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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Boundary Mass and the Soft-to-Hard Limit in Mixture-of-Experts
Theory
Optimization
- Introduces the concept of boundary mass to analyze routing ties in MoE models.
- Proves that the boundary mass is linear in slab width, impacting soft-to-hard risk bounds.
- Establishes Γ-convergence of soft objectives to hard-routing objectives under specific conditions.
- Demonstrates a conditional landscape-transfer principle in a teacher-student setting.
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Boundary Mass and the Soft-to-Hard Limit in Mixture-of-Experts
Summary
This paper investigates the transition from softmax routing to hard routing in mixture-of-experts (MoE) models, particularly focusing on the singularity that arises near routing ties as the temperature approaches zero. The author introduces the concept of 'boundary mass,' which quantifies the probability that the top two router scores are closely tied. Through geometric estimates, the paper demonstrates that this boundary mass is linear with respect to the slab width, with a leading constant derived from a surface integral over the routing interface. The findings lead to quantitative soft-to-hard risk bounds and establish the Γ-convergence of soft objectives to hard-routing objectives under certain conditions. The paper also explores implications in a teacher-student framework, showing that favorable geometric properties of the hard-routing problem can be inherited by soft routing at small temperatures. Overall, the study reveals that the zero-temperature limit is influenced more by a thin geometric layer around routing interfaces than by the entire input space.
Methodology
The author employs geometric analysis and coarea/tube estimates to study the boundary mass and its implications for softmax routing in MoE models. Theoretical results are derived under assumptions of smoothness and transversality of the router and input law, leading to risk bounds and convergence results.
Results
The paper presents a geometric estimate for boundary mass, showing that the probability of inputs near routing ties is proportional to the slab width. It establishes that the soft and hard population risks differ by O(Ï„) and demonstrates that small-temperature soft objectives converge to hard-routing objectives in a variational sense. Additionally, it provides a transfer principle for favorable geometric properties in a teacher-student context.
Implications
The findings have implications for the design and optimization of mixture-of-experts models, particularly in understanding how soft routing can effectively approximate hard routing. This could enhance model performance in various applications where conditional computation is critical.
Topological Neural Tangent Kernel
Graph Learning
Theory
Interpretability
- Introduction of TopoNTK, an infinite-width kernel for higher-order interactions in simplicial complexes.
- Demonstration of how TopoNTK captures filled-simplex structures that are invisible to traditional graph kernels.
- Establishment of exact Hodge preservation in propagation and conditions for kernel-level compatibility.
- Development of spectral learning dynamics and proof of finite-depth stability under perturbations.
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Topological Neural Tangent Kernel
Summary
The paper introduces the Topological Neural Tangent Kernel (TopoNTK), which extends the neural tangent kernel framework to capture higher-order interactions in relational data using simplicial complexes. Traditional graph neural networks are limited to pairwise interactions, but many systems exhibit higher-order relationships that can be more effectively represented by simplicial complexes. TopoNTK utilizes Hodge message-passing on edge features, combining lower and upper Hodge interactions to enhance expressivity and interpretability. The lower Hodge interactions capture graph-like coupling through shared vertices, while upper Hodge interactions account for filled simplices, allowing the kernel to differentiate between complexes with the same graph structure but different higher-order features. The paper also discusses the Hodge decomposition of edge signals, which provides insights into the learning dynamics and stability of the model. Empirical evaluations demonstrate the effectiveness of TopoNTK on synthetic tasks and real-world applications, such as higher-order link prediction in DBLP datasets.
Methodology
The methodology involves defining the TopoNTK through Hodge message-passing on edge features, utilizing both lower and upper Hodge Laplacians to propagate information. The paper employs mathematical proofs to establish properties such as Hodge preservation and spectral learning dynamics, alongside empirical experiments to validate the theoretical findings.
Results
The results indicate that TopoNTK significantly enhances the expressivity of neural tangent kernels by capturing higher-order topological features. The kernel's ability to distinguish between simplicial complexes with identical graphs but different triangle sets is demonstrated. Additionally, the paper proves that the propagation operator preserves the Hodge decomposition, and empirical results show effective performance on tasks related to triangle-count sensitivity and higher-order link prediction.
Implications
The findings suggest that incorporating higher-order topological structures into neural network frameworks can lead to improved modeling of complex relational data, with potential applications in social network analysis, biological systems, and any domain where interactions among groups of entities are critical.
MSMixer: Learned Multi-Scale Temporal Mixing with Complementary Linear Shortcut for Long-Term Time Series Forecasting
Time Series
- MSMixer employs a multi-scale architecture with three parallel branches for improved temporal pattern capture.
- A learnable softmax gate allows dynamic weighting of outputs from different branches, enhancing adaptability.
- The DLinear complementary shortcut provides global context, improving trend and seasonality modeling.
- MSMixer outperforms existing lightweight models and Transformer-based models in forecasting accuracy.
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MSMixer: Learned Multi-Scale Temporal Mixing with Complementary Linear Shortcut for Long-Term Time Series Forecasting
Summary
The paper introduces MSMixer, a novel multi-scale MLP architecture designed for long-term time series forecasting. Traditional models often struggle to capture patterns across different temporal resolutions, which is crucial for accurate forecasting. MSMixer addresses this by employing three parallel branches that operate at different down-sampling factors (1×, 4×, 16×), each utilizing independent MLP blocks to specialize in capturing various temporal patterns, from fine-grained details to macro trends. A learnable softmax gate dynamically weights the outputs from these branches, allowing the model to adaptively emphasize different scales based on the dataset characteristics. Additionally, a DLinear complementary shortcut is implemented to provide full-window context, enhancing the model's ability to capture global trends and seasonality. With only 112 K parameters, MSMixer achieves efficient O(T) complexity, making it a lightweight alternative to existing models. The architecture was evaluated against several benchmarks, demonstrating superior performance in terms of mean squared error (MSE) compared to both lightweight models and Transformer-based approaches, while significantly reducing the number of parameters required.
Methodology
MSMixer utilizes a channel-independent multi-scale MLP architecture with three parallel branches at different down-sampling factors (1×, 4×, 16×). Each branch applies independent MLP blocks to capture specific temporal patterns. A learnable softmax gate merges the outputs from these branches, while a DLinear shortcut is used to maintain full-window context. The model is evaluated on four ETT benchmarks using standard chronological splits and multiple random seeds.
Results
MSMixer achieved the lowest average MSE of 0.357 among lightweight models across 16 configurations, outperforming DLinear (0.386) and NLinear (0.365). It also performed competitively against five Transformer-based models, achieving best or second-best MSE in 9 of 16 configurations, while using 5× fewer parameters than PatchTST. Notably, on ETTm1 at H=336, MSMixer scored 0.367, outperforming PatchTST (0.369), and on ETTm2 at H=720, it scored 0.358 compared to PatchTST's 0.362.
Implications
The MSMixer architecture has significant implications for long-term time series forecasting across various domains, including finance, climate modeling, and industrial process control. Its efficient design allows for effective modeling of complex temporal patterns without the computational burden associated with larger models, making it suitable for real-time applications.
Combining Trained Models in Reinforcement Learning
Reinforcement Learning
Federated Learning
Robotics
- High sample cost and weak transferability are significant issues in DRL.
- The review synthesizes findings from 15 empirical studies on pretrained knowledge reuse.
- Positive results are more common when source and target tasks are structurally similar.
- Evidence for ensemble and federated methods is limited and context-specific.
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Combining Trained Models in Reinforcement Learning
Summary
This paper addresses the challenges of high sample cost and limited transferability in deep reinforcement learning (DRL) by systematically reviewing empirical studies on the reuse of pretrained knowledge. The authors conducted a PRISMA-guided systematic review, starting with 589 records and narrowing it down to 15 empirical studies that met their eligibility criteria. The review synthesizes findings across four main mechanisms: distillation, transfer and policy reuse, ensembles, and federated training. Key observations include that positive outcomes are more likely when source and target tasks share substantial structural similarities or when alignment mechanisms are employed. The evidence for ensembles and federated methods is promising yet limited, and compute-matched comparisons are rare, which complicates claims regarding efficiency gains. The paper contributes a focused review scope, a synthesis of empirical evidence, and introduces a provisional independence spectrum for benchmarking reused models, suggesting areas for future research.
Methodology
The authors employed a PRISMA-guided systematic review methodology, screening 589 records from various databases and narrowing them down to 15 studies based on specific eligibility criteria. They qualitatively analyzed the studies across three factors: source-target similarity, diversity among reused models, and fairness of comparisons against from-scratch baselines.
Results
The review identified three recurring patterns: (1) positive results are concentrated in scenarios with significant structural similarities between tasks or the use of alignment mechanisms; (2) evidence for ensemble and federated methods is promising but limited; and (3) compute-matched comparisons are rare, undermining claims of efficiency gains over single-agent baselines.
Implications
The findings suggest that knowledge reuse in DRL can be beneficial under certain conditions, highlighting the need for more standardized benchmarking and empirical studies to better understand the effectiveness of different reuse strategies. The proposed independence spectrum could guide future research in evaluating pretrained model reuse.
Bolek: A Multimodal Language Model for Molecular Reasoning
NLP
Large Language Models
Multimodal
- BOLEK integrates molecular embeddings into a language model for enhanced reasoning.
- The model outperforms larger, specialized systems in multiple classification tasks.
- It provides auditable explanations that are grounded in molecular features.
- BOLEK demonstrates generalization capabilities beyond its training data.
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Bolek: A Multimodal Language Model for Molecular Reasoning
Summary
The paper introduces BOLEK, a compact multimodal language model designed to enhance molecular reasoning by grounding natural language explanations in molecular structures. Traditional AI models in molecular science often provide outputs that lack transparency, making it difficult for medicinal chemists to trust or understand the predictions. BOLEK addresses this by integrating a molecular embedding, specifically a Morgan fingerprint, into a text decoder, allowing the model to produce explanations that are verifiable against the input molecule. The model is fine-tuned on various alignment tasks and 15 binary classification tasks, utilizing literature-guided synthetic chains-of-thought that anchor predictions in concrete molecular features. BOLEK demonstrates superior performance compared to its larger counterparts, achieving higher mean ROC/PR AUC scores and providing more grounded reasoning by frequently citing numerical descriptors. The results indicate that BOLEK can match the performance of specialized systems while maintaining a compact architecture, suggesting its potential for real-world applications in drug discovery and molecular reasoning.
Methodology
BOLEK employs a multimodal approach by injecting a Morgan fingerprint into a language model's decoder. It is fine-tuned on alignment tasks and downstream reasoning tasks, using literature-guided synthetic chains-of-thought to anchor predictions in verifiable molecular features.
Results
BOLEK outperformed its base model on all 15 downstream tasks in yes/no mode and on 13 of 15 in chain-of-thought mode, raising mean ROC/PR AUC from 0.55 to 0.76. It also outperformed the chemistry-specialist TxGemma-9B-Chat on 13 of 15 tasks while being less than half its size. The model cited numerical descriptors significantly more often than other LLMs, with strong agreement on descriptor values.
Implications
The development of BOLEK suggests a pathway for creating AI models that not only predict molecular properties but also provide transparent, verifiable reasoning, which is crucial for decision-making in drug discovery and other high-stakes scientific applications.
Closed-Loop CO2 Storage Control With History-Based Reinforcement Learning and Latent Model-Based Adaptation
Reinforcement Learning
Optimization
- Closed-loop CO2 storage management is formulated as a partially observable sequential decision problem.
- History-conditioned policies can effectively utilize deployable well-level information to achieve high performance.
- Latent model-based adaptation outperforms direct model-free retuning in abnormal operational scenarios.
- The proposed framework reduces the computational burden associated with traditional history matching and re-optimization.
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Closed-Loop CO2 Storage Control With History-Based Reinforcement Learning and Latent Model-Based Adaptation
Summary
This paper addresses the challenge of managing geological CO2 storage through a closed-loop control framework that adapts to uncertain reservoir behavior. The authors formulate CO2 injection and brine production control as a partially observable sequential decision problem, employing deep reinforcement learning (RL) techniques. They compare various model-free RL policies, including privileged-state, well-only, and history-conditioned approaches, to assess the importance of temporal well-response information. Additionally, a latent model-based adaptation pipeline is introduced, which retunes controllers in response to specific operational challenges such as injector failures and leakage dynamics. The findings demonstrate that history-conditioned policies can achieve performance close to that of privileged-state policies using only deployable well-level data. Furthermore, the latent model-based adaptation outperforms direct model-free retuning under abnormal operating conditions, providing a more efficient alternative to traditional history matching and re-optimization methods in closed-loop CO2 storage control.
Methodology
The authors employed deep reinforcement learning to train controllers on high-fidelity reservoir simulations. They compared various model-free policies under different observability regimes and introduced a latent model-based adaptation pipeline to retune controllers based on operational challenges. The evaluation was conducted using explicit real-simulator interaction budgets.
Results
The results indicated that history-conditioned policies closely matched the performance of privileged-state policies while relying solely on well-level observations. Additionally, the latent model-based adaptation method demonstrated superior performance compared to direct model-free retuning in scenarios with known operational challenges, effectively managing the complexities of closed-loop CO2 storage control.
Implications
This research provides a framework for more efficient and adaptive management of CO2 storage operations, which is crucial for achieving net-zero emissions. The findings could inform the development of real-time control systems in carbon capture and storage applications, enhancing the safety and effectiveness of geological CO2 sequestration.
A dimensional R2 regression metric
Theory
- Dim-R2 extends the R2 metric to handle arbitrary dimensionality in regression tasks.
- It provides a multidimensional view of prediction accuracy, revealing patterns that traditional R2 cannot.
- Dim-R2 is less sensitive to low-variance noise, yielding more interpretable results.
- The metric was validated on synthetic and real-world multidimensional datasets.
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A dimensional R2 regression metric
Summary
The paper introduces the Dimensional R2 score (Dim-R2), an extension of the traditional R2 regression metric that addresses its limitations in handling multidimensional data. Traditional R2 is restricted to at most two-dimensional inputs, reduces performance evaluation to a single scalar, and is sensitive to low-variance noise, which can lead to misleading negative values. Dim-R2 overcomes these issues by allowing for arbitrary dimensionality in regression data, providing a multidimensional view of prediction accuracy, and reducing sensitivity to noise. The authors demonstrate the advantages of Dim-R2 using synthetic sinusoidal data and three multidimensional regression datasets, showing that it highlights patterns in regression accuracy and offers a more interpretable and robust metric for model evaluation.
Methodology
The authors developed Dim-R2 by flattening selected dimensions into independent observations and computing R2 along the remaining dimensions. This approach allows for normalization against specific dimensional variability and enables a comprehensive analysis of prediction accuracy across multiple dimensions. The methodology was tested on synthetic sinusoidal data and real-world datasets involving spatial features.
Results
The results demonstrated that Dim-R2 provides a more nuanced understanding of regression accuracy compared to traditional R2. It effectively highlighted high-accuracy channels while mitigating the impact of low-variance noise, leading to more reliable performance evaluations across different regression tasks.
Implications
The introduction of Dim-R2 has significant implications for regression modeling, particularly in fields where data is inherently multidimensional, such as neuroscience and other scientific domains. It allows researchers to better understand the accuracy of their models and make informed decisions about model tuning and data preprocessing.
Predicting Post Virality with Temporal Cross-Attention over Trend Signals
NLP
Time Series
Multimodal
- Introduction of a post-level trend alignment signal from Wikipedia pageview spikes.
- Development of ViralityNet, a cross-attention architecture that incorporates temporal trend signals.
- Systematic ablation study to analyze the contributions of temporal context and exogenous trends.
- Demonstrated significant improvements in prediction accuracy over traditional text-only models.
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Predicting Post Virality with Temporal Cross-Attention over Trend Signals
Summary
This paper addresses the limitations of existing models for predicting social media virality, which often rely on static textual and structural features, neglecting the dynamic nature of trend signals. The authors introduce ViralityNet, a novel architecture that enhances the prediction of Reddit post virality by integrating internal platform representations with external temporal signals derived from Wikipedia pageview spikes. The study frames virality as a binary classification task, labeling posts as viral if they exceed the 90th percentile of engagement within their subreddit. ViralityNet combines multiple post-level streams, including title and body embeddings, structural metadata, and subreddit embeddings, with a cross-attention mechanism that queries a trends matrix encoding the top Wikipedia spike terms from the past week. The empirical results demonstrate that incorporating external attention signals leads to significant improvements in predictive performance, outperforming text-only baselines by +0.015 AUC-PR and achieving an overall AUC-ROC of 0.836. This work highlights the importance of real-world dynamics in shaping online virality and provides a framework for future research in virality prediction.
Methodology
The authors propose ViralityNet, which integrates multiple streams of post-level data (title embeddings, body embeddings, structural metadata, subreddit embeddings) with a cross-attention mechanism that utilizes a daily sliding-window trends matrix based on Wikipedia pageview spikes. The model is trained to classify posts as viral or non-viral based on a defined engagement score, incorporating a subreddit-stratified labeling strategy.
Results
The incorporation of external attention signals from Wikipedia pageviews resulted in a consistent performance improvement, with the model achieving an AUC-ROC of 0.836 and an increase of +0.015 AUC-PR compared to text-only baselines. The systematic ablation study confirmed the significance of both temporal context and exogenous trends in enhancing predictive accuracy.
Implications
The findings suggest that integrating real-world attention signals can substantially improve the accuracy of virality predictions on social media platforms. This approach could be applied to other platforms and content types, enhancing understanding of engagement dynamics and informing strategies for content creation and dissemination.
Metric-Normalized Posterior Leakage (mPL): Attacker-Aligned Privacy for Joint Consumption
Theory
- Introduction of mPL as a measure of privacy leakage under joint consumption scenarios.
- Establishment of the equivalence between bounding mPL and mDP for independent releases.
- Development of PBmPL to control the probability of exceeding privacy budgets.
- Implementation of AmPL, which adapts perturbation based on attacker feedback.
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Metric-Normalized Posterior Leakage (mPL): Attacker-Aligned Privacy for Joint Consumption
Summary
This paper introduces Metric-Normalized Posterior Leakage (mPL), a novel privacy measure designed to address the limitations of existing privacy frameworks in joint consumption scenarios. While Metric Differential Privacy (mDP) enhances Local Differential Privacy (LDP) by incorporating semantic distances, it often fails to account for the aggregation of evidence from correlated observations, leading to potential privacy violations. The authors propose mPL as a distance-calibrated measure that quantifies the shift in posterior odds after observing multiple releases. They establish that uniformly bounding mPL is equivalent to mDP for independent releases but highlight that this equivalence breaks down under joint observation. To mitigate this issue, the authors introduce Probabilistically Bounded mPL (PBmPL), which limits the frequency of mPL exceeding a target budget, and Adaptive mPL (AmPL), a framework that adjusts perturbation parameters based on learned attacker feedback. Through a case study on text embeddings, they demonstrate that traditional mDP mechanisms can lead to significant mPL violations, while AmPL effectively reduces leakage with minimal utility loss, showcasing its practical applicability in safeguarding privacy during joint consumption.
Methodology
The authors developed a theoretical framework for mPL and PBmPL, demonstrating their properties and establishing connections to mDP. They implemented AmPL, which involves perturbing data, auditing privacy leakage using learned models, and adaptively adjusting parameters based on feedback from simulated attackers. A case study was conducted using text embeddings to validate the proposed methods.
Results
The study found that traditional mDP mechanisms could incur substantial mPL violations under joint consumption, with an example showing mPL ≈0.33 despite satisfying mDP. In contrast, AmPL reduced mPL to approximately 0.12 while maintaining comparable utility, indicating its effectiveness in controlling privacy leakage.
Implications
The findings suggest that mPL and AmPL can provide a more robust framework for privacy protection in machine learning applications, particularly in scenarios involving joint consumption of data. This has implications for designing privacy-preserving mechanisms in various domains, including natural language processing and data sharing.
Bridging the Gap Between Average and Discounted TD Learning
Reinforcement Learning
Theory
Optimization
- Introduces a novel algorithm for average-reward TD learning that guarantees convergence to a unique solution.
- Achieves quadratic scaling in sample complexity, improving upon previous quartic dependencies.
- Applicable to both tabular and linear function approximation settings without requiring restrictive assumptions.
- Convergence analysis is independent of the dimensionality of the parameter vector, enhancing general applicability.
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Bridging the Gap Between Average and Discounted TD Learning
Summary
This paper addresses the theoretical challenges associated with Temporal Difference (TD) learning in the average-reward setting, where the Bellman operator lacks contractive properties. The authors propose a novel algorithm for policy evaluation that utilizes sampling from two independent Markovian trajectories, ensuring convergence to a unique solution of a projected Bellman equation. Unlike previous approaches, their method does not rely on dimension-dependent terms in convergence bounds and is applicable to both linear function approximation and tabular settings. The algorithm significantly reduces sample complexity from quartic to quadratic scaling, aligning its efficiency with that of discounted TD learning. The authors also provide a finite-sample analysis using gradient splitting techniques, demonstrating that their approach achieves a sample-independent fixed point and is robust against initialization and random trajectories.
Methodology
The authors formulate the average-reward Bellman equation as a constrained optimization problem and propose an algorithm that samples from two independent Markov chains in each iteration. They also develop a version of the algorithm that uses a single Markov chain, leveraging ideas from Gradient TD (GTD) methods. The analysis employs gradient splitting techniques to establish convergence guarantees.
Results
The proposed algorithm converges almost surely to a unique, deterministic solution that does not depend on the random trajectory or initialization. The convergence bounds do not include explicit factors of the dimensionality of the parameter vector, and the sample complexity is reduced to quadratic scaling with respect to the condition number, matching the efficiency of discounted TD learning.
Implications
The findings have significant implications for reinforcement learning applications that require long-term performance optimization, such as control systems and production environments. The improved convergence properties and reduced sample complexity can enhance the practical deployment of TD learning algorithms in real-world scenarios.
Hierarchical Federated Learning for Networked AI: From Communication Saving to Architecture-Aware Design
Federated Learning
Optimization
Theory
- HFL should be viewed as an architecture-aware design framework for networked AI.
- The framework is structured around three design axes: architectural parameters, optimization decomposition, and communication realization.
- Convergence in HFL is influenced by the architecture, optimization roles, and communication mechanisms.
- The paper provides a comparative analysis of flat FL, two-tier HFL, and deep HFL.
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Hierarchical Federated Learning for Networked AI: From Communication Saving to Architecture-Aware Design
Summary
This paper presents a novel perspective on Hierarchical Federated Learning (HFL), arguing that it should be viewed as an architecture-aware design framework for networked AI rather than merely a communication-saving protocol. The authors propose a framework organized around three design axes: architectural parameters, layer-wise optimization decomposition, and layer-wise communication realization. The first axis addresses the coordination geometry of learning, including hierarchy depth and connectivity. The second focuses on how the global federated learning objective is decomposed across layers, promoting modular multi-layer optimization. The third axis examines the realization of distributed optimization under various communication regimes. The paper emphasizes that convergence in HFL is architecture-dependent, influenced by the chosen hierarchy, optimization roles, and communication mechanisms. The authors illustrate their framework using large-scale wireless edge intelligence as a case study, contrasting flat FL, two-tier HFL, and deep HFL to highlight the advantages of an architecture-aware approach in practical deployments.
Methodology
The authors develop their framework through a theoretical analysis of hierarchical structures in federated learning, focusing on architectural parameters, optimization roles, and communication strategies. They use large-scale wireless edge intelligence as a case study to illustrate the practical implications of their framework.
Results
The paper demonstrates that HFL can significantly enhance the performance of federated learning systems by optimizing the architecture and communication strategies, leading to improved convergence and efficiency in real-world applications.
Implications
The findings suggest that adopting an architecture-aware approach to HFL can lead to more effective and scalable federated learning systems, particularly in complex networked environments such as IoT and edge computing.
PepSpecBench: A Unified Evaluation Benchmark for Peptide Tandem Mass Spectrometry Prediction
Theory
- PepSpecBench standardizes data preprocessing and model evaluation for peptide MS/MS prediction.
- The benchmark employs a strict backbone-disjoint splitting strategy to mitigate sequence leakage.
- It introduces a comprehensive evaluation suite that includes cross-species testing and robustness assessments.
- The framework reveals previously unrecognized performance discrepancies among existing models.
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PepSpecBench: A Unified Evaluation Benchmark for Peptide Tandem Mass Spectrometry Prediction
Summary
The paper introduces PepSpecBench, a comprehensive benchmark designed to address critical evaluation challenges in peptide tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS) spectrum prediction. The authors identify three main issues in the current landscape: inconsistent data preprocessing, flawed data splitting strategies leading to sequence leakage, and a lack of robust cross-species evaluations. To tackle these challenges, PepSpecBench standardizes data preprocessing across public datasets, implements a strict backbone-disjoint splitting strategy to prevent sequence leakage, and evaluates models within a unified fragment-ion representation space. Additionally, it includes a multi-species evaluation suite and metadata perturbation probes to assess model robustness. The authors demonstrate that their framework uncovers significant performance discrepancies and robustness limitations across six representative models, providing insights for future model design and deployment in computational proteomics.
Methodology
The authors harmonized existing datasets (PROSPECT and MassIVE-KB) under a unified preprocessing protocol, enforced a backbone-disjoint data splitting strategy to prevent leakage, and evaluated various models using a shared fragment-ion representation. They also conducted cross-species evaluations and robustness tests using perturbation probes related to experimental conditions.
Results
The implementation of PepSpecBench revealed significant performance discrepancies among six different models, highlighting the limitations in robustness and generalization capabilities. The results indicated that high in-domain accuracy does not guarantee reliable out-of-domain performance, emphasizing the need for rigorous evaluation protocols.
Implications
PepSpecBench provides a standardized framework that can enhance the comparability of peptide MS/MS prediction models, leading to improved model development and deployment in proteomics. It encourages researchers to adopt more rigorous evaluation practices, ultimately advancing the field of computational proteomics.
Polynomial-Time Optimal Group Selection via the Double-Commutator Eigenvalue Problem
Theory
- Optimal group selection can be solved in polynomial time using a generalized eigenvalue problem.
- The minimum eigenvalue of the double-commutator matrix indicates the existence of a perfectly commuting generator.
- The proposed method links group theory, matrix analysis, and statistical estimation in a novel way.
- The double-commutator formulation subsumes existing methods in independent component analysis and structured matrix nearness.
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Polynomial-Time Optimal Group Selection via the Double-Commutator Eigenvalue Problem
Summary
This paper addresses the problem of optimal group selection within the algebraic diversity framework, which seeks to replace temporal averaging over multiple observations with algebraic group actions on a single observation for statistical estimation. The central challenge is to identify a finite group whose spectral decomposition aligns best with the covariance structure of an M-dimensional observation. Traditional methods require exponential time due to the combinatorial nature of subgroup enumeration. The author presents a polynomial-time algorithm that reduces this problem to a generalized eigenvalue problem derived from the double commutator of the covariance matrix. The proposed method has a complexity of O(d²M² + d³), where d is the dimension of a generator basis. The minimum eigenvector of the double-commutator matrix provides a closed-form construction of the optimal group generator, ensuring that the solution is both efficient and certifiable. The paper also establishes connections to existing methodologies in independent component analysis and structured matrix problems, demonstrating that the double-commutator formulation is a unique approach that is polynomial-time, closed-form, and certifiable.
Methodology
The paper reformulates the group selection problem as a spectral condition on a double-commutator superoperator derived from the covariance matrix. This allows for the computation of the optimal group generator through a generalized eigenvalue problem, which can be solved in polynomial time.
Results
The author proves that the optimal group selection problem can be reduced to a generalized eigenvalue problem with polynomial complexity. The minimum eigenvalue of the double-commutator matrix is zero if and only if an optimal generator exists, providing a certifiable optimality gap when it does not.
Implications
This work has significant implications for statistical estimation, particularly in scenarios where traditional methods are computationally infeasible. It opens new avenues for research linking group theory with statistical methods, potentially enhancing the efficiency of algorithms in various applications.
Skipping the Zeros in Diffusion Models for Sparse Data Generation
Generative Models
Efficient ML
- SED preserves sparsity patterns by focusing on non-zero values, avoiding unnecessary computations.
- The method achieves computational efficiency that scales with the number of non-zero entries.
- SED outperforms traditional diffusion models and domain-specific baselines in generating high-fidelity sparse data.
- The approach provides insights into the inefficiencies of dense models when applied to sparse data.
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Skipping the Zeros in Diffusion Models for Sparse Data Generation
Summary
The paper addresses the limitations of traditional diffusion models (DMs) in generating sparse continuous data, which is prevalent in various real-world applications such as physics and biology. Standard DMs fail to preserve exact zeros, which represent meaningful absences of signal, leading to unnecessary computations on predominantly zero entries. The authors propose a novel approach called Sparsity-Exploiting Diffusion (SED), which focuses on modeling only non-zero values, thereby maintaining sparsity and improving computational efficiency. SED employs a sparse-to-dense latent encoding strategy that encodes only non-zero values into a compact representation and uses an autoregressive decoding method to synthesize dimension-value pairs solely for non-zero entries. The empirical validation of SED across multiple benchmarks in physics and biology demonstrates that it matches or surpasses the performance of conventional DMs and domain-specific models, while also providing insights into the limitations of dense DMs. The findings suggest that SED can significantly enhance the generation quality and efficiency of sparse data synthesis.
Methodology
The authors developed Sparsity-Exploiting Diffusion (SED), which utilizes a sparse-to-dense latent encoding to focus on non-zero values during training and inference. This is complemented by an autoregressive decoding strategy that synthesizes only the non-zero entries, thereby enhancing efficiency and preserving sparsity patterns.
Results
SED demonstrated significant improvements in both quality and efficiency when generating sparse data across various benchmarks in physics and biology. It maintained or surpassed the performance of conventional diffusion models while reducing computational costs associated with processing zero entries.
Implications
The proposed SED approach has the potential to advance data generation in fields where sparsity is critical, such as synthetic biology, particle physics simulations, and recommender systems, by enabling high-fidelity synthesis of sparse data without the computational overhead of traditional methods.
Inducing Permutation Invariant Priors in Bayesian Optimization for Carbon Capture and Storage Applications
Optimization
- Introduction of GP-Perm, a permutation-invariant Gaussian Process kernel for Bayesian Optimization.
- Development of a Deep Kernel Learning model (DKL-DS) for learning permutation-invariant embeddings.
- Evaluation of the proposed methods across multiple synthetic and realistic CCS scenarios.
- Demonstration of improved sample efficiency and optimization performance in the presence of permutation symmetries.
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Inducing Permutation Invariant Priors in Bayesian Optimization for Carbon Capture and Storage Applications
Summary
This paper addresses the limitations of traditional Bayesian Optimization (BO) methods, particularly Gaussian Processes (GPs), when applied to problems with permutation symmetries, such as well placement in Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS) projects. The authors propose a novel Gaussian Process kernel, GP-Perm, which incorporates permutation invariance by utilizing a stable divergence measure to compare sets of inputs. This approach allows for effective optimization of high-fidelity black box simulators that operate under group control, where the order of inputs does not affect the output. The paper also introduces a Deep Kernel Learning model (DKL-DS) that learns a permutation-invariant embedding using the Deep Sets architecture. The proposed methods are evaluated across eight use cases, including seven synthetic benchmarks and a realistic CCS case study, demonstrating their effectiveness in optimizing complex systems with inherent symmetries.
Methodology
The authors developed GP-Perm, a Gaussian Process kernel that enforces permutation invariance at the kernel level by comparing configurations through a stable set discrepancy. Additionally, they implemented a Deep Kernel Learning model (DKL-DS) that utilizes a Deep Sets architecture to learn embeddings that respect permutation invariance. Both methods were benchmarked against standard non-invariant GP/DKL surrogates and engineered invariant set-kernel baselines across various test cases.
Results
The results indicate that GP-Perm and DKL-DS significantly outperform traditional non-invariant Gaussian Processes in terms of sample efficiency and optimization performance in scenarios with permutation symmetries. The evaluation across synthetic benchmarks and a realistic CCS case study demonstrated the robustness and effectiveness of the proposed methodologies.
Implications
The findings suggest that incorporating permutation invariance into Bayesian Optimization can lead to more efficient optimization strategies in various applications, particularly in fields like environmental engineering, where complex systems often exhibit inherent symmetries. This work could pave the way for improved optimization techniques in other domains requiring the handling of unordered sets.
Towards Systematic Generalization for Power Grid Optimization Problems
Optimization
- Introduces a joint modeling framework for ACOPF and SCUC to enhance systematic generalization.
- Utilizes a shared graph-based backbone to capture grid topology and physical interactions.
- Incorporates solver supervision with physics-informed objectives for improved decision-making.
- Demonstrates superior performance and transferability compared to existing learning-based approaches.
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Towards Systematic Generalization for Power Grid Optimization Problems
Summary
This paper addresses the optimization challenges in power system operations, specifically focusing on AC Optimal Power Flow (ACOPF) and Security-Constrained Unit Commitment (SCUC). These two fundamental problems, while sharing the same underlying transmission network and physical laws, are typically approached in isolation by existing learning-based methods, leading to fragmented models that lack the ability to generalize across different problem formulations. The authors propose a novel learning framework that jointly models ACOPF and SCUC using a shared graph-based backbone that captures grid topology and physical interactions. This framework includes task-specific decoders for both static and temporal decision-making, and incorporates solver supervision with physics-informed objectives to ensure AC feasibility and adherence to operational constraints. The evaluation of the model focuses on its ability to generalize across unseen grid topologies and the UC-ACOPF problem, utilizing unsupervised, physics-based objectives and a power dispatch consensus mechanism. Experimental results across various grid scales demonstrate that the proposed model significantly outperforms existing learning-based baselines in terms of performance and transferability, indicating its potential for supporting learning across diverse power system optimization problems.
Methodology
The authors developed a learning framework that combines ACOPF and SCUC into a unified model. This model employs a graph-based representation to encapsulate the physical structure of the power grid and utilizes task-specific decoders for different optimization tasks. The training process is guided by physics-informed objectives to maintain AC feasibility and operational constraints, allowing for cross-case transfer and systematic generalization without retraining.
Results
The proposed framework showed improved performance across multiple grid scales, successfully demonstrating the ability to generalize to unseen grid topologies and effectively handle the coupled UC-ACOPF problem. The results indicate a significant enhancement in transferability and efficiency compared to traditional learning-based models.
Implications
This research has the potential to transform power grid optimization by enabling more efficient and adaptable solutions that can quickly respond to varying operational conditions and constraints. The framework could facilitate the integration of advanced machine learning techniques into real-time power system operations, improving reliability and decision-making processes.
Sparse Regression under Correlation and Weak Signals: A Reproducible Benchmark of Classical and Bayesian Methods
Theory
- Bayesian methods outperform classical methods in prediction accuracy, especially under high correlation.
- The Horseshoe prior provides well-calibrated credible intervals, while Spike-and-Slab exhibits under-coverage.
- Lasso is a strong contender for variable selection when posterior distributions are not required.
- High correlation negatively impacts Lasso's variable selection performance, making Bayesian methods more robust.
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Sparse Regression under Correlation and Weak Signals: A Reproducible Benchmark of Classical and Bayesian Methods
Summary
This paper addresses the trade-off between classical and Bayesian sparse regression methods, particularly in challenging scenarios characterized by correlated features, weak signals, and increasing dimensionality. The author benchmarks six regression methods—Ordinary Least Squares (OLS), Ridge, Lasso, Elastic Net, Horseshoe, and Spike-and-Slab—across various synthetic datasets with different covariance structures, signal-to-noise ratios (SNR), and dimensions. The study comprises over 2,600 experiments, providing a comprehensive comparison of prediction accuracy, estimation error, variable selection quality, and posterior calibration. The findings indicate that Bayesian methods generally outperform classical methods in prediction error, particularly under high correlation conditions. The Horseshoe prior achieves near-nominal coverage for credible intervals, while the Spike-and-Slab prior shows slight under-coverage. For variable selection, Lasso and Spike-and-Slab perform similarly, suggesting Lasso as a practical choice when uncertainty estimates are unnecessary. The paper emphasizes the importance of considering correlation and signal strength in sparse regression and provides reproducible results to guide practitioners in method selection.
Methodology
The study employs a systematic benchmarking approach, testing six regression methods across a grid of varying correlation structures, signal strengths, and dimensions. The evaluation metrics include mean squared error (MSE), L2 estimation error, F1 score for variable selection, and posterior calibration metrics for Bayesian methods.
Results
Bayesian methods, particularly the Horseshoe prior, demonstrate superior prediction performance with MSE values of 72 compared to classical methods ranging from 108 to 267. The Horseshoe prior achieves 94.8% coverage for credible intervals, while Spike-and-Slab shows 91.9% coverage. Lasso and Spike-and-Slab tie in variable selection performance with an F1 score of approximately 0.47.
Implications
The findings provide valuable insights for practitioners in fields such as genomics and signal processing, where understanding variable importance is crucial. The reproducible benchmark allows for informed decision-making when selecting between classical and Bayesian sparse regression methods, particularly in complex data scenarios.
Model-Based Proactive Cost Generation for Learning Safe Policies Offline with Limited Violation Data
Reinforcement Learning
Large Language Models
Robotics
- PROCO leverages large language models to incorporate natural language knowledge into offline safe RL.
- The framework generates a conservative cost function to estimate risks without needing unsafe samples.
- Model-based rollouts are used to synthesize counterfactual unsafe samples for better policy learning.
- PROCO outperforms existing methods in safety-critical tasks, demonstrating significant improvements in safety performance.
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Model-Based Proactive Cost Generation for Learning Safe Policies Offline with Limited Violation Data
Summary
This paper addresses the challenge of learning safe reinforcement learning (RL) policies from offline datasets that contain few or no unsafe samples, which is critical for safety-sensitive applications. Traditional methods rely on abundant unsafe samples to define safety boundaries and penalize violations, but in high-stakes scenarios, collecting such samples is often impractical. The authors propose a novel framework called PROCO (Model-Based Proactive Cost Generation) that integrates large language models (LLMs) to incorporate natural language knowledge about unsafe states into the policy learning process. PROCO first learns a dynamics model from the available offline data and constructs a conservative cost function using LLM-derived knowledge. This allows for risk estimation even in the absence of observed violations. The framework then performs model-based rollouts to synthesize diverse counterfactual unsafe samples, facilitating reliable feasibility identification and guiding policy learning. Experimental results across various Safety-Gymnasium tasks demonstrate that PROCO significantly reduces constraint violations and enhances safety performance compared to existing offline safe RL algorithms and behavior cloning baselines, achieving improvements of over 400% in safety performance.
Methodology
The proposed PROCO framework involves learning a dynamics model from offline data, constructing a conservative cost function using LLMs, and performing model-based rollouts to generate unsafe samples. This approach allows for the identification of infeasible states and guides the learning of safe policies even when the dataset lacks unsafe samples.
Results
In extensive experiments across various Safety-Gymnasium environments, PROCO demonstrated a significant reduction in constraint violations and improved safety performance, achieving over 400% improvement compared to original offline safe RL algorithms and behavior cloning baselines.
Implications
The findings suggest that integrating LLMs into offline safe RL can effectively bridge the gap in knowledge when unsafe samples are scarce, making it feasible to learn safe policies in high-stakes environments such as autonomous driving and robotics.
Differentiable Kernel Ridge Regression for Deep Learning Pipelines
Computer Vision
Reinforcement Learning
Efficient ML
- Introduction of Sparse Kernels (SKs) as a differentiable, localized variant of kernel ridge regression.
- Integration of SKs into PyTorch as modular layers that maintain end-to-end trainability.
- Decomposition of learning into three components: feature representations, target values, and evaluation points.
- Empirical validation shows competitive performance with reduced training requirements across various deep learning architectures.
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Differentiable Kernel Ridge Regression for Deep Learning Pipelines
Summary
This paper explores the integration of kernel methods into deep learning frameworks, specifically through the introduction of Sparse Kernels (SKs), a differentiable and localized variant of kernel ridge regression (KRR). The authors propose that SKs can be seamlessly incorporated into PyTorch as modular layers, allowing for end-to-end trainability while exposing three distinct parameter sets: feature representations, target values, and evaluation points. This decomposition enables various training strategies, including training-free transfer learning and nonlinear probing of representations. The empirical results demonstrate that SK-based modules can match or enhance the performance of traditional neural networks while significantly reducing training requirements across different architectures, including convolutional networks, vision transformers, and reinforcement learning tasks. The findings suggest that kernel methods, when made scalable and differentiable, can be effectively integrated with deep learning, challenging the notion that they should be treated as separate paradigms.
Methodology
The authors developed Sparse Kernels (SKs), which defer training to inference time and solve small local systems, thus reducing computational complexity. They integrated SKs into PyTorch, allowing for modular use in deep learning pipelines. The approach emphasizes a decomposition of learning into three controllable components, enabling flexible training strategies.
Results
The experiments showed that SK-based models achieved competitive performance with significantly less training compared to traditional neural networks. In some cases, SKs matched the performance of trained neural readouts, while in others, they enhanced existing models when used as additional components.
Implications
The findings suggest that kernel methods can be effectively utilized within deep learning frameworks, providing new avenues for model design and training strategies. This could lead to more efficient and flexible machine learning systems that leverage the strengths of both kernel methods and deep learning.
Multi-Perspective Transformers in ARC-AGI-2 Challenge
Computer Vision
Large Language Models
Efficient ML
- Introduces a multi-perspective approach to solving ARC-AGI-2 puzzles using TinyLM.
- Utilizes data augmentation techniques to generate multiple views of puzzles for improved pattern recognition.
- Employs Test-Time Training (TTT) and Products of Experts (POE) for fine-tuning during evaluation.
- Achieves high training accuracy but lower evaluation accuracy, highlighting the challenge of generalization.
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Multi-Perspective Transformers in ARC-AGI-2 Challenge
Summary
This paper presents a novel approach to solving visual puzzles in the ARC-AGI-2 challenge using a TinyLM transformer model. The challenge assesses a machine's ability to generalize from limited examples and apply learned rules in varying contexts. The authors propose a method that includes tokenizing puzzle grids, generating multiple views through transformations, and employing a compact local generator to propose candidate outputs. The model is fine-tuned at test time using Test-Time Training (TTT) and Products of Experts (POE) to enhance performance. The results indicate that the model achieved an accuracy of 96.1% on the training set and 21.7% on the evaluation set, demonstrating the effectiveness of the multi-perspective approach in tackling the challenge's complexity.
Methodology
The methodology involves tokenizing puzzle grids into a text format, creating multiple views through geometric transformations, and using a compact local generator to propose outputs. The model is fine-tuned at test time with TTT and POE to adapt to the puzzle's style while avoiding overfitting.
Results
The model achieved an accuracy of 96.1% on the training set and 21.7% on the evaluation set, indicating a significant drop in performance when generalizing to unseen data.
Implications
The findings suggest that while multi-perspective approaches can enhance model performance on specific tasks, challenges remain in achieving consistent generalization across diverse contexts. This has implications for the development of more robust machine learning models capable of handling complex visual reasoning tasks.
Learning Koopman operators for coupled systems via information on governing equations of subsystems
Theory
Time Series
- Introduces a method to learn Koopman operators for coupled systems using known governing equations of subsystems.
- Addresses limitations of traditional data-driven methods like EDMD in terms of stability and accuracy.
- Demonstrates the proposed method's effectiveness through numerical experiments on coupled oscillator systems.
- Highlights the importance of incorporating prior knowledge into the learning process for improved model performance.
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Learning Koopman operators for coupled systems via information on governing equations of subsystems
Summary
This paper addresses the challenges of analyzing and modeling nonlinear coupled systems, which are common in various scientific and engineering fields. The authors propose a novel method for learning the Koopman operator for such systems by leveraging the known governing differential equations of individual subsystems. Traditional approaches, like Extended Dynamic Mode Decomposition (EDMD), are data-driven and can struggle with stability and accuracy in the context of limited data. The proposed method consists of two main steps: first, deriving the Koopman matrices for each subsystem from their governing equations, and second, constructing a global Koopman matrix by integrating these subsystem matrices using an online EDMD approach. The effectiveness of this method is demonstrated through numerical experiments on coupled oscillator systems, showcasing improved accuracy and stability in learning the Koopman operator compared to purely data-driven methods.
Methodology
The proposed method involves two key steps: (1) deriving the Koopman matrices for each subsystem from their governing differential equations, and (2) constructing a global Koopman matrix by combining these matrices using an online EDMD technique.
Results
The numerical experiments conducted on coupled oscillator systems indicate that the proposed method significantly enhances the accuracy and stability of the learned Koopman operator compared to traditional EDMD approaches, particularly in scenarios with limited data.
Implications
This research has potential applications in various fields where coupled nonlinear systems are prevalent, such as physics, engineering, and biology. By leveraging prior knowledge of subsystem dynamics, the method can lead to more reliable and interpretable models for complex systems.
Flexi-LoRA with Input-Adaptive Ranks: Efficient Finetuning for Speech and Reasoning Tasks
NLP
Large Language Models
Efficient ML
- Flexi-LoRA is the first input-adaptive LoRA framework that adjusts ranks based on input complexity.
- Dynamic rank allocation improves performance while using fewer parameters compared to static LoRA.
- Maintaining consistency between training and inference dynamics is critical for effective adaptation.
- Mathematical reasoning tasks show a higher dependency on rank dynamics than question answering tasks.
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Flexi-LoRA with Input-Adaptive Ranks: Efficient Finetuning for Speech and Reasoning Tasks
Summary
The paper introduces Flexi-LoRA, a novel framework for parameter-efficient fine-tuning of large language models that dynamically adjusts Low-Rank Adaptation (LoRA) ranks based on input complexity. Traditional LoRA methods use static parameter allocation, which is suboptimal for inputs of varying complexity. Flexi-LoRA addresses this by implementing input-adaptive rank allocation during both training and inference. The authors conducted empirical analyses across various tasks, including question answering, mathematical reasoning, and speech tasks, revealing that maintaining consistency between training and inference dynamics is crucial for effective adaptation. The results indicate that input-dependent parameter allocation not only enhances performance but also reduces the number of parameters needed. The study highlights that different tasks exhibit varying dependencies on rank dynamics, with mathematical reasoning tasks showing a higher dependency compared to question answering tasks. Flexi-LoRA outperforms static LoRA methods, particularly in tasks requiring strict reasoning chains, demonstrating improvements in correctness, reasoning quality, and adherence to instructions. The framework also achieves benefits similar to mixture-of-experts models while streamlining implementation and reducing parameter redundancy.
Methodology
The methodology involves a difficulty-aware router that maps input embeddings to appropriate rank assignments based on input complexity. The framework maintains consistent dynamic rank allocation during both training and inference, optimizing the router using a noise-added cross-entropy objective. The training data is balanced between easy and hard samples to ensure effective evaluation of rank assignments.
Results
Flexi-LoRA consistently outperformed static LoRA methods across various tasks, achieving higher performance with fewer parameters. The empirical studies demonstrated that the input-adaptive approach led to significant improvements in tasks requiring complex reasoning, with notable gains in correctness and reasoning quality.
Implications
The findings suggest that input-adaptive fine-tuning methods can significantly enhance the efficiency and effectiveness of large language models in diverse applications, particularly in areas requiring nuanced reasoning and instruction adherence. This approach could pave the way for future research in efficient fine-tuning techniques and their applications in real-world scenarios.
Federated Semi-Supervised Graph Neural Networks with Prototype-Guided Pseudo-Labeling for Privacy-Preserving Gestational Diabetes Mellitus Prediction
Federated Learning
Graph Learning
- Introduces FedTGNN-SS, the first federated semi-supervised GNN framework for clinical tabular EHR data.
- Combines prototype-guided pseudo-labeling with adaptive graph refinement to reduce error accumulation.
- Implements privacy-safe prototype sharing to facilitate cross-silo pseudo-label refinement without data transfer.
- Achieves strong AUROC scores even with up to 80% missing labels in datasets.
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Federated Semi-Supervised Graph Neural Networks with Prototype-Guided Pseudo-Labeling for Privacy-Preserving Gestational Diabetes Mellitus Prediction
Summary
This paper addresses the dual challenges of label scarcity and data privacy in the prediction of Gestational Diabetes Mellitus (GDM) using machine learning. The authors propose a novel framework called FedTGNN-SS, which integrates federated learning with semi-supervised graph neural networks (GNNs) to effectively utilize both labeled and unlabeled electronic health records (EHRs) while preserving patient privacy. The framework employs a local k-nearest-neighbor patient similarity graph for each hospital and trains a topology-adaptive GNN encoder. Key innovations include prototype-guided pseudo-labeling that ensures reliable label assignment, adaptive graph refinement to enhance the representation of patient relationships, clinical-aware consistency augmentation for continuous variables, and privacy-safe prototype sharing that allows for cross-institutional collaboration without compromising patient data. The proposed method was evaluated on three diabetes-related datasets, demonstrating significant performance improvements over 11 federated baselines, particularly under conditions of high label scarcity.
Methodology
The methodology involves constructing local patient similarity graphs at each hospital, training a hybrid GCN-GraphSAGE encoder, and implementing four key components: prototype-guided pseudo-labeling, adaptive graph refinement, clinical-aware augmentation, and privacy-safe prototype sharing. These components work together to enhance the model's ability to learn from both labeled and unlabeled data while maintaining patient privacy.
Results
The FedTGNN-SS framework achieved 56 significant wins (p < 0.05) against 11 federated baselines across three datasets, with notable AUROC scores of 0.8037 for the Pima dataset and 0.9634 for the Early Stage dataset, both under conditions of 80% missing labels.
Implications
The findings suggest that FedTGNN-SS can significantly improve the accuracy of GDM prediction in clinical settings where data privacy and label scarcity are major concerns. This framework could be adapted for other medical conditions and applications where similar challenges exist, potentially leading to better patient outcomes through timely interventions.
Floating-Point Networks with Automatic Differentiation Can Represent Almost All Floating-Point Functions and Their Gradients
Theory
- Floating-point networks can represent almost all floating-point functions and their gradients using automatic differentiation.
- Theoretical results extend to practical activation functions like ReLU, ELU, and Sigmoid.
- The findings have implications for applications in scientific machine learning and adversarial attacks.
- The paper establishes a formal theorem that guarantees the representability of both function values and gradients.
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Floating-Point Networks with Automatic Differentiation Can Represent Almost All Floating-Point Functions and Their Gradients
Summary
This paper investigates the representability of floating-point networks in conjunction with automatic differentiation (AD) for approximating both function values and their gradients. While previous theoretical results established that neural networks can approximate complex functions using real parameters and exact operations, practical implementations rely on floating-point arithmetic, which introduces round-off errors. The authors demonstrate that floating-point networks can represent arbitrary function values and gradients by utilizing AD. They provide a formal theorem indicating that for almost all target functions and gradients, there exists a floating-point network capable of representing them simultaneously. This capability is significant for applications requiring both function values and gradients, such as scientific machine learning, sensitivity analysis, and adversarial attacks. The results hold for various practical activation functions, including ReLU and Sigmoid, thus broadening the applicability of floating-point networks in real-world scenarios.
Methodology
The authors develop a theoretical framework to analyze floating-point networks under automatic differentiation. They introduce a floating-point network structure consisting of affine transformations and activation functions, and they derive a theorem that demonstrates the ability of these networks to represent arbitrary function values and gradients. The methodology includes formal proofs and considerations of practical activation functions.
Results
The main result is encapsulated in Theorem 3.1, which states that for almost all target functions and gradients, a corresponding floating-point network can be constructed. This theorem implies that floating-point networks can effectively fit both function values and gradients, allowing for simultaneous optimization in various applications.
Implications
The findings suggest that floating-point networks can be effectively utilized in fields requiring precise gradient information, such as scientific computing, optimization problems, and machine learning tasks that involve sensitivity analysis and adversarial training. The ability to manipulate gradients also opens avenues for enhancing security in machine learning models.