion of the implications for method development, linking concept extraction with generative modeling and amortized posterior inference.
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A Unifying Framework for Unsupervised Concept Extraction
Summary
This paper presents a unified theoretical framework for unsupervised concept extraction, which is crucial for understanding and utilizing the internal representations of neural networks. The authors frame concept extraction as identifying a generative model, introducing a new class of models called latent concept generative models (LC-GMs). They develop a meta-theorem for identifiability that simplifies the process of establishing guarantees for various existing approaches to concept extraction, such as sparse autoencoders and transcoders. The framework allows for the characterization of identifiability through the intersection of transition sets, extending previous work to stochastic mixing scenarios. The authors demonstrate the utility of their framework by recovering known identifiability results in fields like dictionary learning and independent component analysis, while also discussing its implications for future method development in concept extraction and generative modeling.
Methodology
The authors utilize identifiability theory to treat concepts as latent random variables sampled from an unknown distribution. They introduce latent concept generative models (LC-GMs) that consist of a concept generator and a mixing kernel. The framework allows for both deterministic and stochastic relationships between concepts and features, facilitating a rigorous statistical approach to concept extraction.
Results
The paper establishes a general meta-theorem for identifiability that significantly simplifies the process of proving guarantees for concept extraction methods. The authors demonstrate that their framework can recover diverse existing results in identifiability, thereby validating its theoretical contributions and practical utility.
Implications
The proposed framework has the potential to enhance the interpretability and reliability of concept extraction methods, which are essential for tasks such as model steering, unlearning, and representation alignment. It paves the way for developing new methods with uniqueness guarantees, improving the robustness of downstream applications.
Supernodes and Halos: Loss-Critical Hubs in LLM Feed-Forward Layers
Large Language Models
NLP
Efficient ML
- Supernodes account for a significant portion of loss sensitivity in FFN layers, with the top 1% of channels capturing a median of 58.7% of LP mass.
- Pruning methods that remove supernodes lead to substantial degradation in model performance, highlighting their critical role.
- The study introduces the concept of 'write halos' around supernodes, which share redundancy and support, aiding in structured pruning.
- The findings are validated across various LLMs, indicating a consistent pattern of LP concentration and the importance of core channel preservation.
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Supernodes and Halos: Loss-Critical Hubs in LLM Feed-Forward Layers
Summary
This paper investigates the organization of channel-level importance in transformer feed-forward networks (FFNs), particularly focusing on large language models (LLMs). The authors introduce a Fisher-style loss proxy (LP) based on activation-gradient second moments to demonstrate that loss sensitivity is highly concentrated in a small subset of channels, termed 'supernodes.' In their analysis of Llama-3.1-8B, they find that the top 1% of channels per layer accounts for a median of 58.7% of the LP mass, indicating that these channels are critical for maintaining model performance. The study reveals that while FFN layers contain strong activation outliers, supernodes do not overlap significantly with these outliers and cannot be solely explained by activation power or weight norms. The authors also identify a 'halo' structure around supernodes, where non-supernode channels exhibit redundancy with the supernode core. They validate their findings through one-shot structured FFN pruning experiments, showing that methods protecting supernodes, like SCAR-Prot, significantly outperform those that do not, achieving a perplexity of 54.8 compared to 989.2 for other methods. The concentration of LP mass in supernodes is consistent across multiple LLMs and increases during pretraining, suggesting that preserving this core is essential for effective structured pruning.
Methodology
The authors employ a Fisher-style loss proxy based on activation-gradient second moments to quantify channel importance in FFNs. They conduct structured pruning experiments to assess the impact of removing supernodes and analyze the resulting changes in model performance, particularly perplexity.
Results
The analysis reveals that the top 1% of channels in FFN layers are supernodes, which account for a median of 58.7% of LP mass. Pruning methods that protect these supernodes maintain lower perplexity, with the best-performing method, SCAR-Prot, achieving a perplexity of 54.8, while other methods degrade to perplexities over 900. The LP concentration pattern is consistent across multiple LLMs and increases during pretraining.
Implications
The findings suggest that understanding and preserving the core of loss-critical channels in FFNs is crucial for effective model pruning and deployment. This could lead to more efficient LLMs with reduced computational requirements while maintaining performance.
Nautile-370M: Spectral Memory Meets Attention in a Small Reasoning Model
NLP
Large Language Models
Reinforcement Learning
- Introduction of SeqCond Attention (SCA), a novel sequence operator that enhances efficiency and expressiveness in language modeling.
- Demonstration of SCA's theoretical expressiveness, proving it can replicate outputs of traditional self-attention mechanisms.
- Development of a hybrid architecture combining SCA and transformer layers, optimizing for reasoning tasks.
- Implementation of gradient-balanced GRPO and scored self-distillation to improve reinforcement learning outcomes.
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Nautile-370M: Spectral Memory Meets Attention in a Small Reasoning Model
Summary
The paper introduces Nautile-370M, a 371-million-parameter language model designed for efficient reasoning while adhering to strict parameter and inference budgets. The model employs a hybrid architecture that alternates between two SeqCond Attention (SCA) layers and one transformer layer, aiming to combine the efficiency of structured sequential models with the expressive routing capabilities of attention mechanisms. The SCA layer computes a compressed summary of input sequences using a linear-time spectral sequence operator, allowing for efficient state updates during inference. The model was trained on a Cloud TPU v4-64 pod and further refined using reinforcement learning on an NVIDIA DGX Spark, addressing challenges in reasoning quality through innovative training strategies. Key contributions include the theoretical expressiveness of SCA, a robust training pipeline, and enhancements to reinforcement learning techniques, which collectively improve reasoning accuracy on benchmark tasks.
Methodology
Nautile-370M utilizes a hybrid architecture consisting of 24 layers, with 16 SCA layers and 8 transformer layers. The SCA layers compute a compressed summary of the input sequence using a characteristic function, allowing for efficient token retrieval and state updates. The model was trained on a large dataset and underwent a reinforcement learning stage that included modifications to standard GRPO to enhance stability and performance.
Results
The model demonstrated that the SCA readout mechanism can accurately retrieve individual tokens from a summary and replicate outputs of softmax attention. The training enhancements led to a significant improvement in reasoning accuracy on the GSM8K dataset, increasing from 28.0% to 33.4%.
Implications
Nautile-370M's architecture and training methodologies could influence future developments in efficient language models, particularly in applications requiring reasoning under strict computational constraints. The findings may also contribute to advancements in reinforcement learning strategies for language processing tasks.
Prior-Aligned Data Cleaning for Tabular Foundation Models
Reinforcement Learning
- Introduces L2C2, the first deep RL framework for tabular data cleaning focused on prior alignment.
- Demonstrates the importance of reward design in RL for data cleaning, with several designs leading to trivial strategies.
- TFMAwareReward effectively selects distinct cleaning pipelines and improves accuracy on challenging datasets.
- Parameterized cleaning actions enhance the reward across most datasets.
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Prior-Aligned Data Cleaning for Tabular Foundation Models
Summary
This paper introduces L2C2, a novel deep reinforcement learning (RL) framework aimed at addressing the data cleaning challenges faced by Tabular Foundation Models (TFMs). TFMs, such as TabPFN v2, excel in zero-shot learning on small datasets but struggle with real-world data that often contains missing values, outliers, and duplicates. These issues create a prior mismatch that degrades model accuracy and confidence calibration. The proposed L2C2 framework treats data cleaning as a prior alignment problem, where a learned policy sequences cleaning operations to minimize the distributional gap between the dirty input and the model's synthetic prior. The paper conducts six experiments across ten OpenML benchmark datasets, revealing critical insights into reward design for RL in data cleaning. It demonstrates that three out of seven reward designs lead to trivial cleaning strategies, emphasizing the importance of principled reward engineering. The novel TFMAwareReward design successfully identifies distinct cleaning pipelines and enhances model accuracy in specific cases. Additionally, the study shows that parameterized cleaning actions improve pipeline rewards and that a policy pre-trained on one dataset can effectively transfer knowledge to other datasets, significantly boosting performance. These findings underscore the potential of prior alignment as a robust strategy for preparing real-world tabular data for TFMs.
Methodology
The methodology involves framing the data cleaning process as a reinforcement learning problem, where a policy is trained to sequence cleaning operations based on a reward signal that measures the alignment between the cleaned data and the TFM's synthetic prior. The paper explores various reward designs and evaluates their effectiveness through experiments on multiple benchmark datasets.
Results
The experiments reveal that three out of seven reward designs lead to degenerate cleaning strategies, while the TFMAwareReward design successfully identifies structurally distinct pipelines and improves accuracy on four out of ten datasets. Parameterized cleaning actions enhance the reward in nine out of ten datasets, and pre-trained policies outperform scratch training on held-out datasets, achieving up to a 28.8% improvement after fine-tuning.
Implications
The findings suggest that prior alignment is a viable and principled approach for data preparation in real-world applications of TFMs. This could lead to more effective deployment of machine learning models in domains where data quality is a significant concern, such as healthcare and finance.
Cortex-Inspired Continual Learning: Unsupervised Instantiation and Recovery of Functional Task Networks
Theory
Efficient ML
- FTN offers a parameter-isolation approach to prevent catastrophic forgetting in continual learning.
- The three-stage mask configuration allows for unsupervised task detection and rapid recovery of task-specific subnetworks.
- FTN-Slow achieves nearly zero forgetting across multiple benchmarks, while FTN-Fast balances speed and retention.
- The method is inspired by biological neural mechanisms, enhancing its structural and functional efficiency.
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Cortex-Inspired Continual Learning: Unsupervised Instantiation and Recovery of Functional Task Networks
Summary
This paper presents Functional Task Networks (FTN), a novel parameter-isolation method for continual learning inspired by the mammalian neocortex. FTN addresses the challenges of catastrophic forgetting and unsupervised task detection in block-sequential continual learning. The method employs a three-stage mask configuration process: (1) gradient descent identifies task-relevant neurons, (2) a smoothing kernel promotes spatial contiguity, and (3) k-winner-take-all binarizes the mask. Each neuron functions as an independent deep network, allowing for disjoint gradient updates and protecting against forgetting. The authors evaluate FTN on three benchmarks: a synthetic multi-task generator, MNIST with shuffled labels, and Permuted MNIST. Results show that FTN-Slow achieves nearly zero forgetting, while FTN-Fast offers a speed advantage with minimal retention loss. The spatial organization mechanism significantly reduces the complexity of mask search, enhancing efficiency. Overall, FTN provides a robust framework for continual learning, merging structural protection, rapid task detection, and efficient neuron consolidation.
Methodology
The methodology involves creating Functional Task Networks (FTN) through a three-stage mask configuration process: (1) using gradient descent to identify relevant neurons, (2) applying a smoothing kernel for spatial contiguity, and (3) employing k-winner-take-all binarization to finalize the mask. Each neuron is treated as an independent deep network, allowing for disjoint gradient updates.
Results
FTN-Slow demonstrated nearly zero forgetting across three continual learning benchmarks, while FTN-Fast provided a trade-off between speed and retention. The spatial organization mechanism significantly reduced the complexity of the mask search process, improving efficiency.
Implications
The findings suggest that FTN could be applied in various domains requiring continual learning, such as robotics, autonomous systems, and adaptive AI applications, where maintaining prior knowledge while learning new tasks is crucial.
SFT-then-RL Outperforms Mixed-Policy Methods for LLM Reasoning
Large Language Models
Reinforcement Learning
Optimization
- Identification of critical bugs in popular training frameworks that degrade SFT performance.
- Correction of these bugs leads to the SFT-then-RL pipeline outperforming mixed-policy methods by significant margins.
- A truncated SFT-then-RL variant with fewer RL steps still outperforms mixed-policy methods, highlighting efficiency.
- The findings underscore the importance of rigorous validation across different frameworks in machine learning research.
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SFT-then-RL Outperforms Mixed-Policy Methods for LLM Reasoning
Summary
This paper critiques recent mixed-policy optimization methods for large language model (LLM) reasoning, which claim to outperform the standard supervised fine-tuning (SFT) followed by reinforcement learning (RL) pipeline. The authors identify two significant bugs in widely used training frameworks that have led to misleading performance baselines in previous research. The first bug involves a CPU-offloaded optimizer in DeepSpeed that fails to correctly accumulate gradients, while the second bug pertains to incorrect loss aggregation in OpenRLHF. After addressing these issues, the authors demonstrate that the corrected SFT-then-RL pipeline surpasses all evaluated mixed-policy methods by substantial margins on math benchmarks. They also show that even a truncated version of the SFT-then-RL approach, using fewer RL iterations, outperforms mixed-policy methods while being more efficient in terms of floating-point operations (FLOPs). These findings restore confidence in the SFT-then-RL paradigm and emphasize the necessity of cross-framework validation to ensure the reliability of reported results.
Methodology
The authors conducted experiments to identify and fix bugs in the SFT training process, specifically focusing on the CPU-offloaded optimizer in DeepSpeed and loss aggregation in OpenRLHF. They then compared the performance of the corrected SFT-then-RL pipeline against various mixed-policy methods on mathematical reasoning benchmarks.
Results
The corrected SFT-then-RL pipeline achieved an improvement of +3.8 points on Qwen2.5-Math-7B and +22.2 points on Llama-3.1-8B compared to the best mixed-policy methods. Even a version with only 50 RL steps outperformed all mixed-policy methods while using fewer FLOPs.
Implications
These results suggest that the SFT-then-RL approach is more reliable and efficient for training LLMs in reasoning tasks, potentially influencing future research directions and training methodologies in the field of machine learning.
Parameter Efficiency Is Not Memory Efficiency: Rethinking Fine-Tuning for On-Device LLM Adaptation
NLP
Large Language Models
Efficient ML
- Parameter efficiency does not equate to memory efficiency in LLM adaptation.
- LARS introduces a novel approach that reduces activation memory during training.
- LARS achieves significant memory savings while maintaining competitive performance.
- The framework is applicable to resource-constrained devices, enhancing LLM deployment.
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Parameter Efficiency Is Not Memory Efficiency: Rethinking Fine-Tuning for On-Device LLM Adaptation
Summary
This paper challenges the assumption that parameter-efficient fine-tuning (PEFT) methods, which reduce the number of trainable parameters in large language models (LLMs), also lead to improved memory efficiency for on-device adaptation. The authors highlight that while methods like LoRA and IA3 minimize trainable parameters, they still incur significant memory overhead due to intermediate tensors that scale with sequence length, often leading to out-of-memory errors on resource-constrained devices. To address this issue, the authors introduce LARS (Low-memory Activation-Rank Subspace), a novel framework that constrains the activation subspace during training, effectively decoupling memory consumption from sequence length. LARS demonstrates a substantial reduction in memory footprint—averaging 33.54% on GPUs and 51.95% on CPUs compared to LoRA—while maintaining competitive accuracy and throughput across various tasks and models. The framework is also deployable on low-resource hardware like Raspberry Pi, showcasing its potential for sophisticated LLM personalization in edge environments.
Methodology
The authors propose LARS, which constrains the low-rank activation subspace used during training to minimize activation memory. This approach is evaluated against existing PEFT methods like LoRA and IA3, focusing on memory consumption and performance across various models and datasets.
Results
LARS reduces peak training memory by an average of 33.54% on GPUs and 51.95% on CPUs compared to LoRA, while maintaining competitive accuracy and throughput across different reasoning, understanding, and long-context datasets.
Implications
The findings suggest that LARS can enable more efficient on-device adaptation of LLMs, making sophisticated personalization feasible on low-resource hardware. This has significant implications for applications in mobile and edge computing, where memory constraints are critical.
Scalable Hyperparameter-Divergent Ensemble Training with Automatic Learning Rate Exploration for Large Models
Optimization
Efficient ML
- HDET allows simultaneous exploration of diverse learning rates across GPU replicas without additional hardware costs.
- An automatic learning rate controller adapts the learning rate based on inter-replica performance, enhancing training efficiency.
- The method improves model quality and convergence speed on large-scale training tasks.
- HDET can be applied to various scalar hyperparameters, broadening its applicability in model training.
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Scalable Hyperparameter-Divergent Ensemble Training with Automatic Learning Rate Exploration for Large Models
Summary
This paper introduces Hyperparameter-Divergent Ensemble Training (HDET), a novel method designed to enhance the training of large neural networks by exploring diverse learning rates across multiple GPU replicas. Traditional data-parallel stochastic gradient descent (DP-SGD) typically employs identical learning rates across replicas, limiting the exploration of the learning rate space. HDET addresses this by allowing each replica to train with distinct learning rates drawn from a structured range around a base schedule. The training process alternates between a 'fan-out' phase, where replicas operate independently, and a 'converge' phase, where parameters are averaged across replicas. Additionally, the authors propose an automatic learning rate (auto-LR) controller that adapts the learning rate based on the relative performance of replicas, effectively creating a self-adjusting learning rate schedule. This approach not only improves optimization quality and generalization but also eliminates the need for extensive hyperparameter tuning. The framework is versatile and can be applied to other scalar hyperparameters beyond learning rates. The authors provide a reference implementation compatible with PyTorch, making it accessible for practitioners.
Methodology
HDET operates in two alternating phases: a fan-out phase where each GPU replica trains with a distinct learning rate, and a converge phase where parameters are averaged across replicas using AllReduce. An auto-LR controller updates the base learning rate schedule based on the relative training loss of replicas, employing a momentum-based approach for adjustments.
Results
Empirical evaluations demonstrate that HDET consistently enhances final model quality and accelerates convergence on production-scale tasks, outperforming traditional training methods that rely on fixed learning rates.
Implications
HDET's approach to hyperparameter exploration can lead to more efficient training of large models, reducing the need for extensive hyperparameter tuning and potentially improving the performance of various machine learning applications.
Safe-Support Q-Learning: Learning without Unsafe Exploration
Reinforcement Learning
Robotics
Theory
- Introduces a behavior policy that enables safe RL without unsafe exploration in both online and offline settings.
- Proposes a two-stage safe-support Q-learning framework with KL-regularized Bellman targets.
- Demonstrates a unique fixed point for the safe Bellman operator and provides a method for policy extraction.
- Achieves stable learning and safer behavior with performance on par or better than existing methods.
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Safe-Support Q-Learning: Learning without Unsafe Exploration
Summary
This paper addresses the critical challenge of ensuring safety during reinforcement learning (RL) training, particularly in high-risk applications where unsafe exploration can lead to severe consequences. The authors propose a novel Q-learning-based framework called Safe-Support Q-Learning, which strictly prohibits the visitation of unsafe states during training. This is achieved by utilizing a behavior policy that is supported on a safe set, allowing sufficient exploration within safe regions without the need for near-optimality. The framework operates in two stages: first, a KL-regularized Bellman target is introduced to constrain the Q-function to remain close to the behavior policy, and second, a parametric policy extraction method is developed to derive an optimal policy from the trained Q-values. The proposed method is adaptable to various action spaces and behavior policies, demonstrating stable learning and well-calibrated value estimates. Experimental results indicate that Safe-Support Q-Learning yields safer behavior while achieving comparable or superior performance compared to existing baselines.
Methodology
The methodology involves a two-stage framework where the Q-function and policy are trained separately. A KL-regularized Bellman target is introduced to ensure the Q-function remains aligned with a behavior policy that operates within a safe set. The policy is derived from the trained Q-values using a parametric extraction method, allowing for effective exploration and learning without visiting unsafe states.
Results
The experimental results show that the proposed Safe-Support Q-Learning method achieves stable learning and produces well-calibrated value estimates. It demonstrates safer behavior compared to existing baselines while maintaining comparable or improved performance metrics.
Implications
The implications of this work are significant for applications in high-risk domains such as autonomous driving and robotics, where ensuring safety during the learning process is paramount. The proposed framework can be utilized to develop RL agents that operate safely in uncertain environments, potentially reducing the risk of catastrophic failures.
Intrinsic Mutual Information as a Modulator for Preference Optimization
NLP
Large Language Models
Optimization
- RMiPO is a lightweight framework for offline preference optimization that reduces reliance on hyperparameter tuning.
- The framework leverages intrinsic mutual information for dynamic hyperparameter modulation.
- RMiPO achieves a reduction in training overhead by over 15% compared to existing methods.
- Extensive evaluations demonstrate RMiPO's superior performance on benchmark datasets.
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Intrinsic Mutual Information as a Modulator for Preference Optimization
Summary
This paper introduces RMiPO, a novel framework for offline preference optimization that utilizes intrinsic mutual information to enhance the alignment of Large Language Models (LLMs) with human values. Traditional methods like Direct Preference Optimization (DPO) require extensive hyperparameter tuning, which can be time-consuming and computationally expensive. RMiPO addresses this challenge by implementing a dynamic modulation mechanism that allows for instance-level adaptive tuning of hyperparameters, particularly focusing on the hyperparameter γ that controls reward margins. The authors provide a thorough analysis of hyperparameter roles in preference optimization and demonstrate that RMiPO significantly reduces training overhead while achieving superior performance compared to existing methods. Experimental evaluations on benchmarks such as AlpacaEval 2 and MT-Bench show that RMiPO can reduce training costs by approximately 15-20% while outperforming state-of-the-art baselines in preference alignment tasks.
Methodology
RMiPO employs a dynamic modulation mechanism based on intrinsic mutual information to adaptively tune hyperparameters during the optimization process. The framework focuses on the hyperparameter γ, which influences the reward margin, allowing for decoupled modeling of preference contributions without significant computational costs. The authors conducted a theoretical analysis and extensive experiments to validate the effectiveness of RMiPO against existing methods.
Results
The experimental results indicate that RMiPO consistently outperforms existing offline preference optimization methods, achieving better alignment with human preferences while reducing training costs by approximately 15-20%. The framework was evaluated on multiple benchmarks, including AlpacaEval 2 and MT-Bench, demonstrating its effectiveness in enhancing the performance of LLMs.
Implications
The findings suggest that RMiPO can facilitate more efficient training of LLMs by minimizing the need for extensive hyperparameter tuning, thereby making preference optimization more accessible and practical for real-world applications. This could lead to improved alignment of AI systems with human values and preferences, enhancing their usability in various domains.
GeoEdit: Local Frames for Fast, Training-Free On-Manifold Editing in Diffusion Models
Generative Models
Optimization
Computer Vision
- Introduces a Jacobian-free algorithm for on-manifold editing in diffusion models.
- Proves a theoretical guarantee for the accuracy of tangent space estimation from perturbed samples.
- Enables rapid, continuous editing without the need for full re-diffusion or retraining.
- Demonstrates effective CLIP-guided optimization for semantic image editing.
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GeoEdit: Local Frames for Fast, Training-Free On-Manifold Editing in Diffusion Models
Summary
The paper presents GeoEdit, a novel approach for efficient, training-free editing of images generated by diffusion models. Traditional methods for editing require re-running the full denoising process for each adjustment, which is computationally expensive and time-consuming. GeoEdit addresses this by enabling edits near the data manifold, allowing for small local updates instead of full re-synthesis. The authors develop a sample-based estimator for the local tangent space, proving its accuracy in approximating the true tangent. This leads to a Jacobian-free algorithm that alternates small tangent moves with diffusion-based projections, facilitating fine-grained edits while maintaining fidelity to the original content. The method allows for rapid adjustments controlled by the number of steps taken, integrating seamlessly with existing diffusion samplers. Empirical results demonstrate that the proposed tangent directions enable smooth, semantic editing and effective optimization guided by CLIP, showcasing the practicality of continuous interactive editing.
Methodology
The authors estimate the local tangent space from perturbed samples and develop a Jacobian-free editing algorithm that alternates small tangent moves with diffusion-based projections. This approach allows for efficient editing by operating near the data manifold, utilizing cached noise and partial denoising instead of starting from pure noise.
Results
The experiments conducted validate the effectiveness of the tangent space formulation, showing that it supports efficient, continuous editing with smooth and fine-grained manipulations. The method allows for interactive control over edits while preserving the realism of the generated images.
Implications
GeoEdit has significant implications for practical image editing applications, enabling users to make targeted modifications quickly and efficiently without the need for extensive computational resources. This could enhance creative workflows in various fields, including digital art, design, and content creation.
Rethinking Layer Redundancy in Large Language Models: Calibration Objectives and Search for Depth Pruning
NLP
Large Language Models
Efficient ML
- Layer redundancy in LLMs is influenced by both the model and the evaluation objective.
- Different calibration objectives yield qualitatively different pruning patterns.
- Perplexity and downstream accuracy rankings do not consistently align.
- Search algorithms converge to similar solutions under a fixed objective.
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Rethinking Layer Redundancy in Large Language Models: Calibration Objectives and Search for Depth Pruning
Summary
This paper investigates the concept of layer redundancy in large language models (LLMs) through the lens of depth pruning, which aims to enhance inference efficiency by removing Transformer blocks. The authors challenge the traditional structural view of layer importance, which assumes that redundancy is an intrinsic property of pretrained networks. Instead, they propose a functional perspective, suggesting that redundancy is influenced by both the model and the evaluation objective. Through empirical studies involving three LLM families, two calibration objectives, and seven search algorithms, the authors find that different objectives lead to distinct pruning patterns and that perplexity and downstream accuracy do not consistently align. Their findings indicate that the calibration objective significantly impacts pruning outcomes, potentially more so than the choice of search algorithm. This work highlights the need for careful design of calibration objectives in depth pruning strategies.
Methodology
The authors conducted an empirical study by varying the importance criteria and search algorithms while holding one axis fixed. They formulated depth pruning as a subset selection problem and compared the performance of seven search algorithms under two distinct calibration objectives across three LLM families.
Results
The study revealed that the same model exhibits varying pruning patterns depending on the calibration objective used. Specifically, under perplexity, layer removals were concentrated in mid-to-late layers, while under the task likelihood margin, removals were more distributed. Additionally, the correlation between perplexity rank and downstream accuracy rank was found to be weak, indicating a misalignment between these metrics. Within a fixed objective, search algorithms produced similar pruning solutions with minimal accuracy differences.
Implications
The findings suggest that optimizing calibration objectives could enhance the effectiveness of depth pruning in LLMs, leading to more efficient models without significant loss in performance. This has implications for the deployment of LLMs in resource-constrained environments, where inference efficiency is crucial.
QFlash: Bridging Quantization and Memory Efficiency in Vision Transformer Attention
Computer Vision
Efficient ML
- QFlash enables fully integer-based softmax computation in Vision Transformers.
- Achieves significant speedups (up to 8.69×) over existing methods while reducing energy consumption.
- Addresses critical challenges in integer-only attention mechanisms, including scale explosion and GPU inefficiencies.
- Maintains competitive accuracy levels, ensuring practical applicability in real inference scenarios.
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QFlash: Bridging Quantization and Memory Efficiency in Vision Transformer Attention
Summary
The paper introduces QFlash, an innovative approach to enhance the efficiency of Vision Transformer (ViT) attention mechanisms by addressing the limitations of existing methods like FlashAttention. While FlashAttention improves computational efficiency through tiling, it still relies on floating-point arithmetic for softmax calculations, which complicates full quantization. The authors identify three main challenges in achieving integer-only FlashAttention: scale explosion during tile-wise accumulation, inefficiencies in GPU-based exponential operations, and quantization granularity constraints. QFlash overcomes these issues by implementing an end-to-end integer-only design that executes softmax entirely in the integer domain, thus running as a single Triton kernel. The proposed method demonstrates significant performance improvements, achieving up to 6.73× speedup over I-ViT and up to 8.69× speedup on Swin models, while also reducing energy consumption by 18.8% compared to FP16 FlashAttention. Importantly, QFlash maintains competitive accuracy levels, demonstrating that integer-only designs can achieve high efficiency without sacrificing performance.
Methodology
QFlash employs an integer-only kernel design that integrates softmax computation directly into the attention mechanism, utilizing efficient integer arithmetic to manage scale propagation and optimize GPU performance. The method incorporates online softmax with shift-based exponential approximation, ensuring numerical stability while maintaining uniform scales across tiles for direct integer comparison.
Results
QFlash demonstrates impressive performance metrics, achieving speedups of up to 6.73× on I-ViT and 8.69× on Swin models. It also reduces energy consumption by 18.8% compared to FP16 FlashAttention, while maintaining Top-1 accuracy comparable to FP32 models on ViT and DeiT datasets.
Implications
The advancements presented in QFlash have significant implications for deploying Vision Transformers in resource-constrained environments, enabling faster and more energy-efficient inference without compromising accuracy. This could enhance applications in real-time computer vision tasks and edge computing.
Causal Representation Learning from General Environments under Nonparametric Mixing
Theory
Graph Learning
- Introduces a framework for causal representation learning in general environments without restrictive assumptions.
- Demonstrates the ability to fully recover latent DAGs and identify causal variables under nonparametric mixing.
- Utilizes third-order derivatives to extract causal ordering information, improving upon existing methods.
- Validates theoretical results through simulation studies, showcasing practical applicability.
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Causal Representation Learning from General Environments under Nonparametric Mixing
Summary
This paper addresses the challenges in causal representation learning (CRL), specifically focusing on recovering latent causal variables and their relationships from low-level observations in general environments. Traditional approaches often rely on strict assumptions about data distribution changes, such as linearity or specific types of interventions, which may not hold in real-world scenarios. The authors propose a new framework that allows for the recovery of latent directed acyclic graphs (DAGs) and causal variables under nonparametric mixing functions and nonlinear causal models. They introduce a set of desiderata for CRL applicable to broader environments and demonstrate that it is possible to fully recover the latent DAG and identify latent variables using sufficient change conditions on causal mechanisms up to third-order derivatives. This work represents a significant advancement in the field, as it relaxes previous assumptions and provides a more realistic approach to CRL, validated through simulation studies.
Methodology
The authors formalize a set of desiderata for CRL applicable to general environments and propose a novel approach leveraging third-order derivatives of causal mechanisms. They establish identifiability results for recovering latent DAGs and causal variables under nonparametric mixing functions and nonlinear latent causal models.
Results
The study shows that under the proposed framework, it is possible to fully recover the latent DAG and identify latent variables up to minor indeterminacies. The results match or improve upon existing works while requiring fewer assumptions about the changing environments.
Implications
This research has significant implications for various scientific fields where understanding causal relationships from complex, high-dimensional data is crucial. It opens avenues for more robust causal inference methods that can be applied in areas such as genomics, social sciences, and economics, where data often do not conform to traditional assumptions.
FedSLoP: Memory-Efficient Federated Learning with Low-Rank Gradient Projection
Federated Learning
Optimization
Efficient ML
- FedSLoP reduces communication and memory costs in federated learning.
- The algorithm employs low-rank gradient projections to maintain optimization efficiency.
- Theoretical convergence guarantees are provided for nonconvex settings.
- Empirical results demonstrate competitive accuracy against existing methods.
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FedSLoP: Memory-Efficient Federated Learning with Low-Rank Gradient Projection
Summary
The paper introduces FedSLoP, a novel federated optimization algorithm designed to enhance memory efficiency and reduce communication costs in federated learning (FL) environments, particularly in heterogeneous and resource-constrained settings. Traditional methods like FedAvg often face challenges such as slow convergence and high memory usage, especially when clients have limited resources. FedSLoP addresses these issues by employing stochastic low-rank subspace projections of gradients, which effectively reduces the dimensionality of the updates communicated and stored while maintaining optimization progress. The authors provide a theoretical convergence analysis demonstrating that FedSLoP converges to a first-order stationary point at a rate of O(1/√NT) under standard smoothness and bounded-variance assumptions. Empirical evaluations on federated MNIST classification tasks with non-IID data show that FedSLoP significantly lowers communication volume and client-side memory requirements while achieving comparable or superior accuracy compared to FedAvg and other sparse or low-rank methods. The results suggest that random subspace momentum techniques like FedSLoP offer a principled solution for efficient federated learning.
Methodology
FedSLoP integrates stochastic low-rank subspace projections into the federated learning framework, allowing for reduced dimensionality of gradient updates. The method involves a detailed theoretical analysis of convergence under specific assumptions and extensive empirical testing on federated MNIST datasets with heterogeneous data distributions.
Results
The experiments reveal that FedSLoP achieves a significant reduction in communication volume and client memory usage while maintaining or improving accuracy compared to FedAvg and other baseline methods. The convergence rate of O(1/√NT) indicates effective optimization performance in nonconvex scenarios.
Implications
FedSLoP's design makes it a promising candidate for federated learning applications in environments with limited computational resources, such as mobile devices and IoT systems. Its memory-efficient approach could facilitate broader adoption of federated learning in real-world applications where data privacy and resource constraints are critical.
Feasible-First Exploration for Constrained ML Deployment Optimization in Crash-Prone Hierarchical Search Spaces
Optimization
- Introduces Thermal Budget Annealing (TBA) for feasible-first exploration in deployment optimization.
- Identifies the importance of early exploration quality in crash-heavy and budget-constrained environments.
- Presents DeployBench, a benchmark suite for evaluating deployment optimization strategies.
- Demonstrates improved model family discovery and reduced wasted budget compared to cold-start TPE.
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Feasible-First Exploration for Constrained ML Deployment Optimization in Crash-Prone Hierarchical Search Spaces
Summary
This paper addresses the challenges of deploying machine learning models under strict production constraints, which require optimizing over various factors such as model family, quantization scheme, runtime backend, and serving configuration. The author identifies that traditional black-box optimization methods, like Tree-structured Parzen Estimators (TPE), often struggle in environments where many configurations are invalid due to crashes or constraints. To tackle this issue, the paper proposes a novel method called Thermal Budget Annealing (TBA), which emphasizes a feasible-first exploration phase to identify valid configurations before transitioning to model-guided exploitation with TPE. The TBA method incorporates mechanisms to enhance robustness against hardware failures, including trial timeouts and subspace blacklisting. Additionally, the paper introduces DeployBench, a benchmark suite designed for evaluating deployment optimization strategies in hierarchical search spaces with hidden crash zones. Experimental results demonstrate that the TBA approach significantly improves the discovery of optimal model families while minimizing wasted evaluation budgets compared to traditional TPE, particularly in crash-prone environments.
Methodology
The methodology consists of a two-phase approach: Phase 1 employs crash-aware simulated annealing to explore feasible regions and diversify model-family discovery, while Phase 2 utilizes TPE, warm-started from the Phase 1 results. The method includes robustness mechanisms such as trial timeouts and subspace blacklisting to enhance performance in hostile hardware environments.
Results
The proposed hybrid method outperformed TPE in discovering the globally optimal model family across various hardware settings. Specifically, it achieved optimal discovery rates of 5/5 on H100, 4/5 on A100 and L4, and 3/5 on T4, compared to TPE's 3/5 on H100 and L4. On the RTX 5080, the hybrid discovered the optimal model in 8/10 seeds versus TPE's 3/10, demonstrating clear advantages in crash-prone environments.
Implications
The findings suggest that optimizing deployment strategies with a feasible-first approach can lead to more efficient resource utilization and improved model performance in real-world applications, particularly in environments with strict constraints and high failure rates.
PolyKV: A Shared Asymmetrically-Compressed KV Cache Pool for Multi-Agent LLM Inference
Large Language Models
Efficient ML
NLP
- Introduces a shared-pool architecture for KV cache that allows multiple agents to access a single compressed cache.
- Achieves a stable 2.91x compression ratio across various configurations and models.
- Demonstrates significant memory savings, reducing KV cache memory from 19.8 GB to 0.45 GB with minimal performance degradation.
- Finds that perplexity degradation improves with longer context lengths, suggesting implicit regularization effects.
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PolyKV: A Shared Asymmetrically-Compressed KV Cache Pool for Multi-Agent LLM Inference
Summary
The paper introduces PolyKV, a novel system designed to optimize memory usage during multi-agent inference of large language models (LLMs) by implementing a shared, asymmetrically-compressed key-value (KV) cache pool. Traditional methods allocate separate KV caches for each agent, leading to significant memory overhead. PolyKV addresses this by allowing multiple agents to share a single compressed KV cache, which is created once and injected into individual agent contexts using HuggingFace DynamicCache objects. The compression technique employed is asymmetric, utilizing int8 quantization for keys to maintain softmax stability, while values are compressed using TurboQuant MSE, which combines Fast Walsh-Hadamard Transform (FWHT) rotation and 3-bit Lloyd-Max quantization. The authors evaluate PolyKV across various model scales and context lengths, demonstrating a consistent compression ratio of 2.91x and significant memory savings, particularly with 15 concurrent agents. The results indicate that PolyKV not only reduces memory usage dramatically but also maintains a low degradation in perplexity and high semantic equivalence as measured by BERTScore.
Methodology
The methodology involves creating a SharedKVPool that computes a single compressed KV state from a shared document context. This state is then injected into multiple agents' DynamicCache instances. The compression is achieved through asymmetric quantization, where keys are quantized at int8 and values are compressed using TurboQuant MSE, which includes a FWHT rotation followed by 3-bit Lloyd-Max quantization.
Results
PolyKV achieves a compression ratio of 2.91x across all configurations tested. Specifically, with the Llama-3-8B model and 15 agents sharing a 4K-token context, it reduces memory usage from 19.8 GB to 0.45 GB, a 97.7% reduction, while maintaining only a +0.57% increase in perplexity. The perplexity delta remains stable across varying numbers of agents and improves with longer context lengths, with a noted inversion at 1,851 tokens where compressed cache quality surpasses the full-precision baseline.
Implications
The implications of this research are significant for the deployment of large language models in multi-agent systems, particularly in scenarios where memory efficiency is critical. By enabling shared access to a compressed KV cache, PolyKV can facilitate more scalable and efficient inference processes, potentially leading to broader applications in real-time language processing tasks.
BitRL: Reinforcement Learning with 1-bit Quantized Language Models for Resource-Constrained Edge Deployment
Reinforcement Learning
Large Language Models
Efficient ML
- BitRL is the first framework to integrate 1-bit quantized LLMs with reinforcement learning for edge deployment.
- Achieves 10-16× memory reduction and 3-5× energy efficiency improvements while retaining 85-98% of task performance.
- Theoretical analysis characterizes quantization effects and identifies value estimation as a critical bottleneck.
- Real-world validation on commodity hardware (Raspberry Pi 4) confirms the framework's practical utility.
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BitRL: Reinforcement Learning with 1-bit Quantized Language Models for Resource-Constrained Edge Deployment
Summary
The paper introduces BitRL, a novel framework designed to deploy reinforcement learning (RL) agents on resource-constrained edge devices by utilizing 1-bit quantized language models. Traditional large language models (LLMs) are limited by their substantial memory and computational requirements, making them impractical for edge deployment due to concerns over latency, privacy, and energy consumption. BitRL leverages the BitNet b1.58 architecture, which employs ternary weights (-1, 0, +1), achieving significant reductions in memory usage (10-16×) and energy efficiency (3-5×) compared to full-precision models while maintaining 85-98% of their performance across various benchmarks. The authors provide a theoretical analysis of quantization as structured parameter perturbation and derive convergence bounds for quantized policy gradients. They also identify the challenges of value function learning under extreme quantization and propose hybrid-precision architectures as a solution. The framework is validated through real-world experiments on Raspberry Pi 4 hardware, demonstrating its practical applicability in edge AI scenarios.
Methodology
The methodology involves using a frozen 1-bit quantized language model based on the BitNet b1.58 architecture, which employs ternary weights. A lightweight trainable head is used to learn the policy and value functions, enabling efficient on-device learning without reliance on cloud resources. The authors conduct theoretical analyses to understand the effects of quantization and perform empirical validation across nine benchmarks.
Results
BitRL demonstrates a significant reduction in model size and energy consumption while maintaining high performance levels. The framework achieves 10-16× memory savings and 3-5× energy efficiency improvements compared to full-precision baselines, with performance retention of 85-98% across various tasks. The study also highlights the challenges in value function learning due to quantization errors.
Implications
The implications of this work suggest that BitRL can enable the deployment of intelligent RL agents in resource-constrained environments, such as mobile devices and IoT applications, where traditional large models are impractical. This advancement could lead to more efficient edge AI systems that operate independently of cloud infrastructure, enhancing privacy and reducing latency.
Scaling Multi-Node Mixture-of-Experts Inference Using Expert Activation Patterns
Large Language Models
Efficient ML
Optimization
- Characterization of expert activation patterns across multiple MoE models reveals critical insights into load imbalance and activation correlation.
- Proposed workload-aware micro-batch grouping and expert placement strategies significantly reduce inter-node communication overhead.
- Optimizations lead to a 20% reduction in all-to-all communication volume and a 6% decrease in MoE layer latency.
- The approach provides both theoretical insights and practical solutions for scaling MoE inference in large multi-node clusters.
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Scaling Multi-Node Mixture-of-Experts Inference Using Expert Activation Patterns
Summary
This paper addresses the challenges of scaling Mixture-of-Experts (MoE) inference in multi-node deployments, particularly focusing on expert load imbalance and inefficient token routing. The authors profile several state-of-the-art MoE models and analyze over 100,000 expert activation traces to uncover persistent properties such as variable expert load imbalance and domain-specific expert activation. To mitigate the issues identified, they propose two key innovations: workload-aware micro-batch grouping and an expert placement strategy that enhances token locality to the destination expert. These optimizations lead to a significant reduction in inter-node communication overhead, thereby improving MoE decode latency and accelerator utilization. The findings provide a comprehensive characterization of expert activation patterns and present a principled approach to optimize request batching and expert placement, ultimately addressing critical gaps in scaling MoE inference systems.
Methodology
The authors conducted a comprehensive analysis of expert activation patterns from various state-of-the-art MoE models. They developed a data-driven approach that includes workload-aware micro-batch grouping to cluster requests based on expert activation patterns and an expert placement algorithm to optimize the distribution of experts across nodes, minimizing inter-node communication.
Results
The proposed methods resulted in up to a 20% reduction in all-to-all communication volume and a 6% decrease in MoE layer latency compared to existing strategies. This demonstrates improved efficiency in multi-node MoE inference systems.
Implications
The findings have significant implications for the deployment of large language models in distributed systems, enabling more efficient scaling of MoE architectures. The proposed strategies can enhance the performance of future sparse language models, making them more viable for real-world applications.
Unstable Rankings in Bayesian Deep Learning Evaluation
Theory
- Standard evaluations of Bayesian deep learning methods are unreliable under data scarcity.
- Method rankings are dataset-dependent and can vary significantly across different datasets.
- A Bayesian hierarchical model is proposed to treat evaluation metrics as random variables.
- The Minimum Detectable Difference curve helps assess the reliability of observed performance gaps.
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Unstable Rankings in Bayesian Deep Learning Evaluation
Summary
This paper investigates the reliability of method rankings in Bayesian deep learning evaluations under conditions of data scarcity. The authors demonstrate that standard evaluations, which assume reliable metric estimates, fail when the training dataset is small. They highlight that method rankings can be unstable and dataset-dependent, leading to significant discrepancies in perceived method superiority. To address this issue, the authors propose a Bayesian hierarchical model that treats evaluation metrics as random variables across different data realizations. They introduce a Minimum Detectable Difference curve to assess the smallest performance gap that can be reliably detected based on the training size. Through empirical studies involving six Bayesian deep learning methods across various datasets, the authors find that uncertainty-aware evaluation is crucial in low-data scenarios, as current evidence for method superiority can diverge significantly from predictive detectability. Their framework provides practitioners with tools to evaluate whether their data is sufficient for drawing conclusions about method performance.
Methodology
The authors employ a Bayesian hierarchical model to treat evaluation metrics as random variables across different data realizations. They introduce the Minimum Detectable Difference curve to quantify the smallest performance gap that can be reliably detected given a specific training size. The study involves empirical evaluations of six Bayesian deep learning methods across five regression datasets with varying training sizes.
Results
The study reveals that standard uncertainty quantification (UQ) metrics decrease in variance with increasing sample size, but the rates vary across methods. Method rankings are unstable across datasets, and coverage-based metrics remain unreliable with fewer than 100 samples. The Continuous Ranked Probability Score (CRPS) is found to provide more stable estimates than Negative Log-Likelihood in small-sample scenarios.
Implications
The findings suggest that practitioners should be cautious when interpreting method rankings derived from small datasets. The proposed framework aids in determining the sufficiency of evaluation data, which is critical for making informed decisions about method superiority in Bayesian deep learning applications, especially in fields with limited data availability.
PathMoG: A Pathway-Centric Modular Graph Neural Network for Multi-Omics Survival Prediction
Graph Learning
Multimodal
Interpretability
- PathMoG reorganizes genomic data into pathway modules to enhance biological relevance in survival prediction.
- The Hierarchical Omics Modulation (HOM) mechanism allows for better integration of multi-omics data.
- A dual-level attention mechanism captures complex interactions between pathways and clinical outcomes.
- PathMoG outperforms existing survival prediction models across multiple cancer types.
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PathMoG: A Pathway-Centric Modular Graph Neural Network for Multi-Omics Survival Prediction
Summary
The paper introduces PathMoG, a novel pathway-centric modular graph neural network designed for cancer survival prediction using multi-omics data. Traditional survival prediction models struggle with high-dimensional and heterogeneous data, often ignoring biological structures or using overly simplistic approaches to integrate various omics data. PathMoG addresses these challenges by reorganizing genomic data into 354 KEGG-informed pathway modules, which allows for biologically informed representation learning. The model employs a Hierarchical Omics Modulation (HOM) mechanism to condition gene expression on mutation, copy number variation (CNV), and clinical context, facilitating a more nuanced integration of multi-omics data. Additionally, a dual-level attention mechanism captures both intra-pathway and inter-pathway signals, leading to interpretable patient-level Cox risk estimates. The authors evaluated PathMoG on a dataset of 5,650 patients across 10 cancer types from The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) and demonstrated its superiority over existing survival prediction models, providing interpretable outputs at multiple levels.
Methodology
PathMoG utilizes a modular graph neural network architecture that decomposes genomic data into predefined pathway modules. It incorporates a Hierarchical Omics Modulation (HOM) mechanism to condition gene expression data based on mutation, CNV, and clinical context. The model employs a dual-level attention mechanism to enhance the interpretability and relevance of the predictions, focusing on both intra-pathway and inter-pathway interactions.
Results
The evaluation of PathMoG on 5,650 patients from 10 TCGA cancer types demonstrated significant improvements in survival prediction accuracy compared to existing models. The framework provided interpretable outputs at the gene, pathway, and patient levels, facilitating biologically grounded risk stratification.
Implications
PathMoG has the potential to improve cancer prognosis by providing more accurate and interpretable survival predictions based on multi-omics data. Its biologically informed approach may lead to better understanding of cancer mechanisms and more personalized treatment strategies.
Towards interpretable AI with quantum annealing feature selection
Computer Vision
Interpretability
Optimization
- Introduces a quantum annealing-based feature selection method for CNNs.
- Enhances interpretability by identifying important feature maps for predictions.
- Demonstrates improved class disentanglement compared to existing methods.
- Analyzes the computational behavior of quantum annealing in feature selection.
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Towards interpretable AI with quantum annealing feature selection
Summary
This paper addresses the challenge of interpretability in deep learning models, particularly Convolutional Neural Networks (CNNs) used in image classification. The authors propose a novel method for feature selection that leverages quantum annealing to identify the most significant feature maps contributing to model predictions. By reformulating the feature selection problem as a Quadratic Unconstrained Binary Optimization (QUBO) problem, the approach enables efficient exploration of the feature space. The proposed method is evaluated against established explainable AI techniques, GradCAM and GradCAM++, demonstrating improved class disentanglement and enhanced transparency in model reasoning. Additionally, the paper investigates the computational behavior of the quantum annealing algorithm, providing insights into its effectiveness. The findings suggest that quantum computing can significantly improve the interpretability of deep learning models, making them more trustworthy for critical applications.
Methodology
The authors reformulate the feature selection problem as a QUBO problem, where binary variables represent the inclusion or exclusion of feature maps. Quantum annealing is then employed to efficiently explore the solution space, allowing for the identification of the most relevant features contributing to model predictions.
Results
The proposed quantum annealing feature selection method outperformed traditional explainable AI techniques, showing improved class disentanglement and providing clearer insights into the model's decision-making process. The analysis of the quantum annealing algorithm's performance indicated a favorable computational behavior, supporting the effectiveness of the approach.
Implications
This work suggests that integrating quantum computing with feature selection can enhance the interpretability of deep learning models, making them more reliable for applications in critical fields such as healthcare and autonomous systems. It opens avenues for further research into quantum-enhanced AI methodologies.
Evaluating CUDA Tile for AI Workloads on Hopper and Blackwell GPUs
Efficient ML
Optimization
Large Language Models
- CuTile achieves up to 1,007 TFLOP/s for fused attention on Blackwell B200, outperforming FlashAttention-2 by 2.5x.
- CuTile is a practical replacement for WMMA in GEMM tasks, requiring significantly less code.
- CuTile does not outperform cuBLAS for standard GEMM workloads, achieving only 52-79% of its performance.
- Triton offers better portability across architectures compared to CuTile.
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Evaluating CUDA Tile for AI Workloads on Hopper and Blackwell GPUs
Summary
This paper presents the first independent evaluation of NVIDIA's CUDA Tile (CuTile), a Python-based programming model designed to simplify GPU kernel development while maintaining efficiency on modern GPUs. The authors benchmark CuTile against established alternatives such as cuBLAS, Triton, WMMA, and raw SIMT across three NVIDIA GPUs (H100 NVL, B200, and RTX PRO 6000) using various AI workloads, including GEMM and LLM inference. The findings indicate that CuTile's performance is highly dependent on the specific workload and GPU architecture. Notably, CuTile achieves impressive performance on the Blackwell B200 GPU for fused attention, outperforming FlashAttention-2 by 2.5x with significantly less code. However, its performance on the RTX PRO 6000 is less favorable, highlighting optimization gaps across architectures. The study concludes that while CuTile can be a practical alternative for certain workloads, it does not yet match the performance of vendor-optimized libraries like cuBLAS for standard GEMM tasks. Additionally, Triton demonstrates superior portability across architectures, making it a preferable choice for developers requiring cross-platform compatibility.
Methodology
The authors conducted a comparative evaluation of CuTile against several established GPU programming approaches (cuBLAS, Triton, WMMA, and raw SIMT) on three different NVIDIA GPUs. They benchmarked representative AI workloads, including GEMM and fused multi-head attention, to assess performance and portability, focusing on code efficiency and throughput.
Results
CuTile demonstrated exceptional performance for fused attention on the Blackwell B200 GPU, achieving 1,007 TFLOP/s, while for GEMM tasks, it reached 52-79% of cuBLAS performance. On the RTX PRO 6000, CuTile's performance was only 53% of FlashAttention-2 throughput, indicating significant optimization challenges. Triton maintained 62-101% of cuBLAS performance across all tested platforms without architecture-specific tuning.
Implications
The findings suggest that CuTile can simplify GPU kernel development for specific workloads, particularly in datacenter environments. However, its limitations in portability and performance relative to established libraries indicate that developers should carefully consider their workload requirements and GPU architecture before adopting CuTile. The study also highlights the need for further optimization of CuTile for workstation-class GPUs.
Efficient VQ-QAT and Mixed Vector/Linear quantized Neural Networks
Efficient ML
- Introduction of a cosine similarity-based assignment method for VQ model weight compression.
- Enhancement of Differentiable K-Means with top-1 sampling and a straight-through estimator.
- Exploration of differentiable neural architecture search for adaptive layer-wise quantization.
- Demonstrated faster training and better accuracy preservation on ResNet-18 for ImageNet classification.
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Efficient VQ-QAT and Mixed Vector/Linear quantized Neural Networks
Summary
This paper presents three innovative techniques for vector quantization (VQ) based model weight compression, aimed at enhancing the efficiency of deep neural network quantization. The authors introduce a cosine similarity-based assignment method to address codebook collapse and facilitate end-to-end training. Building on the Differentiable K-Means (DKM) approach, they enhance the assignment process by integrating cosine similarity with top-1 sampling and a straight-through estimator, which eliminates the need for weighted-average reconstruction. Additionally, the paper explores the application of differentiable neural architecture search (NAS) to dynamically select layer-wise quantization configurations, optimizing the compression process. While the proposed method does not consistently outperform existing quantization techniques across all levels, it offers valuable insights into the design trade-offs and behaviors of VQ-based model compression methods, particularly in the context of resource-constrained hardware deployment.
Methodology
The authors developed a plug-and-play quantization-aware training (QAT) framework that utilizes cosine similarity for weight assignment, combined with top-1 sampling and a straight-through estimator. They also employed differentiable neural architecture search to adaptively select quantization configurations at the layer level, optimizing the overall compression process.
Results
The proposed methods showed improved performance over state-of-the-art quantization frameworks for certain configurations, particularly on the ResNet-18 architecture for ImageNet classification, achieving faster training times and better accuracy retention. However, the methods did not consistently outperform all existing approaches across all quantization levels.
Implications
The findings suggest that the proposed techniques can significantly enhance the efficiency of neural network quantization, making them suitable for deployment on resource-constrained hardware. The insights into design trade-offs may guide future research in model compression and quantization strategies.
CoreFlow: Low-Rank Matrix Generative Models
Generative Models
- CoreFlow learns shared low-rank geometry for matrix distributions, improving training efficiency.
- The model effectively handles incomplete matrices through masked updates and iterative completion.
- CoreFlow shows substantial improvements in generation quality in few-sample settings.
- The approach preserves matrix structure while reducing the effective generative dimension.
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CoreFlow: Low-Rank Matrix Generative Models
Summary
The paper introduces CoreFlow, a novel generative model designed to learn matrix-valued distributions from high-dimensional and potentially incomplete training data. The authors address the challenges of ambient-space generative modeling, which can be computationally expensive and statistically fragile in high dimensions with limited samples. CoreFlow operates by first identifying shared low-rank row and column subspaces across the matrix distribution, allowing it to train a continuous normalizing flow (CNF) solely on the induced low-dimensional core. This approach effectively separates shared matrix geometry from sample-specific variations, preserving matrix structure and enhancing training efficiency. Additionally, CoreFlow incorporates masked Riemannian updates to handle incomplete training matrices, ensuring robust structure learning even with significant missing data. The authors demonstrate that CoreFlow significantly improves spectral and moment-level generation quality in few-sample regimes while remaining competitive in data-rich environments, achieving effective performance even with compressed dimensions and missing entries.
Methodology
CoreFlow employs a two-stage process: first, it learns shared row and column subspaces from the matrix distribution, and then it trains a continuous normalizing flow (CNF) on the low-dimensional core space. The model utilizes masked Riemannian updates to recover shared geometry from incomplete matrices, ensuring stability and reliability in subspace recovery.
Results
The experimental results indicate that CoreFlow significantly enhances the quality of generated matrices in both real and synthetic benchmarks, particularly in scenarios with limited samples. The model demonstrates competitive performance in data-rich settings, even when subjected to compression to 9% of the ambient dimension and with up to 40% missing training entries.
Implications
CoreFlow has potential applications in various fields where matrix-valued data is prevalent, such as geophysics, climate modeling, sensor networks, and medical imaging. Its ability to generate high-fidelity matrix data from limited and incomplete samples can facilitate realistic simulations, data augmentation, and imputation tasks.
Time-varying Interaction Graph ODE for Dynamic Graph Representation Learning
Graph Learning
- TI-ODE models inter-node interactions as a time-dependent combination of multiple basis functions.
- The model captures both the diversity of interaction patterns and their time-varying nature.
- TI-ODE shows superior robustness compared to traditional models with a unified message-passing mechanism.
- Experimental results indicate state-of-the-art performance on multiple dynamic graph benchmarks.
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Time-varying Interaction Graph ODE for Dynamic Graph Representation Learning
Summary
This paper introduces Time-varying Interaction Graph Ordinary Differential Equations (TI-ODE), a novel approach for dynamic graph representation learning that addresses the limitations of existing graph neural ODEs. Traditional models typically employ a unified message passing mechanism, which fails to capture the diversity and time-varying nature of inter-node interactions. TI-ODE overcomes this by decomposing the evolution function into a set of learnable interaction basis functions, each representing a distinct type of inter-node interaction. These functions are dynamically combined using time-dependent weights, allowing the model to adaptively evolve interaction patterns over time. The authors demonstrate that TI-ODE not only achieves state-of-the-art performance on six dynamic graph datasets, including physical and molecular dynamics, but also exhibits superior robustness and interpretability compared to models using a unified message-passing function. The findings suggest that TI-ODE is a promising framework for effectively modeling complex dynamic interactions in various real-world applications.
Methodology
The authors propose TI-ODE, which represents the evolution function in graph ODEs as a combination of learnable interaction basis functions. These functions are dynamically weighted based on time, allowing for a flexible representation of inter-node interactions. The methodology includes theoretical proofs of robustness and extensive empirical evaluations across diverse datasets.
Results
TI-ODE consistently outperformed existing state-of-the-art models across six benchmarks, including two physical dynamics datasets, two molecular dynamics datasets, and two real-world datasets. The model also demonstrated superior interpretability and generalizability on the Covid dataset, along with enhanced robustness compared to models relying on a unified message-passing function.
Implications
The TI-ODE framework has significant implications for various applications involving dynamic graphs, such as social networks, transportation systems, and biological networks. Its ability to model complex interaction patterns can improve predictive performance and provide deeper insights into dynamic systems.
EvoTSC: Evolving Feature Learning Models for Time Series Classification via Genetic Programming
Time Series
- EvoTSC leverages genetic programming to evolve feature learning models for time series classification.
- The multi-layer program structure integrates expert knowledge to enhance the evolutionary search process.
- A modified Pareto tournament selection strategy is introduced to reduce overfitting and improve model generalizability.
- EvoTSC significantly outperforms eleven benchmark methods in various experimental comparisons.
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EvoTSC: Evolving Feature Learning Models for Time Series Classification via Genetic Programming
Summary
This paper introduces EvoTSC, a novel genetic programming approach aimed at evolving lightweight feature learning models for time series classification (TSC). The authors address the challenges of limited labeled data and high computational demands in TSC by embedding expert knowledge into a multi-layer program structure that guides the evolutionary process. The proposed method incorporates a tailored Pareto tournament selection strategy to combat overfitting, promoting the development of models that generalize well across different training data subsets. Extensive experiments on univariate time series datasets demonstrate that EvoTSC outperforms eleven benchmark methods in most scenarios, showcasing the effectiveness of the evolved models and the efficiency of the proposed components.
Methodology
The methodology involves a genetic programming framework that evolves feature learning models through a multi-layer program structure. This structure organizes various operations such as segment detection, domain transformation, and feature extraction into a hierarchical search space. The authors also implement a modified Pareto tournament selection strategy to favor models that maintain consistent performance across different training subsets, thereby addressing overfitting.
Results
The experimental results indicate that EvoTSC consistently outperforms eleven benchmark methods in univariate time series classification tasks. The analysis of the evolved models confirms their resource efficiency and highlights the contributions of individual components within the EvoTSC framework.
Implications
The findings suggest that EvoTSC can be effectively applied in domains requiring time series classification, such as medical diagnostics, industrial monitoring, and financial analysis, particularly in scenarios where labeled data is scarce and computational resources are limited. The interpretability of the evolved models also makes them suitable for safety-critical applications.
Online combinatorial optimization with stochastic decision sets and adversarial losses
Optimization
Theory
- Introduces algorithms for online combinatorial optimization with stochastic action availability.
- Proposes Counting Awake Times for efficient loss estimation.
- Improvements in regret bounds from O(T^4/5) to O(T^2/3) and O(√T) in restricted settings.
- Eliminates costly exploration phases present in previous algorithms.
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Online combinatorial optimization with stochastic decision sets and adversarial losses
Summary
This paper addresses the challenges of online combinatorial optimization in scenarios where the availability of actions is stochastic and can change over time. Traditional approaches assume a fixed set of actions, but real-world applications often involve unreliable actions, such as sensor readings or road segments that may be blocked. The authors propose two novel algorithms, SLEEPINGCAT and SLEEPINGCATBANDIT, which utilize a new loss estimation technique called Counting Awake Times. These algorithms are designed for different feedback settings, including restricted and semi-bandit feedback. The paper improves upon existing methods by eliminating the need for costly exploration phases and providing better regret bounds. The authors demonstrate that their algorithms outperform previous approaches, particularly in terms of regret bounds, making them more efficient for practical applications.
Methodology
The authors develop algorithms based on the Follow-The-Perturbed-Leader method, adapting it to handle stochastic decision sets. They introduce a novel loss estimation technique, Counting Awake Times, which allows for efficient computation of losses without requiring explicit exploration of action availability probabilities. The algorithms are evaluated under different feedback assumptions, including full information, bandit, and semi-bandit settings.
Results
The proposed algorithms, SLEEPINGCAT and SLEEPINGCATBANDIT, show significant improvements over the best-known competitor, BSFPL, particularly in terms of regret bounds. The regret bounds are improved from O(T^4/5) to O(T^2/3) in the adversarial setting and achieve O(√T) in the restricted feedback setting, demonstrating enhanced performance in learning from stochastic environments.
Implications
The findings suggest that the proposed algorithms can be effectively applied in various domains where action availability is uncertain, such as routing, recommender systems, and other sequential decision-making problems. The improved efficiency and reduced complexity of the algorithms make them suitable for real-time applications in dynamic environments.
Hybrid JIT-CUDA Graph Optimization for Low-Latency Large Language Model Inference
Large Language Models
Optimization
Efficient ML
- Introduction of a hybrid JIT-CUDA Graph runtime to optimize LLM inference.
- Significant reduction in inference latency and variance for short-sequence workloads.
- Asynchronous graph capture mechanism enhances runtime flexibility.
- Evaluation shows up to 66.0% reduction in Time-to-First-Token (TTFT).
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Hybrid JIT-CUDA Graph Optimization for Low-Latency Large Language Model Inference
Summary
This paper addresses the challenge of high inference latency in Large Language Models (LLMs) during interactive applications, particularly in short-sequence settings. The authors propose a hybrid runtime framework that integrates Just-In-Time (JIT) compilation with CUDA Graph execution. This framework optimally partitions transformer inference into static components, which are executed via CUDA Graph replay, and dynamic components, which are managed through JIT-compiled kernels. This approach allows for asynchronous graph capture and reuse across decoding steps, significantly reducing kernel launch overhead. The evaluation is conducted on the LLaMA-2 7B model using single-GPU, batch-size-one inference across varying prompt lengths. The results demonstrate that the hybrid runtime reduces Time-to-First-Token (TTFT) by up to 66.0% and achieves lower P99 latency compared to existing frameworks like TensorRT-LLM. The findings suggest that this hybrid optimization strategy is effective for latency-sensitive AI applications, particularly in scenarios requiring quick response generation.
Methodology
The authors developed a hybrid runtime framework that combines static CUDA Graph execution for predictable components of transformer inference with dynamic JIT compilation for components requiring flexibility. This involved partitioning the inference pipeline, implementing asynchronous graph generation, and overlapping JIT execution with CUDA Graph replay to minimize overhead.
Results
The proposed hybrid runtime framework achieved a reduction in Time-to-First-Token (TTFT) by up to 66.0% and demonstrated lower P99 latency compared to TensorRT-LLM during single-GPU, batch-size-one inference across prompt lengths from 10 to 500 tokens.
Implications
This work presents a practical optimization strategy for deploying LLMs in latency-sensitive environments, such as conversational agents and interactive applications, where quick response generation is crucial. The hybrid approach can enhance user experience by minimizing delays in AI interactions.
FlashOverlap: Minimizing Tail Latency in Communication Overlap for Distributed LLM Training
Large Language Models
Efficient ML
Optimization
- FlashOverlap eliminates tail latency in communication-computation overlap for distributed LLM training.
- The method uses peer-to-peer communication to replace traditional collective operations, allowing for fine-grained overlap.
- FlashOverlap is compatible with various parallelism strategies, enhancing its applicability across different architectures.
- Experimental evaluations show significant improvements in latency, MFU, and throughput.
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FlashOverlap: Minimizing Tail Latency in Communication Overlap for Distributed LLM Training
Summary
The paper introduces FlashOverlap, a novel technique aimed at minimizing tail latency in communication overlap during distributed training of large language models (LLMs). As LLMs grow in size, the need for efficient parallelization across accelerators like GPUs and TPUs has become critical. Traditional methods for communication-computation overlap often suffer from tail latency, which can significantly hinder performance. FlashOverlap addresses this issue by replacing conventional collective operations (reduce-scatter and all-gather) with decomposed peer-to-peer (P2P) communication, allowing for fine-grained overlap of computation and communication. This method not only reduces communication overhead but also supports various parallelism strategies, including data parallelism and tensor-level parallelism. Experimental results demonstrate that FlashOverlap achieves lower latency, improved Model FLOPS Utilization (MFU), and higher throughput compared to existing methods, thereby enhancing the efficiency of distributed LLM training and inference.
Methodology
The authors propose FlashOverlap, which decomposes traditional collective communication operations (reduce-scatter and all-gather) into peer-to-peer communications. This allows for the scheduling of partitioned computations to achieve fine-grained overlap between communication and computation, effectively reducing communication overhead and eliminating tail latency.
Results
Experimental evaluations indicate that FlashOverlap consistently achieves lower latency and higher throughput compared to existing methods. It also demonstrates superior Model FLOPS Utilization (MFU), making it a more efficient solution for distributed LLM training and inference.
Implications
The proposed method has significant implications for the training and inference of large language models, enabling more efficient use of computational resources and potentially lowering operational costs. By alleviating communication bottlenecks, FlashOverlap allows for the scaling of model parallelism across multiple nodes, which is crucial for handling increasingly large models.
Compute Aligned Training: Optimizing for Test Time Inference
NLP
Large Language Models
Reinforcement Learning
- Introduction of Compute Aligned Training (CAT) to align training objectives with test-time strategies.
- Derivation of new loss functions that optimize model performance during inference.
- Empirical evidence showing substantial improvements in test-time scaling over standard training methods.
- Extension of alignment techniques beyond traditional SFT and RL to include various inference strategies.
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Compute Aligned Training: Optimizing for Test Time Inference
Summary
This paper introduces Compute Aligned Training (CAT), a novel framework designed to optimize the training of models, particularly Large Language Models (LLMs), for improved performance during test-time inference. The authors argue that traditional training methods, such as Supervised Fine-Tuning (SFT) and Reinforcement Learning (RL), often misalign with the strategies employed during inference, leading to suboptimal performance. By conceptualizing inference strategies as operators that transform the base policy of a model, CAT derives new loss functions that better align training objectives with test-time strategies. The paper empirically validates the effectiveness of CAT across various paradigms and demonstrates that it significantly enhances test-time performance without incurring additional computational costs during training. The authors also extend previous work on training-inference alignment to include a broader range of strategies and models, including Protein Language Models (PLMs).
Methodology
The methodology involves conceptualizing inference strategies as operators on the base policy of a model, allowing for the derivation of new loss functions that maximize performance during test-time inference. The authors perform gradient descent to minimize loss with respect to a transformed distribution, effectively aligning training with the deployment environment. This approach is applied to both SFT and RL, re-weighting gradients based on the marginal utility of samples to aggregate outcomes.
Results
The empirical results indicate that CAT significantly improves test-time performance across various strategies, including Pass@N and Majority Vote, compared to standard training methods. The framework demonstrates its effectiveness not only for LLMs but also for Protein Language Models, showcasing its versatility and generalizability.
Implications
The implications of this work suggest that aligning training with test-time strategies can lead to more robust and effective models in real-world applications, particularly in scenarios where models are required to generate multiple candidate solutions. This approach could enhance the performance of AI systems in various domains, including natural language processing and beyond.
Prior-Agnostic Robust Forecast Aggregation
Theory
- Introduces a prior-agnostic robust forecast aggregation framework for unknown state spaces.
- Develops a closed-form log-odds aggregator that pools forecasts in logit space.
- Establishes minimax-regret guarantees, demonstrating the complexity of unknown state spaces.
- Achieves a worst-case regret of 0.0255 under conditionally independent signals.
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Prior-Agnostic Robust Forecast Aggregation
Summary
This paper addresses the challenge of robust forecast aggregation in scenarios where the aggregator lacks knowledge of the underlying joint information structure and prior distributions. Unlike traditional models that assume a known binary state space, the authors propose a prior-agnostic approach where the state can take any value in the interval [0, 1]. The main contribution is the introduction of a closed-form log-odds aggregator that pools forecasts in logit space, providing minimax-regret guarantees across various knowledge regimes. The authors demonstrate that robust aggregation with an unknown state space is more complex than with a known state, establishing a lower bound for regret and achieving a worst-case regret of 0.0255 under conditionally independent signals. They also characterize regret bounds for Blackwell-ordered structures and general information structures. In scenarios where the aggregator knows the marginal forecast distribution of each expert, a generalized log-odds rule achieves a regret of 0.0228, with a lower bound of 0.0225. This work is significant as it presents the first explicit closed-form aggregator achieving a regret upper bound strictly less than 0.0226 in the classical known state space setting.
Methodology
The authors utilize a closed-form log-odds aggregation function that linearly combines expert forecasts in logit space. They analyze the performance of this aggregator under various conditions, particularly focusing on conditionally independent signals and different information structures. The methodology includes deriving regret bounds and comparing the aggregator's performance against an omniscient Bayesian benchmark.
Results
The proposed log-odds aggregator achieves a worst-case regret of 0.0255 in the unknown state space setting, which is shown to be strictly harder than the known state space scenario. In the classical setting with a known binary state space, the aggregator achieves a regret strictly below 0.0226. Additionally, when the aggregator knows each expert's marginal forecast distribution, a generalized log-odds rule achieves a regret of 0.0228, with a lower bound of 0.0225.
Implications
This research has significant implications for fields requiring reliable forecast aggregation from multiple sources, such as weather forecasting, election predictions, and financial analysis. The ability to aggregate forecasts effectively without prior knowledge of the underlying state can enhance decision-making processes in uncertain environments.