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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Advances in Scientific Machine Learning for Coupled Fluid Flow and Transport
Efficient ML
Theory
- Overview of SciML advancements for coupled fluid flow and transport modeling.
- Introduction of surrogate modeling techniques using PINNs and β-VAEs.
- Discussion of computational strategies like Adaptive Mesh Refinement/Coarsening.
- Illustration of methodologies through benchmark problems like lock-exchange flows.
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Advances in Scientific Machine Learning for Coupled Fluid Flow and Transport
Summary
This chapter reviews recent advancements in Scientific Machine Learning (SciML) aimed at modeling coupled fluid flow and transport phenomena, particularly those governed by the incompressible Navier–Stokes and scalar transport equations. These phenomena, prevalent in applications like turbidity currents and thermal convection, are characterized by strong nonlinear coupling and multiscale behavior, which complicates high-fidelity simulations. The authors discuss state-of-the-art SciML techniques for developing efficient surrogate models, including linear reduced-order methods such as Dynamic Mode Decomposition and nonlinear approaches like Physics-Informed Neural Networks (PINNs) and β-Variational Autoencoders (β-VAEs). The chapter highlights the authors' contributions to surrogate modeling of turbidity currents using PINNs and the extraction of disentangled nonlinear modes from thermal flows via β-VAEs. It also covers the mathematical and physical foundations of coupled fluid flow, computational strategies like Adaptive Mesh Refinement/Coarsening, and scientific data compression, demonstrating how SciML can facilitate rapid and accurate approximations of complex systems while significantly reducing computational costs compared to full-order simulations. The chapter emphasizes the ongoing research in real-time prediction and uncertainty quantification as future directions.
Methodology
The authors review and implement various SciML approaches, including linear reduced-order methods (Dynamic Mode Decomposition) and neural network-based techniques (Physics-Informed Neural Networks and β-Variational Autoencoders). They also integrate High Performance Computing strategies to enhance model efficiency.
Results
The chapter presents successful applications of surrogate modeling for turbidity currents and the extraction of nonlinear modes from thermal flows, demonstrating the effectiveness of SciML in approximating complex coupled systems.
Implications
The findings suggest that SciML can significantly reduce computational costs in modeling fluid dynamics, enabling faster simulations and real-time applications in environmental monitoring, engineering, and other fields where fluid transport phenomena are critical.
Activation- and Influence-Aware Ranks (AIR): Function-Preserving SVD Compression for LLMs
Large Language Models
Efficient ML
NLP
- AIR integrates activation and influence metrics for improved SVD-based compression of LLMs.
- The method achieves over 18% lower perplexity compared to SVD-LLM with 60% parameter retention.
- AIR requires approximately 90% less calibration data while maintaining model quality.
- The framework is layer-local and can be combined with end-to-end methods for enhanced performance.
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Activation- and Influence-Aware Ranks (AIR): Function-Preserving SVD Compression for LLMs
Summary
The paper introduces Activation- and Influence-Aware Ranks (AIR), a novel framework for compressing large language models (LLMs) using Singular Value Decomposition (SVD). AIR enhances the low-rank approximation of weight matrices by integrating both forward activation and backward influence metrics, allowing for a more context-aware compression. The method begins with an activation-aware optimum from SVD-LLM and employs a closed-form alternating least squares (ALS) approach to optimize the rank allocation. This integration of influence metrics ensures that the approximation error is redistributed away from high-influence weights, improving model performance while maintaining efficiency. The authors demonstrate that AIR significantly outperforms existing methods, achieving lower perplexity on benchmark datasets with reduced calibration data requirements. The framework is designed to be layer-local and can be combined with other optimization techniques, such as LoRA, to further enhance performance. Overall, AIR provides a robust solution for efficient LLM deployment under varying resource constraints.
Methodology
AIR employs a forward-backward analysis to derive a profiling matrix from activations and an influence matrix from backward signals. It utilizes a closed-form ALS optimization to update the low-rank approximation of weight matrices, ensuring that the influence of weights is considered during the compression process.
Results
On the LLaMA-7B model, AIR achieves 18% lower perplexity on the WikiText-2 dataset at 60% parameter retention, and it generalizes well across various LLM families. It also demonstrates system-level efficiency, resulting in 64% peak memory savings and 53% reduction in per-token latency.
Implications
The AIR framework has significant implications for the deployment of large language models in resource-constrained environments, enabling efficient model compression without sacrificing performance. It opens avenues for further research into context-aware compression techniques and their applications in real-time NLP tasks.
Performance Analysis and Optimization of 3D Generative Diffusion Models across GPU Architectures
Generative Models
Optimization
Efficient ML
- Detailed performance analysis of Med-DDPM across three NVIDIA GPU architectures.
- Identification of architecture-specific bottlenecks in convolution and normalization kernels.
- Implementation of TF32 Tensor Core activation and a 3D channels-last layout for optimization.
- Achieved up to 100× reduction in SM cycles and dynamic instructions on A100.
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Performance Analysis and Optimization of 3D Generative Diffusion Models across GPU Architectures
Summary
This paper presents a comprehensive performance analysis of the Med-DDPM, a state-of-the-art medical diffusion model for 3D MRI synthesis, across three generations of NVIDIA GPU architectures: Volta (V100), Ampere (A100), and Hopper (H100). The authors investigate kernel-level runtime breakdowns, memory utilization, and warp-level activities to identify performance bottlenecks. They find that the training process is heavily dominated by cuDNN convolution and implicit-GEMM kernels, with inefficiencies stemming from memory-access patterns and limited Tensor Core utilization. To address these issues, the authors propose two architecture-aware optimizations: enabling TF32 Tensor Core activation and restructuring the model's memory layout to a 3D channels-last format. These optimizations lead to significant performance improvements, including a reduction in SM cycles and dynamic instructions, as well as an increase in Tensor Core utilization and IPC, all while maintaining synthesis quality. The paper concludes with practical guidelines for optimizing 3D diffusion models on modern GPUs.
Methodology
The authors conducted a full-stack GPU performance study using NVIDIA’s Nsight Compute profiler to analyze Med-DDPM's execution characteristics at the kernel level and microarchitectural behavior. They examined kernel mixes, instruction profiles, and memory utilization to identify bottlenecks and then applied targeted optimizations based on their findings.
Results
The proposed optimizations resulted in a reduction of SM cycles by up to 100×, a decrease in dynamic instructions by 100×, an increase in Tensor Core utilization from 1.45 to 9.98×, and a 7% rise in IPC on the A100 GPU, without degrading the quality of the synthesized images.
Implications
The findings suggest that with appropriate architectural optimizations, the deployment of 3D generative diffusion models can be made more efficient, enabling broader applications in medical imaging and potentially reducing the computational resources required for training and inference.
Integrating national forest inventory, airborne lidar, and satellite imagery for wall-to-wall mapping of forest structure with computer vision
Computer Vision
- Introduction of the VibrantForests framework for comprehensive forest mapping.
- Utilization of satellite imagery and lidar data to estimate multiple forest attributes.
- Improved predictive capabilities across diverse forest conditions.
- Annual updates and high spatial resolution of 10 meters.
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Integrating national forest inventory, airborne lidar, and satellite imagery for wall-to-wall mapping of forest structure with computer vision
Summary
The paper presents the VibrantForests framework, which integrates national forest inventory data, airborne lidar, and satellite imagery to create comprehensive, wall-to-wall maps of forest structure across the contiguous United States. This framework aims to address the challenges faced by forest managers in obtaining consistent and actionable data for effective forest and wildfire management. The VibrantForests model is trained on lidar-derived samples to estimate key forest attributes such as canopy cover, canopy height, aboveground live tree biomass, basal area, and quadratic mean diameter at a resolution of 10 meters. The authors demonstrate that their model effectively captures a wide range of forest conditions, outperforming existing passive-sensor models by reducing common issues like regression-to-mean behavior. The framework is designed to provide annual updates and is extensible beyond the U.S., making it a valuable tool for natural resource managers involved in wildfire risk assessments and forest restoration planning.
Methodology
The VibrantForests framework employs a satellite-based forest structure model trained on lidar-derived samples. It integrates various data sources to estimate forest attributes at a 10-meter resolution, focusing on delivering coherent and actionable data for forest management.
Results
The model successfully generates estimates of key forest structure attributes across a wide range of conditions, demonstrating improved performance over traditional passive-sensor models. It effectively reduces overestimation in sparse conditions and underestimation in dense conditions, providing reliable data for forest management.
Implications
The VibrantForests framework has significant implications for forest management and wildfire risk assessment, offering a consistent and comprehensive data source that can enhance decision-making processes for natural resource managers. Its annual update capability and extensibility to other regions make it a versatile tool for large-scale forest planning.
Predicting Mergeability of Parameter-Efficient Fine-Tuning Updates
NLP
Large Language Models
Efficient ML
- Introduces a framework for predicting the mergeability of LoRA adapters during early training.
- Defines mergeability based on single-task utility and post-merge retention.
- Presents MergeProbe, a lightweight predictor that informs merging decisions.
- Demonstrates improved performance on the MERGE-PEFT benchmark across multiple domains.
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Predicting Mergeability of Parameter-Efficient Fine-Tuning Updates
Summary
This paper addresses the challenge of merging low-rank adaptation (LoRA) updates in parameter-efficient fine-tuning (PEFT) for language models. The authors highlight that while LoRA allows for the creation of multiple domain-specific adapters, the merging process can lead to performance degradation due to interference between adapters. The authors propose a novel framework to predict the mergeability of these adapters early in the training process, thereby avoiding costly post-training evaluations. They define mergeability in terms of single-task utility and retention after merging, and introduce MergeProbe, a lightweight predictor that assesses mergeability based on early training signals. The study demonstrates that MergeProbe can effectively forecast whether adapters should be merged, reweighted, pruned, or routed, thus transforming the merging process from a reactive to an anticipatory workflow. The evaluation on the MERGE-PEFT benchmark across five domains shows that MergeProbe outperforms existing interference-aware merging methods, achieving better retention rates with lower deployment overhead.
Methodology
The authors formalize the concept of mergeability for LoRA adapters, focusing on how updates align during training. They introduce MergeProbe, which utilizes early training signals to predict the potential success of merging adapters. The methodology involves measuring alignment of updates, disturbance of shared representations, and other factors that indicate potential interference. The evaluation is conducted on the MERGE-PEFT benchmark, which includes various domains such as math, code, and science.
Results
MergeProbe achieves the best average and worst-case retention rates compared to strong interference-aware merge baselines. The results indicate that the predictor can effectively identify adapters that are suitable for merging, leading to improved performance and reduced overhead in deployment.
Implications
The findings suggest that organizations using parameter-efficient fine-tuning can significantly enhance their model deployment strategies by anticipating mergeability, thus reducing the need for extensive post-training evaluations and improving overall model performance across tasks.
What Makes Effective Supervision in Latent Chain-of-Thought: An Information-Theoretic Analysis
NLP
Large Language Models
Theory
- Latent Chain-of-Thought models face challenges due to weak outcome supervision leading to gradient attenuation and representational drift.
- The paper introduces two types of supervision: Trajectory Supervision for stepwise reasoning and Space Supervision for semantic structure preservation.
- The Unified Latent Probe (ULP) is proposed to quantify the mutual information between latent trajectories and reasoning steps.
- Empirical results show that effective supervision stabilizes training and enhances reasoning accuracy through improved information fidelity.
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What Makes Effective Supervision in Latent Chain-of-Thought: An Information-Theoretic Analysis
Summary
This paper investigates the challenges of robust latent reasoning in Latent Chain-of-Thought (CoT) models, which internalize reasoning within continuous hidden states rather than relying on verbose discrete reasoning traces. The authors identify a dual collapse phenomenon: gradient attenuation along the optimization path and representational drift in the latent space, which hinders effective learning. They propose a decomposition of process supervision into two dimensions: Trajectory Supervision, which provides dense stepwise reasoning signals, and Space Supervision, which maintains the semantic structure of the latent manifold. The study introduces the Unified Latent Probe (ULP) to measure mutual information between latent trajectories and explicit reasoning steps. Experimental results demonstrate a clear Information-Performance Binding, indicating that reasoning accuracy is contingent on the fidelity of information preserved in the latent chain. The findings advocate for a shift from geometric imitation to mutual information maximization in latent reasoning supervision.
Methodology
The authors conducted an information-theoretic analysis of Latent CoT, decomposing process supervision into trajectory and space supervision. They introduced the Unified Latent Probe (ULP) to measure mutual information and performed empirical experiments to assess the impact of different supervision strategies on training stability and reasoning accuracy.
Results
The experiments revealed that process supervision significantly stabilizes training and enhances reasoning accuracy. The findings indicated that trajectory supervision increases gradient magnitudes, promoting active adaptation, while space supervision's effectiveness varies based on the type of supervision applied. Generative reconstruction was found to better preserve information capacity compared to geometric compression.
Implications
The insights from this study could lead to improved training methodologies for Latent CoT models, enhancing their reasoning capabilities in various applications, particularly in natural language processing tasks where robust reasoning is critical.
Low-Energy Reduced RISC-V Instruction Subset Processor for Tsetlin Machine Inference at the Edge
Efficient ML
- Introduction of a programmable RISC-V architecture tailored for Tsetlin Machine inference.
- Significant performance improvements and energy savings compared to traditional architectures.
- Demonstration of TM's competitive accuracy against Binarized Neural Networks.
- Methodology includes instruction profiling and optimizations specific to TM workloads.
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Low-Energy Reduced RISC-V Instruction Subset Processor for Tsetlin Machine Inference at the Edge
Summary
This paper presents a novel domain-specific RISC-V microprocessor architecture designed for efficient Tsetlin Machine (TM) inference, targeting edge AI applications. The authors address the limitations of existing co-processor designs that often rely on tightly coupled interfaces and lack programmability. By leveraging the modular nature of the RISC-V architecture, they propose a reduced instruction subset processor that maintains programmability while enhancing performance and reducing energy consumption for TM workloads. The methodology includes instruction profiling to guide the reduction of instructions, followed by optimizations in the datapath and control path specifically for TM inference. The proposed architecture is evaluated against a baseline RV32IM core and compared with Binarized Neural Networks (BNNs), which are known for their efficiency in edge environments. The results demonstrate that the TM achieves comparable or superior accuracy, with execution time reductions of up to 98% and an average energy consumption reduction of 29.7 times, showcasing its potential for programmable and efficient edge AI systems.
Methodology
The authors designed a domain-specific RISC-V microprocessor architecture by profiling instructions to reduce the instruction set, followed by optimizations in the datapath and control path tailored for Tsetlin Machine inference. The architecture was evaluated using multiple datasets and compared against a baseline RV32IM core and Binarized Neural Networks.
Results
The proposed reduced RISC-V core achieved up to 88.18% accuracy on the CIFAR-2 dataset, significantly outperforming BNNs, which achieved 60.0%. The execution time was reduced by up to 98%, and the architecture demonstrated an average energy consumption reduction of 29.7 times, indicating its effectiveness for edge AI applications.
Implications
The findings suggest that the proposed architecture can facilitate the deployment of energy-efficient and high-performance machine learning models in resource-constrained edge environments, potentially impacting applications in IoT, smart sensing, and autonomous systems.
MassSpecGym in the Wild: Uncovering and Correcting Evaluation Pitfalls in AI-Driven Molecule Discovery
Optimization
Theory
- Identification of evaluation pitfalls in 17 out of 26 papers using MassSpecGym.
- Categorization of issues into data leakage, shortcut learning, and implementation bugs.
- Introduction of MassSpecGym v1.5 to address identified failures and improve benchmarking standards.
- Recommendations for best practices in model evaluation in the context of MS/MS.
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MassSpecGym in the Wild: Uncovering and Correcting Evaluation Pitfalls in AI-Driven Molecule Discovery
Summary
This paper addresses critical evaluation issues in the application of machine learning for tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS) in molecule discovery, using the MassSpecGym benchmark suite as a case study. The authors conducted a systematic audit of 26 papers that reported results using MassSpecGym within its first year, identifying evaluation pitfalls in at least 17 of these papers. They categorized the issues into three main classes: data leakage, shortcut learning, and implementation bugs leading to metric divergence. The authors emphasize that these pitfalls can significantly distort benchmark results, leading to misleading conclusions about model performance. To mitigate these issues, they provide recommendations for best practices in evaluation and introduce MassSpecGym v1.5, which incorporates these recommendations and aims to enhance the reliability of benchmarking in this field. The paper highlights the importance of transparent and robust evaluation methods in advancing machine learning applications in metabolomics.
Methodology
The authors conducted a systematic review and audit of existing literature utilizing the MassSpecGym benchmark suite. They categorized the evaluation issues found in the papers and performed controlled experiments to quantify the impact of these issues on benchmark conclusions. The findings were distilled into actionable recommendations, which were then implemented in the updated MassSpecGym v1.5.
Results
The audit revealed that significant evaluation issues were prevalent in the literature, affecting the validity of model performance conclusions. The introduction of MassSpecGym v1.5 addressed these issues by providing improved evaluation metrics and guidelines for future research.
Implications
The findings underscore the necessity for rigorous evaluation standards in machine learning applications for molecule discovery, potentially influencing future research practices and the design of benchmarking suites in computational metabolomics.
Boundary Embedding Shaping with Adaptive Contrastive Learning for Graph Structural Disentanglement
Graph Learning
- Identifies spurious structural noise from entangled neighborhoods as a critical issue in graph classification.
- Introduces Boundary Embedding Shaping (BES) as a framework combining hard example mining and adaptive contrastive learning.
- Demonstrates that BES effectively sharpens decision boundaries without destabilizing non-boundary nodes.
- Achieves significant improvements in classification accuracy, particularly for nodes near class boundaries.
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Boundary Embedding Shaping with Adaptive Contrastive Learning for Graph Structural Disentanglement
Summary
This paper addresses the challenge of graph structural entanglement in Graph Neural Networks (GNNs), which arises from spurious correlations among semantically irrelevant neighbors that contaminate node embeddings, particularly affecting nodes near class boundaries. The authors propose a novel approach called Boundary Embedding Shaping (BES), which utilizes adaptive contrastive learning to selectively suppress structural noise at decision boundaries while maintaining model stability. By focusing on boundary-region entanglement, BES enhances the classification performance of GNNs. The methodology involves hard example mining to identify boundary nodes surrounded by different classes and refining their embeddings with minimal parameter updates. The experimental results demonstrate that BES significantly improves boundary discrimination and outperforms existing leading methods, achieving an average increase of 3.3% in node classification accuracy and up to 5.0% on the WikiCS dataset, along with superior performance in link prediction tasks.
Methodology
The proposed Boundary Embedding Shaping (BES) framework enhances GNNs by employing hard example mining to identify boundary nodes and applying adaptive contrastive learning to refine their embeddings. This process involves minimal updates to model parameters, allowing for effective disentanglement of structural noise while preserving the overall model stability.
Results
BES consistently outperforms existing GNN methods, with an average increase of 3.3% in node classification accuracy and up to 5.0% improvement on the WikiCS dataset. The method also shows superior performance in link prediction tasks, validating its effectiveness in enhancing boundary discrimination.
Implications
The findings suggest that addressing structural entanglement in graph data can lead to more robust GNN models, which is crucial for applications in various domains such as social networks, biological systems, and recommendation systems. The proposed methodology can be integrated into existing GNN architectures to enhance their performance in challenging classification tasks.
UltraQuant: 4-bit KV Caching for Context-Heavy Agents
Large Language Models
Efficient ML
NLP
- UltraQuant introduces a 4-bit KV caching method tailored for context-heavy agent workloads.
- The approach emphasizes joint measurement of task quality, cache residency, and serving throughput.
- Key design innovations include asymmetric KV treatment and optimized GPU kernels for enhanced performance.
- UltraQuant achieves a 3.47× reduction in time-to-first-token in late rounds and a 1.63× increase in output throughput over the FP8 KV baseline.
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UltraQuant: 4-bit KV Caching for Context-Heavy Agents
Summary
The paper presents UltraQuant, a novel approach to 4-bit key-value (KV) caching specifically designed for context-heavy agents that require efficient memory usage during multi-turn interactions. The authors identify the challenges posed by long context prefixes and high concurrency in serving systems, which can lead to inefficient GPU utilization. They propose a framework that integrates TurboQuant-style rotation and codebook quantization to enhance the performance of KV caching. The study emphasizes the importance of jointly measuring task quality, cache residency, and serving throughput. Key design choices for robust 4-bit caching are discussed, including asymmetric treatment of keys and values, Walsh-Hadamard rotation, and optimizations for AMD GPUs. The results demonstrate that UltraQuant significantly improves time-to-first-token (TTFT) and output throughput compared to the FP8 KV baseline, particularly in cache-pressured scenarios. This work contributes to the ongoing efforts to optimize memory management in large language models, paving the way for more efficient deployment in real-world applications.
Methodology
The authors employ a combination of TurboQuant-style rotation and codebook quantization to implement 4-bit KV caching. They optimize the design for AMD GPUs by developing specialized decode-attention kernels and utilizing FP4 micro-tensor approximations. The methodology includes a focus on serving efficiency metrics such as time-to-first-token (TTFT) and time-per-output-token (TPOT) through empirical evaluations using a multi-turn benchmark with real human-LLM conversation data.
Results
UltraQuant demonstrates a 3.47× improvement in time-to-first-token during late rounds of cache pressure and a 2.3× improvement across all rounds compared to the FP8 KV caching baseline. Additionally, it increases output throughput by 1.63×, showcasing its effectiveness in managing long-context workloads with high concurrency.
Implications
The findings suggest that UltraQuant can significantly enhance the performance of context-heavy agents in real-world applications, particularly in scenarios requiring efficient memory management and high throughput. This could lead to advancements in the deployment of large language models in various domains, including conversational AI and automated task execution.
IHBench: Evaluating Post-Interruption Recovery in Voice Agents with Structured Workflows
Audio & Speech
NLP
Large Language Models
- IHBench defines post-interruption recovery as a critical evaluation axis for voice agents.
- The benchmark includes six types of interruptions and uses a two-axis scoring system.
- Closed-weight models outperform open-weight models in handling interruptions.
- The study reveals significant performance gaps in existing models regarding post-interruption recovery.
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IHBench: Evaluating Post-Interruption Recovery in Voice Agents with Structured Workflows
Summary
The paper introduces IHBench, a benchmark designed to evaluate the post-interruption recovery capabilities of voice agents operating within structured workflows, such as customer service and healthcare. Traditional benchmarks have primarily focused on the mechanics of interruptions, such as detecting when a user interrupts. However, they have largely overlooked how well agents recover and continue the conversation after such interruptions. IHBench addresses this gap by defining post-interruption recovery as a distinct evaluation axis, incorporating six types of interruptions and providing a two-axis scoring system based on task fulfillment and recovery quality. The authors generated synthetic multi-turn conversations across ten enterprise domains, injecting controlled interruptions and developing evaluation rubrics for each. They evaluated 27 audio-language model configurations from various sources, revealing significant differences in performance based on model type and interruption type. Closed-weight models demonstrated superior robustness to interruptions compared to open-weight models, showing better task fulfillment and slower degradation in performance as conversation length increased. The study also validated the evaluation framework through human studies and cross-benchmark comparisons, highlighting the distinct nature of recovery quality as a capability axis.
Methodology
The authors developed IHBench by creating synthetic multi-turn conversations grounded in state-machine workflows across ten enterprise domains. They injected six types of interruptions at controlled points and established evaluation rubrics for each interruption type. The performance of 27 audio-language model configurations was assessed based on task fulfillment and recovery quality, with validation through human studies and comparisons with existing benchmarks.
Results
The evaluation showed that closed-weight models consistently outperformed open-weight models in terms of task fulfillment and recovery quality. Closed-weight models were found to degrade more slowly as conversations lengthened and did not exhibit a performance gap between audio and text modalities, unlike open-weight models. The study highlighted that many current models struggle with post-interruption recovery, indicating a need for targeted training.
Implications
The findings suggest that improving post-interruption recovery in voice agents is crucial for enhancing user experience in real-time applications. The IHBench framework can guide future research and development efforts in building more robust voice agents capable of handling interruptions effectively.
Multi-Granular Attention-Driven Reinforcement Learning Framework for Web Intelligent Enhancement Systems
Reinforcement Learning
Graph Learning
Optimization
- Development of a graph-based semantic knowledge modeling framework with attention mechanisms.
- Introduction of an adaptive multi-agent reinforcement learning strategy for optimizing personalized web actions.
- Incorporation of a continuous online adaptation and feedback integration module for real-time updates.
- Achieved an accuracy of 80%, outperforming existing methods.
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Multi-Granular Attention-Driven Reinforcement Learning Framework for Web Intelligent Enhancement Systems
Summary
This paper presents the Multi-Granular Attention-based Reinforcement Web Intelligent Enhancement System (MGAR-WIES), designed to improve the adaptability, accuracy, and scalability of web intelligent enhancement systems that rely on heterogeneous and dynamic web data. Traditional machine learning and reinforcement learning models often struggle with semantic understanding and real-time adaptability in evolving web environments. The proposed framework integrates semantic graph modeling, attention mechanisms, and adaptive reinforcement learning to address these challenges. The methodology involves collecting and preprocessing heterogeneous web data to create unified feature representations, which are then transformed into a dynamic semantic graph. This graph captures local relevance and global contextual dependencies through graph embeddings enhanced by attention mechanisms. An adaptive multi-agent reinforcement learning strategy utilizes these attention-aware semantic states to optimize personalized web actions, such as content recommendation and navigation optimization. Additionally, a continuous online feedback mechanism is incorporated to update graph representations and learning policies in real-time, ensuring sustained adaptability and performance. The proposed MGAR-WIES framework demonstrated improved accuracy (80%) compared to existing approaches, showcasing its effectiveness in enhancing web intelligence systems.
Methodology
The methodology involves collecting heterogeneous web data, preprocessing it to create unified feature representations, and constructing a dynamic semantic graph. Attention mechanisms are applied to enhance graph embeddings, which are then utilized in an adaptive multi-agent reinforcement learning strategy to optimize personalized web actions. A continuous online feedback mechanism is integrated for real-time updates of semantic embeddings and learning policies.
Results
The MGAR-WIES framework achieved an accuracy of 80%, significantly outperforming existing approaches in terms of adaptability and performance in dynamic web environments.
Implications
The proposed framework has potential applications in various domains such as e-commerce, healthcare, and smart cities, where personalized and context-aware web services are critical. It can enhance decision-making, user satisfaction, and operational efficiency by providing smarter web experiences.
Zero-Inflated Gaussian Distributions Enable Parameter-Space Sparsity in Estimation-of-Distribution Algorithms
Optimization
- Introduction of zero-inflated Gaussian distributions as a sampling law for EDAs in sparse optimization.
- Joint optimization of sparsity patterns and active values without additional hyperparameters.
- Identification of latent parameters from observed samples, enhancing the understanding of correlation structures.
- Empirical results show ZIG-EDA outperforms existing methods in terms of convergence speed and solution quality.
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Zero-Inflated Gaussian Distributions Enable Parameter-Space Sparsity in Estimation-of-Distribution Algorithms
Summary
This paper addresses the challenge of optimizing sparse solutions in black-box optimization problems using Estimation-of-Distribution Algorithms (EDAs). Traditional EDAs excel in continuous parameter spaces but struggle with sparse spaces where many parameters are zero. The authors propose a novel approach using multivariate zero-inflated Gaussian (ZIG) distributions, which naturally encode sparsity by combining a point mass at zero with a continuous Gaussian component. This allows for the joint optimization of sparsity patterns and active parameter values without the need for hand-crafted operators or additional assumptions. The paper details the formulation of the ZIG distribution, the identification of its latent parameters from observed samples, and the development of practical estimators for recovering latent correlation structures. Empirical evaluations demonstrate that the ZIG-EDA outperforms traditional dense Gaussian EDAs and other sparse optimization methods on the Lunar Lander benchmark, achieving faster convergence and higher returns while maintaining a sparse solution with only a fraction of active parameters. This work represents a significant advancement in evolutionary optimization for sparse parameter spaces.
Methodology
The authors develop a multivariate zero-inflated Gaussian distribution through a latent Gaussian model with two latent variables per observed dimension—one for the zero indicator and one for the active value. They derive estimators for recovering latent correlation structures and evaluate the approach empirically on benchmark tasks.
Results
The ZIG-EDA converges faster and achieves higher final returns than a dense Gaussian EDA, a hand-crafted sparse evolutionary algorithm, and an ad-hoc sparse EDA on the Lunar Lander benchmark, while maintaining a sparse solution with only about 12 out of 90 parameters active.
Implications
This research provides a new framework for sparse optimization in evolutionary algorithms, potentially impacting various fields requiring efficient and interpretable models, such as machine learning, finance, and engineering.
Quantile of Means: A Bonus-Free Ensemble Method for Minimax Optimal Reinforcement Learning
Reinforcement Learning
Theory
Efficient ML
- Introduces a quantile-based ensemble method for exploration in finite-horizon MDPs.
- Achieves instance-optimal variance-dependent regret bounds without requiring count-based bonuses.
- Improves regret rates in bandit settings by reducing logarithmic factors.
- Distribution-agnostic approach that adapts to various reward distributions.
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Quantile of Means: A Bonus-Free Ensemble Method for Minimax Optimal Reinforcement Learning
Summary
This paper presents a novel quantile-based ensemble method for reinforcement learning (RL) that achieves optimal variance-dependent regret bounds for finite-horizon Markov Decision Processes (MDPs). Traditional RL algorithms often rely on count-based uncertainty estimates for exploration, which can be difficult to compute in practice. The proposed method circumvents this issue by using an ensemble of Q-value estimates to select actions based on a fixed quantile, thereby capturing optimism without requiring explicit counts or prior knowledge of reward distributions. The authors demonstrate that their approach not only matches the best-known results for instance-optimal regret in tabular MDPs but also improves upon existing bandit algorithms by reducing logarithmic factors in regret. The algorithm is distribution-agnostic, meaning it performs well across various reward distributions, and its analysis is straightforward, lacking the complexity of bonus-based methods. This work extends the theoretical understanding of ensemble methods in RL and provides a practical framework for efficient exploration in MDPs.
Methodology
The authors propose a quantile-based ensemble mechanism that selects actions based on a fixed quantile of an ensemble of Q-value estimates. This method avoids the need for explicit visitation counts or prior knowledge of reward distributions, allowing for efficient exploration in MDPs. The analysis leverages the true concentration properties of the underlying distributions to provide tighter guarantees.
Results
The proposed algorithm achieves instance-optimal regret bounds for tabular finite-horizon MDPs, matching the best-known results previously attainable only through complex count-based methods. Additionally, it improves bandit performance by achieving optimal instance-dependent rates and reduces logarithmic factors from prior work.
Implications
This research has significant implications for the development of efficient exploration strategies in reinforcement learning, particularly in environments where traditional count-based methods are impractical. The findings suggest that ensemble methods can serve as a robust alternative for exploration in various RL applications, potentially enhancing performance in domains such as robotics and game playing.
Exploring the potential of AlphaEarth and TESSERA embeddings for Fine-scale Local Climate Zone Mapping: A case study across five cities in Switzerland
Computer Vision
- TESSERA embeddings outperform traditional Sentinel-1/2 composites and AlphaEarth for LCZ mapping.
- The study demonstrates the feasibility of generating fine-scale LCZ maps at 10m resolution.
- Embedding-based models can reduce preprocessing time and improve model transferability.
- Improving reference data quality is crucial for enhancing mapping accuracy.
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Exploring the potential of AlphaEarth and TESSERA embeddings for Fine-scale Local Climate Zone Mapping: A case study across five cities in Switzerland
Summary
This study investigates the use of precomputed embeddings from TESSERA and AlphaEarth to upscale coarse Local Climate Zone (LCZ) maps to a finer resolution of 10 meters. Traditional LCZ mapping often relies on 100-meter resolution data, which is inadequate for detailed urban climate research. The authors employ an attention-based U-Net architecture to assess the performance of these embeddings against conventional Sentinel-1/2 composites across five Swiss cities. Three experiments are conducted to evaluate multi-city transferability, the impact of higher-resolution reference data, and the temporal robustness of the models. Results indicate that TESSERA embeddings consistently outperform both Sentinel-1/2 and AlphaEarth in generating accurate LCZ maps, achieving Intersection-over-Union (IoU) scores between 0.59-0.69 and 0.77-0.82 in the first two experiments. The study highlights the potential of embedding-based models to streamline the LCZ mapping process, reduce preprocessing efforts, and enhance the scalability of urban climate applications. However, challenges remain in transferring models across different years, emphasizing the need for improved reference data quality.
Methodology
The authors utilized an attention-based U-Net architecture to process precomputed embeddings from TESSERA and AlphaEarth, comparing their performance against traditional Sentinel-1/2 composites. Three experiments were conducted: one for multi-city transferability, another assessing the impact of higher-resolution reference data, and a third evaluating temporal robustness across different years.
Results
The study found that TESSERA embeddings consistently yielded higher accuracy in LCZ mapping compared to other datasets, with IoU scores ranging from 0.59-0.69 and 0.77-0.82 in the first two experiments. The results also indicated challenges in model transferability across years, highlighting the importance of reference data quality.
Implications
The findings suggest that embedding-based approaches can significantly enhance the accuracy and efficiency of LCZ mapping, which is essential for urban climate modeling and sustainable urban planning. The open-source nature of the developed workflow allows for broader application and adaptation in various urban contexts.
Train, Retrieve, or Both? A Four-Arm Head-to-Head for Correct Statutory Citation on the Ontario Residential Tenancies Act
NLP
Large Language Models
- The hybrid SFT+RAG model outperforms both the base and SFT-only models in citation accuracy.
- Retrieval is crucial for achieving zero hallucinations in statutory citations.
- The study demonstrates that a smaller, efficient hybrid model can match or exceed the performance of larger, specialized retrieval systems.
- The findings indicate that more data does not necessarily lead to better performance in this context.
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Train, Retrieve, or Both? A Four-Arm Head-to-Head for Correct Statutory Citation on the Ontario Residential Tenancies Act
Summary
This paper addresses the challenge of accurately citing statutory provisions from the Ontario Residential Tenancies Act (RTA) for self-represented tenants, landlords, and help-desk staff. The authors investigate whether fine-tuning a model is sufficient for this task or if a hybrid retrieval approach is necessary. They conduct a four-arm comparison using the Qwen2.5-7B-Instruct model, evaluating four configurations: a base zero-shot model, a supervised fine-tuning (SFT) model, a retrieval-augmented generation (RAG) model, and a hybrid SFT+RAG model. The study finds that the base model fails to provide citations, while the SFT-only model misrecalls sections. The RAG model achieves a citation accuracy of 0.44 with zero hallucinations, and the hybrid model scores the highest at 0.481 exact matches, demonstrating that hybrid approaches can enhance citation accuracy. The results suggest that retrieval is essential for reducing hallucinations and that the hybrid model outperforms larger, specialized retrieval systems without requiring more data. However, the aspirational target of 0.70 exact matches remains unmet, indicating room for improvement.
Methodology
The authors built a citation index and a question-to-citation dataset, then conducted a four-arm comparison of different model configurations: a base zero-shot model, a supervised fine-tuning (SFT) model trained on synthetic data, a retrieval-augmented generation (RAG) model, and a hybrid SFT+RAG model. They evaluated the models based on citation exact-match scores using a small, human-verification-pending evaluation set.
Results
The base model could not provide citations (0.00 accuracy, 81% hallucinated), while the SFT-only model achieved a low accuracy of 0.148. The RAG model improved citation accuracy to 0.44 with zero hallucinations. The hybrid SFT+RAG model scored the highest at 0.481 exact matches, demonstrating enhanced robustness against higher-recall candidate sets. Despite these improvements, the target of 0.70 exact matches was not reached.
Implications
The findings suggest that hybrid models combining fine-tuning and retrieval can significantly improve the accuracy of statutory citations, which is crucial for legal decision-support systems. This approach could be applied to other legal texts and domains where precise citation is necessary, potentially aiding self-represented individuals and legal professionals.
FlexLAM: Resolving the Bottleneck Trade-off in Latent Action Learning
Robotics
Computer Vision
Efficient ML
- FlexLAM introduces variable-length latent actions to overcome fixed-capacity bottlenecks in LAMs.
- The method employs retained-prefix training to create prefix-valid codes that enhance action alignment.
- FlexLAM outperforms traditional fixed-capacity LAMs across all evaluated token budgets.
- The model supports inference-time token-budget adjustments without retraining.
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FlexLAM: Resolving the Bottleneck Trade-off in Latent Action Learning
Summary
The paper introduces FlexLAM, a novel approach to Latent Action Learning (LAM) that addresses the limitations of fixed-capacity bottlenecks in existing LAMs. Traditional LAMs impose a rigid capacity for latent action representation, which can lead to inefficiencies in action alignment, particularly when labeled data is scarce. The authors identify a bottleneck trade-off where overly tight codes may discard crucial transition cues, while overly loose codes introduce unnecessary complexity. FlexLAM employs a variable-length latent action representation trained through nested dropout, allowing for prefix-valid codes that capture essential transition structures while adding detail only when necessary. This method enables the model to adaptively support different token budgets at inference time without requiring retraining. The authors demonstrate that FlexLAM consistently outperforms fixed-capacity LAMs across various token budgets in standard evaluations, indicating that it not only provides flexibility but also enhances the latent-action interface. The findings suggest that FlexLAM can serve as an architecture-free upgrade to existing latent action models, improving performance in tasks such as Ego4D transition reconstruction.
Methodology
FlexLAM utilizes nested dropout to train variable-length latent actions, allowing for the creation of prefix-valid codes that can adapt to varying transition complexities. This approach maintains the existing LAM pipeline while enhancing the latent-action interface, enabling the model to handle multiple token budgets effectively.
Results
FlexLAM demonstrated superior performance compared to separately trained fixed-capacity LAMs at every evaluated token budget in DMLab. The model's ability to adaptively manage token budgets and improve action alignment under limited labels was validated through various evaluations, including Ego4D reconstruction.
Implications
FlexLAM's architecture-free approach to latent action learning could significantly enhance the efficiency and effectiveness of models in video-based decision-making tasks. Its ability to adaptively manage latent action representations may lead to broader applications in robotics, video analysis, and other domains requiring action recognition from unlabelled data.
How Transparent is DiffusionGemma?
NLP
Large Language Models
Interpretability
- DiffusionGemma's initial variable transparency is low due to high opaque serial depth.
- Intermediate states can be made interpretable, reducing opaque serial depth significantly.
- Algorithmic transparency is more complex for diffusion models compared to autoregressive models.
- Novel phenomena unique to diffusion models were identified, including non-chronological reasoning.
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How Transparent is DiffusionGemma?
Summary
This paper investigates the transparency of DiffusionGemma, a text diffusion model developed by Google DeepMind, focusing on its reasoning processes and the implications for model interpretability. The authors decompose transparency into two components: variable transparency, which assesses the understanding of intermediate computational states, and algorithmic transparency, which evaluates the ability to reconstruct the model's output process. The study reveals that DiffusionGemma initially appears to have poor variable transparency due to its high opaque serial depth compared to the autoregressive Gemma 4 model. However, by mapping information through an interpretable token bottleneck, the authors demonstrate that this depth can be significantly reduced. The paper also highlights the challenges of achieving algorithmic transparency in diffusion models, as they can implement complex reasoning processes that differ from autoregressive models. Through interpretability case studies, the authors uncover unique phenomena such as non-chronological reasoning and intermediate-context reasoning. Additionally, they assess the monitorability of DiffusionGemma, finding it comparable to Gemma 4. Overall, the findings suggest that while DiffusionGemma presents transparency challenges, there are pathways to enhance interpretability without sacrificing performance.
Methodology
The authors analyze the architecture of DiffusionGemma to assess its opaque serial depth and variable transparency. They conduct interpretability case studies to explore unique reasoning phenomena and adapt monitorability evaluations to compare DiffusionGemma with Gemma 4. The study involves mapping information flow through denoising steps and assessing the interpretability of intermediate outputs.
Results
The study finds that DiffusionGemma has an initial opaque serial depth 28.6 times greater than Gemma 4, which can be reduced to 1.1 times with interpretable bottlenecks. The authors also identify novel reasoning behaviors specific to diffusion models and confirm that DiffusionGemma's monitorability is comparable to that of Gemma 4.
Implications
The findings suggest that improving transparency in diffusion models is feasible, which is crucial for AI safety and understanding model behavior. Enhanced interpretability could lead to better monitoring and mitigation of misuse in AI systems.
Judging to Improve: A De-biased VLM-as-3D-Judge Protocol for Single-Image 3D Generation
Generative Models
Optimization
Computer Vision
- Development of an optimization-grade de-biased VLM-as-3D-judge protocol.
- Identification and rectification of three failure modes in the evaluation process.
- Empirical findings show that independent samples lack learnable preferences.
- Lightweight adaptations can achieve parity with strong base models but not exceed them.
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Judging to Improve: A De-biased VLM-as-3D-Judge Protocol for Single-Image 3D Generation
Summary
This paper builds upon previous work that established a de-biased, cross-model VLM-as-3D-judge for evaluating single-image-to-3D mesh quality. The authors explore whether the preferences of this judge can be utilized to optimize a strong open generator, TRELLIS, specifically for furniture assets, without relying on human labels. The key contribution is the development of an optimization-grade protocol that enhances the original judge by addressing issues that arise when integrating it into the training and evaluation loop. The authors identify and rectify three failure modes: image overload, Gaussian-splat renders that obscure geometry defects, and reference-free judging that favors incorrect outputs. They demonstrate that using this hardened protocol allows for reliable evaluation and optimization, although the results show that the adapted generator matches the strong base rather than surpassing it. The study reveals that independent samples from the base do not carry learnable preferences, necessitating engineered quality-contrastive constructions for effective training. The findings indicate that while lightweight adaptations can achieve parity with the base model, exceeding it requires more than simple parameter-efficient techniques.
Methodology
The authors employed a two-judge system, with a training judge (Qwen2.5-VL-7B) distinct from an evaluation judge (InternVL3-8B) to avoid circularity in optimization. They implemented position-bias corrections and addressed failure modes through systematic testing across six adaptation methods, two input regimes, and a degradation-severity sweep, all while using publicly available models and data.
Results
The study found that the most effective adaptation method, conditioner repair under severe degradation, achieved parity (0.50) with the base model, but no method surpassed the ≥65% win-rate target. The results were mechanistically explained, showing that clean inputs saturated the judge and that conditioning repair was crucial for improving geometry.
Implications
The findings suggest that while lightweight adaptations can match existing models, achieving superior performance may require more complex strategies. The optimization-grade judge protocol developed in this study can be reused for future research in single-image 3D generation and other applications requiring reliable evaluation metrics.
A Hybrid GNN-FEM Framework for Phase-Field Fracture Simulation. Physics-Preserving Hybridization for Generalizable Surrogate Modeling
Graph Learning
Efficient ML
Theory
- Integration of GNN with FEM enhances efficiency in phase-field fracture modeling.
- The framework maintains physical consistency by preserving the incremental solution structure.
- Strong generalization capabilities across varying problem settings are achieved.
- Numerical experiments confirm reduced computational costs without sacrificing accuracy.
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A Hybrid GNN-FEM Framework for Phase-Field Fracture Simulation. Physics-Preserving Hybridization for Generalizable Surrogate Modeling
Summary
This paper presents a novel hybrid framework that integrates Graph Neural Networks (GNN) with Finite Element Method (FEM) for simulating phase-field fracture, addressing the challenges of computational cost and generalization in complex physical systems. The authors highlight the limitations of traditional phase-field approaches, which, while robust, are computationally expensive due to their need to solve coupled, nonlinear, and history-dependent systems. To mitigate these issues, the proposed framework replaces the phase-field update at each load increment with a GNN surrogate while retaining the FEM-based displacement solver to ensure mechanical equilibrium and boundary conditions are met. This selective surrogate strategy focuses on identifying a physically meaningful learning target, thus avoiding the need for exhaustive data generation. The framework is designed to generalize across various geometries, loading conditions, and material properties by employing dimensionless feature design and a physics-informed loss based on the governing phase-field equation. Numerical experiments demonstrate that this hybrid approach significantly reduces computational costs while maintaining accuracy compared to conventional FEM, showcasing robust predictive performance across diverse problem settings.
Methodology
The authors developed a hybrid framework that combines GNNs with FEM. The GNN serves as a surrogate model to replace the phase-field update in the FEM process, while the FEM solver ensures that mechanical equilibrium and boundary conditions are satisfied. The framework employs dimensionless feature design and a physics-informed loss function to enhance generalization and maintain physical consistency.
Results
The hybrid GNN-FEM framework demonstrated a significant reduction in computational costs while achieving comparable accuracy to traditional FEM methods. It exhibited robust predictive performance across a wide range of geometries, loading conditions, and material properties, indicating its effectiveness as a generalizable surrogate model for phase-field fracture simulations.
Implications
This research has potential implications for various fields requiring efficient simulations of complex physical systems, such as materials science, structural engineering, and computational mechanics. The hybrid approach could facilitate faster and more accurate predictions in scenarios involving fracture mechanics, ultimately aiding in the design and analysis of materials and structures.
An Information Theoretic Framework for Graph Novelty Generation via Latent Mixture Modeling
Generative Models
Graph Learning
Theory
- Introduces a novel framework for graph novelty generation using latent mixture modeling.
- Imposes novelty and reliability conditions based on the Minimum Description Length principle.
- Theoretical guarantees on misclassification probabilities for generated samples.
- Empirical results demonstrate superior control over novelty and reliability compared to existing methods.
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An Information Theoretic Framework for Graph Novelty Generation via Latent Mixture Modeling
Summary
This paper introduces an information-theoretic framework for generating novel graph data that diverges from existing patterns while maintaining structural integrity. The authors propose a method that embeds data into a latent space and employs finite mixture models to characterize the latent distribution. Novelty is enforced by ensuring that generated samples are poorly represented by existing mixture components, while reliability is maintained through constraints on the overall mixture structure based on the Minimum Description Length (MDL) principle. The framework includes a theoretical analysis demonstrating that with appropriate threshold settings, the probabilities of misclassifying non-novel or unreliable samples converge to zero. Empirical evaluations on synthetic and benchmark datasets confirm the effectiveness of the proposed method in achieving principled novelty generation with quantifiable risk, distinguishing it from traditional data augmentation and extrapolation techniques.
Methodology
The proposed framework utilizes latent mixture modeling to represent the probability distribution of latent representations. It enforces novelty by requiring generated samples to significantly increase the local description length while ensuring that the global structure of the mixture model remains stable. The authors develop MDL-guided sampling algorithms that balance these conflicting requirements and provide theoretical analysis for misclassification probabilities.
Results
The experiments conducted on both synthetic and real-world datasets show that the proposed method effectively generates novel graph samples while controlling for reliability. The results indicate that varying threshold parameters allows for better management of novelty and reliability compared to competing methods, confirming the framework's practical applicability.
Implications
This work has significant implications for applications requiring creative data generation, such as community formation and material design. The framework provides a rigorous mathematical foundation for novelty generation, which can enhance the capabilities of generative models in various domains.
Uncertainty-Aware Reward Modeling for Stable RLHF
Reinforcement Learning
Large Language Models
Optimization
- Introduces Uncertainty-Aware Reward Modeling (UARM) to address unreliability in reward models.
- Utilizes quantile-based conformal prediction for calibrated uncertainty estimates.
- Implements a heteroscedastic advantage reweighting scheme to suppress unreliable samples.
- Demonstrates significant improvements in reward model calibration and alignment quality.
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Uncertainty-Aware Reward Modeling for Stable RLHF
Summary
This paper addresses critical challenges in Reinforcement Learning from Human Feedback (RLHF), particularly the unreliability of reward models and the amplification of unreliable signals in group-based policy optimization methods like Group Relative Policy Optimization (GRPO). The authors propose Uncertainty-Aware Reward Modeling (UARM), which incorporates calibrated uncertainty into reward models using quantile-based conformal prediction. This approach allows the reward model to output not only point estimates but also uncertainty intervals that reflect the model's confidence in its predictions. In the online phase, the authors introduce a heteroscedastic advantage reweighting scheme that uses the uncertainty estimates to down-weight high-uncertainty samples during the standardization process in GRPO. The proposed method aims to reduce reward hacking and improve the alignment quality of policies. Experiments conducted on three datasets (HelpSteer, Ultra-Feedback, and PKU-SafeRLHF) demonstrate that UARM significantly enhances reward model calibration and downstream alignment quality compared to standard GRPO and other uncertainty-agnostic baselines.
Methodology
The methodology involves two phases: an offline phase where a reward model is trained as a quantile regression estimator to provide conditional quantiles and uncertainty intervals, and an online phase where these intervals are used to derive a heteroscedastic advantage that down-weights high-uncertainty samples during policy optimization.
Results
The experiments show that UARM improves reward model calibration, reduces instances of reward hacking, and enhances the overall alignment quality of the policies when compared to standard GRPO and other baseline methods.
Implications
The findings suggest that incorporating uncertainty into reward modeling can lead to more robust and reliable reinforcement learning systems, potentially improving the alignment of large language models with human values and preferences.
Emyx: Fast and efficient all-atom protein generation
Generative Models
Efficient ML
- Emyx introduces a simplified architecture for all-atom protein generation, focusing on geometric constraints.
- The model outperforms existing state-of-the-art methods in enzyme design benchmarks.
- Emyx achieves significant reductions in training time and computational resources.
- The approach bridges flow matching training efficiency with advanced sampling methods from diffusion models.
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Emyx: Fast and efficient all-atom protein generation
Summary
Emyx is a novel 140M-parameter conditional flow matching model designed for efficient all-atom protein generation, addressing the limitations of current methods that rely on complex architectures inherited from structure prediction. Traditional all-atom generators are expensive to train and often produce limited structural diversity, which hinders the exploration of novel proteins for enzyme design. Emyx simplifies this process by focusing on sparse geometric constraints instead of rich co-evolutionary signals, allowing for a more efficient training process. The architecture replaces heavy embedding stacks with lightweight conditional representations and sparse connectivity, leading to significant reductions in training costs. Notably, Emyx achieves superior performance compared to existing models like ProteÃna-Complexa and RFdiffusion3 on the AME enzyme design benchmark, excelling in global fold recovery, catalytic geometry accuracy, structural novelty, scaffold diversity, and geometric validity. Furthermore, Emyx trains in just 682 GPU-hours, approximately four times less than RFdiffusion3, demonstrating its efficiency without compromising on performance.
Methodology
Emyx employs a conditional flow matching model architecture that utilizes standard transformer blocks, replacing complex embedding stacks with lightweight representations. It incorporates an exact reparametrization of the flow matching interpolant into the EDM noise-level framework, facilitating efficient training and sampling without the need for retraining.
Results
Emyx demonstrates superior performance over ProteÃna-Complexa and RFdiffusion3 on the AME enzyme design benchmark, achieving high success rates in global fold recovery and catalytic geometry accuracy while maintaining structural novelty and geometric validity. The training process is completed in 682 GPU-hours, significantly less than RFdiffusion3.
Implications
The advancements presented by Emyx could revolutionize computational enzyme design, enabling the generation of novel proteins with applications in industrial and medical biocatalysis. Its efficiency and effectiveness may lead to broader explorations of chemical space and the development of innovative enzymes.
Federated Bilevel Performative Prediction
Optimization
Federated Learning
Theory
- Introduces federated bilevel performative prediction, integrating decision-dependent distribution shifts into federated learning.
- Formulates the federated bilevel performatively stable (FBPS) point and establishes conditions for its existence and uniqueness.
- Develops two algorithms, FBi-RRM and FBi-SGD, with convergence guarantees tailored for performative shifts.
- Demonstrates improved meta-generalization and stability through experiments on strategic learning tasks.
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Federated Bilevel Performative Prediction
Summary
This paper introduces the concept of federated bilevel performative prediction, addressing the challenges posed by decision-dependent distribution shifts in federated learning settings. Traditional federated bilevel optimization methods often assume fixed client data distributions, which can lead to instability when model decisions influence client behavior and data collection. The authors formalize the federated bilevel performatively stable (FBPS) point and provide sufficient conditions for its existence and uniqueness. They propose two algorithms: FBi-RRM, which achieves linear convergence under specific conditions, and FBi-SGD, a communication-efficient stochastic method that guarantees convergence under diminishing step sizes. The paper validates the proposed methods through experiments on strategic regression and meta-strategic classification, demonstrating improved performance and stability compared to non-performative baselines. This work represents a significant advancement in integrating performativity into federated learning frameworks, offering a new perspective on hypergradient estimation and stability in heterogeneous environments.
Methodology
The authors develop a unified framework for federated bilevel optimization that incorporates client-specific decision-dependent distributions. They analyze the stability of the FBPS point under a decoupled-risk perspective and propose two algorithms: FBi-RRM, which converges linearly under a contraction condition, and FBi-SGD, which is a stochastic method that leverages federated hypergradient estimation. Both methods are designed to handle the complexities of performative shifts and client heterogeneity.
Results
The experiments conducted on strategic regression and meta-strategic classification tasks validate the predicted stability thresholds and show that the proposed methods outperform non-performative baselines in terms of meta-generalization. The results indicate that incorporating performativity into the training process leads to more stable and effective learning outcomes in federated settings.
Implications
This research has significant implications for federated learning applications where client behavior and data distributions are influenced by model decisions. It opens avenues for more robust and adaptive learning systems that can better handle the dynamic nature of client data in real-world scenarios, particularly in fields such as personalized medicine, finance, and recommendation systems.
Sparsity, Superposition, and Forgetting: A Mechanistic Study of Representation Retention in Continual Learning
Theory
Interpretability
- Superposition increases over time with transient dips at task boundaries, indicating boundary-specific interference.
- Higher feature sparsity leads to more superposition but does not always result in forgetting if representations are strong.
- Tasks with sparser features exhibit higher effective rank, suggesting broader latent capacity usage.
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Sparsity, Superposition, and Forgetting: A Mechanistic Study of Representation Retention in Continual Learning
Summary
This paper investigates the mechanisms of representation retention in continual learning (CL) systems, which often suffer from catastrophic forgetting. The authors propose a controlled, synthetic framework that allows for the observation and measurement of key factors such as sparsity, superposition, and forgetting. By utilizing a generator-separator pipeline, they define latent features and create tasks with adjustable sparsity and overlap. The study employs sparse dynamical relations (SINDy) to analyze how representation strength changes over time in relation to superposition and exposure history. The findings reveal that superposition tends to increase over time, with temporary decreases at task boundaries, indicating boundary-specific interference. Additionally, while higher feature sparsity leads to increased superposition, it does not necessarily result in forgetting if representations remain strong. The analysis also shows that tasks with sparser features utilize a broader latent capacity. Overall, the study provides insights that challenge the conventional belief that more superposition equates to more forgetting, highlighting the complex interplay between representation strength, superposition, and capacity allocation.
Methodology
The authors developed a controlled synthetic framework to isolate and measure the effects of sparsity and superposition on representation retention. They used a generator-separator pipeline to define latent features and tasks, and applied sparse dynamical relations (SINDy) to analyze the temporal changes in representation strength and their relationship with superposition and exposure history.
Results
The study found that superposition generally rises over time, with dips at task boundaries. It also showed that while higher sparsity increases superposition, strong representations can mitigate forgetting. Furthermore, tasks with sparser features demonstrated a higher effective rank, indicating more efficient use of latent capacity.
Implications
The findings suggest that understanding the dynamics of representation retention can inform the design of more robust continual learning algorithms. The controlled framework allows for the development of falsifiable hypotheses and diagnostic tools that can be applied to real-world CL scenarios.
Manifold Bandits: Bayesian Curriculum Learning over the Latent Geometry of Large Language Models
Reinforcement Learning
Large Language Models
NLP
- Introduces Bayesian Manifold Curriculum (BMC) for structured problem sampling in RL for LLMs.
- Frames problem sampling as a manifold-structured bandit problem, emphasizing the relationships between tasks.
- Identifies trade-offs between productivity, diversity, and utility in adaptive curriculum learning.
- Demonstrates that focusing solely on difficulty can hinder generalization and performance.
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Manifold Bandits: Bayesian Curriculum Learning over the Latent Geometry of Large Language Models
Summary
This paper addresses the challenge of efficient problem sampling in reinforcement learning (RL) for large language models (LLMs). Traditional adaptive curriculum learning methods focus on selecting prompts of intermediate difficulty, treating the problem as a standard bandit problem. However, this approach neglects the structured nature of the task space. The authors propose a novel framework called Bayesian Manifold Curriculum (BMC), which organizes problems into a hierarchical task tree based on the model's latent representation. BMC employs Bayesian learning to guide sampling decisions, allowing for a more effective exploration of the task manifold. The authors demonstrate that different sampling strategies create trade-offs between productivity, diversity, and utility, emphasizing that merely prioritizing difficulty is insufficient for optimal performance. By framing problem sampling as a manifold-structured bandit problem, the paper highlights the importance of structure and type-awareness in problem selection, leading to improved training efficiency and broader data coverage.
Methodology
The authors developed a hierarchical method called Latent Task Trees to approximate the structure of the task manifold from model embeddings. BMC utilizes Bayesian decision-making over these trees to adaptively sample problems, accounting for the non-stationary dynamics induced by the model's learning process. The framework is evaluated through diagnostic analysis to assess the trade-offs between productivity, diversity, and utility in problem selection.
Results
The empirical results indicate that BMC significantly improves the trade-off between training efficiency and coverage of the task manifold compared to traditional methods. The analysis reveals that adaptive curricula cannot be solely evaluated based on downstream performance, as the axes of productivity, diversity, and utility are interdependent and impact overall learning outcomes.
Implications
The findings suggest that incorporating a structured approach to problem sampling can enhance the training of LLMs, leading to better reasoning capabilities and generalization. The proposed methods can be applied to various RL scenarios beyond LLMs, potentially improving learning efficiency in other domains.
Flow Map Denoisers: Traversing the Distortion-Perception Plane for Inverse Problems
Computer Vision
Generative Models
Theory
- Flow maps enable continuous traversal of the distortion-perception plane with a single model.
- The lookahead parameter controls the tradeoff between MMSE and perceptual quality.
- The method achieves optimality for Gaussian targets and demonstrates empirical effectiveness for natural images.
- Integration into a Plug-and-Play framework allows for versatile applications in various inverse problems.
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Flow Map Denoisers: Traversing the Distortion-Perception Plane for Inverse Problems
Summary
This paper addresses the challenge of image restoration, which often involves a tradeoff between minimizing distortion and maximizing perceptual quality. Traditional methods either fixate on a single point in the distortion-perception (DP) plane or require complex setups such as paired-data supervision or hyperparameter tuning. The authors introduce flow map models, which allow for a continuous traversal of the DP frontier using a single trained model. By adjusting a lookahead parameter, the flow map can interpolate between minimum mean squared error (MMSE) and perceptual quality, effectively spanning the DP frontier. Theoretical proofs confirm that for Gaussian targets, varying the lookahead parameter recovers the optimal DP curve, while empirical results demonstrate similar behavior for natural images. The proposed method is integrated into a Plug-and-Play (PnP) framework, enabling versatile applications across various inverse problems without the need for retraining. Extensive experiments on datasets like CelebA and AFHQ show that the method matches or surpasses specialized baselines at both ends of the DP spectrum, providing a smooth transition across the DP plane.
Methodology
The authors utilize flow map models to define a family of denoisers indexed by a lookahead parameter, which allows for continuous control over the distortion-perception tradeoff. They prove theoretical properties for Gaussian targets and empirically validate the approach on natural images. The method is embedded within a Plug-and-Play framework to facilitate its application across different inverse problems.
Results
The proposed flow map denoisers successfully recover the optimal DP frontier for Gaussian targets and show similar performance for natural images. Experiments on CelebA and AFHQ datasets demonstrate that the method can match or exceed the performance of specialized models at both ends of the DP spectrum, while also providing a smooth transition across the DP plane.
Implications
This work has significant implications for image restoration and other inverse problems, as it simplifies the model design by allowing a single model to adaptively control the tradeoff between distortion and perceptual quality. This could lead to more efficient and effective solutions in computational imaging and related fields.
SL-S4Wave: Self-Supervised Learning of Physiological Waveforms with Structured State Space Models
Time Series
- Introduces SL-S4Wave, a self-supervised learning framework tailored for long-sequence physiological waveforms.
- Combines contrastive learning with a structured state space model to capture both local and long-range dependencies.
- Demonstrates superior performance in arrhythmia detection with fewer labeled examples and robust performance on long segments.
- Shows effective transferability to unseen arrhythmia types and generalizability to EEG tasks.
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SL-S4Wave: Self-Supervised Learning of Physiological Waveforms with Structured State Space Models
Summary
The paper presents SL-S4Wave, a self-supervised learning framework designed to model long-sequence physiological waveforms, such as ECG and EEG, using structured state space models (S4). Traditional self-supervised learning methods often struggle with the complexities of multichannel signals and long-range dependencies, particularly in the context of noisy medical data. SL-S4Wave addresses these challenges by integrating contrastive learning with a novel encoder architecture that employs multi-layer global convolution with multiscale subkernels. This architecture allows for effective capture of both local patterns and long-range temporal dependencies. The authors conduct extensive experiments on real-world datasets, demonstrating that SL-S4Wave outperforms state-of-the-art methods in arrhythmia detection, achieves high performance with fewer labeled examples, and maintains robustness on long waveform segments. Additionally, the model shows effective transferability to unseen arrhythmia types and generalizability across different physiological tasks, such as EEG state recognition. Overall, SL-S4Wave represents a significant advancement in the self-supervised learning of complex physiological signals.
Methodology
The methodology involves the development of the S4Wave encoder, which utilizes structured state space models to adapt to multichannel physiological waveforms. The encoder incorporates global convolution with multiscale kernels, residual connections, and gating mechanisms to enhance the learning of long-range temporal dynamics. The self-supervised pretraining framework employs contrastive objectives to ensure robustness against noise and maintain temporal coherence in the learned representations.
Results
SL-S4Wave consistently outperformed state-of-the-art supervised and self-supervised baselines in arrhythmia detection tasks, achieving high accuracy with significantly fewer labeled examples. The model demonstrated strong label efficiency and maintained robust performance on long waveform segments, effectively modeling complex temporal dynamics. Additionally, it showed effective transferability to unseen arrhythmia types and superior performance on EEG tasks.
Implications
The findings suggest that SL-S4Wave could significantly enhance the automatic analysis of physiological signals in clinical settings, reducing the reliance on large labeled datasets and improving the detection of critical events such as arrhythmias. This framework may also be applicable to other domains involving long-sequence time series data.
Sensorimotor World Models: Perception for Action via Inverse Dynamics
Robotics
Reinforcement Learning
Theory
- Introduction of sensorimotor world models (SMWM) that prioritize action-relevant representations.
- Use of inverse dynamics regularization to prevent representation collapse and enhance model stability.
- Demonstration of the model's ability to learn compact latent spaces and filter out irrelevant information.
- Competitive performance in planning tasks compared to existing models.
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Sensorimotor World Models: Perception for Action via Inverse Dynamics
Summary
This paper introduces a novel approach to learning sensorimotor world models (SMWM) that emphasizes the importance of action-relevant representations in the context of perception for action. The authors argue that traditional world models, which often focus on visual fidelity, can lead to representation collapse when trained end-to-end. To address this, they propose using inverse dynamics regularization as a mechanism to maintain the integrity of learned representations while ensuring they are aligned with controllable actions. The SMWM is trained on offline datasets of trajectories, allowing it to learn compact and interpretable latent spaces without the need for complex regularization techniques. The results demonstrate that the SMWM effectively captures the controllable degrees of freedom in the environment, filters out irrelevant information, and achieves competitive planning performance in both 2D and 3D control tasks.
Methodology
The authors develop the SMWM by training an encoder, a forward dynamics model, and an inverse dynamics model jointly from offline datasets. The inverse dynamics model predicts the action taken between two observations, and gradients are propagated back to the encoder to ensure that action-relevant information is preserved in the latent representations.
Results
The SMWM successfully learns non-collapsed representations that track controllable dynamics and spatial geometry. It demonstrates effective filtering of irrelevant information and achieves competitive planning performance in various control tasks, outperforming traditional methods that rely on more complex regularization techniques.
Implications
The findings suggest that incorporating action-relevant information into world models can significantly enhance their utility in robotics and intelligent agent design. This approach could lead to more robust and interpretable models that better understand and interact with dynamic environments.
Displacement Is Not Direction: Evaluating Fidelity Metrics for Quantized LLM Deployment
Large Language Models
NLP
Efficient ML
- Identification of a silent zone where fidelity metrics lose ranking power.
- Decomposition of score differences into volume and direction, highlighting KLD's limitations.
- Demonstration that per-prompt KLD has weak predictive power for model selection.
- Evidence that the collapse of correlation is consistent across various metric variants.
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Displacement Is Not Direction: Evaluating Fidelity Metrics for Quantized LLM Deployment
Summary
This paper investigates the effectiveness of fidelity metrics, specifically per-token KL divergence (KLD) and perplexity (PPL), in evaluating the quality of quantized large language models (LLMs). The authors analyze a cohort of quantized models, Qwen3.6-35B-A3B and Devstral-Small-2-24B, across various downstream benchmarks. They find that while KLD and PPL show a strong correlation with benchmark scores in models that have significantly degraded quality, this correlation diminishes in the 'silent zone' where models are near baseline quality. In this silent zone, KLD and PPL fail to provide reliable rankings or predictions of model performance. The authors propose a decomposition of score differences into volume and direction, revealing that KLD primarily measures the volume of disagreement with a reference model but does not consistently track the direction of these disagreements. The study concludes that fidelity metrics like KLD and PPL are not suitable for model selection in the silent zone, as they do not effectively distinguish between correct and incorrect responses or route prompts to better models when disagreements occur.
Methodology
The authors conducted a comprehensive analysis of fidelity metrics (KLD and PPL) against benchmark scores for quantized models. They evaluated multiple cohorts of models and employed statistical methods to assess correlations, particularly focusing on the silent zone where models are near baseline quality. They also explored different metric variants and their effectiveness in predicting model performance.
Results
The study found strong correlations between KLD/PPL and benchmark scores in degraded models, but these correlations collapsed in the silent zone, where KLD showed no significant predictive power. The authors established that KLD primarily measures the volume of disagreement, with weak task-dependent relationships to the direction of those disagreements. The per-prompt analysis indicated that KLD was ineffective in distinguishing between model performance on correct and incorrect responses.
Implications
The findings suggest that practitioners should be cautious when using fidelity metrics like KLD and PPL for model selection in quantized LLMs, especially in scenarios where models are near baseline quality. This research highlights the need for developing more robust evaluation metrics that can reliably assess the performance of quantized models, particularly in practical deployment settings.
ProMUSE: Progressive Multi-modal Uncertainty-guided Staged Evidential Alzheimer Disease Classification
Multimodal
Efficient ML
- ProMUSE utilizes a staged approach to integrate multi-modal data for Alzheimer's disease classification.
- The framework begins with low-cost clinical data and incorporates MRI/PET only when necessary, based on uncertainty thresholds.
- Experiments show ProMUSE reduces MRI/PET usage by 50-90% while maintaining competitive diagnostic accuracy.
- The methodology employs Dempster–Shafer theory for effective fusion of modality-specific beliefs and uncertainties.
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ProMUSE: Progressive Multi-modal Uncertainty-guided Staged Evidential Alzheimer Disease Classification
Summary
The paper presents ProMUSE, a novel framework for classifying Alzheimer's disease (AD) that leverages multi-modal data while addressing the high costs associated with certain diagnostic modalities like MRI and PET scans. The framework begins with low-cost clinical data to perform evidential classification and quantifies uncertainty using a Dirichlet-based subjective logic model. When the uncertainty surpasses a predefined threshold, ProMUSE progressively integrates MRI or PET features, utilizing Dempster–Shafer theory for modality-wise belief and uncertainty fusion. This staged acquisition approach allows for accurate AD diagnosis while significantly reducing the reliance on expensive imaging techniques. The effectiveness of ProMUSE is validated through experiments on three independent datasets (ADNI, AIBL, and OASIS), demonstrating that it achieves competitive or superior accuracy compared to full-modality baselines while reducing MRI/PET usage by 50–90%. This highlights ProMUSE as a practical solution for real-world AD screening, balancing diagnostic performance with resource efficiency.
Methodology
ProMUSE employs a progressive multi-modal uncertainty-guided approach, starting with low-cost clinical data for evidential classification. It quantifies uncertainty using a Dirichlet-based subjective logic model and integrates additional modalities (MRI/PET) based on uncertainty thresholds. The fusion of modality-specific beliefs and uncertainties is achieved through Dempster–Shafer theory.
Results
The framework was tested on three datasets (ADNI, AIBL, OASIS), achieving competitive or superior accuracy compared to full-modality baselines while significantly reducing the need for MRI/PET scans by 50-90%.
Implications
ProMUSE offers a resource-efficient solution for early Alzheimer's disease screening, making it more accessible in clinical settings. Its approach can potentially reduce healthcare costs and improve patient outcomes by facilitating earlier diagnosis and intervention.
Connect the Dots: Training LLMs for Long-Lifecycle Agents with Cross-Domain Generalization Via Reinforcement Learning
Large Language Models
Reinforcement Learning
- Introduction of the CoD framework for training LLMs to enhance long-lifecycle agent capabilities.
- End-to-end reinforcement learning approach interleaving task-solving and context-updating episodes.
- Demonstrated improvements in task-solving performance through empirical results.
- Potential for cross-domain generalization of the CoD meta-capability.
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Connect the Dots: Training LLMs for Long-Lifecycle Agents with Cross-Domain Generalization Via Reinforcement Learning
Summary
This paper introduces a novel framework called 'Connect the Dots' (CoD) designed to enhance the capabilities of large language models (LLMs) for long-lifecycle agent deployment. The CoD framework aims to enable LLM-based agents to solve a sequence of related tasks while continuously exploring their environment and updating their contextual understanding. The authors propose an end-to-end reinforcement learning (RL) approach that interleaves task-solving and context-updating episodes, addressing the challenges of credit assignment and task/environment design. The framework includes a GRPO-style RL algorithm and tailored environments that incentivize the development of the CoD meta-capability. Empirical results demonstrate that agents trained using the CoD framework show significant improvements in task-solving performance, particularly in sequential tasks where context updates are crucial. The study also highlights the potential for cross-domain generalization, suggesting that the CoD meta-capability can be effectively applied across different environments. The authors provide proof-of-concept implementations and encourage further research by releasing their code for public use.
Methodology
The authors developed a general CoD framework that incorporates a GRPO-style reinforcement learning algorithm. They designed specific tasks and environments to train LLMs in a way that promotes the CoD meta-capability, focusing on self-updating context and effective task-solving. The methodology emphasizes end-to-end RL training with a structured rollout pattern that mirrors real-world deployment scenarios.
Results
The empirical results indicate that agents trained under the CoD framework exhibit a notable increase in success rates for sequential tasks, with performance improving from 28% to 76% when conditioned on self-updated context. This demonstrates the effectiveness of the CoD framework in enhancing the LLMs' ability to generalize across tasks and domains.
Implications
The findings suggest that LLMs can be effectively trained for long-lifecycle deployments, enabling them to adapt and improve over time in dynamic environments. This has significant implications for the development of AI agents in various applications, including robotics and autonomous systems, where continual learning and adaptability are crucial.
Learner-based Concept Drift Detection: Analysis and Evaluation
Theory
Time Series
Efficient ML
- Concept drift is a significant challenge for machine learning models in dynamic environments.
- The paper categorizes drift detection methods into SPC, Window-based, and Ensemble-based frameworks.
- A total of 15 drift detection algorithms are reviewed and empirically evaluated.
- Synthetic and real-world datasets are used to assess the performance of the detection methods.
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Learner-based Concept Drift Detection: Analysis and Evaluation
Summary
This paper addresses the challenge of concept drift in machine learning, particularly in the context of evolving streaming environments. Concept drift refers to the changes in statistical properties of incoming data, which can significantly degrade the performance of predictive models. The authors provide a comprehensive survey of concept drift characteristics, including various types of drifts such as abrupt, gradual, and recurring changes. They focus on learner-based detection methods, which monitor the performance of learning models over time to identify significant changes indicative of drift. The study categorizes drift detection methods into three main frameworks: Statistical Control Process (SPC), Window-based, and Ensemble-based methods, reviewing a total of 15 representative detectors. An empirical evaluation is conducted using both synthetic datasets, where drift locations are known, and real-world datasets to assess the practical applicability of these methods. The findings highlight the effectiveness of different detection algorithms under various drift scenarios, providing insights into their strengths and weaknesses. This work aims to enhance understanding of concept drift and improve the adaptability of machine learning models in dynamic environments.
Methodology
The authors conducted a theoretical analysis of concept drift characteristics and categorized drift detection methods into three main frameworks: SPC-based, Window-based, and Ensemble-based methods. They performed an empirical evaluation of these methods on synthetic datasets with known drift locations and real-world datasets to assess their performance under different drift scenarios.
Results
The empirical evaluation demonstrated varying effectiveness among the drift detection algorithms, with some methods performing better in detecting abrupt drifts while others excelled in identifying gradual changes. The study provides a comparative analysis of the strengths and weaknesses of each method, contributing to a clearer understanding of their applicability in real-world scenarios.
Implications
The findings of this study can inform the development of more robust machine learning models capable of adapting to concept drift, which is crucial for applications in fraud detection, health monitoring, and other domains where data distributions change over time. Improved drift detection methods can lead to better decision-making and predictive performance in dynamic environments.
Spectral DPPs via NEPv: A Scalable Continuous Relaxation of Determinantal MAP for Diversity-Aware Data Selection
Optimization
Efficient ML
Theory
- Introduces a continuous relaxation of the DPP-MAP problem, making it scalable for large datasets.
- Develops a new NEPV formulation that allows for efficient iterative solving.
- Achieves a time complexity of O(ndk + nk²)t, suitable for datasets with millions to billions of candidates.
- Maintains the diversity objectives of DPPs while reducing computational costs.
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Spectral DPPs via NEPv: A Scalable Continuous Relaxation of Determinantal MAP for Diversity-Aware Data Selection
Summary
This paper addresses the challenge of selecting a diverse and high-quality subset from a large pool of candidates, a critical task in various machine learning applications such as data curation and active learning. The authors focus on Determinantal Point Processes (DPPs), which provide a principled approach to diversity but face computational challenges due to the NP-hard nature of their MAP objective. The paper introduces a continuous relaxation of the DPP-MAP problem on the Stiefel manifold, transforming it into a Nonlinear Eigenvalue Problem with eigenvector dependency (NEPV). This new formulation allows for a scalable iterative solver, NEPV-DPP, which operates efficiently with a time complexity of O(ndk + nk²)t, making it feasible for large datasets. The authors demonstrate that their approach maintains the diversity objectives of DPPs while significantly reducing computational costs, thus enabling practical applications in large-scale data selection tasks. The paper emphasizes the theoretical aspects of the relaxation and the solver, with plans for empirical validation in future work.
Methodology
The authors recast the DPP-MAP problem as a continuous optimization problem over the Stiefel manifold, leading to a Nonlinear Eigenvalue Problem with eigenvector dependency. They derive a self-consistent field iteration for solving this NEPV, ensuring convergence and efficiency through a spectral-gap-based local contraction guarantee.
Results
The NEPV-DPP algorithm demonstrates significant improvements in computational efficiency, allowing for diversity-aware data selection in large-scale scenarios where traditional methods are infeasible. The theoretical framework supports the effectiveness of the proposed approach, although empirical results are planned for future validation.
Implications
This work has potential applications in various fields requiring efficient data selection, such as active learning, data curation for model training, and experimental design, particularly in scenarios with large candidate pools where diversity is crucial.
Fisher-Geometric Sharpness and the Implicit Bias of SGD toward Flat Minima
Theory
Optimization
- Introduces Riemannian sharpness as a reparametrization-invariant measure of flatness.
- Establishes a connection between SGD's implicit bias and Riemannian flatness through a PAC-Bayes generalization bound.
- Demonstrates that mini-batch SGD concentrates probability mass at Riemannian-flat minima.
- Empirical results show Riemannian sharpness correlates with generalization better than Euclidean sharpness.
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Fisher-Geometric Sharpness and the Implicit Bias of SGD toward Flat Minima
Summary
This paper addresses the longstanding question of why stochastic gradient descent (SGD) tends to find solutions that generalize well in deep learning, particularly in over-parameterized settings. The authors propose that SGD implicitly favors flat minima, which are associated with better generalization. However, they critique existing measures of flatness based on Euclidean geometry for lacking invariance under reparametrizations that preserve the network function. To resolve this issue, the authors introduce a new measure of flatness grounded in the Riemannian geometry of the statistical manifold defined by the Fisher Information Matrix (FIM). They define Riemannian sharpness and demonstrate its invariance under smooth reparametrizations. The paper formalizes the gradient noise of mini-batch SGD and shows that the probability mass is concentrated at Riemannian-flat minima. A PAC-Bayes generalization bound is established, linking Riemannian sharpness to test performance. Empirical validation on datasets like MNIST and CIFAR-10 shows that Riemannian sharpness better predicts generalization than traditional Euclidean measures, thus providing a rigorous framework for understanding the implicit bias of SGD towards flat minima.
Methodology
The authors replace the Euclidean metric with the Fisher Information Matrix to define Riemannian sharpness. They derive the covariance structure of gradient noise in mini-batch SGD and analyze the stationary distribution of the corresponding stochastic differential equation (SDE). The paper also establishes a PAC-Bayes generalization bound controlled by Riemannian sharpness.
Results
The study proves that Riemannian sharpness is invariant under reparametrizations and shows that mini-batch SGD assigns exponentially greater probability mass to Riemannian-flat minima. Empirical experiments on MNIST and CIFAR-10 confirm that Riemannian sharpness reliably tracks generalization performance across various optimizers and learning rates.
Implications
This work provides a more robust theoretical foundation for understanding the relationship between flat minima and generalization in deep learning, potentially influencing future optimization algorithms and model training strategies.
Multi-Modal Contrastive Learning for Implicit Earth Embeddings via Location Tying
Multimodal
- Introduction of two multimodal contrastive learning architectures: MELT and SALT.
- Both architectures utilize unpaired geospatial data, expanding beyond traditional two-modality approaches.
- Performance is primarily limited by the location encoder rather than modality diversity.
- MELT provides more stable training compared to SALT.
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Multi-Modal Contrastive Learning for Implicit Earth Embeddings via Location Tying
Summary
This paper addresses the challenge of spatial prediction tasks that are often hindered by the scarcity of high-quality labeled ground-truth observations. The authors propose two novel multimodal contrastive learning architectures: Multimodal Embedding via Location Tying (MELT) and Sequential Alternating Location Training (SALT). These architectures extend the conventional contrastive learning framework by utilizing unpaired geospatial data across multiple modalities, rather than being limited to a single additional modality. The study empirically demonstrates that both MELT and SALT can match the performance of the leading two-modality baseline (SATCLIP) across four downstream tasks. However, the results indicate that simply increasing the number of modalities does not consistently enhance performance, as the location encoder itself appears to be the primary limiting factor. The findings suggest that the contrastive objective reaches its peak early, regardless of the diversity of modalities or the volume of pre-training data. Among the two proposed methods, MELT shows more stable training and offers a stronger foundation for future scalability in multimodal contrastive learning.
Methodology
The authors developed two architectures for multimodal contrastive learning: MELT, which constructs batches that jointly train all modalities using a shared contrastive objective, and SALT, which alternates the active non-location modality while keeping the location encoder active throughout the training epochs. This approach allows for the integration of multiple modalities without the need for synchronized observations.
Results
Both MELT and SALT achieved performance comparable to the strongest two-modality baseline (SATCLIP) across four spatial prediction tasks. However, the increase in modalities did not consistently lead to improved performance, indicating that the effectiveness of the location encoder is a critical factor.
Implications
The proposed architectures could enhance the ability to leverage unlabelled geospatial data for various spatial prediction tasks, potentially improving predictions in fields such as ecological modeling and urban planning. The findings also suggest directions for future research in optimizing location encoders and exploring the integration of additional modalities.
Neural network surrogates with uncertainty quantification for inverse problems in partial differential equations
Theory
Efficient ML
- Introduction of DeepGaLA, a neural network surrogate for PDEs with uncertainty quantification.
- Demonstrates the effectiveness of DA-MCMC for evaluating posterior approximations.
- Achieves accuracy comparable to Gaussian-process surrogates while improving efficiency in high-dimensional settings.
- Incorporates differential-equation constraints, enhancing applicability in nonlinear scenarios.
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Neural network surrogates with uncertainty quantification for inverse problems in partial differential equations
Summary
This paper addresses the challenge of solving inverse problems in partial differential equations (PDEs), where unknown model parameters need to be inferred from noisy or incomplete data. Traditional numerical methods for such problems are often computationally expensive, particularly in Bayesian contexts. The authors introduce DeepGaLA, a neural network surrogate designed to provide uncertainty-aware predictions, thereby reducing overconfidence in inference when training data is limited. The paper demonstrates that a short run of delayed-acceptance Markov chain Monte Carlo (DA-MCMC) can effectively evaluate the fidelity of the surrogate-induced posterior approximations. Through various numerical experiments, DeepGaLA shows comparable accuracy to established Gaussian-process surrogates while maintaining better efficiency as the parameter dimension increases. Additionally, it can incorporate differential-equation constraints, including in nonlinear settings. Overall, the results suggest that uncertainty-quantified neural surrogates can facilitate scalable and reliable Bayesian inference for complex inverse problems.
Methodology
The authors developed DeepGaLA, a neural network-based surrogate model that approximates solutions to PDEs. They utilized a delayed-acceptance Markov chain Monte Carlo (DA-MCMC) approach to assess the quality of posterior approximations induced by the surrogate. The methodology emphasizes uncertainty quantification and the incorporation of differential-equation constraints.
Results
DeepGaLA demonstrated high accuracy in approximating forward models, comparable to Gaussian-process surrogates, while exhibiting superior efficiency as the dimensionality of the parameter space increased. The method effectively reduced overconfidence in predictions, particularly in scenarios with limited training data.
Implications
The findings suggest that neural network surrogates like DeepGaLA can significantly enhance the efficiency and reliability of Bayesian inference in inverse problems, making them applicable in various scientific and engineering domains where PDEs are used for modeling complex systems.
Multi-Task Bayesian In-Context Learning
Theory
Efficient ML
Time Series
- Introduces a flexible framework for test-time adaptation in Bayesian inference.
- Demonstrates robust generalization under out-of-meta-distribution prior shifts.
- Achieves inference efficiency that is significantly faster than classical Bayesian methods.
- Matches oracle Bayesian predictors across diverse task families.
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Multi-Task Bayesian In-Context Learning
Summary
This paper presents a novel framework for Multi-Task Bayesian In-Context Learning (MTB-ICL), which addresses the limitations of existing amortized Bayesian inference methods that struggle with adaptability to new priors at test time. The authors propose a mechanism that represents prior information as a prefix of in-context datasets, allowing for flexible test-time adaptation without requiring parameter updates. By training a transformer model on sequences of prior and target tasks, the framework enables robust generalization across various task families, including those with out-of-meta-distribution (OoMD) priors and high-dimensional latent structures. The proposed method achieves significant improvements in inference efficiency, matching the performance of oracle Bayesian predictors while being orders of magnitude faster. The practical relevance of the approach is demonstrated through a real-world spatiotemporal temperature prediction benchmark, showcasing its effectiveness in handling complex and varying prior distributions.
Methodology
The authors develop a multi-task in-context learning framework that explicitly incorporates prior information as prefixes in the input datasets. A transformer model is trained to adapt its predictions based on these prefixes, allowing for direct control over the prior at test time. The model is evaluated across various scenarios, including different prior distributions and real-world datasets, to assess its performance and generalization capabilities.
Results
The proposed MTB-ICL framework successfully matches the performance of oracle Bayesian predictors across a range of tasks, demonstrating robust generalization under OoMD prior shifts. The method significantly reduces inference time compared to traditional Bayesian approaches such as MCMC and stochastic variational inference, achieving orders-of-magnitude faster results while maintaining predictive accuracy.
Implications
The findings suggest that MTB-ICL can be effectively applied in scenarios where prior distributions are not fixed and may vary across different contexts, such as personalized models in healthcare or adaptive systems in environmental monitoring. The framework's efficiency and flexibility could lead to broader applications in real-time decision-making and predictive analytics.
Computational Methods and Challenges in Cell-Free DNA Analysis for Multi-Cancer Early Detection
Multimodal
- cfDNA is a promising biomarker for non-invasive multi-cancer early detection.
- The review highlights various computational methods, including machine learning and deep learning approaches, for analyzing cfDNA.
- Challenges in the field include technical, computational, and methodological issues that need to be addressed for clinical integration.
- Multimodal ensemble approaches are identified as having the highest readiness for clinical application.
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Computational Methods and Challenges in Cell-Free DNA Analysis for Multi-Cancer Early Detection
Summary
This paper reviews the computational methods developed for analyzing cell-free DNA (cfDNA) in the context of multi-cancer early detection (MCED) from 2022 to 2025. The authors discuss the biological basis of cfDNA signals, emphasizing its potential for non-invasive cancer detection through a single blood test. The review covers classical statistical methods, machine learning techniques, and deep learning frameworks, including autoencoder-based models, focusing on their biological interpretability, validation strategies, and readiness for clinical integration. The authors categorize the challenges in the field into technical, computational, and methodological issues, highlighting the need for standardization in evaluation protocols. The findings suggest that multimodal ensemble approaches show the most promise for clinical application, but emphasize that further work is needed to address existing challenges and improve the robustness of cfDNA as a clinical biomarker.
Methodology
The authors review and categorize computational methods for cfDNA analysis, including classical statistical methods, machine learning techniques, and deep learning frameworks. They analyze how fragmentomics and epigenetic features are extracted and utilized for cancer detection, and discuss validation strategies and biological interpretability of these methods.
Results
The review indicates that multimodal ensemble approaches are the most promising for clinical integration in MCED. However, it also identifies significant challenges in the field, including the need for standardized evaluation protocols to facilitate better assessment and comparison of methods.
Implications
The findings suggest that advancements in cfDNA analysis could lead to more effective and non-invasive cancer screening methods, potentially improving early detection rates and reducing treatment costs. The emphasis on standardization may also pave the way for more reliable clinical applications of cfDNA biomarkers.
OnDeFog: Online Decision Transformer under Frame Dropping
Reinforcement Learning
- OnDeFog combines offline learning mechanisms with online reinforcement learning to handle frame dropping.
- It addresses the limitations of DeFog, which struggles with generalization due to its offline nature.
- OnDeFog demonstrates superior performance in environments with high frame dropping rates.
- The method outperforms DeFog on datasets with a significant amount of low-reward data.
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OnDeFog: Online Decision Transformer under Frame Dropping
Summary
The paper addresses the challenge of frame dropping in reinforcement learning (RL) applications, where communication delays or sensor failures lead to incomplete observations. The authors propose OnDeFog, an online decision transformer that integrates mechanisms from the Decision Transformer under Random Frame Dropping (DeFog) with the Online Decision Transformer (ODT). While DeFog is effective in offline settings, it struggles with generalization to novel states due to its reliance on pre-collected datasets. OnDeFog, by contrast, learns policies through direct interaction with the environment, enhancing robustness against frame dropping. Experimental evaluations demonstrate that OnDeFog outperforms ODT in high frame-drop-rate environments and surpasses DeFog in scenarios with substantial low-reward data, indicating its effectiveness in real-world applications where frame dropping is prevalent.
Methodology
The authors developed OnDeFog by integrating the frame dropping handling mechanisms from DeFog into the online learning framework of ODT. This approach allows the agent to learn policies through direct interaction with the environment, improving its adaptability to novel states and reducing reliance on extensive pre-collected datasets.
Results
Experimental results show that OnDeFog significantly outperforms ODT in environments characterized by high frame dropping rates and also exceeds DeFog's performance in datasets with a large amount of low-reward data, highlighting its robustness and effectiveness in real-world scenarios.
Implications
The findings suggest that OnDeFog can be effectively applied in real-world reinforcement learning tasks where frame dropping is a concern, such as in teleoperation, autonomous driving, and robotics, potentially leading to more reliable and efficient agent performance in dynamic environments.
Protein Representation Learning with Secondary-Structure and Energy-Filtered Hydrogen-Bond Graphs
Graph Learning
- Introduction of SSProNet, a graph neural network that incorporates secondary structure and hydrogen-bond interactions for protein representation.
- Construction of protein graphs based on biophysically grounded topologies that reflect stabilizing forces rather than mere proximity.
- Augmentation of residue nodes with secondary structure assignments to provide additional structural context.
- Empirical validation shows consistent performance improvements over traditional methods on various protein-related tasks.
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Protein Representation Learning with Secondary-Structure and Energy-Filtered Hydrogen-Bond Graphs
Summary
This paper presents SSProNet, a novel graph neural network designed for protein representation learning that incorporates secondary structure and energy-filtered hydrogen-bond interactions. Traditional graph-based methods often rely on sequence adjacency or geometric proximity, which inadequately capture the complexities of protein folding. The authors propose a new approach that constructs protein graphs based on hydrogen bonds identified by DSSP and filtered by their energetic strength, enhancing the model's ability to reflect stabilizing interactions. Each residue node is augmented with secondary structure assignments, providing richer context for learning. The proposed method is empirically validated across several benchmarks, demonstrating consistent improvements over existing proximity-based methods, particularly in structure-sensitive tasks. The results suggest that integrating secondary structure and energy-filtered interactions significantly enhances the biological interpretability of the learned representations, aligning with established structural motifs in proteins.
Methodology
The authors developed SSProNet by constructing protein graphs with edges based on hydrogen bonds filtered by their energetic strength, complemented by a radial scaffold for connectivity. Residue nodes were enhanced with secondary structure information and geometric descriptors to maintain invariance under rotation and translation. The model was evaluated on standard benchmarks for protein fold classification, enzyme commission prediction, and ligand-binding affinity estimation.
Results
SSProNet consistently outperformed existing proximity-based graph methods across multiple benchmarks, particularly excelling in structure-sensitive metrics. Ablation studies confirmed that the performance gains were primarily due to the incorporation of secondary structure priors and the hydrogen-bond topology.
Implications
The findings suggest that incorporating biophysically relevant features into graph representations can lead to more effective models for protein analysis, potentially improving predictions in drug discovery, protein engineering, and understanding protein dynamics.
Pseudo-Feature Padding: A Lightweight Defense Against False Data Injection in Power Grids
Theory
Efficient ML
- Introduction of a lightweight defense framework against FDIA in DNNs for CPS.
- Utilization of pseudo-feature padding to increase input dimensionality and complexity.
- Model-agnostic approach requiring no modifications to existing DNN architectures.
- Demonstrated significant robustness improvements with negligible performance impact.
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Pseudo-Feature Padding: A Lightweight Defense Against False Data Injection in Power Grids
Summary
This paper addresses the vulnerabilities of Deep Neural Networks (DNNs) in Cyber-Physical Systems (CPS), particularly in the context of False Data Injection Attacks (FDIA) in power grids. The authors propose a novel defense framework that enhances DNN robustness by introducing an additional input layer that pads input samples with pseudo-feature values derived from the statistical distribution of the data. This approach increases input dimensionality in a randomized manner, complicating adversarial attacks and making them computationally infeasible. The method is lightweight, model-agnostic, and does not require changes to the core DNN architecture, facilitating deployment in real-world CPS settings. The framework was evaluated on various power grid applications, including state estimation using IEEE test systems, demonstrating significant improvements in model robustness with minimal impact on performance. The results indicate that the proposed padding strategy effectively mitigates attacks that could bypass conventional defenses, showcasing its potential as a practical solution for enhancing the security of DNNs in CPS.
Methodology
The proposed framework integrates an additional input layer that performs padding using pseudo-feature values derived from the statistical distribution of the input data. This dynamic padding increases the input dimensionality and complexity, making adversarial perturbations less transferable and more difficult to generate. The method employs tree-based models to identify low-importance features and samples new values from their distributions, enhancing data diversity and adversarial uncertainty.
Results
The evaluation of the proposed framework on IEEE 14-bus, 30-bus, 118-bus, and 300-bus systems showed that the padding strategy significantly improved the robustness of DNNs against FDIA while maintaining performance integrity. The results indicated that conventional defense techniques were inadequate against sophisticated FDIA samples, highlighting the effectiveness of the proposed method.
Implications
The proposed defense framework has significant implications for securing DNNs in CPS environments, particularly in critical applications like power grid management. Its lightweight and model-agnostic nature allows for easy integration into existing systems, enhancing their resilience against adversarial attacks without requiring extensive modifications or redeployment of sensors.
Efficiently Representing Algorithms With Chain-of-Thought Transformers
Theory
Efficient ML
Large Language Models
- CoT transformers can simulate Word RAM algorithms with poly-logarithmic overhead.
- The study provides a direct simulation method that is more efficient than Turing machine-based simulations.
- Three practical settings for CoT simulation are established: finite-precision transformers, continuous CoT, and hybrid architectures.
- The results show that CoT can execute common algorithms efficiently, such as sorting and Dijkstra's algorithm.
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Efficiently Representing Algorithms With Chain-of-Thought Transformers
Summary
This paper investigates the ability of chain-of-thought (CoT) transformers to efficiently simulate algorithms as described in the Word RAM model, which is more practical than Turing machines for real-world applications. The authors establish that CoT transformers can simulate Word RAM algorithms with only poly-logarithmic overhead, significantly improving upon previous methods that relied on Turing machine simulations, which incurred quadratic overhead. The study presents three settings for this simulation: (1) finite-precision transformers with poly-logarithmic width and rightmost unique hard attention, (2) fixed-width transformers utilizing continuous CoT, and (3) hybrid architectures combining transformers with recurrent layers. In each case, the authors demonstrate that CoT can execute algorithms like sorting and Dijkstra's algorithm efficiently, matching or improving upon the complexity bounds known from the Word RAM model. This work not only confirms the computational universality of CoT transformers but also enhances their practical applicability in algorithmic contexts.
Methodology
The authors utilize three different settings to demonstrate the efficient simulation of Word RAM algorithms by CoT transformers. They analyze finite-precision transformers with rightmost unique hard attention, fixed-width transformers with continuous reasoning, and hybrid models that incorporate recurrent layers. Each method is evaluated for its ability to execute algorithms with minimal overhead, focusing on the complexity of operations and the efficiency of token emissions.
Results
The paper concludes that CoT transformers can simulate any Word RAM algorithm with only a poly-logarithmic overhead in terms of the number of operations. The overhead can be reduced to log-square for flat instruction sets and logarithmic for multiplication-free instructions. This represents a significant improvement over previous Turing machine simulations, which required quadratic overhead.
Implications
The findings suggest that CoT transformers can be effectively used in practical algorithmic applications, enhancing their utility in programming and computational tasks. This could lead to more efficient implementations of algorithms in machine learning and artificial intelligence systems, potentially improving performance in various applications.
When, Where, and How: Adaptive Binning for Tabular Self-Supervised Learning
Theory
Efficient ML
Optimization
- Introduction of Adaptive Binning, a training-adaptive discretization method for tabular self-supervised learning.
- Feature-wise coarse-to-fine curriculum allows for dynamic refinement of discretization during training.
- Combines categorical reconstruction with ordinal supervision for improved representation learning.
- Demonstrated consistent performance improvements across various medical tabular datasets.
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When, Where, and How: Adaptive Binning for Tabular Self-Supervised Learning
Summary
This paper addresses the challenges of applying deep learning to medical tabular data, which is often underutilized due to the lack of reliable labels requiring expert adjudication. The authors propose a novel approach called Adaptive Binning, which enhances self-supervised learning (SSL) for tabular data by introducing a training-adaptive discretization pretext. Unlike existing methods that use a fixed global quantile discretization, Adaptive Binning employs a feature-wise coarse-to-fine curriculum that refines discretization based on learning dynamics. This method is motivated by the spectral bias of neural networks and curriculum learning principles, allowing for progressive refinement of discretization as features reach saturation. The approach incorporates a heterogeneity-aware objective that combines categorical reconstruction with ordinal supervision for numerical features. The authors validate their method on public medical tabular datasets, demonstrating consistent improvements in performance for linear probing and fine-tuning tasks without the need for dataset-specific tuning. Additionally, they establish a benchmark for medical tabular SSL with standardized evaluation protocols to facilitate reproducible research in this area.
Methodology
The authors developed an autoencoding-based framework for tabular SSL that refines discretization during pretraining. This framework includes mechanisms for feature-wise saturation detection, representation-aware split selection, and type-aware reconstruction objectives. The Adaptive Binning method replaces fixed global discretization with a dynamic, training-coupled approach that evolves throughout the training process.
Results
Experiments on public medical tabular datasets showed that Adaptive Binning consistently outperformed existing methods in both linear probing and fine-tuning scenarios. The method achieved significant improvements without requiring specific tuning for different datasets, indicating its robustness and generalizability.
Implications
The proposed Adaptive Binning method has the potential to enhance the application of deep learning in clinical settings by effectively leveraging unlabeled medical tabular data. The establishment of a benchmark for medical tabular SSL could drive further research and development in this underexplored area, ultimately improving healthcare outcomes through better data utilization.
Kolmogorov-Arnold Reservoir Computing
Theory
Efficient ML
Time Series
- KARC utilizes explicit basis-function expansions inspired by the Kolmogorov-Arnold representation theorem.
- It achieves efficient closed-form training while preserving the expressive capacity of Kolmogorov-Arnold networks.
- KARC outperforms existing reservoir computing methods on benchmarks involving chaotic systems and PDEs.
- The framework can be integrated with generative diffusion models for enhanced feature forecasting.
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Kolmogorov-Arnold Reservoir Computing
Summary
This paper introduces Kolmogorov-Arnold Reservoir Computing (KARC), a novel framework that enhances traditional reservoir computing by leveraging the Kolmogorov-Arnold representation theorem. KARC replaces conventional reservoirs with explicit basis-function expansions, allowing for efficient closed-form training while maintaining the expressive capacity of Kolmogorov-Arnold networks (KANs). The authors demonstrate that KARC effectively addresses the limitations of existing reservoir computing methods, particularly in capturing long-range dependencies and managing feature dimensionality. Experimental results show that KARC outperforms traditional reservoir computing techniques on challenging benchmarks, including chaotic ordinary differential equations and high-dimensional partial differential equations. Additionally, KARC can be integrated with generative diffusion models for applications such as text-to-image generation, establishing a significant connection between reservoir computing and KANs, and providing a robust tool for dynamical system forecasting.
Methodology
KARC employs univariate basis-function expansions to represent dynamical states, projecting time-delay coordinates onto functions such as Fourier, B-spline, or Chebyshev functions. This approach allows for linear feature scaling with input dimensions and avoids the recurrent structure of traditional reservoir computing. The output weights are trained efficiently using ridge regression, providing a lightweight alternative to conventional methods.
Results
KARC demonstrated superior performance in long-horizon predictions across various chaotic systems and PDE-governed scenarios compared to existing reservoir computing techniques. The framework also supports multiple basis functions for feature forecasting, showing comparable results with different basis types.
Implications
KARC presents a significant advancement in the field of dynamical system forecasting, offering a more efficient and expressive modeling framework. Its integration with generative models opens new avenues for applications in areas such as climate modeling, fluid dynamics, and other scientific domains where data scarcity and computational resources are constraints.
Human-like autonomy emerges from self-play and a pinch of human data
Reinforcement Learning
Robotics
- Spiced self-play combines self-play RL with minimal human data to improve driving policies.
- Only 30 minutes of human driving data significantly enhances policy alignment with human behavior.
- The method avoids extensive reward engineering and domain randomization, simplifying the training process.
- Policies trained with this approach exhibit lower collision rates and more human-like driving behavior.
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Human-like autonomy emerges from self-play and a pinch of human data
Summary
This paper presents a novel approach to training autonomous driving policies using self-play reinforcement learning (RL) combined with a minimal amount of human driving data. The authors highlight a significant limitation of traditional self-play methods: while they can produce effective driving strategies, these strategies may not align with human driving conventions. To address this, the authors propose a method called 'spiced self-play,' which incorporates a small amount of human data (30 minutes) as a regularization objective alongside a sparse reward for safe goal-reaching. This approach allows the model to learn from extensive simulated experiences while still being guided by human-like behaviors. The results demonstrate that this method significantly enhances coordination with human trajectories and reduces collision rates, achieving human-like driving behavior without the need for extensive reward engineering or domain randomization. The authors provide open-source code and training protocols to facilitate reproducibility and further research.
Methodology
The authors employ Proximal Policy Optimization (PPO) under a sparse reward structure for safe goal-reaching, while regularizing the policy towards a behavioral cloning anchor derived from a small set of human driving demonstrations. This approach leverages the vast amount of synthetic experience generated through self-play, allowing for effective training with minimal human input.
Results
The study finds that integrating just 30 minutes of human driving data with 60 years of simulated self-play experience leads to improved coordination with human proxies, lower collision rates, and more realistic driving behavior. The spiced self-play method outperforms traditional self-play and imitation learning approaches, demonstrating the effectiveness of minimal human data in enhancing autonomous driving policies.
Implications
This research suggests that a small amount of human data can significantly enhance the performance of autonomous systems, particularly in complex environments like driving. It opens avenues for more efficient training methods in robotics and autonomous vehicles, reducing the reliance on extensive human data collection while still achieving human-compatible behavior.
When Calibration Fails the Vulnerable Hospital: Federated Conformal Risk Control via Risk-Curve Shrinkage
Federated Learning
Computer Vision
Theory
- Quantifies the marginal-conditional coverage gap in federated CRC using real medical data.
- Proposes a shrinkage-based federated CRC protocol to improve prediction set efficiency.
- Demonstrates that naive pooling of calibration scores can lead to significant coverage violations.
- Highlights the necessity of finite-sample correction terms in maintaining coverage guarantees.
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When Calibration Fails the Vulnerable Hospital: Federated Conformal Risk Control via Risk-Curve Shrinkage
Summary
This paper addresses the challenges of deploying conformal risk control (CRC) in federated learning settings, particularly in medical segmentation tasks across multiple hospitals. The author demonstrates that the standard approach of pooling calibration scores from different sites can lead to significant coverage violations at individual institutions, despite appearing well-calibrated on average. Using real multi-institutional brain tumor data from the FeTS-2022 dataset, the study quantifies the marginal-conditional coverage gap, revealing that 40% of hospitals exceed the target false-negative rate. The naive alternative of local CRC restores coverage but results in impractically large prediction sets. To overcome these issues, the author proposes a shrinkage-based federated CRC protocol, where each site transmits its empirical risk curve to a central server, which then computes a shrinkage-regularized threshold. This method allows for a balance between coverage and prediction set efficiency, validated through sensitivity analysis. The findings highlight the importance of finite-sample correction terms in maintaining coverage and demonstrate that the proposed method significantly reduces violations compared to naive pooling.
Methodology
The study employs a shrinkage-based federated CRC protocol where each hospital computes its local empirical risk curve and transmits it to a central server. The server then calculates a shrinkage-regularized threshold that balances coverage and prediction set efficiency. The method includes a hyperparameter that allows for tuning between worst-case coverage and efficiency.
Results
The proposed method achieved a reduction in coverage violations to 2.7 out of 20 institutions with a 2.0× stretch in prediction sets, compared to significant violations observed with naive pooling. The sensitivity analysis identified an optimal hyperparameter value that maintained near-nominal per-site coverage across various configurations.
Implications
The findings have significant implications for the deployment of machine learning models in clinical settings, particularly in ensuring that segmentation models provide reliable uncertainty estimates across diverse institutions. This approach can enhance patient safety by reducing the risk of missed diagnoses in vulnerable hospitals.
LOKI: Memory-Free Null-Space Constrained Lifelong Knowledge Editing
NLP
Large Language Models
Efficient ML
- Introduction of a dynamic layer selection algorithm for knowledge editing.
- Utilization of null-space projections to preserve past knowledge.
- Demonstrated superior performance compared to existing lifelong knowledge editing methods.
- No need for access to previous knowledge or extensive preprocessing.
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LOKI: Memory-Free Null-Space Constrained Lifelong Knowledge Editing
Summary
The paper introduces LOKI, a novel approach to lifelong knowledge editing in large language models (LLMs) that addresses the challenges of catastrophic forgetting and the need for prior knowledge access. Traditional methods typically modify a fixed set of layers for all new knowledge, which limits flexibility and increases the risk of forgetting previously learned information. LOKI employs a dynamic layer selection mechanism based on the Hilbert-Schmidt Independence Criterion (HSIC) to identify the most relevant layers for each new fact. Additionally, it utilizes null-space projections of model weights to preserve past knowledge without requiring access to previous knowledge samples or extensive preprocessing. The authors demonstrate that LOKI significantly outperforms existing methods, achieving up to a 14% improvement in average accuracy across various datasets. This work contributes to the field of lifelong learning by providing a more efficient and flexible framework for updating LLMs in a memory-free manner.
Methodology
LOKI employs a three-phase structure for lifelong knowledge editing: Layer Selection, Knowledge Consolidation, and Knowledge Insertion. It uses HSIC for dynamic layer selection and projects gradient updates onto the null-space of model weights to avoid interference with previously learned knowledge. This approach allows for efficient updates without requiring additional memory or parameters.
Results
LOKI achieved up to a 14% increase in average accuracy compared to existing methods in various experiments. The empirical validation included exploratory experiments and ablation studies to assess the effectiveness of its components.
Implications
The findings suggest that LOKI can enhance the adaptability of LLMs in real-world applications where continuous knowledge updates are necessary. This method could be particularly useful in dynamic environments where information is constantly changing, allowing models to remain relevant and accurate without the need for costly retraining.
Predicting gestational age at birth in the context of preterm birth from multi-modal fetal MRI
Multimodal
- Developed a machine learning pipeline for predicting gestational age at birth using multi-modal fetal MRI data.
- Achieved an accuracy of 0.77 and specificity of 0.82 in classifying term and preterm births.
- Identified key predictive features such as cervical length and placental T2* values.
- Demonstrated the potential of using regression models for predicting gestational age, expanding the approach beyond classification.
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Predicting gestational age at birth in the context of preterm birth from multi-modal fetal MRI
Summary
This paper addresses the challenge of predicting gestational age (GA) at birth, particularly in the context of preterm births, which pose significant health risks. The authors developed a machine learning pipeline that integrates multi-modal fetal MRI data from 333 control cases and 93 preterm birth cases. The pipeline includes methods for data imputation, feature selection, and regression modeling to predict GA at birth. The predictions were categorized into term and preterm classifications, with performance metrics such as accuracy, sensitivity, and specificity reported. An ablation study was conducted to validate the pipeline's design, and performance was assessed using stratified 10-fold cross-validation. The results indicated an R2 score of 0.13 and a mean absolute error of 2.74 weeks, with an accuracy of 0.77, sensitivity of 0.59, and specificity of 0.82. Key features influencing predictions included cervical length and placental T2* values. This work is significant as it is one of the first to approach preterm birth prediction as a regression problem rather than solely a classification issue, providing a proof of concept for future research and potential clinical applications.
Methodology
The study employed a machine learning pipeline that included bespoke methods for data imputation, feature selection, and regression modeling. The performance was evaluated using stratified 10-fold cross-validation, and an ablation study was conducted to validate the design of the pipeline.
Results
The pipeline achieved an R2 score of 0.13 and a mean absolute error of 2.74 weeks. The classification results showed an accuracy of 0.77, sensitivity of 0.59, and specificity of 0.82 across the folds. Key features selected included cervical length and statistics derived from placental T2* values.
Implications
The findings suggest that machine learning techniques can enhance the prediction of gestational age at birth, which is crucial for improving care for preterm infants. This approach may lead to better clinical decision-making and resource allocation in maternal-fetal medicine.
Does Text Actually Help? Uncovering and Resolving Text Collapse in Multimodal Time Series Forecasting
Time Series
Multimodal
- Identification of 'text collapse' as a critical failure mode in multimodal time series forecasting.
- Introduction of REST-TS, a framework that resolves text collapse by supervising the text branch on the residual components.
- REST-TS achieves state-of-the-art performance across diverse domains without requiring changes to backbone architectures.
- Effective rank analysis shows that REST-TS enhances the utilization of textual information in forecasting.
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Does Text Actually Help? Uncovering and Resolving Text Collapse in Multimodal Time Series Forecasting
Summary
This paper investigates the effectiveness of incorporating textual information in multimodal time series forecasting, revealing a phenomenon termed 'text collapse.' Text collapse occurs when the text branch of a forecasting model produces nearly identical outputs regardless of the input text, leading to underutilization of potentially valuable information. The authors argue that this issue arises from the inherent dominance of numerical inputs due to their strong autocorrelation with the output, which overshadows the text's contribution. To address this, they propose a novel framework called REST-TS (Residual-Exclusive Supervision for Text in Time Series), which assigns distinct roles to the numerical and text branches. The numerical backbone generates its own forecast, while the text branch is exclusively tasked with predicting the residual components that the numerical forecast cannot explain. This approach compels the text branch to extract meaningful content from the input, resulting in improved performance. The authors validate REST-TS across various real-world domains and backbone architectures, demonstrating its superiority over existing multimodal frameworks and confirming the importance of effective text utilization in forecasting tasks.
Methodology
The authors conducted an effective rank analysis to measure the variability of outputs from the text branch across different inputs. They proposed REST-TS, which includes a Trend-Noise-Event decomposition module and an Exponential Moving Average (EMA) target network to ensure the text branch focuses on predicting the residual components of the numerical forecast.
Results
REST-TS consistently outperformed existing multimodal forecasting frameworks across various real-world datasets and backbone architectures. The effective rank of the text branch was significantly higher in REST-TS, indicating better utilization of textual information compared to previous models.
Implications
The findings suggest that properly leveraging textual information can enhance forecasting accuracy in various domains, such as finance, healthcare, and energy management. The proposed methodology can be applied to improve other multimodal learning tasks where different data modalities are involved.
Algebraic Dead Directions in LayerNorm Transformers: A Forward-Pass-Only Diagnostic at LLM Scale
Theory
Large Language Models
Optimization
- Introduces a forward-pass-only method to identify dead directions in LayerNorm transformers.
- Demonstrates that the inverse-scale direction of LayerNorm is a kernel for activation covariance.
- Validates the method across 14 pretrained transformers, achieving high accuracy in predictions.
- Shows that training increases the depth of dead directions, revealing more complex structures.
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Algebraic Dead Directions in LayerNorm Transformers: A Forward-Pass-Only Diagnostic at LLM Scale
Summary
This paper introduces a novel diagnostic method for identifying 'dead directions' in LayerNorm transformers, which are directions in parameter space where the Fisher information metric degenerates. The authors propose that the inverse-scale direction of the LayerNorm affine parameter serves as an algebraic kernel for the post-final-norm centered activation covariance, allowing for the identification of dead directions without requiring a forward or backward pass. This method was validated across 14 pretrained transformers, demonstrating that the predicted dead direction closely matches the measured bottom singular direction in LayerNorm models, while being absent in RMSNorm models. The study also reveals that training significantly deepens the covariance eigenvalue along this direction, indicating the opening of additional dead directions. The findings suggest a clear distinction between LayerNorm and RMSNorm models based on their dead direction characteristics, providing insights into the structure of pretrained transformers and their optimization landscapes.
Methodology
The authors derive a closed-form expression for dead directions in LayerNorm transformers based solely on the LayerNorm scale parameter. They validate this approach by comparing the predicted dead direction with the measured bottom singular direction using a single forward pass and direct singular value decomposition (SVD). The study involves testing 14 pretrained transformers across various tasks to assess the accuracy of the predictions.
Results
The predicted dead direction matches the measured bottom singular direction to four decimal places in all 9 LayerNorm models tested, while being absent in all 5 RMSNorm models. Additionally, the covariance eigenvalue along the predicted direction deepens significantly after training, indicating the emergence of additional dead directions.
Implications
This research provides a computationally efficient method for diagnosing the optimization landscape of LayerNorm transformers, which could aid in understanding model behavior and improving training strategies. The findings may also influence the design of future transformer architectures by highlighting the importance of normalization techniques in shaping model dynamics.
Convex training of Lipschitz-regularized shallow neural networks
Optimization
Theory
- Introduction of a convex training method for Lipschitz-regularized shallow neural networks.
- The proposed method guarantees that the optimal network is no worse than the initial pre-trained network.
- Demonstrated improvements in accuracy and robustness against adversarial attacks on real-world datasets.
- The convex program can be solved efficiently using existing optimization solvers.
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Convex training of Lipschitz-regularized shallow neural networks
Summary
This paper presents a novel training procedure for shallow neural networks (SNNs) that enhances their robustness against adversarial attacks by employing a Lipschitz-regularized training program. The authors introduce a convex restriction to the non-convex training problem, allowing for efficient global optimization. This method can be applied as a post-processing step to improve pre-trained networks, ensuring that the resulting network is at least as effective as the initial model. The authors demonstrate the effectiveness of their approach through experiments on real-world regression datasets, showing that their convex training method yields networks with lower objective values compared to existing techniques. Additionally, the networks trained using this method exhibit improved accuracy and robustness against adversarial perturbations. The paper addresses the challenges of traditional training methods, such as the sensitivity to hyperparameters and the lack of convergence guarantees, by providing a tractable convex program that minimizes the Lipschitz constant, a measure of adversarial robustness.
Methodology
The authors develop a convex training method by fixing the outer layer weights and activation patterns of the hidden units, leading to a convex restriction of the original non-convex problem. They propose an iterative algorithm that solves a sequence of these convex restrictions to global optimality, ensuring a monotonically decreasing objective value.
Results
The experiments show that the proposed convex training method results in networks that have lower objective values on the Lipschitz-regularized program compared to existing methods. Furthermore, the networks exhibit higher accuracy and greater robustness against adversarial attacks on certain datasets.
Implications
The findings suggest that the proposed convex training method can be a valuable tool for enhancing the robustness of neural networks in safety-critical applications, such as autonomous driving and security assessments, where adversarial attacks pose significant risks.
Critical Percolation as a Synthetic Data Model for Interpretability
Interpretability
- Introduces a synthetic data model based on critical percolation clusters to improve interpretability research.
- The model captures hierarchical and multi-scale structures, reflecting properties of natural data.
- An efficient algorithm for generating data at arbitrary scales is proposed.
- Probing experiments show that latent variables can be decoded from neural network activations.
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Critical Percolation as a Synthetic Data Model for Interpretability
Summary
This paper introduces a novel family of synthetic datasets based on critical mean-field percolation clusters, aimed at enhancing the interpretability of neural networks. Traditional synthetic datasets often lack the hierarchical and multi-scale structures found in natural data, which limits their effectiveness as testbeds for interpretability methods. The proposed model generates data points from sparse, low-dimensional fractal clusters characterized by a power-law size distribution, with latent variables reflecting a taxonomic hierarchy. The authors present an almost linear-time algorithm for sampling these hierarchical structures, allowing for scalable data generation. Probing experiments demonstrate that the model's ground-truth latent variables can be decoded from neural network activations, indicating that the model effectively captures the hierarchical organization of features. The combination of sparsity, self-similarity, power-law statistics, and analytical tractability positions critical percolation as a principled framework for interpretability research in machine learning.
Methodology
The authors develop a synthetic data model using critical mean-field percolation clusters, which are characterized by sparse, low-dimensional fractal structures. They propose an almost linear-time algorithm to sample random trees and their hierarchical latent decompositions, facilitating scalable data generation. The model's properties are analytically tractable, with known critical exponents that eliminate the need for hyperparameter tuning.
Results
The experiments reveal that the latent variables generated by the model can be linearly decoded from the activations of neural networks, demonstrating the model's effectiveness in capturing the hierarchical organization of features. The synthetic datasets exhibit properties such as sparsity, self-similarity, and power-law statistics, making them suitable for interpretability research.
Implications
This work suggests that critical percolation can serve as a robust framework for testing and developing interpretability methods in machine learning, potentially leading to better understanding and transparency of neural network models. It opens avenues for further research into hierarchical data structures and their implications for AI interpretability.
On the QUEST for Uncertainty Quantification via Highest Density Regions
Theory
- QUEST provides a novel framework for uncertainty quantification based on highest density regions.
- The approach addresses limitations of traditional proper scoring rules in regression tasks.
- QUEST measures satisfy important axioms from the uncertainty quantification literature.
- Empirical results indicate that QUEST outperforms standard uncertainty measures in selective prediction tasks.
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On the QUEST for Uncertainty Quantification via Highest Density Regions
Summary
This paper addresses the critical issue of uncertainty quantification (UQ) in probabilistic machine learning, particularly for regression tasks. Traditional scalar UQ methods, especially those based on proper scoring rules (PSRs), often yield counterintuitive results when the target statistic diverges from the conditional expectation. The authors introduce a new framework called QUEST (Quantifying Uncertainty via highest dEnSiTy regions), which characterizes uncertainty by the volume of the most probable subset of a distribution's support. QUEST measures the concentration of Lebesgue measure at the peaks of a distribution, evaluated using a robustness parameter α. The paper establishes theoretical connections between QUEST measures and classical statistics, demonstrating that these measures satisfy key axioms from the UQ literature, such as monotonicity and invariance. Empirical evaluations show that QUEST outperforms standard UQ measures like variance and differential entropy in selective prediction benchmarks, suggesting its effectiveness as a more reliable alternative for UQ in regression settings.
Methodology
The authors propose QUEST, a family of uncertainty measures based on the Lebesgue measure of a distribution's highest density region. They establish theoretical foundations linking these measures to classical statistics and conduct empirical evaluations against standard UQ methods.
Results
The empirical results demonstrate that QUEST measures of epistemic and aleatoric uncertainty perform favorably compared to traditional measures like variance and differential entropy, particularly in selective prediction benchmarks.
Implications
The proposed QUEST framework has significant implications for safety-critical applications in machine learning, providing a more reliable method for uncertainty quantification that can enhance decision-making processes in various domains.
VERITAS: Verifier-Guided Proof Search for Zero-Shot Formal Theorem Proving
Theory
Large Language Models
Reinforcement Learning
- Introduces VERITAS, a zero-shot framework for formal theorem proving.
- Utilizes a two-phase protocol that incorporates structured verifier feedback into proof generation.
- Achieves improved theorem solving rates compared to existing methods.
- Releases VERITAS-CombiBench, a benchmark of 55 combinatorics theorems.
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VERITAS: Verifier-Guided Proof Search for Zero-Shot Formal Theorem Proving
Summary
The paper introduces VERITAS, a novel zero-shot framework for formal theorem proving that enhances the interaction between proof generation and verification. Traditional LLM-based provers often reduce rich verifier feedback to a binary pass/fail outcome, losing valuable information. VERITAS addresses this by implementing a two-phase proof search protocol that incorporates detailed verifier signals into the proof generation process. The framework consists of four specialized agents: a Strategist, Tactician, Critic, and Retriever, all of which share a unified proof state and utilize structured feedback from the verifier. The first phase employs a Best-of-N sampling approach, while the second phase utilizes a critic-guided Monte Carlo Tree Search (MCTS) that leverages failures from the first phase as negative examples. This method preserves all theorems solved in the first phase, ensuring that any additional successes in the second phase are directly attributable to the feedback-driven exploration. The results demonstrate significant improvements in theorem solving rates on benchmarks, highlighting the importance of integrating structured verifier feedback into the proof search process.
Methodology
VERITAS employs a four-agent framework that includes a Strategist for high-level strategy selection, a Tactician for generating tactic candidates, a Critic for scoring partial proofs, and a Retriever for lemma retrieval. The two-phase protocol first conducts a Best-of-N sampling followed by a critic-guided MCTS that uses feedback from the verifier to refine the search process.
Results
VERITAS achieved a solving rate of 40.6% on the miniF2F benchmark, outperforming the Best-of-5 method (36.9%) and a handcrafted Portfolio (26.2%). On the newly introduced VERITAS-CombiBench, it reached 7.3%, significantly higher than Best-of-5 (1.8%) and Portfolio (3.6%), demonstrating the effectiveness of guided sampling over unguided approaches.
Implications
The findings suggest that integrating structured feedback from verifiers can substantially enhance the performance of theorem provers. This approach could lead to more efficient and effective formal verification tools in various applications, including software verification, automated reasoning, and AI-assisted mathematics.
3D-DLP: Self-Supervised 3D Object-Centric Scene Representation Learning
Computer Vision
Robotics
Reinforcement Learning
- 3D-DLP is the first self-supervised object-centric representation model for colored 3D voxel data.
- The model utilizes a compact particle representation that scales effectively to real-world data.
- Key methodological innovations include an appearance-aware K-means keypoint prior and a chroma reconstruction loss.
- The learned latent particles are controllable and interpretable, allowing for effective scene manipulation.
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3D-DLP: Self-Supervised 3D Object-Centric Scene Representation Learning
Summary
The paper introduces 3D-DLP, a self-supervised model designed for object-centric representation learning from 3D RGB-D or voxel data. This model decomposes scenes into distinct 3D latent particles, each encoding attributes such as keypoint positions, bounding box dimensions, and appearance features. The approach builds on the Deep Latent Particles (DLP) framework, enabling the generation of interpretable segmentation maps through a self-supervised reconstruction objective. The authors demonstrate the model's capabilities on both simulated and real-world datasets, showcasing its interpretability and controllability. By manipulating the latent particles, novel scene configurations can be generated. Additionally, the use of these compact 3D representations significantly enhances robotic manipulation tasks compared to traditional methods that either lack explicit 3D information or rely on dense, memory-intensive inputs. The paper presents a unified framework for processing various types of 3D inputs and identifies key methodological components that facilitate effective learning in dense voxel scenes.
Methodology
3D-DLP extends the Deep Latent Particles framework to process RGB-D and voxel inputs directly. It employs a self-supervised reconstruction objective to learn a set of 3D latent particles, each representing distinct entities in a scene. The model incorporates an appearance-aware K-means keypoint prior and a chroma reconstruction loss to enhance performance on dense voxel scenes.
Results
The experiments demonstrate that 3D-DLP successfully learns interpretable and controllable latent representations. The model outperforms baseline methods in robotic manipulation tasks, achieving consistent gains in performance across various benchmarks, including 12 MimicGen and 10 language-conditioned RLBench tasks.
Implications
The development of 3D-DLP has significant implications for robotic decision-making and manipulation, as it provides a more efficient and interpretable means of understanding complex 3D scenes. This could lead to advancements in autonomous systems that require precise spatial reasoning and interaction with their environments.
Score Approximation for Diffusion Models on Arbitrary Low-Dimensional Structures
Generative Models
Theory
Efficient ML
- Establishes the first score approximation theory for any distribution with compact support, removing continuity and smoothness assumptions.
- Introduces a discrete-mixture formulation that allows for score approximation with ReLU networks, mitigating the curse of dimensionality.
- Demonstrates that the parameter size of the neural network grows with ε at order O(ε^(-d/2)), improving upon existing theoretical bounds.
- Provides a divide-and-conquer strategy to bound discretization error and higher-order derivatives of log p_t(x), enhancing diffusion theory.
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Score Approximation for Diffusion Models on Arbitrary Low-Dimensional Structures
Summary
This paper addresses the limitations of existing score approximation theories for diffusion models, which often rely on restrictive assumptions such as Lipschitz continuity and smooth manifold supports. The authors present a universal score approximation theorem applicable to any distribution supported on a compact set of upper Minkowski dimension d. They introduce a novel discrete-mixture formulation that allows the score function to be approximated using a ReLU network, with complexity growing exponentially only with d, thus alleviating the exponential curse of ambient dimensionality. This advancement enables diffusion models to effectively adapt to irregular and non-smooth data structures, which is crucial for their performance in real-world generative tasks. The work also discusses the implications of their findings for existing theories on solving the backward diffusion SDE for arbitrary compact distributions, highlighting the broader applicability of diffusion models in various contexts.
Methodology
The authors develop a universal score approximation theorem and utilize a discrete-mixture formulation to approximate the score function with a ReLU network. They analyze the complexity of this approximation and provide bounds on discretization errors and higher-order derivatives, allowing for broader applicability of diffusion models.
Results
The main results indicate that the proposed score approximation method can effectively handle any distribution with compact support, significantly broadening the scope of diffusion models. The complexity of the neural network required for approximation grows exponentially only with the upper Minkowski dimension, rather than the ambient dimensionality, thus enhancing efficiency.
Implications
The findings suggest that diffusion models can be more robust and versatile in real-world applications, particularly in generative tasks involving complex data structures. This work lays the groundwork for future research in score-based generative modeling and its applications across various domains.
The Significance of Style Diversity in Annotation-Free Synthetic Data Generation
NLP
Large Language Models
Generative Models
- Proposes an annotation-free framework for synthetic dialogue generation using intent definitions.
- Introduces two stylization models (Univ and Exam) to enhance linguistic style diversity.
- Demonstrates that style diversity is more critical than topic diversity for synthetic data utility.
- Achieves up to 93.3% performance compared to human-annotated data in intent classification tasks.
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The Significance of Style Diversity in Annotation-Free Synthetic Data Generation
Summary
This paper presents a novel framework for generating synthetic dialogue data for intent classification without relying on human-annotated seed data. The authors argue that in fast-paced industrial environments, obtaining high-quality annotated data is often impractical. Their approach utilizes intent definitions to generate dialogues and introduces two types of attributes—topic and style—to enhance data diversity. The framework includes two innovative post-hoc stylization models, Univ and Exam, which transform synthetic utterances into varied, human-like styles. To ensure data quality, the authors implement an LLM-as-a-judge filtering process. Experimental results demonstrate that the proposed method achieves up to 93.3% of the performance of models trained on human-annotated data. Notably, the study reveals that style diversity is more crucial than topic diversity for the utility of synthetic data, as it helps prevent models from learning misleading stylistic correlations. The findings suggest that incorporating style attributes during the generation process is more effective than adapting styles post-hoc.
Methodology
The authors developed a framework that generates dialogue based on intent definitions without human annotations. They categorized attributes into topic and style, emphasizing the importance of style diversity. Two stylization models were created to adapt generated dialogues to human-like styles, and an LLM was used to filter low-quality samples.
Results
The proposed framework achieved 90.7% and 93.3% accuracy on industrial and public datasets, respectively, compared to human-annotated training data. The results indicated that style diversity significantly enhances the utility of synthetic data, while topic diversity had a lesser impact.
Implications
This research has significant implications for industries that require rapid adaptation of dialogue systems without the availability of annotated data. It suggests that focusing on style diversity can lead to more effective synthetic data generation, which can be crucial for developing and testing models in new domains or applications.
VIMPO: Value-Implicit Policy Optimization for LLMs
Large Language Models
Reinforcement Learning
Optimization
- VIMPO offers a critic-free approach to policy optimization that maintains simplicity while enhancing credit assignment.
- The method derives a closed-form representation of the value function using policy log-ratios and Monte Carlo estimates.
- VIMPO achieves better training efficiency and higher validation accuracy compared to GRPO, especially under noisy reward conditions.
- The approach separates reward incorporation from policy improvement, allowing for coherent integration of outcome-based supervision.
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VIMPO: Value-Implicit Policy Optimization for LLMs
Summary
The paper introduces VIMPO (Value-Implicit Policy Optimization), a novel critic-free policy optimization method for large language models (LLMs) that aims to enhance reasoning capabilities through reinforcement learning with verifiable rewards. Traditional methods face a trade-off between simplicity and effective credit assignment, with actor-critic methods providing dense learning signals but requiring a learned value function, which can introduce instability. VIMPO addresses this by deriving a policy-implied value function from KL-regularized reinforcement learning optimality conditions, allowing for a critic-free approach that incorporates outcome-level rewards. The method utilizes a closed-form representation of the value function based on policy log-ratios and anchors it with a terminal condition, enabling a simple value loss without the need for a critic. Additionally, VIMPO provides a one-step temporal-difference advantage for PPO-style updates, facilitating token-level credit assignment. Empirical results demonstrate that VIMPO outperforms existing methods like GRPO on various benchmarks, particularly in scenarios with noisy rewards, indicating its robustness and efficiency in training.
Methodology
VIMPO derives a policy-implied value function from KL-regularized reinforcement learning, utilizing a closed-form representation based on policy log-ratios against a frozen reference model. It employs a terminal condition to create a critic-free value optimization objective and integrates a one-step temporal-difference advantage into PPO-style updates for token-level credit assignment.
Results
VIMPO demonstrated superior performance over the GRPO baseline across several mathematical reasoning benchmarks, including MATH-500, AIME 2024, AIME 2025, and OlympiadBench. It showed faster training convergence and higher validation accuracy, particularly excelling in environments with noisy rewards, where it maintained a consistent advantage.
Implications
The development of VIMPO suggests a promising direction for improving the training of large language models in complex reasoning tasks, potentially leading to more robust applications in areas requiring multi-step reasoning, such as mathematical problem solving and code generation.