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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HISR: Hindsight Information Modulated Segmental Process Rewards For Multi-turn Agentic Reinforcement Learning
Reinforcement Learning
Large Language Models
- Introduction of HISR for improved credit assignment in multi-turn reinforcement learning.
- Segment-level process rewards align more effectively with sub-goals compared to traditional turn-level rewards.
- Hindsight model captures action importance, enhancing the reliability of reward assignment.
- Extensive experiments show HISR achieves state-of-the-art performance on multiple benchmarks.
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HISR: Hindsight Information Modulated Segmental Process Rewards For Multi-turn Agentic Reinforcement Learning
Summary
The paper introduces HISR (Hindsight Information Modulated Segmental Process Rewards), a novel approach aimed at enhancing the performance of large language models (LLMs) in complex long-horizon agentic decision-making tasks. Traditional reward models (RMs) struggle with delayed propagation of sparse rewards and unreliable credit assignment, particularly in multi-turn reinforcement learning scenarios. HISR addresses these issues by aligning rewards with sub-goals and emphasizing significant segments of the task trajectory. The authors propose a segment-level process RM that assigns rewards to sub-goals rather than individual turns, thereby avoiding overly granular reward allocation. Additionally, a hindsight model is developed to capture action importance by comparing sequence likelihoods between hindsight and policy models. This method aggregates segment importance scores to modulate segmental process rewards, improving credit assignment reliability. The effectiveness of HISR is validated through extensive experiments on three publicly available benchmarks, demonstrating state-of-the-art performance and providing insights into the method's applicability in enhancing agentic capabilities of LLMs.
Methodology
The HISR approach utilizes a segment-level process reward model to assign rewards based on sub-goals rather than individual turns. A hindsight model is employed to assess action importance by comparing likelihoods of actions taken in hindsight versus those predicted by the policy model. This information is used to aggregate segment importance scores, which modulate the segmental process rewards to enhance credit assignment reliability.
Results
The experimental results demonstrate that HISR achieves state-of-the-art performance on three publicly available agentic benchmarks, indicating its effectiveness in improving the reliability of credit assignment in multi-turn reinforcement learning tasks.
Implications
The HISR framework has significant implications for advancing the capabilities of large language models in complex decision-making scenarios, potentially leading to more effective applications in areas such as household assistance and other agentic tasks requiring long-horizon planning.
Rigorous Error Certification for Neural PDE Solvers: From Empirical Residuals to Solution Guarantees
Theory
- Establishes a theoretical link between residual-based training objectives and solution-space error for PINNs.
- Proves that vanishing residual error ensures convergence to the true solution under certain conditions.
- Derives generalization bounds that can be computed without access to the true solution.
- Demonstrates the applicability of the theoretical results through numerical experiments on various PDEs.
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Rigorous Error Certification for Neural PDE Solvers: From Empirical Residuals to Solution Guarantees
Summary
This paper addresses the challenge of uncertainty quantification in neural PDE solvers, particularly focusing on physics-informed neural networks (PINNs). Traditional methods for solving partial differential equations (PDEs) rely on discretization theory, where error is managed through mesh refinement. In contrast, PINNs minimize residual losses at collocation points, leading to new sources of error that complicate the assessment of solution reliability. The authors establish a theoretical framework that connects residual control to solution-space error, proving that if neural approximations are contained within a compact subset of the solution space, then a vanishing residual error guarantees convergence to the true solution. They derive both deterministic and probabilistic convergence results, providing certified generalization bounds that translate various errors (residual, boundary, and initial) into explicit guarantees on solution error. The paper also includes numerical experiments on different types of PDEs, demonstrating the practical applicability of their theoretical findings and the effectiveness of their error certification approach.
Methodology
The authors utilize compactness arguments to conduct a convergence analysis of PINNs. They derive generalization bounds based on computable errors without requiring the true solution. Additionally, they employ formal verification tools to certify error bounds across different PDE systems.
Results
The paper presents theoretical results that establish convergence guarantees for PINNs and provides explicit generalization bounds that relate residual and other errors to the true solution error. Numerical experiments validate these theoretical findings, showing that the proposed method yields verifiable generalization guarantees and stable convergence.
Implications
The findings have significant implications for the reliability of neural PDE solvers in scientific and engineering applications, where understanding the uncertainty and accuracy of solutions is crucial. The established error certification framework can enhance the trustworthiness of neural network-based methods in solving complex PDEs.
Fundamental Limits of Neural Network Sparsification: Evidence from Catastrophic Interpretability Collapse
Interpretability
- Extreme neural network sparsification leads to catastrophic interpretability collapse.
- Global representation quality remains stable while local interpretability degrades significantly.
- The phenomenon of interpretability collapse is intrinsic to the sparsification process, not algorithm-specific.
- Extended training does not recover dead neurons, indicating irreversibility of the collapse.
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Fundamental Limits of Neural Network Sparsification: Evidence from Catastrophic Interpretability Collapse
Summary
This paper investigates the relationship between extreme neural network sparsification and mechanistic interpretability, specifically focusing on whether interpretable features survive under aggressive compression. The authors introduce a hybrid Variational Autoencoder–Sparse Autoencoder (VAE-SAE) architecture and an adaptive sparsity scheduling framework that progressively reduces active neurons from 500 to 50 over 50 training epochs. Through experiments on two benchmark datasets, dSprites and Shapes3D, they find a paradox where global representation quality remains stable while local feature interpretability collapses. Under Top-k sparsification, dead neuron rates reached 34.4% on dSprites and 62.7% on Shapes3D, while L1 regularization produced similar or worse results. Extended training did not recover dead neurons, indicating that interpretability collapse is intrinsic to the compression process. The study also reveals that the extent of interpretability collapse scales with dataset complexity, suggesting that more complex datasets exacerbate the issue. These findings challenge existing assumptions about the preservation of interpretability during extreme sparsification and highlight the need for further exploration in this area.
Methodology
The authors employed a hybrid VAE-SAE architecture and an adaptive sparsity scheduling framework to progressively reduce the number of active neurons during training. They conducted controlled experiments on two datasets, utilizing both Top-k and L1 sparsification methods to analyze the effects on interpretability and representation quality.
Results
The study found that under Top-k sparsification, dead neuron rates were 34.4% on dSprites and 62.7% on Shapes3D. L1 regularization resulted in 41.7% dead neurons on dSprites and 90.6% on Shapes3D. Extended training for an additional 100 epochs yielded no significant recovery of dead neurons, and the collapse pattern was consistent across various thresholds and datasets.
Implications
The findings suggest that extreme sparsification may compromise the interpretability of neural networks, which is critical for deploying AI systems in resource-constrained environments. This has implications for regulatory compliance and the development of transparent AI systems.
BVSIMC: Bayesian Variable Selection-Guided Inductive Matrix Completion for Improved and Interpretable Drug Discovery
Interpretability
- BVSIMC improves predictive accuracy and interpretability in drug discovery by incorporating variable selection.
- The model effectively handles high-dimensional and noisy side information using Bayesian variable selection techniques.
- BVSIMC outperforms existing methods in predicting drug resistance and drug repositioning.
- The approach reveals clinically meaningful side features that contribute to drug-disease interactions.
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BVSIMC: Bayesian Variable Selection-Guided Inductive Matrix Completion for Improved and Interpretable Drug Discovery
Summary
The paper introduces BVSIMC, a novel Bayesian model designed for drug discovery that incorporates variable selection from side features, such as chemical properties and genomic information. The model addresses the challenges of high-dimensional and noisy side information, which can hinder predictive performance in drug resistance prediction and drug repositioning. By employing spike-and-slab priors, BVSIMC effectively filters out irrelevant side features, enhancing both the accuracy and interpretability of predictions. The authors validate BVSIMC through simulation studies and two real-world applications: predicting drug resistance in Mycobacterium tuberculosis and identifying new drug-disease associations. The results demonstrate that BVSIMC outperforms existing state-of-the-art methods, revealing clinically significant side features in the process.
Methodology
BVSIMC utilizes a Bayesian framework with spike-and-slab priors for variable selection, allowing for selective shrinkage of side feature effects. This model learns sparse latent embeddings to enhance predictive performance while filtering out irrelevant side information.
Results
BVSIMC demonstrated superior performance in simulation studies and real-world applications compared to several state-of-the-art methods. It successfully identified the most relevant side features in drug resistance prediction and drug repositioning tasks.
Implications
The findings suggest that BVSIMC can significantly enhance the efficiency of drug discovery processes by improving prediction accuracy and interpretability, potentially leading to better therapeutic strategies and reduced development costs.
When Differential Privacy Meets Wireless Federated Learning: An Improved Analysis for Privacy and Convergence
Federated Learning
Theory
Optimization
- Introduces a precise characterization of privacy loss in DPWFL that converges to a constant.
- Incorporates both device selection and mini-batch sampling in the analysis.
- Establishes convergence guarantees for general non-convex objectives while considering gradient clipping.
- Derives an explicit privacy-utility trade-off, improving upon existing methods.
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When Differential Privacy Meets Wireless Federated Learning: An Improved Analysis for Privacy and Convergence
Summary
This paper addresses the challenges of privacy loss characterization and convergence analysis in Differentially Private Wireless Federated Learning (DPWFL). The authors present a comprehensive analysis that incorporates device selection and mini-batch sampling, demonstrating that privacy loss can converge to a constant rather than diverging with the number of iterations. They establish convergence guarantees while accounting for gradient clipping, which is crucial for enforcing differential privacy. The study derives an explicit privacy-utility trade-off for general smooth non-convex loss objectives, overcoming limitations of previous works that relied on restrictive convexity assumptions. The theoretical findings are validated through numerical experiments, showcasing the effectiveness of their approach in enhancing both privacy and model utility in federated learning settings.
Methodology
The authors utilize a theoretical framework to analyze the privacy trajectory of DPWFL, incorporating device-level and data-level sampling. They leverage inherent channel noise to establish privacy guarantees and analyze the impact of gradient clipping on convergence. The methodology includes rigorous mathematical proofs and numerical simulations to validate the theoretical results.
Results
The analysis shows that the privacy loss in DPWFL can converge to a constant value, rather than increasing indefinitely with iterations. The study also confirms that gradient clipping plays a significant role in ensuring convergence under general smoothness assumptions, leading to a better understanding of the privacy-utility trade-off.
Implications
The findings have significant implications for the deployment of federated learning systems in privacy-sensitive applications, such as healthcare and finance, where protecting user data is paramount. The improved analysis can guide the design of more efficient and privacy-preserving federated learning algorithms.
Enhancing Multi-Corpus Training in SSL-Based Anti-Spoofing Models: Domain-Invariant Feature Extraction
Audio & Speech
- Multi-corpus training can degrade performance in spoofing detection due to dataset-specific biases.
- The proposed IDFE framework effectively minimizes corpus-specific information in embeddings.
- A 20% reduction in average EER was achieved using the IDFE framework compared to baseline models.
- The study emphasizes the need for improved generalization in spoofing detection systems.
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Enhancing Multi-Corpus Training in SSL-Based Anti-Spoofing Models: Domain-Invariant Feature Extraction
Summary
This paper addresses the challenges of speech spoofing detection, particularly the performance variability across different training and evaluation corpora. The authors propose the Invariant Domain Feature Extraction (IDFE) framework, which utilizes multi-task learning and a gradient reversal layer to minimize corpus-specific information in learned embeddings. Their experiments reveal that multi-corpus training does not consistently enhance performance due to dataset-specific biases that impair generalization. The IDFE framework effectively reduces the average equal error rate (EER) by 20% compared to baseline models across four diverse datasets, demonstrating its potential to improve robustness in spoofing detection systems. The study highlights the importance of addressing dataset biases to enhance the reliability of automatic speaker verification systems against advanced spoofing attacks.
Methodology
The authors employed a multi-task learning approach with a gradient reversal layer to develop the IDFE framework. They conducted experiments using four different datasets to analyze the impact of multi-corpus training on spoofing detection performance. The framework focuses on suppressing dataset-specific cues in the embedding space to enhance generalization.
Results
The IDFE framework achieved a 20% reduction in average EER compared to the baseline models across four evaluation datasets, indicating significant improvements in detection performance and robustness against dataset biases.
Implications
The findings suggest that addressing dataset biases is crucial for developing reliable spoofing detection systems. The IDFE framework's approach can be utilized in various applications requiring robust audio and speech recognition, particularly in enhancing security measures for automatic speaker verification systems.
A Family of Adaptive Activation Functions for Mitigating Failure Modes in Physics-Informed Neural Networks
Theory
Optimization
Efficient ML
- Introduction of adaptive wavelet-based activation functions for PINNs.
- Significant improvements in training stability and accuracy over traditional activation functions.
- Evaluation across multiple PDE classes demonstrating robustness.
- Validation against various models including PINNsFormer and other deep learning architectures.
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A Family of Adaptive Activation Functions for Mitigating Failure Modes in Physics-Informed Neural Networks
Summary
This paper addresses the common failure modes in Physics-Informed Neural Networks (PINNs) by introducing a novel family of adaptive wavelet-based activation functions. These functions enhance training stability and expressive power by integrating trainable wavelet functions with traditional activation functions like hyperbolic tangent and softplus. Five distinct activation functions are developed and evaluated across four classes of partial differential equations (PDEs). The results demonstrate that the proposed activation functions significantly improve robustness and accuracy compared to conventional activation functions. The effectiveness of the approach is validated through comparisons with baseline PINNs, transformer-based architectures such as PINNsFormer, and other deep learning models, showcasing its generality and applicability in scientific computing.
Methodology
The study develops five adaptive activation functions by combining wavelet functions with either trainable or fixed hyperbolic tangent and softplus functions. These functions are systematically evaluated within the PINN framework across four representative classes of PDEs, using comprehensive comparisons to assess performance against traditional activation functions and other advanced models.
Results
The proposed wavelet-based activation functions showed improved robustness and accuracy in training PINNs, outperforming standard activation functions. The results were illustrated through bar plots, indicating a clear advantage in handling the complexities of PDEs, particularly in scenarios involving oscillatory patterns and high-frequency features.
Implications
The findings suggest that adaptive wavelet-based activation functions can significantly enhance the performance of PINNs in solving complex scientific and engineering problems, potentially leading to more accurate and efficient numerical solutions of PDEs in various applications such as medical imaging, quantum systems, and radiation transfer problems.
MST-Direct: Matching via Sinkhorn Transport for Multivariate Geostatistical Simulation with Complex Non-Linear Dependencies
Optimization
Theory
Generative Models
- MST-Direct preserves complex non-linear dependencies in multivariate geostatistical simulations.
- The algorithm uses Optimal Transport theory and the Sinkhorn algorithm for direct distribution matching.
- MST-Direct processes all variables simultaneously, enhancing computational efficiency.
- Comprehensive experiments show 100% shape preservation across various complex relationship types.
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MST-Direct: Matching via Sinkhorn Transport for Multivariate Geostatistical Simulation with Complex Non-Linear Dependencies
Summary
This paper introduces MST-Direct, a novel algorithm designed for multivariate geostatistical simulation that effectively captures complex non-linear dependencies among geological variables. Traditional methods, such as Gaussian Copula and LU Decomposition, rely on linear correlation structures, which are inadequate for accurately modeling real-world geological phenomena characterized by bimodal distributions, step functions, and heteroscedastic relationships. MST-Direct leverages Optimal Transport theory and the Sinkhorn algorithm to directly match multivariate distributions while preserving spatial correlation structures. The algorithm processes all variables simultaneously as a multidimensional vector and employs relational matching with k-nearest neighbor adjacency to maintain spatial coherence. The authors validate MST-Direct through extensive experiments comparing it with traditional methods on synthetic data featuring five types of complex bivariate relationships. The results demonstrate that MST-Direct achieves perfect shape preservation (100% histogram similarity) while maintaining competitive variogram reproduction, marking a significant advancement in accurately modeling non-linear geological dependencies.
Methodology
MST-Direct employs Optimal Transport theory to establish a coupling between source and target distributions, minimizing transport costs while preserving spatial correlation structures. The Sinkhorn algorithm is utilized for efficient computation of entropy-regularized optimal transport, allowing for simultaneous processing of multiple variables without iterative updates.
Results
The experimental validation indicates that MST-Direct achieves 100% histogram similarity in shape preservation across five types of complex bivariate relationships, while also demonstrating competitive performance in variogram reproduction compared to traditional methods.
Implications
The proposed MST-Direct algorithm has significant implications for geostatistical modeling in fields such as geology, hydrology, and environmental science, where accurate representation of non-linear dependencies is crucial for uncertainty quantification and risk management.
Are complicated loss functions necessary for teaching LLMs to reason?
Large Language Models
Reinforcement Learning
Optimization
- Negative feedback is crucial for effective learning in LLMs.
- PPO-style constraints are not necessary for improving mathematical reasoning.
- RGRA, a simplified variant of GRPO, can outperform GRPO on reasoning tasks.
- Simpler reinforcement learning methods can enhance reasoning in LLMs.
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Are complicated loss functions necessary for teaching LLMs to reason?
Summary
This paper investigates the necessity of complex loss functions in training large language models (LLMs) for reasoning tasks. The authors analyze Group Relative Policy Optimization (GRPO), a method that combines various components such as group-relative advantage estimation, PPO-style clipping, and KL regularization. They identify two critical findings: first, negative feedback is essential for effective learning, as training solely on positive actions limits model performance; second, PPO-style constraints are not necessary for enhancing mathematical reasoning. Based on these insights, the authors propose a simplified approach called REINFORCE with Group Relative Advantage (RGRA), which retains the group-relative advantage estimation while omitting the more complex components. Experiments demonstrate that RGRA can outperform GRPO on standard mathematical benchmarks, suggesting that simpler reinforcement learning methods can effectively improve reasoning capabilities in LLMs. This work provides a clearer understanding of the essential elements in loss functions for LLM training and offers practical guidance for developing more efficient post-training strategies.
Methodology
The authors conducted a systematic analysis of GRPO by isolating and removing components to evaluate their necessity for effective learning. They compared the performance of GRPO with their proposed RGRA approach across standard mathematical benchmarks.
Results
The experiments revealed that RGRA achieved stronger performance than GRPO on mathematical reasoning tasks, indicating that a simpler loss function can be more effective in training LLMs for reasoning.
Implications
The findings suggest that LLM training can be made more efficient by simplifying loss functions, potentially leading to faster training times and reduced computational costs while maintaining or improving performance in reasoning tasks.
Communication-Efficient and Robust Multi-Modal Federated Learning via Latent-Space Consensus
Federated Learning
Multimodal
- Introduction of CoMFed, a framework for multi-modal federated learning that enhances communication efficiency.
- Utilization of learnable projection matrices to create compressed latent representations for heterogeneous clients.
- Implementation of a robust alignment regularizer based on geometric-median consensus to improve resilience against outliers.
- Demonstration of competitive accuracy in human activity recognition tasks with minimal communication costs.
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Communication-Efficient and Robust Multi-Modal Federated Learning via Latent-Space Consensus
Summary
This paper addresses the challenges of applying Federated Learning (FL) in multi-modal settings, where clients possess heterogeneous data modalities and model architectures. The authors propose CoMFed, a Communication-Efficient Multi-Modal Federated Learning framework that utilizes learnable projection matrices to create compressed latent representations. A latent-space regularizer is introduced to align these representations across clients, enhancing cross-modal consistency and robustness against outliers. The framework allows for collaboration among clients without the need for shared data or architectures, making it scalable and efficient. Experiments conducted on human activity recognition benchmarks demonstrate that CoMFed achieves competitive accuracy while minimizing communication overhead, showcasing its effectiveness in real-world applications.
Methodology
The proposed methodology involves learning client-specific projection matrices that map intermediate features into a shared latent space. This allows heterogeneous models to exchange semantically comparable information. The framework employs a robust latent-space consensus mechanism that leverages geometric-median regularization to ensure consistency across clients and mitigate the effects of outliers and Byzantine behavior.
Results
The experimental results indicate that CoMFed achieves competitive accuracy on human activity recognition benchmarks while significantly reducing communication overhead compared to traditional federated learning approaches. The framework's ability to operate effectively in heterogeneous environments without shared datasets or architectures is a notable advantage.
Implications
The implications of this research extend to various applications in privacy-sensitive and resource-constrained environments, such as smart cities, healthcare, and IoT systems, where multi-modal data from diverse sources can be utilized for collaborative learning without compromising data privacy.
Self-Tuning Sparse Attention: Multi-Fidelity Hyperparameter Optimization for Transformer Acceleration
NLP
Large Language Models
Optimization
- AFBS-BO automates hyperparameter tuning for sparse attention, eliminating the need for manual grid search.
- The framework achieves a 3.4× speedup in hyperparameter discovery and requires 8.8× fewer evaluations than traditional methods.
- Configurations discovered by AFBS-BO outperform existing sparse attention methods while maintaining high model quality.
- The approach leverages multi-fidelity evaluation to efficiently explore hyperparameter spaces.
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Self-Tuning Sparse Attention: Multi-Fidelity Hyperparameter Optimization for Transformer Acceleration
Summary
The paper addresses the challenges of deploying sparse attention mechanisms in transformer models, which are hindered by the need for optimal hyperparameter tuning that varies across layers and models. The authors propose a novel framework called AFBS-BO (Adaptive Fidelity Binary Search with Bayesian Optimization) that automates the discovery of layer- and head-specific hyperparameters for sparse attention. This hybrid algorithm combines Bayesian Optimization for global exploration with binary search for local refinement, utilizing multi-fidelity evaluations to reduce tuning costs significantly. The results demonstrate that AFBS-BO accelerates hyperparameter discovery by 3.4 times and requires 8.8 times fewer evaluations compared to traditional grid search methods. Furthermore, the configurations identified by AFBS-BO outperform existing sparse attention baselines while closely matching the quality of dense attention, thus transforming sparse attention into a self-optimizing component suitable for diverse transformer architectures and applications.
Methodology
AFBS-BO employs a three-stage hybrid algorithm: (1) Bayesian Optimization for global exploration of hyperparameter regions using low-fidelity evaluations, (2) Binary Search Refinement for precise tuning within promising regions using high-fidelity evaluations, and (3) Multi-Input Validation to ensure robustness across diverse inputs.
Results
The AFBS-BO framework achieves a hyperparameter discovery time of 3.0 seconds for the Llama-2-7B model, compared to 10.1 seconds for grid search, while requiring only 240 evaluations instead of 2100. On the WikiText-2 dataset, it discovers configurations that yield a perplexity of 7.45 at 70.7% sparsity, outperforming the state-of-the-art H2O method and approaching the theoretical Top-K oracle.
Implications
The automation of hyperparameter tuning for sparse attention mechanisms can facilitate broader adoption of these methods in production environments, enhancing the efficiency and performance of transformer models across various applications in NLP and beyond.
Hierarchical Latent Structure Learning through Online Inference
Theory
Time Series
Efficient ML
- HOLMES integrates hierarchical representation with online inference for latent structure learning.
- The model uses a nested Chinese Restaurant Process prior for dynamic latent tree construction.
- HOLMES achieves compact representations that support efficient transfer learning.
- It demonstrates improved predictive performance in context-dependent tasks compared to flat models.
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Hierarchical Latent Structure Learning through Online Inference
Summary
The paper introduces the Hierarchical Online Learning of Multiscale Experience Structure (HOLMES) model, which addresses the challenge of learning hierarchical latent structures through online inference. Traditional online latent-cause models rely on flat partitions, while hierarchical Bayesian models typically require offline inference. HOLMES combines a nested Chinese Restaurant Process prior with sequential Monte Carlo inference to enable trial-by-trial inference over hierarchical latent representations without explicit supervision. The model is evaluated through simulations demonstrating that HOLMES matches the predictive performance of flat models while learning more compact representations that facilitate one-shot transfer to higher-level latent categories. Additionally, in a context-dependent task with nested temporal structures, HOLMES outperforms flat models in outcome prediction, showcasing its ability to capture latent rule structures across varying contexts and timescales. This work provides a computational framework for discovering hierarchical structures in sequential data, balancing generalization and discrimination effectively.
Methodology
The HOLMES model is formalized as a Bayesian nonparametric model that assigns observations to paths through a latent tree. It employs a hierarchical prior over tree structures combined with sequential Monte Carlo methods for online inference. This allows the model to dynamically construct and update latent representations based on sequential observations.
Results
In simulations, HOLMES matched the predictive performance of flat models while learning more compact representations. It also demonstrated improved outcome prediction in context-dependent tasks, effectively capturing latent rule structures across different contexts and timescales.
Implications
The HOLMES framework has potential applications in various fields requiring hierarchical structure learning from sequential data, such as cognitive modeling, decision-making processes, and adaptive learning systems. It could enhance the development of intelligent systems that need to generalize from past experiences while maintaining sensitivity to relevant details.
Variational Phasor Circuits for Phase-Native Brain-Computer Interface Classification
Theory
Efficient ML
Time Series
- Introduction of the Variational Phasor Circuit (VPC) as a phase-native learning architecture.
- VPC utilizes trainable phase shifts and local unitary mixing for BCI classification.
- Demonstrated competitive accuracy with fewer parameters compared to traditional classifiers.
- VPC serves as a bridge between classical oscillatory signal processing and quantum systems.
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Variational Phasor Circuits for Phase-Native Brain-Computer Interface Classification
Summary
This paper introduces the Variational Phasor Circuit (VPC), a novel deterministic classical learning architecture designed for brain-computer interface (BCI) classification tasks. The VPC operates on the continuous S1 unit circle manifold, utilizing trainable phase shifts and local unitary mixing instead of traditional dense real-valued weight matrices. This phase-native approach allows for effective binary and multi-class classification of spatially distributed signals, particularly in the context of EEG data. The architecture supports compact phase-based decision boundaries and can be stacked to create deeper circuits through inter-block normalization. The authors demonstrate the effectiveness of VPC using synthetic BCI benchmarks, achieving competitive accuracy in decoding complex mental states while requiring significantly fewer trainable parameters compared to standard Euclidean classifiers. The findings suggest that unit-circle phase interference can serve as a mathematically principled alternative to dense neural computations, positioning VPC as both a standalone classifier and a potential front-end encoding layer for future hybrid phasor-quantum systems.
Methodology
The VPC is constructed as a deterministic learning model based on the PhasorFlow framework, encoding data as unit-magnitude complex states. It employs phase shifts as trainable parameters and utilizes local mixing and spectral interference to induce global structure, avoiding the use of dense Euclidean matrices.
Results
The VPC was tested on a synthetic 32-channel BCI benchmark, achieving effective classification of binary and four-class mental states. The results indicated that VPC can decode complex mental-state tasks with competitive accuracy while maintaining a lower parameter count than traditional neural network classifiers.
Implications
The VPC offers a new approach to BCI classification that leverages phase information, potentially improving the efficiency and effectiveness of mental-state decoding. Furthermore, it lays the groundwork for future integration with quantum computing systems, enhancing the performance of hybrid models.
AgentDS Technical Report: Benchmarking the Future of Human-AI Collaboration in Domain-Specific Data Science
Multimodal
- AI agents struggle with domain-specific reasoning and often perform poorly on tasks requiring specialized knowledge.
- Human expertise is crucial for diagnosing issues, incorporating domain knowledge, and making strategic decisions.
- Human-AI collaboration yields superior results compared to either humans or AI working independently.
- The AgentDS benchmark provides a structured way to evaluate and improve human-AI collaboration in data science.
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AgentDS Technical Report: Benchmarking the Future of Human-AI Collaboration in Domain-Specific Data Science
Summary
The AgentDS Technical Report introduces a benchmark and competition aimed at evaluating the performance of AI agents and human-AI collaboration in domain-specific data science tasks. The benchmark consists of 17 challenges across six industries: commerce, food production, healthcare, insurance, manufacturing, and retail banking. The study involved an open competition with 29 teams and 80 participants, allowing for a systematic comparison between human-AI collaborative approaches and AI-only baselines. The findings reveal that current AI agents struggle with domain-specific reasoning, often performing below the median of human participants. In contrast, the most successful solutions emerged from human-AI collaboration, highlighting the essential role of human expertise in diagnosing modeling failures, injecting domain knowledge, and making strategic decisions. The results challenge the notion of complete automation in data science, emphasizing the need for systems that support effective human-AI collaboration rather than aiming for full autonomy.
Methodology
The methodology involved designing a benchmark with 17 challenges that reflect real-world data science problems, incorporating multimodal data and requiring domain-specific insights. An open competition was organized to facilitate the comparison of human-AI collaborative solutions against AI-only approaches.
Results
The competition results indicated that AI-only solutions performed near or below the median of human participants, while the best outcomes were achieved through human-AI collaboration. This underscores the limitations of current AI agents in handling complex, domain-specific tasks.
Implications
The implications of this research suggest that while AI can automate certain aspects of data science, human expertise remains vital for effective problem-solving. Future AI systems should be designed to enhance collaboration with human data scientists, leveraging their domain knowledge and strategic reasoning.
Engineering Verifiable Modularity in Transformers via Per-Layer Supervision
Interpretability
NLP
Large Language Models
- Introduces per-layer supervision to enhance modularity in transformer architectures.
- Demonstrates that per-layer supervision leads to larger and more predictable ablation effects.
- Establishes a feature engineering methodology that captures computational dynamics independent of vocabulary.
- Shows that different tasks can route through different attention heads, indicating functional reorganization.
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Engineering Verifiable Modularity in Transformers via Per-Layer Supervision
Summary
This paper addresses the challenge of interpretability in transformer models, which often exhibit a 'Hydra effect' where ablating certain components leads to minimal behavioral changes due to redundancy. The author proposes a novel approach that combines dual-stream processing, per-layer supervision, and gated attention to expose hidden modularity within transformers. By implementing per-layer supervision, the study demonstrates that models can achieve significantly larger ablation effects, revealing which predictions depend on specific components. The results indicate that models trained with this method show a fourfold increase in control over targeted behaviors compared to standard training. The findings suggest that architectural interventions can transform interpretability from passive observation to active control, establishing a methodology for verifying causal relationships in model behavior.
Methodology
The methodology involves three main components: dual-stream processing to separate token identity from contextual representations, per-layer supervision to provide independent gradient signals at each layer, and gated attention to regularize head activation patterns. This architecture allows for the examination of modular pathways and their causal contributions to model behavior.
Results
Models trained with per-layer supervision exhibited ablation effects 5 to 23 times larger than control models, with a standard deviation of 6.32%, indicating a significant spread in the effects of ablation. This contrasts with control models, which showed minimal changes (mean 0.05%, standard deviation 0.63%). The supervised models also demonstrated four times greater control leverage over specific behaviors, such as capitalization.
Implications
The findings suggest that it is possible to engineer modularity in transformer models, which could lead to more interpretable and controllable AI systems. This approach may have applications in various fields where understanding model behavior is crucial, such as natural language processing and decision-making systems.
MIDST Challenge at SaTML 2025: Membership Inference over Diffusion-models-based Synthetic Tabular data
Generative Models
- The MIDST Challenge quantitatively evaluates the privacy of synthetic tabular data generated by diffusion models.
- It introduces novel membership inference attacks tailored for complex tabular data.
- The challenge encompasses both single-table and multi-table data synthesis scenarios.
- The results aim to inform industry practices regarding privacy-preserving technologies.
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MIDST Challenge at SaTML 2025: Membership Inference over Diffusion-models-based Synthetic Tabular data
Summary
The MIDST Challenge, organized by the Vector Institute as part of the IEEE SaTML 2025 conference, aimed to evaluate the privacy efficacy of synthetic tabular data generated by diffusion models against membership inference attacks (MIAs). While synthetic data is often viewed as a solution for privacy-preserving data publishing, its resilience to privacy attacks, particularly in tabular formats, has not been thoroughly explored. The challenge focused on assessing the privacy gain of diffusion-generated synthetic data by employing both black-box and white-box MIAs across various models, including single and multi-relational tables. The challenge highlighted the need for robust privacy metrics in evaluating generative models, particularly in complex tabular data synthesis, which is increasingly relevant in industries such as finance and healthcare. The MIDST GitHub repository provides resources for further exploration and participation in this ongoing research area.
Methodology
The MIDST Challenge involved training generative models on public datasets to produce synthetic tabular data. Participants were tasked with conducting membership inference attacks to determine whether specific data points were part of the training set or not. The challenge included four tracks based on the type of access to the models (black-box vs. white-box) and the nature of the data (single-table vs. multi-table). Participants utilized various diffusion models, including TabDDPM, TabSyn, and ClavaDDPM, to evaluate privacy efficacy.
Results
The challenge provided insights into the effectiveness of different membership inference attacks on synthetic tabular data generated by diffusion models. It revealed the limitations and privacy vulnerabilities of these models, particularly in complex data synthesis scenarios. The outcomes are expected to guide future research and development in privacy-preserving synthetic data generation.
Implications
The findings from the MIDST Challenge have significant implications for industries that rely on synthetic data for privacy compliance, such as finance and healthcare. By understanding the privacy risks associated with synthetic data, organizations can better implement privacy-preserving technologies and comply with regulations like GDPR and CCPA.
R2-Dreamer: Redundancy-Reduced World Models without Decoders or Augmentation
Reinforcement Learning
Computer Vision
Efficient ML
- Introduces R2-Dreamer, a decoder-free MBRL framework that eliminates the need for data augmentation.
- Utilizes a self-supervised redundancy-reduction objective to prevent representation collapse.
- Achieves competitive performance on standard benchmarks and superior results on DMC-Subtle.
- Trains significantly faster than existing models like DreamerV3.
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R2-Dreamer: Redundancy-Reduced World Models without Decoders or Augmentation
Summary
The paper introduces R2-Dreamer, a novel framework for Model-Based Reinforcement Learning (MBRL) that addresses the challenge of learning effective representations from high-dimensional image data without relying on decoders or data augmentation. Traditional methods often focus on pixel-level reconstruction, which can lead to overfitting on irrelevant visual details, wasting representational capacity. R2-Dreamer employs a self-supervised redundancy-reduction objective inspired by Barlow Twins, which serves as an internal regularizer to prevent representation collapse. This approach allows for robust representation learning while eliminating the dependency on external data augmentation techniques. The authors demonstrate that R2-Dreamer achieves competitive performance on standard benchmarks like the DeepMind Control Suite and Meta-World, and shows significant improvements on the challenging DMC-Subtle benchmark, particularly in scenarios with small task-relevant objects. Additionally, R2-Dreamer trains 1.59 times faster than the existing DreamerV3 model, highlighting its efficiency. The paper concludes that effective internal regularization can enhance the versatility and performance of decoder-free MBRL frameworks.
Methodology
R2-Dreamer builds upon the Recurrent State-Space Model (RSSM) framework, integrating a redundancy-reduction objective inspired by Barlow Twins to enhance representation learning. This approach replaces traditional pixel-level reconstruction objectives and external data augmentation with an internal regularization mechanism, allowing for effective learning of task-essential information from high-dimensional observations.
Results
R2-Dreamer demonstrated competitive performance against strong baselines such as DreamerV3 and TD-MPC2 across various benchmarks, including the DeepMind Control Suite and Meta-World. Notably, it achieved substantial gains on the DMC-Subtle benchmark, particularly in scenarios involving small task-relevant objects, while also training 1.59 times faster than DreamerV3.
Implications
The findings suggest that eliminating reliance on decoders and data augmentation can lead to more versatile and efficient MBRL frameworks. This could have significant implications for developing general agents capable of learning from complex visual environments without the constraints of task-specific augmentations.
Seasoning Generative Models for a Generalization Aftertaste
Generative Models
Theory
- Introduces a discriminator-guided recipe for refining generative models.
- Establishes a strong duality result for f-divergences that enhances understanding of generative model training.
- Demonstrates that refined generative models show improved generalization capabilities.
- Connects theoretical insights to practical applications in score-based diffusion models.
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Seasoning Generative Models for a Generalization Aftertaste
Summary
This paper explores the use of discriminators to enhance the training and fine-tuning of generative models, particularly focusing on the strong-duality result related to f-divergences. The authors propose a discriminator-guided approach that refines generative models, leading to improved generalization capabilities compared to non-refined models. The analysis reveals that the generalization gap can be reduced based on the Rademacher complexity of the discriminator set used for refinement. The work also connects to existing methods, such as score-based diffusion models, providing theoretical validation and insights into their generalization guarantees. The paper's contributions include a characterization of strong duality for f-divergences, an application to diffusion models demonstrating theoretical convergence, and a study of generalization that emphasizes the role of discriminators in closing the generalization gap.
Methodology
The authors extend a strong-duality result related to f-divergences to derive a discriminator-guided recipe for refining generative models. They analyze the relationship between the original and refined models using Integral Probability Metrics (IPM) and establish generalization bounds based on the regularization of the discriminator set.
Results
The paper shows that refining generative models using discriminators leads to a provable improvement in generalization. The results include a characterization of strong duality for f-divergences, an application to diffusion models that ensures theoretical convergence, and a generalization bound that highlights the importance of well-regularized discriminators.
Implications
The findings suggest that incorporating discriminators into the training of generative models can significantly enhance their performance and generalization capabilities. This has potential applications in various domains where generative models are utilized, such as image synthesis, text generation, and more.
Detection Is Cheap, Routing Is Learned: Why Refusal-Based Alignment Evaluation Fails
NLP
Large Language Models
Theory
- Detection of concepts in language models is trivial and does not indicate alignment effectiveness.
- Surgical ablation can effectively remove censorship mechanisms, leading to improved factual outputs.
- Routing mechanisms are lab- and model-specific, affecting how concepts are expressed in outputs.
- Refusal-based evaluations fail to capture the complexity of censorship, as models may still be heavily influenced by steering mechanisms.
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Detection Is Cheap, Routing Is Learned: Why Refusal-Based Alignment Evaluation Fails
Summary
This paper investigates the limitations of current alignment evaluation methods in language models, particularly focusing on political censorship as a case study. The author argues that while detection of sensitive concepts is straightforward, the routing of these concepts to behavioral outputs is complex and varies significantly across different models and labs. Through a series of experiments involving nine open-weight models from five labs, the study reveals that perfect detection accuracy does not correlate with meaningful alignment, as models can achieve high accuracy on trivial tasks without demonstrating true understanding. The research identifies that surgical ablation of censorship mechanisms can lead to accurate factual outputs in most models, but one model exhibited confabulation due to entangled architecture. Furthermore, the findings indicate that refusal-based evaluations are inadequate, as models may still be heavily steered towards certain narratives despite passing such audits. The paper proposes a three-stage framework for understanding alignment: detection, routing, and output generation, emphasizing that the routing mechanism is critical for determining how detected concepts influence model behavior.
Methodology
The study employed probing, surgical ablation, and behavioral tests across nine open-weight models from five different labs. It analyzed the models' responses to politically sensitive prompts and compared the effects of removing censorship mechanisms on output accuracy. The research also included a permutation baseline to assess the diagnostic value of probe accuracy.
Results
The experiments yielded three main findings: (1) probe accuracy is non-diagnostic for alignment effectiveness, (2) surgical ablation can remove censorship in most models, leading to accurate outputs, and (3) refusal-based evaluations do not adequately measure censorship, as models may still exhibit narrative steering despite low refusal rates.
Implications
These findings suggest that current methods for evaluating model alignment may need to be re-evaluated and improved to account for the complexities of routing mechanisms. The proposed framework could guide future research in developing more effective alignment evaluation techniques, particularly in politically sensitive contexts.
Signals of Success and Struggle: Early Prediction and Physiological Signatures of Human Performance across Task Complexity
Multimodal
- Early physiological signals can predict future performance outcomes in interactive tasks.
- High performers show targeted gaze and stable cardiac activation under increasing task complexity.
- The study achieved a balanced accuracy of 0.86 using an ocular-cardiac fusion model.
- Physiological measures provide insights into cognitive processes and emotional states during task execution.
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Signals of Success and Struggle: Early Prediction and Physiological Signatures of Human Performance across Task Complexity
Summary
This paper investigates the early prediction of human performance in interactive systems by analyzing physiological signals, specifically ocular and cardiac features, during tasks of varying complexity. The authors conducted a within-subject experiment in a game environment where participants' physiological responses were monitored to predict their performance in subsequent tasks. The study highlights the potential of using early physiological indicators to forecast performance outcomes, thereby enabling timely interventions for users who may struggle as task demands increase. The results indicate that high performers exhibit distinct ocular behaviors and stable cardiac responses compared to low performers, suggesting that these physiological measures can provide insights into cognitive processes and emotional states during task execution. By achieving a balanced accuracy of 0.86 with an ocular-cardiac fusion model, the research demonstrates the feasibility of cross-session performance prediction, contributing to the understanding of how physiological signals can inform user modeling and support in interactive systems.
Methodology
The authors conducted a within-subject experiment where participants engaged in a game with varying complexity. Physiological data, including ocular and cardiac signals, were collected during low-complexity tasks to predict performance in subsequent high-complexity tasks. The analysis focused on identifying patterns in visual behavior and autonomic responses that correlate with performance outcomes.
Results
The study found that the ocular-cardiac fusion model achieved a balanced accuracy of 0.86 in predicting performance. High performers demonstrated strategic visual attention and stable heart rates, while low performers exhibited narrow visual searches and heart rate instability. These differences highlight the potential of using physiological signals for early performance prediction.
Implications
The findings suggest that integrating physiological monitoring into interactive systems can enhance user modeling and enable proactive support for users facing increasing task demands. This approach could be applied in various domains, including education, gaming, and high-stakes environments, to improve user engagement and performance outcomes.
AcceRL: A Distributed Asynchronous Reinforcement Learning and World Model Framework for Vision-Language-Action Models
Reinforcement Learning
Multimodal
Robotics
- AcceRL introduces a fully asynchronous and decoupled RL framework for VLA models.
- The framework integrates a trainable world model to generate synthetic experiences, enhancing sample efficiency.
- AcceRL achieves state-of-the-art performance on the LIBERO benchmark.
- The architecture exhibits super-linear scaling in throughput and efficient hardware utilization.
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AcceRL: A Distributed Asynchronous Reinforcement Learning and World Model Framework for Vision-Language-Action Models
Summary
The paper presents AcceRL, a novel asynchronous reinforcement learning (RL) framework specifically designed for large-scale Vision-Language-Action (VLA) models. AcceRL addresses significant challenges in computational efficiency and data acquisition by decoupling training, inference, and rollouts, thus eliminating synchronization barriers. This framework is the first to integrate a trainable world model into a distributed asynchronous RL pipeline, enabling the generation of virtual experiences that enhance sample efficiency and training stability. The authors demonstrate that AcceRL achieves state-of-the-art performance on the LIBERO benchmark, showcasing super-linear scaling in throughput and efficient hardware utilization. The incorporation of a world model allows for 'learning in imagination,' which significantly reduces reliance on real-world interactions and improves online sample efficiency by 200 times. Overall, AcceRL represents a paradigm shift in the application of RL to complex embodied tasks, providing a robust solution to the limitations of traditional synchronous frameworks.
Methodology
AcceRL employs a modular architecture that isolates training, inference, and sampling into independent asynchronous streams. This design eliminates synchronization barriers and allows for continuous refinement of the world model alongside policy learning. The framework leverages a world model pre-trained on offline trajectories to facilitate 'learning in imagination,' thus generating high-fidelity synthetic experiences for training.
Results
AcceRL demonstrated state-of-the-art performance across all evaluation categories on the LIBERO benchmark. The framework achieved super-linear scaling in throughput with the number of trainer GPUs and exhibited robust training stability in complex control tasks. The world model variant significantly improved online sample efficiency by 200 times compared to traditional methods.
Implications
The development of AcceRL has significant implications for the field of embodied artificial intelligence, particularly in enhancing the efficiency and effectiveness of RL in complex environments. Its ability to generate synthetic experiences could lead to advancements in training agents capable of executing intricate tasks based on natural language instructions, potentially transforming applications in robotics, autonomous systems, and interactive AI.
Context Bootstrapped Reinforcement Learning
Reinforcement Learning
Large Language Models
NLP
- Introduction of Context Bootstrapped Reinforcement Learning (CBRL) to enhance RLVR.
- CBRL uses a stochastic injection of few-shot demonstrations to improve exploration efficiency.
- Demonstrated consistent performance improvements across multiple tasks and model families.
- CBRL is algorithm-agnostic, yielding gains with different reinforcement learning algorithms.
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Context Bootstrapped Reinforcement Learning
Summary
The paper introduces Context Bootstrapped Reinforcement Learning (CBRL), a novel approach designed to enhance Reinforcement Learning from Verifiable Rewards (RLVR) by addressing the issue of exploration inefficiency. In RLVR, models often struggle to generate successful rollouts, leading to minimal learning signals, especially in tasks requiring novel reasoning patterns or domain-specific knowledge. CBRL tackles this by incorporating few-shot demonstrations into training prompts, with a stochastic injection mechanism that starts with a high probability of including these examples and gradually reduces it to zero. This method encourages the model to internalize reasoning patterns from the demonstrations rather than relying on them during testing. The authors validate CBRL across two model families and five Reasoning Gym tasks, demonstrating consistent improvements in success rates and exploration efficiency. The results indicate that CBRL is algorithm-agnostic, showing effectiveness with both GRPO and RLOO algorithms, and it significantly enhances performance in a domain-specific programming language, Q. The findings suggest that CBRL effectively mitigates exploration inefficiency and fosters durable learning behaviors.
Methodology
CBRL employs a method that incorporates a bank of solved examples and a stochastic injection mechanism, where few-shot demonstrations are dynamically added to training prompts. The probability of injection follows a curriculum that starts high and decreases over time, encouraging the model to learn independently as training progresses.
Results
CBRL consistently outperformed the GRPO-only baseline across all tested model-environment pairs, with accuracy improvements ranging from +1.3% to +22.3%. In the Q programming language, the test-pass rate increased from 27.3% to 43.0%, and Pass@1 improved from 5.0% to 26.3%. The method also showed significant gains under RLOO, with improvements in specific tasks like Word Sorting and Puzzle-24.
Implications
CBRL's approach could be applied to various domains requiring reinforcement learning, particularly in scenarios where exploration inefficiency is a challenge. Its algorithm-agnostic nature allows for broader applicability across different reinforcement learning frameworks, potentially enhancing the training of models in complex reasoning tasks and domain-specific applications.
Off-Policy Learning with Limited Supply
Theory
Optimization
Reinforcement Learning
- Conventional greedy OPL methods can lead to suboptimal performance in limited supply scenarios.
- The paper introduces a novel method, OPLS, that focuses on relative expected rewards for better item allocation.
- Theoretical proofs confirm the existence of superior policies under limited supply conditions.
- Empirical results demonstrate OPLS's effectiveness over existing OPL methods in various datasets.
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Off-Policy Learning with Limited Supply
Summary
This paper addresses the challenges of off-policy learning (OPL) in contextual bandits under limited supply conditions, which are common in real-world applications like recommendation systems and online advertising. Traditional OPL methods assume an unconstrained environment where items can be selected infinitely, leading to potential suboptimality when items are scarce. The authors demonstrate that greedy selection methods, which maximize expected rewards for individual users, can deplete item availability and hinder future allocations that could yield higher rewards. They introduce a new method, Off-Policy Learning with Limited Supply (OPLS), which prioritizes items based on their relative expected rewards compared to other users, rather than solely on absolute expected rewards. Theoretical analysis shows that superior policies exist in limited supply settings, and empirical results indicate that OPLS outperforms conventional OPL methods across both synthetic and real-world datasets, effectively addressing the limitations imposed by item scarcity.
Methodology
The authors conducted a theoretical analysis of off-policy learning in contextual bandits with limited supply, formulating the problem for the first time in the literature. They proposed the OPLS method, which selects items based on the relative reward gap, and validated its performance through empirical evaluations on synthetic and real-world datasets.
Results
The empirical results show that OPLS significantly outperforms traditional OPL methods in terms of policy performance in scenarios with limited supply, achieving higher total expected rewards compared to greedy approaches.
Implications
The findings suggest that OPLS can enhance decision-making in various applications where item scarcity is a concern, such as e-commerce and coupon allocation, leading to improved user satisfaction and resource management.
Gradient-Informed Temporal Sampling Improves Rollout Accuracy in PDE Surrogate Training
Optimization
Time Series
Theory
- Introduces Gradient-Informed Temporal Sampling (GITS) for improved data selection in PDE surrogate training.
- GITS optimizes local gradients and temporal coverage to enhance rollout accuracy.
- Demonstrates superior performance over traditional sampling methods across multiple PDE systems.
- Ablation studies validate the importance of GITS's dual optimization objectives.
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Gradient-Informed Temporal Sampling Improves Rollout Accuracy in PDE Surrogate Training
Summary
This paper addresses the challenge of selecting training data for neural simulators used in partial differential equation (PDE) surrogate training. Traditional methods often rely on uniformly sampled data, which may not yield the most informative training pairs. The authors propose a novel sampling method called Gradient-Informed Temporal Sampling (GITS), which optimizes both local gradient information and temporal coverage. GITS aims to balance model specificity with dynamical information, overcoming the limitations of existing sampling techniques that either cluster around high-information-density regions or lack model-specific relevance. The authors demonstrate that GITS significantly reduces rollout error across various PDE systems and neural simulator architectures compared to multiple baseline methods. Additionally, ablation studies confirm the necessity of GITS's dual objectives, and the paper provides insights into the conditions under which GITS excels or fails.
Methodology
The authors developed GITS, which combines a pilot-model short-horizon gradient-norm score with a set-level temporal coverage objective. This approach allows for the selection of training data that is both informative and diverse, avoiding redundancy while ensuring relevance to the model being trained.
Results
GITS outperformed several baseline sampling methods, achieving lower rollout errors across different PDE systems and neural architectures. The ablation studies highlighted the necessity of both optimization objectives in GITS, confirming that the method effectively balances model-specific information with temporal diversity.
Implications
The findings suggest that GITS can significantly enhance the training efficiency and accuracy of neural simulators in various applications involving PDEs, potentially leading to better performance in real-world simulations and predictive modeling tasks.
Path-Constrained Mixture-of-Experts
NLP
Large Language Models
Efficient ML
- PathMoE constrains the expert path space by sharing router parameters across consecutive layers.
- The method shows consistent performance improvements over conventional independent routing in language modeling tasks.
- PathMoE eliminates the need for auxiliary load balancing losses while maintaining balanced expert utilization.
- Improved cross-layer coordination leads to better specialization and robustness in routing.
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Path-Constrained Mixture-of-Experts
Summary
The paper introduces PathMoE, a novel approach to Mixture-of-Experts (MoE) architectures that addresses the inefficiencies of conventional independent routing methods. Traditional MoE architectures allow for a vast number of expert paths, leading to statistical inefficiency as many paths remain unexplored during training. PathMoE mitigates this by sharing router parameters across consecutive layers, which constrains the expert path space while maintaining flexibility. The authors demonstrate that this method results in improved performance on language modeling tasks, achieving lower perplexity and better accuracy on downstream tasks without the need for auxiliary load balancing losses. Analysis reveals that PathMoE enhances cross-layer coordination, leading to improved expert specialization and robustness against routing perturbations. Additionally, tokens following the same expert path exhibit interpretable clustering by linguistic function, providing insights into the structure of expert paths in MoE architectures.
Methodology
The authors propose PathMoE, which shares router parameters across blocks of consecutive layers in MoE architectures. This approach encourages path coherence without enforcing identical routing decisions, allowing for flexibility in processing diverse token representations. The methodology is validated through experiments on models with 0.9B and 16B parameters, focusing on language modeling and downstream tasks.
Results
PathMoE demonstrates significant improvements in performance metrics, including lower perplexity and higher accuracy on downstream tasks compared to independent routing. It achieves 31% higher routing consistency and 11% lower routing entropy, while being 22.5 times more robust to routing perturbations. The clustering of tokens by linguistic function is more concentrated in PathMoE than in conventional routing methods.
Implications
The findings suggest that constraining the expert path space can lead to more efficient training and better model performance in large-scale MoE architectures. This approach may have broader applications in NLP tasks and could inform future designs of scalable deep learning models.
SINDy-KANs: Sparse identification of non-linear dynamics through Kolmogorov-Arnold networks
Theory
Interpretability
- SINDy-KANs combine KANs and SINDy to enhance model interpretability.
- The framework allows for symbolic regression of function compositions.
- SINDy-KANs enforce learning of parsimonious equations directly.
- The method is validated through multiple symbolic regression tasks.
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SINDy-KANs: Sparse identification of non-linear dynamics through Kolmogorov-Arnold networks
Summary
The paper introduces SINDy-KANs, a novel framework that combines Kolmogorov-Arnold networks (KANs) with the Sparse Identification of Nonlinear Dynamics (SINDy) method to enhance the interpretability of machine learning models. KANs are known for their ability to learn complex functions through trainable activation functions, but they often lack interpretability due to the complexity of the learned representations. On the other hand, SINDy provides a way to derive sparse, interpretable equations from data but is limited by the predefined library of functions. SINDy-KANs address these limitations by training a KAN alongside a SINDy-like representation, allowing for the discovery of sparse equations at the level of each activation function while maintaining the compositional power of deep KANs. The authors demonstrate the effectiveness of SINDy-KANs through various symbolic regression tasks, including dynamical systems, showcasing accurate equation discovery across different scenarios. This approach not only improves interpretability but also retains the flexibility and expressiveness of deep learning models.
Methodology
The methodology involves simultaneously training a Kolmogorov-Arnold network (KAN) and a SINDy-like representation. The KAN learns complex functions through trainable activation functions, while SINDy is applied to enforce sparsity and interpretability at the level of each activation function. This dual approach allows for the discovery of interpretable equations from data, leveraging the strengths of both methods.
Results
The experiments conducted demonstrate that SINDy-KANs successfully discover accurate and interpretable equations across various symbolic regression tasks, including those related to dynamical systems. The results indicate that the proposed method outperforms traditional KANs in terms of interpretability while maintaining high accuracy.
Implications
The SINDy-KAN framework has significant implications for fields requiring interpretable machine learning models, such as physics, engineering, and any domain where understanding the underlying dynamics is crucial. It opens avenues for more interpretable AI systems that can provide insights into complex phenomena.
RE-SAC: Disentangling aleatoric and epistemic risks in bus fleet control: A stable and robust ensemble DRL approach
Reinforcement Learning
- Introduces RE-SAC framework to disentangle aleatoric and epistemic uncertainties in bus fleet control.
- Employs IPM-based weight regularization to stabilize Q-value estimates against aleatoric risks.
- Utilizes a diversified Q-ensemble to address epistemic risks and prevent overconfidence in sparse data regions.
- Demonstrates superior performance and stability in simulations compared to standard DRL approaches.
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RE-SAC: Disentangling aleatoric and epistemic risks in bus fleet control: A stable and robust ensemble DRL approach
Summary
This paper addresses the challenges of bus holding control in urban transit systems, particularly the instability of Q-value estimates in deep reinforcement learning (DRL) due to the conflation of aleatoric and epistemic uncertainties. The authors propose a novel framework called Robust Ensemble Soft Actor-Critic (RE-SAC) that explicitly disentangles these uncertainties. Aleatoric uncertainty, stemming from environmental noise, is managed through Integral Probability Metric (IPM)-based weight regularization in the critic network, which provides a robust lower bound for the Bellman operator. Epistemic uncertainty, resulting from insufficient data in certain state-action regions, is mitigated using a diversified Q-ensemble that penalizes overconfident value estimates. The empirical results demonstrate that RE-SAC outperforms baseline models, achieving higher and more stable cumulative rewards in a bidirectional bus corridor simulation. The findings highlight the importance of addressing both types of uncertainty to improve the robustness and reliability of DRL applications in dynamic environments.
Methodology
The RE-SAC framework integrates IPM-based weight regularization to manage aleatoric uncertainty and employs a diversified Q-ensemble to mitigate epistemic uncertainty. This dual approach enhances the stability of Q-value estimates in volatile environments, allowing for more reliable decision-making in bus fleet control.
Results
In extensive simulations, RE-SAC achieved the highest cumulative reward of approximately -0.4 × 10^6, significantly outperforming vanilla Soft Actor-Critic (SAC) at -0.55 × 10^6 and an epistemic-only ablation at -1.2 × 10^6. Additionally, it reduced Oracle Q-value estimation error by up to 62% in rare out-of-distribution states compared to SAC.
Implications
The findings suggest that effectively disentangling uncertainties can lead to more robust and reliable applications of DRL in complex, stochastic environments like urban transit systems. This approach may be applicable to other domains where uncertainty plays a critical role in decision-making.
Evaluating Model-Free Policy Optimization in Masked-Action Environments via an Exact Blackjack Oracle
Reinforcement Learning
Optimization
Theory
- Development of an exact dynamic programming oracle for blackjack, providing a rigorous benchmark for policy optimization.
- Comparison of three model-free optimizers (REINFORCE, SPSA, CEM) in recovering optimal policies, with REINFORCE showing the best performance.
- Significant cell-conditional regret observed across all methods, indicating persistent policy-level errors despite smooth reward convergence.
- Establishment and empirical validation of the minimum-bet optimality theorem under no-count constraints.
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Evaluating Model-Free Policy Optimization in Masked-Action Environments via an Exact Blackjack Oracle
Summary
This paper presents an evaluation of model-free policy optimization techniques in the context of casino blackjack, specifically using an infinite-shoe model that serves as a benchmark for discrete stochastic control with dynamically masked actions. An exact dynamic programming oracle was developed, which provided ground-truth action values and optimal policy labels across 4,600 decision cells, yielding a theoretical expected value (EV) of -0.00161 per hand. The study compared three model-free optimizers: masked REINFORCE, simultaneous perturbation stochastic approximation (SPSA), and the cross-entropy method (CEM). Among these, REINFORCE demonstrated the highest sample efficiency, achieving a 46.37% action-match rate and an EV of -0.04688 after 106 hands, outperforming CEM and SPSA in terms of action-match rates and evaluations. However, all methods showed significant cell-conditional regret, indicating persistent policy errors despite overall reward convergence. The paper also established a minimum-bet optimality theorem, confirming that optimal bet sizing under no-count constraints leads to a recommendation of the table minimum, which serves as a negative control for the simulation framework. The findings emphasize the challenges posed by tabular environments with sparse state visitation and dynamic action masking, highlighting the necessity of exact oracles and negative controls in evaluating algorithmic performance.
Methodology
The methodology involved creating an infinite-shoe blackjack simulator and an exact dynamic programming oracle to derive ground-truth action values. Three model-free policy optimization techniques were evaluated through simulated interactions, measuring convergence, action-match rates, and cell-conditional regret. The study also included a mathematical proof and empirical validation of the minimum-bet optimality theorem.
Results
REINFORCE achieved a 46.37% action-match rate and an expected value of -0.04688 after 106 hands, outperforming CEM (39.46%, 7.5 × 10^6 evaluations) and SPSA (38.63%, 4.8 × 10^6 evaluations). All methods exhibited substantial cell-conditional regret, indicating ongoing policy errors despite overall reward convergence. The minimum-bet optimality theorem was proven and validated, confirming that optimal betting under no-count conditions leads to the table minimum.
Implications
The findings suggest that while model-free optimization techniques can be effective in certain environments, challenges remain in handling dynamic action masking and sparse state visitation. The establishment of exact oracles and negative controls is crucial for accurately assessing the performance of optimization algorithms, which could have broader implications for reinforcement learning applications in complex environments.
Adaptive Regime-Aware Stock Price Prediction Using Autoencoder-Gated Dual Node Transformers with Reinforcement Learning Control
Reinforcement Learning
Time Series
- Introduces an autoencoder-based mechanism for regime detection that adapts to market conditions.
- Utilizes dual node transformer architecture for specialized processing of stable and volatile market states.
- Employs a Soft Actor-Critic reinforcement learning controller for dynamic adjustment of regime detection thresholds.
- Achieves a 26% reduction in MAPE and a 7 percentage point improvement in directional accuracy over baseline models.
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Adaptive Regime-Aware Stock Price Prediction Using Autoencoder-Gated Dual Node Transformers with Reinforcement Learning Control
Summary
This paper presents an innovative framework for stock price prediction that adapts to different market regimes, addressing the limitations of traditional models that often fail during volatile periods. The proposed system consists of three main components: an autoencoder that detects anomalies in market conditions by measuring reconstruction errors, dual node transformer networks that specialize in stable and event-driven market conditions, and a Soft Actor-Critic (SAC) reinforcement learning controller that dynamically adjusts the regime detection threshold and blending weights based on prediction performance. This adaptive approach allows the model to learn regime boundaries autonomously, improving prediction accuracy. The framework was tested on 20 S&P 500 stocks from 1982 to 2025, achieving a mean absolute percentage error (MAPE) of 0.59% with the full adaptive system, compared to 0.80% for a baseline model. The results indicate that the system maintains robust performance during high-volatility periods and significantly reduces prediction errors compared to traditional methods.
Methodology
The methodology involves an autoencoder trained on normal market conditions to identify anomalies through reconstruction errors. Data is routed through dual node transformer networks tailored for stable and event-driven conditions. A Soft Actor-Critic reinforcement learning controller optimizes the regime detection threshold and blending weights based on real-time prediction performance feedback.
Results
The proposed framework achieved a MAPE of 0.59% with the adaptive system and 0.68% without the reinforcement learning controller, compared to 0.80% for the baseline model. Directional accuracy reached 72% with the complete framework, and the system maintained a MAPE below 0.85% during high-volatility periods.
Implications
This adaptive framework has significant implications for financial forecasting, providing a more robust tool for stock price prediction that can adjust to changing market dynamics without the need for manual regime labeling. It could enhance decision-making for traders and investors by improving prediction accuracy during critical market events.
Enhancing the Parameterization of Reservoir Properties for Data Assimilation Using Deep VAE-GAN
Generative Models
- Introduces a hybrid VAE-GAN model to enhance data assimilation in reservoir simulations.
- Addresses limitations of traditional ESMDA methods, particularly regarding finite ensemble sizes and Gaussian assumptions.
- Demonstrates improved quality of reservoir descriptions and effective history matching through two case studies.
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Enhancing the Parameterization of Reservoir Properties for Data Assimilation Using Deep VAE-GAN
Summary
This paper addresses the limitations of traditional data assimilation methods in petroleum reservoir simulation, particularly the Ensemble Smoother with Multiple Data Assimilation (ESMDA). The authors highlight two main issues: the finite size of ensembles representing distributions and the Gaussian assumption in parameter uncertainties, which is problematic for non-Gaussian reservoir properties. To overcome these challenges, the authors propose a novel approach that integrates a Variational Autoencoder Generative Adversarial Network (VAE-GAN) with ESMDA. This hybrid model leverages the strengths of both GANs, which generate geologically plausible realizations, and VAEs, which excel in data assimilation. The methodology is validated through two case studies—one involving categorical data and the other continuous permeability values. The results demonstrate that the VAE-GAN model achieves high-quality reservoir descriptions while maintaining effective history matching of production curves, thus providing a significant advancement in the parameterization of reservoir properties for data assimilation.
Methodology
The authors developed a deep learning model combining Variational Autoencoders and Generative Adversarial Networks (VAE-GAN) to parameterize reservoir properties. This model was integrated with the Ensemble Smoother with Multiple Data Assimilation (ESMDA) to improve data assimilation processes. The methodology was tested on two case studies, one with categorical data and another with continuous permeability values.
Results
The application of the VAE-GAN model resulted in high-quality reservoir descriptions comparable to those generated by GANs, while also achieving effective history matching similar to that of VAEs. The findings indicate that this hybrid approach successfully balances geological realism and data assimilation accuracy.
Implications
The proposed VAE-GAN model has the potential to significantly enhance the accuracy of reservoir simulations in petroleum engineering, enabling better decision-making in resource extraction and management. This approach could also be adapted for other fields requiring data assimilation with non-Gaussian distributions.
SLEA-RL: Step-Level Experience Augmented Reinforcement Learning for Multi-Turn Agentic Training
Reinforcement Learning
Large Language Models
NLP
- SLEA-RL retrieves experiences at each decision step based on current observations, unlike traditional methods that use static retrieval.
- The framework includes a self-evolving experience library that maintains quality through score-based admission and rate-limited extraction.
- Empirical results show SLEA-RL outperforms various reinforcement learning and experience-augmented baselines on multiple benchmarks.
- The approach allows agents to adaptively leverage accumulated experiences, enhancing their learning and decision-making capabilities.
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SLEA-RL: Step-Level Experience Augmented Reinforcement Learning for Multi-Turn Agentic Training
Summary
The paper introduces SLEA-RL, a novel framework for enhancing reinforcement learning in multi-turn environments by leveraging step-level experience retrieval. Traditional large language model (LLM) agents face limitations in learning from past experiences across episodes, as they operate in isolation and retrieve experiences only once based on initial task descriptions. SLEA-RL addresses this by dynamically retrieving relevant experiences at each decision step, conditioned on the current observation. The framework consists of three main components: step-level observation clustering for efficient retrieval, a self-evolving experience library that distills successful and unsuccessful strategies, and policy optimization with step-level credit assignment for better advantage estimation. The authors demonstrate that SLEA-RL significantly outperforms existing reinforcement learning baselines in long-horizon multi-turn benchmarks, showcasing its effectiveness in adapting to changing environments and improving agent performance.
Methodology
SLEA-RL employs step-level observation clustering to group structurally similar states for efficient experience retrieval. It maintains a self-evolving experience library that updates based on the quality of trajectories, using semantic analysis rather than gradient updates. The policy optimization process incorporates step-level credit assignment to improve the learning signal from intermediate actions.
Results
SLEA-RL achieved superior performance on long-horizon benchmarks such as ALFWorld and WebShop, demonstrating faster convergence and higher success rates compared to existing reinforcement learning methods like GiGPO and GRPO.
Implications
The findings suggest that integrating step-level experience retrieval can significantly enhance the training of LLM agents in dynamic environments, potentially leading to more effective applications in complex multi-turn tasks such as web navigation and interactive search.
Frayed RoPE and Long Inputs: A Geometric Perspective
NLP
Large Language Models
Theory
- RoPE causes performance degradation for long inputs due to the disruption of key/query cluster separation.
- The concept of sink tokens is critical for preventing over-mixing of information in attention mechanisms.
- RoPE-ID is proposed as a modification that maintains cluster separation and improves generalization to longer contexts.
- Empirical validation shows that RoPE-ID outperforms prior tuning-free methods on long-context tasks.
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Frayed RoPE and Long Inputs: A Geometric Perspective
Summary
This paper addresses the limitations of Rotary Positional Embedding (RoPE) in transformer models, particularly when handling long input sequences that exceed the training context length. The authors provide a unified geometric perspective on the attention behavior of RoPE, revealing that long inputs disrupt the tight clustering of key and query latent point clouds, which is crucial for maintaining the functionality of sink tokens—placeholders that prevent token mixing. The paper introduces RoPE-ID (In Distribution), a modification of RoPE that applies high-frequency rotation to a subset of channels, thereby preserving the separation of key/query clusters and enhancing generalization to longer inputs. The effectiveness of RoPE-ID is validated through experiments on the LongBench and RULER benchmarks using 1B and 3B parameter Transformers, demonstrating significant improvements in context length generalization compared to previous methods.
Methodology
The authors conducted both empirical and theoretical analyses to explore the geometric properties of attention behavior with RoPE. They identified the clustering behavior of key and query latent point clouds and proposed RoPE-ID as a modification that applies high-frequency rotation to a subset of channels in attention layers. This approach was tested on large transformer models using established benchmarks.
Results
RoPE-ID demonstrated strong context length generalization and improved performance on the LongBench and RULER benchmarks, outperforming previous tuning-free methods. The proposed method effectively maintained the necessary separation of key/query clusters, allowing for better handling of long inputs.
Implications
The findings suggest that RoPE-ID can be a valuable tool for enhancing the performance of large language models on tasks requiring long-context understanding. This work may influence future designs of positional encoding techniques and attention mechanisms in transformer architectures.
Towards Differentiating Between Failures and Domain Shifts in Industrial Data Streams
Time Series
Interpretability
- Introduces a method to differentiate between failures and domain shifts in industrial data streams.
- Utilizes a modified Page-Hinkley changepoint detector for identifying changes in data distribution.
- Incorporates supervised domain-adaptation algorithms for fast online anomaly detection.
- Demonstrates the method's effectiveness through experiments on a steel factory dataset.
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Towards Differentiating Between Failures and Domain Shifts in Industrial Data Streams
Summary
This paper addresses the critical challenge of distinguishing between failures and domain shifts in industrial data streams, particularly in the context of anomaly detection in manufacturing processes. The authors propose a novel method that integrates a modified Page-Hinkley changepoint detector to identify changes in data distribution, alongside supervised domain-adaptation algorithms for rapid online anomaly detection. The method is designed to differentiate between genuine failures and normal domain shifts, which are often misclassified as failures due to their similar impact on data patterns. The research is motivated by the need to reduce false positive alarms in industrial settings, which can lead to unnecessary maintenance costs and production stoppages. The proposed approach is validated through experiments using a dataset from a steel factory, demonstrating its effectiveness in accurately identifying and classifying changes in operational conditions. By incorporating explainable artificial intelligence (XAI) components, the method also aims to assist human operators in making informed decisions regarding system health.
Methodology
The methodology consists of a modified Page-Hinkley changepoint detector to identify domain shifts and potential failures, combined with supervised domain-adaptation algorithms for real-time anomaly detection. This approach is complemented by an explainable AI component to enhance operator understanding and decision-making.
Results
The experiments conducted on the steel factory dataset showed that the proposed method effectively distinguishes between genuine failures and normal domain shifts, significantly reducing false positive rates compared to traditional anomaly detection methods.
Implications
The findings suggest that the proposed method can improve the robustness of industrial monitoring systems, leading to more efficient operations and reduced maintenance costs. It highlights the importance of integrating explainable AI to support human operators in complex decision-making environments.
Adapting Methods for Domain-Specific Japanese Small LMs: Scale, Architecture, and Quantization
NLP
Large Language Models
Efficient ML
- Optimal training scale for domain-specific Japanese LMs is identified as 4,000 samples.
- Llama-3 models with Japanese pre-training outperform multilingual models in technical domains.
- Quantization effects vary by architecture, with Llama-3 models improving under Q4 quantization.
- The study provides a complete reproducible pipeline for deploying QLoRA on consumer hardware.
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Adapting Methods for Domain-Specific Japanese Small LMs: Scale, Architecture, and Quantization
Summary
This paper presents a systematic methodology for developing domain-specific Japanese small language models (LMs) using QLoRA fine-tuning. The study addresses three critical questions: optimal training scale, base-model selection, and architecture-aware quantization. In Stage 1, scale-learning experiments reveal that a training dataset of 4,000 samples yields the best performance, with a minimum test-set negative log-likelihood (NLL) of 1.127 before overfitting occurs at 5,000 samples. Stage 2 involves comparing four Japanese LLMs, where Llama-3 models with Japanese continual pre-training (Swallow-8B and ELYZA-JP-8B) outperform multilingual models (Qwen2.5-7B). In Stage 3, the paper investigates quantization effects, finding that Llama-3 architectures benefit from Q4 K M quantization, while GQA architectures experience significant degradation. The recommended production model, Swallow-8B Q4 K M, achieves a score of 2.830/3, with an inference speed of 8.9 seconds per question and a size of 4.9 GB. The methodology is applicable to low-resource technical domains and provides actionable guidance for creating compact Japanese specialist LMs on consumer hardware.
Methodology
The methodology consists of a three-stage optimization process: Stage 1 focuses on determining the optimal training scale through scale-learning experiments; Stage 2 compares the performance of various Japanese LLMs under identical QLoRA training conditions; Stage 3 evaluates the effects of quantization on model performance, highlighting architecture-dependent outcomes.
Results
The results indicate that a training dataset of 4,000 samples is optimal for minimizing NLL. Llama-3 models with Japanese continual pre-training achieve superior performance compared to multilingual models. Furthermore, Llama-3 architectures show improved quality under Q4 quantization, while GQA architectures suffer degradation. The recommended model, Swallow-8B Q4 K M, demonstrates high performance and efficiency.
Implications
The findings have significant implications for the deployment of domain-specific language models in technical fields, providing a framework for efficient training and quantization strategies. This research can guide practitioners in developing specialized LMs that are both effective and resource-efficient, particularly in low-resource environments.
Book your room in the Turing Hotel! A symmetric and distributed Turing Test with multiple AIs and humans
NLP
Large Language Models
Theory
- Introduction of TuringHotel as a distributed Turing Test framework.
- Implementation on the UNaIVERSE platform, allowing for mixed communities of humans and AIs.
- Findings indicate that current LLMs can sometimes be indistinguishable from humans, but human traits are still identifiable.
- Advocacy for open AI practices to ensure transparency and public oversight in AI evaluations.
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Book your room in the Turing Hotel! A symmetric and distributed Turing Test with multiple AIs and humans
Summary
This paper presents 'TuringHotel', a novel extension of the Turing Test that facilitates interactions between Large Language Models (LLMs) and human participants in a group setting. Unlike the traditional one-on-one format, TuringHotel allows both humans and AIs to act as judges and respondents in time-bounded discussions. The interactions occur on the UNaIVERSE platform, which provides a decentralized, peer-to-peer network ensuring privacy and security. The authors conducted experiments with 17 human participants and 19 LLMs, revealing that while some LLMs can be mistaken for humans, identifiable human traits remain. This study highlights the need for more realistic and scalable evaluation settings for AI systems, advocating for open AI practices and decentralized platforms to facilitate ongoing research and competition in AI capabilities.
Methodology
The study utilized the UNaIVERSE platform to create a decentralized environment where humans and AIs could interact in group settings. Participants engaged in conversations within a peer-to-peer network, with a manager agent organizing discussions and ensuring anonymity. The experimental design allowed for continuous participation rather than limited laboratory sessions.
Results
The results showed that some LLMs were occasionally mistaken for humans during discussions, indicating their advanced conversational capabilities. However, the study also uncovered unexpected mistakes that revealed identifiable human characteristics, suggesting that while LLMs are improving, they have not yet fully reached indistinguishability from humans.
Implications
The findings suggest that decentralized platforms like UNaIVERSE could play a crucial role in future AI evaluations, enabling more realistic assessments of AI capabilities. This approach could foster greater public engagement and oversight in AI development, ensuring that advancements in AI technology are aligned with societal values and interests.
Towards Noise-Resilient Quantum Multi-Armed and Stochastic Linear Bandits
Theory
Optimization
Efficient ML
- Introduction of a noise-robust QMC algorithm (BQMC) for improved estimation in noisy environments.
- Development of noise-resilient quantum bandit algorithms (NR-QUCB and NR-QLinUCB) that integrate BQMC.
- Demonstration of logarithmic regret behavior under realistic noise conditions.
- Extensive experimental validation showing improved performance across multiple noise models.
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Towards Noise-Resilient Quantum Multi-Armed and Stochastic Linear Bandits
Summary
This paper addresses the challenges of noise in quantum multi-armed bandits (QMAB) and stochastic linear bandits (QSLB) by proposing a noise-robust quantum Monte Carlo (QMC) algorithm. Traditional quantum bandit algorithms often assume ideal conditions, neglecting the noise present in current noisy intermediate-scale quantum (NISQ) devices, which can significantly affect performance. The authors introduce a Bayesian estimation-based QMC algorithm, BQMC, which enhances estimation accuracy in noisy environments. Building on BQMC, they develop two new algorithms: noise-resilient quantum UCB (NR-QUCB) and noise-resilient quantum LinUCB (NR-QLinUCB). These algorithms maintain logarithmic regret behavior while effectively handling noise, thus preserving the advantages of quantum methods over classical approaches. Extensive simulations demonstrate that the proposed algorithms achieve improved regret performance across various quantum noise models, indicating their robustness and effectiveness in practical applications.
Methodology
The authors developed a Bayesian estimation-based quantum Monte Carlo algorithm (BQMC) to enhance estimation accuracy in the presence of noise. They then integrated this algorithm into quantum bandit frameworks to create NR-QUCB and NR-QLinUCB, focusing on maintaining performance while accounting for noise in NISQ devices. The effectiveness of these algorithms was validated through extensive simulations under various quantum noise models.
Results
The proposed noise-resilient quantum bandit algorithms (NR-QUCB and NR-QLinUCB) demonstrated improved estimation accuracy and reduced regret compared to traditional quantum bandit methods when subjected to several quantum noise models. The algorithms maintained logarithmic regret behavior, showcasing their robustness in realistic settings.
Implications
The findings suggest that integrating noise resilience into quantum bandit algorithms is crucial for their practical application in real-world scenarios, particularly in fields such as online decision-making, recommendation systems, and adaptive control, where quantum advantages can be leveraged despite the presence of noise.
STEP: Scientific Time-Series Encoder Pretraining via Cross-Domain Distillation
Time Series
- STEP framework leverages cross-domain distillation to enhance scientific time-series representation learning.
- Introduces adaptive patching and statistics compensation to handle diverse and extreme-length sequences.
- Demonstrates the transferability of foundation models from related time series domains.
- Achieves strong performance across various scientific time series tasks.
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STEP: Scientific Time-Series Encoder Pretraining via Cross-Domain Distillation
Summary
The paper presents STEP, a framework for pretraining scientific time-series encoders through cross-domain distillation. Scientific time series are characterized by their sparsity, heterogeneity, and limited scale, which complicates unified representation learning. Existing foundation models pretrained on domains like audio and general time series contain valuable knowledge, but their application to scientific signals is underexplored. The authors systematically evaluate these foundation models, demonstrating their transferability and complementary strengths for scientific tasks. STEP introduces an adaptive patching mechanism to manage extreme-length sequences and a statistics compensation scheme to address diverse numerical scales. By leveraging cross-domain distillation, STEP integrates knowledge from multiple foundation models to create a unified encoder that learns general-purpose features tailored for scientific signals. Experiments across seven scientific time series tasks validate the effectiveness of STEP, showcasing its ability to enhance representation learning in scientific domains.
Methodology
The methodology involves a systematic evaluation of foundation models pretrained on audio, general time series, and neural signals to assess their transferability to scientific tasks. The STEP encoder employs adaptive patching to manage varying sequence lengths and a statistics compensation scheme to normalize different numerical scales. Cross-domain distillation is utilized to integrate knowledge from multiple models, enhancing the encoder's capability to learn from diverse data sources.
Results
The experiments conducted on seven scientific time series tasks demonstrate that STEP significantly improves performance compared to existing methods. The framework effectively captures the complementary strengths of different foundation models, leading to a unified encoder that excels in representation learning for scientific signals.
Implications
The findings suggest that leveraging knowledge from diverse time series domains can substantially improve the modeling of scientific data. This approach could facilitate advancements in AI for science, enabling better understanding and prediction of complex scientific phenomena across various fields.
Discovering What You Can Control: Interventional Boundary Discovery for Reinforcement Learning
Reinforcement Learning
Robotics
Theory
- Introduces Interventional Boundary Discovery (IBD) for causal identification in RL.
- IBD uses the agent's actions as interventions to distinguish causal dimensions from confounded distractors.
- Demonstrates that traditional observational methods can misidentify relevant features when distractors are present.
- IBD closely tracks oracle performance and is effective across various RL algorithms.
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Discovering What You Can Control: Interventional Boundary Discovery for Reinforcement Learning
Summary
This paper addresses the challenge of selecting relevant state dimensions in reinforcement learning (RL) when confounded by distractors, which complicates causal identification. The author introduces the concept of the Causal Sphere of Influence (SoI) and proposes a novel method called Interventional Boundary Discovery (IBD). IBD leverages the agent's ability to randomize its actions as a natural intervention mechanism, applying Pearl's do-operator to distinguish between causally influential dimensions and confounded distractors. The method employs two-sample testing to generate a binary mask indicating which observation dimensions are causally influenced by the agent's actions. IBD is model-free, lightweight, and can be integrated as a preprocessing step into any RL algorithm. The empirical evaluation across 12 continuous control tasks reveals that traditional observational feature selection methods fail to distinguish between true causal dimensions and confounded distractors, particularly when distractors outnumber relevant features. IBD, however, closely tracks oracle performance across varying levels of distractor complexity, demonstrating its effectiveness and robustness. Additionally, the method provides a diagnostic framework for understanding the difficulties in RL environments, helping practitioners identify whether issues stem from representational confusion or exploration bottlenecks.
Methodology
The methodology involves formalizing the problem of causal identification through the Causal Sphere of Influence and implementing IBD, which randomizes the agent's actions and applies two-sample testing with multiple-testing correction to create a binary mask of observation dimensions. This mask indicates which dimensions are causally influenced by the agent's actions, allowing for integration with any downstream RL algorithm.
Results
The results indicate that full-state RL performance degrades sharply when distractors outnumber relevant features by a ratio of approximately 3:1. In contrast, IBD consistently tracks oracle performance across all tested distractor levels, demonstrating its robustness and effectiveness. Additionally, IBD is shown to transfer well across different RL algorithms and can detect partially controllable dimensions with as little as 5% causal variance.
Implications
The findings suggest that IBD can significantly improve the performance of RL agents in environments with distractors, providing a clearer understanding of causal relationships and enabling better feature selection. This has potential applications in robotics, where understanding the influence of various sensory inputs is crucial for effective learning and decision-making.
Mathematical Foundations of Deep Learning
Theory
Optimization
Generative Models
- Deep learning is fundamentally a mathematical enterprise, requiring a solid understanding of function approximation and optimization.
- The book emphasizes the importance of theoretical guarantees and mathematical rigor in the design and training of neural networks.
- Integration of deep learning with optimal control and reinforcement learning showcases its versatility and applicability in various fields.
- The text serves as a bridge for readers from different backgrounds, offering insights into both the mathematical and practical aspects of deep learning.
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Mathematical Foundations of Deep Learning
Summary
This book provides a comprehensive mathematical framework for understanding deep learning, addressing the theoretical underpinnings that have been less explored compared to its empirical successes. It begins by treating neural networks as function approximators and delves into their expressive power through approximation theory. The text emphasizes the optimization processes involved in training deep neural networks, discussing both deterministic and stochastic optimization algorithms. Furthermore, it explores the integration of deep learning with optimal control, reinforcement learning, and generative modeling, highlighting the mathematical principles that govern these areas. The author aims to bridge the gap between theoretical concepts and practical applications, making the material accessible to both mathematically inclined readers and those from engineering or machine learning backgrounds. The book is structured around key themes, including function approximation, optimization theory, and the application of deep learning in various domains, ultimately providing a solid foundation for understanding the mechanics behind deep learning methodologies.
Methodology
The book employs a theoretical approach, utilizing concepts from approximation theory, optimization theory, and control theory to analyze and explain deep learning models. It includes discussions on various optimization algorithms, both deterministic and stochastic, and explores the mathematical foundations of neural networks and their training processes.
Results
The book does not present empirical results but rather focuses on establishing a theoretical framework that explains why deep neural networks are effective, how to train them efficiently, and how they can be applied to solve complex problems in machine learning and beyond.
Implications
The insights provided in this book can enhance the understanding of deep learning among researchers and practitioners, leading to improved model design, training strategies, and applications in fields such as scientific computing, automatic control, and generative modeling.
Discounted Beta--Bernoulli Reward Estimation for Sample-Efficient Reinforcement Learning with Verifiable Rewards
Reinforcement Learning
Large Language Models
Efficient ML
- Introduces Discounted Beta–Bernoulli (DBB) reward estimation to improve sample efficiency in RLVR.
- Addresses issues of variance collapse and high estimation variance in existing group-based RLVR methods.
- DBB leverages historical reward statistics, providing more stable training signals.
- Empirical results show significant performance improvements on both in-distribution and out-of-distribution benchmarks.
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Discounted Beta--Bernoulli Reward Estimation for Sample-Efficient Reinforcement Learning with Verifiable Rewards
Summary
This paper addresses the issue of sample inefficiency in Reinforcement Learning with Verifiable Rewards (RLVR), particularly in the context of large language models. Existing group-based RLVR methods often rely on point estimation of rewards from a limited number of rollouts, leading to high variance and ineffective use of generated responses. The authors propose a novel approach called Discounted Beta–Bernoulli (DBB) reward estimation, which models rewards as samples from a policy-induced distribution. This method incorporates historical reward statistics to provide a more stable and informative training signal. Although the DBB estimator is biased, it significantly reduces variance and avoids variance collapse, resulting in lower mean squared error compared to traditional point estimation. The effectiveness of the proposed method is validated through extensive experiments on various reasoning benchmarks, demonstrating that GRPO with DBB consistently outperforms naive GRPO across different model sizes without incurring additional computational costs.
Methodology
The authors reformulate RLVR from a statistical estimation perspective, modeling rewards as stochastic outcomes from a distribution induced by the policy. They propose the DBB estimator, which tracks the evolving reward distribution by discounting historical observations, thus reducing variance while introducing a controlled bias.
Results
The proposed GRPO-DBB method outperforms naive GRPO, achieving average Acc@8 improvements of 3.22 and 2.42 points on in-distribution benchmarks for the 1.7B and 8B models, respectively. On out-of-distribution benchmarks, it achieves gains of 12.49 and 6.92 points for the same models, demonstrating the effectiveness of the DBB approach.
Implications
The findings suggest that DBB reward estimation can enhance the efficiency of RLVR methods, making them more applicable in practical scenarios where computational resources are limited. This could lead to improved performance in various applications involving large language models and complex reasoning tasks.
From ex(p) to poly: Gaussian Splatting with Polynomial Kernels
Computer Vision
Efficient ML
- Introduction of a polynomial kernel approximation for Gaussian Splatting that is computationally efficient and compatible with existing datasets.
- Demonstration of significant performance improvements (4%-15%) with negligible impact on image quality.
- Mathematical derivation proving invariance of anti-aliasing normalization factors for arbitrary kernel functions.
- Methodology for fitting polynomial coefficients using an L1 loss with a sampling strategy tailored for practical rendering distributions.
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From ex(p) to poly: Gaussian Splatting with Polynomial Kernels
Summary
This paper addresses the limitations of the original Gaussian kernel used in 3D Gaussian Splatting (3DGS) by proposing a polynomial kernel approximation that enhances computational efficiency while maintaining compatibility with existing datasets. The authors replace the exponential kernel with a polynomial approximation combined with a ReLU function, allowing for more aggressive culling of splats. This modification leads to significant performance improvements of 4%−15% with minimal degradation in image quality. The paper includes a mathematical analysis of the new kernel, demonstrating its advantages for 3DGS implementations, particularly on NPU hardware. The authors also provide a methodology for fitting polynomial coefficients optimized for real-world rendering scenarios, ensuring that the new kernel is practical for various applications in neural rendering.
Methodology
The authors propose a polynomial kernel approximation to replace the original Gaussian kernel in 3DGS. They derive a universal bounding radius for splats and utilize an L1 loss for fitting polynomial coefficients. The methodology includes evaluating the performance and quality impacts of the new kernel in various rendering scenarios.
Results
The proposed polynomial kernel shows performance improvements ranging from 4% to 15% across different 3DGS implementations, with minimal degradation in image quality. The mathematical analysis confirms the effectiveness of the new kernel and its compatibility with existing datasets.
Implications
The findings suggest that the polynomial kernel can enhance the efficiency of 3D Gaussian Splatting, making it more practical for real-time rendering applications. This could lead to broader adoption of 3DGS in various fields, including computer graphics and virtual reality.
Foundations of Schrödinger Bridges for Generative Modeling
Generative Models
Theory
Optimization
- Introduces Schrödinger bridges as a unifying framework for generative modeling.
- Develops mathematical foundations linking optimal transport and stochastic control.
- Provides a comprehensive toolkit for constructing Schrödinger bridges.
- Explores various applications of Schrödinger bridges in generative modeling.
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Foundations of Schrödinger Bridges for Generative Modeling
Summary
This paper presents a comprehensive framework for generative modeling based on the concept of Schrödinger bridges, which serve as a unifying principle for various modern generative approaches, including diffusion models and score-based models. The author develops the mathematical foundations of the Schrödinger bridge problem, emphasizing its connections to optimal transport, stochastic control, and path-space optimization. The guide details both static and dynamic formulations of the Schrödinger bridge problem, providing a toolkit for constructing these bridges from first principles. The paper also explores various variations of the Schrödinger bridge problem and their applications in generative modeling, including data translation, modeling single-cell state dynamics, and sampling Boltzmann distributions. By framing generative modeling through the lens of Schrödinger bridges, the author aims to clarify the relationships between different generative methods and enhance the understanding of their theoretical underpinnings.
Methodology
The paper employs a theoretical approach, developing the mathematical foundations of the Schrödinger bridge problem through optimal transport and stochastic control principles. It includes both static and dynamic formulations, along with algorithmic techniques for constructing and applying Schrödinger bridges in generative modeling tasks.
Results
The author establishes a clear framework for understanding and constructing Schrödinger bridges, demonstrating their applicability to various generative modeling tasks. The paper outlines how these constructions can lead to generalized computational methods and task-specific applications, enhancing the efficiency and effectiveness of generative models.
Implications
The findings have significant implications for the field of generative modeling, providing a structured approach that can simplify the development and application of generative methods across diverse domains. This framework may lead to improved algorithms for data generation, translation, and modeling complex distributions in various scientific and practical applications.
Enactor: From Traffic Simulators to Surrogate World Models
Generative Models
Reinforcement Learning
Robotics
- Enactor utilizes a transformer-based architecture to model actor interactions in traffic simulations.
- The model generates physically consistent trajectories over long time periods, addressing limitations of traditional methods.
- It operates in a 'simulation-in-the-loop' framework, allowing for real-time control of actor dynamics.
- Enactor requires fewer training samples than traditional agent-centric generative approaches.
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Enactor: From Traffic Simulators to Surrogate World Models
Summary
The paper presents 'Enactor', a novel actor-centric generative model that leverages transformer-based architecture to improve the realism of traffic microsimulations. Traditional microsimulators like SUMO often rely on simplistic behavior models that fail to accurately capture complex interactions among vehicles and pedestrians, particularly at traffic intersections. The proposed model addresses these limitations by generating physically grounded trajectories that reflect learned behaviors from data. It operates in a 'simulation-in-the-loop' setting, where initial conditions are generated using SUMO, and the model controls actor dynamics over an extended period. The results demonstrate that Enactor effectively captures intricate actor interactions and produces long-horizon, consistent trajectories while requiring significantly fewer training samples compared to conventional agent-centric methods. The model outperforms baseline approaches in various traffic engineering metrics, showcasing its potential for enhancing traffic simulation accuracy and efficiency.
Methodology
The authors developed a generative model based on transformer architecture, focusing on actor-centric interactions and the geometric understanding of traffic intersections. The model was tested in a live simulation environment, where it controlled actor dynamics after initial conditions were set using SUMO, allowing for evaluation over 40,000 timesteps.
Results
The experimental results showed that Enactor effectively captures complex actor interactions and generates long-horizon, physically consistent trajectories. It significantly outperformed baseline models in various metrics, including aggregate speed and travel-time metrics, achieving over a 10x improvement in KL-Divergence.
Implications
The findings suggest that Enactor can enhance the realism and accuracy of traffic simulations, which could lead to better planning and decision-making in urban traffic management and infrastructure design. Its ability to operate with fewer training samples also makes it a promising tool for researchers and practitioners in the field.
FlowMS: Flow Matching for De Novo Structure Elucidation from Mass Spectra
Generative Models
Graph Learning
- FlowMS is the first discrete flow matching framework for spectrum-conditioned molecular generation.
- It achieves state-of-the-art performance on 5 out of 6 metrics on the NPLIB1 benchmark.
- The model enforces chemical formula constraints during generation, enhancing structural plausibility.
- FlowMS demonstrates a 9.15% top-1 accuracy, representing a 9.7% improvement over the previous best model.
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FlowMS: Flow Matching for De Novo Structure Elucidation from Mass Spectra
Summary
FlowMS introduces a novel discrete flow matching framework aimed at de novo molecular generation from mass spectra, addressing the challenges of combinatorial complexity and spectral ambiguity in mass spectrometry (MS). Traditional methods for structure elucidation often rely on extensive annotated databases and struggle with the inherent ambiguities of mass spectra. FlowMS leverages a spectrum-conditioned approach, utilizing a pretrained formula transformer encoder to generate molecular graphs through iterative refinement in probability space while enforcing chemical formula constraints. The framework demonstrates state-of-the-art performance on the NPLIB1 benchmark, achieving a top-1 accuracy of 9.15% and a top-10 MCES of 7.96, surpassing previous models like DiffMS and MS-BART. The results indicate that FlowMS not only produces structurally plausible candidates but also narrows the search space for experimental validation, marking a significant advancement in mass spectrometry-based structure elucidation for applications in metabolomics and natural product discovery.
Methodology
FlowMS employs a discrete flow matching approach that utilizes linear interpolation noising and continuous-time Markov chain (CTMC) denoising. It integrates a spectrum encoder that produces conditioning fingerprints from mass spectra and pairs this with a decoder that generates candidate molecular structures while adhering to chemical formula constraints. The model is pretrained on large-scale fingerprint-molecule pairs to enhance its generative capabilities.
Results
FlowMS achieves a top-1 accuracy of 9.15% on the NPLIB1 benchmark, outperforming DiffMS by 9.7% and achieving a top-10 MCES of 7.96, which is a 4.2% improvement over MS-BART. The generated molecular structures are visually confirmed to closely resemble ground truth structures, indicating high structural plausibility.
Implications
The introduction of FlowMS has significant implications for the fields of metabolomics and natural product discovery, as it provides a more efficient and accurate method for de novo structure elucidation from mass spectra. This can facilitate the identification of new compounds and enhance the capabilities of mass spectrometry in analytical chemistry.
Enhancing Pretrained Model-based Continual Representation Learning via Guided Random Projection
Theory
Efficient ML
Optimization
- Introduction of SCL-MGSM, a method that enhances RPL construction using a data-guided approach.
- MGSM selects informative and non-redundant random bases, improving expressivity without high dimensionality.
- Theoretical convergence analysis supports the stability of the proposed method during updates.
- Extensive experiments show SCL-MGSM outperforms existing methods in exemplar-free CIL benchmarks.
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Enhancing Pretrained Model-based Continual Representation Learning via Guided Random Projection
Summary
This paper addresses the challenges of continual representation learning using pretrained models (PTMs), particularly in the context of exemplar-free class incremental learning (CIL). The authors propose a novel approach called the Stochastic Continual Learner with MemoryGuard Supervisory Mechanism (SCL-MGSM), which enhances the Random Projection Layer (RPL) by employing a data-guided mechanism to construct the projection layer. Unlike traditional methods that rely on randomly initialized RPLs, SCL-MGSM selects target-aligned random bases to adapt the PTM representation to new tasks, thereby improving expressivity and numerical stability. The paper highlights the limitations of existing RPL-based methods, particularly under severe domain shifts, and demonstrates that the proposed method can achieve superior performance on multiple CIL benchmarks without resorting to excessively high-dimensional projections. The authors provide theoretical guarantees for the convergence of their approach and validate its effectiveness through extensive experiments, showcasing its advantages over state-of-the-art techniques in continual learning scenarios.
Methodology
The methodology involves constructing a Random Projection Layer (RPL) using the MemoryGuard Supervisory Mechanism (MGSM), which selects random bases based on a target-aligned residual criterion. This process is guided by the initial task and adapts the RPL dimension dynamically. The RPL remains frozen during the continual learning phase, and updates to the linear classification head are performed using recursive ridge regression.
Results
The results indicate that SCL-MGSM significantly outperforms state-of-the-art methods on multiple exemplar-free CIL benchmarks, demonstrating improved performance and efficiency. The method effectively mitigates issues related to catastrophic forgetting and domain shifts, showcasing its practical applicability in continual learning scenarios.
Implications
The findings suggest that SCL-MGSM can be effectively applied in various continual learning tasks where pretrained models are utilized, particularly in scenarios with significant domain shifts. This approach may enhance the adaptability of AI systems in dynamic environments, making it relevant for applications in robotics, autonomous systems, and real-time data processing.
Position: Spectral GNNs Are Neither Spectral Nor Superior for Node Classification
Graph Learning
Theory
- Spectral GNNs are theoretically flawed and do not represent true spectral mechanisms.
- Graph Fourier bases used in Spectral GNNs lack the properties of classical Fourier bases.
- Polynomial approximations in Spectral GNNs can exactly interpolate spectral responses, challenging their theoretical justification.
- The performance of GCNs is attributed to message-passing dynamics rather than spectral filtering.
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Position: Spectral GNNs Are Neither Spectral Nor Superior for Node Classification
Summary
This position paper critically evaluates the theoretical foundations of Spectral Graph Neural Networks (Spectral GNNs) and their efficacy in node classification tasks. The authors argue that the commonly accepted notion of Spectral GNNs being based on a graph Fourier basis is fundamentally flawed, as graph Laplacian eigenvectors do not exhibit the properties of a true Fourier basis. They identify two main theoretical issues: first, the graph Fourier bases used in Spectral GNNs do not qualify as classical Fourier bases for graph signals; second, polynomial approximations used in these networks can exactly interpolate spectral responses, undermining the justification for their use. The authors demonstrate that the performance of Graph Convolutional Networks (GCNs) is misattributed to spectral low-pass filtering, asserting instead that the observed behaviors stem from message-passing dynamics. They analyze two specific directed spectral models, MagNet and HoloNet, revealing that their effectiveness is not due to spectral mechanisms but rather implementation issues that align them more closely with Message Passing Neural Networks (MPNNs). Overall, the paper posits that Spectral GNNs do not effectively capture the graph spectrum nor provide superior performance in node classification, with competitive results better explained by their equivalence to MPNNs.
Methodology
The authors employ theoretical analysis to critique the foundations of Spectral GNNs, demonstrating the inadequacies of graph Fourier bases and polynomial approximations. They provide proofs and counterarguments to established claims regarding the spectral properties of GNNs and analyze specific models to illustrate their points.
Results
The paper concludes that Spectral GNNs do not capture the graph spectrum meaningfully and do not reliably enhance performance in node classification tasks. The authors show that the effectiveness of these networks can be explained through their equivalence to simpler MPNNs, particularly when inconsistencies in implementation are accounted for.
Implications
This work challenges the prevailing understanding of Spectral GNNs and suggests that future research should focus on the underlying message-passing dynamics rather than spectral interpretations. It calls for a reevaluation of the theoretical frameworks used in graph neural networks, potentially leading to more robust and interpretable models.
Tula: Optimizing Time, Cost, and Generalization in Distributed Large-Batch Training
Optimization
Efficient ML
Computer Vision
- Tula optimizes large-batch training by balancing time, cost, and model quality.
- The service predicts training time and cost with an accuracy of 7.5-14% across multiple models.
- It achieves up to 20× speedup and improves test accuracy by approximately 9% on average.
- A gradient-scaling technique is introduced to mitigate the generalization gap associated with large batches.
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Tula: Optimizing Time, Cost, and Generalization in Distributed Large-Batch Training
Summary
The paper presents Tula, an online service designed to optimize time, cost, and convergence quality in distributed large-batch training of convolutional models. It addresses the challenges associated with scaling training processes, which can lead to diminishing returns in performance due to increased communication overhead and the generalization gap that arises from using large batch sizes. Tula combines parallel-systems modeling with statistical performance prediction to identify the optimal batch size for given models, datasets, and compute resources. The authors conduct a comprehensive analysis of the trade-offs between parallel and statistical efficiency, develop a performance model to estimate resource requirements and execution overhead, and introduce a gradient-scaling technique that enhances model accuracy. The effectiveness of Tula is demonstrated through evaluations on various vision tasks, showing significant improvements in training speed and model accuracy compared to standard large-batch training methods.
Methodology
The authors developed an empirical performance model that combines profiling-based compute analysis with a parallel model to predict compute and synchronization costs. Tula employs a gradient-scaling technique to project large-batch updates to a small-batch space, improving model accuracy while maintaining efficiency.
Results
Tula demonstrated a 20× overall speedup in training and an average test accuracy improvement of approximately 9% across various vision tasks compared to standard large-batch training methods. The predictions of training time and cost were accurate within 7.5-14% error across multiple models.
Implications
Tula's approach can significantly enhance the efficiency and effectiveness of distributed training in deep learning, making it applicable in various domains that require large-scale model training, such as computer vision and natural language processing.
InfoMamba: An Attention-Free Hybrid Mamba-Transformer Model
Efficient ML
Computer Vision
NLP
- InfoMamba integrates a lightweight global aggregation pathway with a selective recurrent pathway.
- The architecture replaces traditional self-attention with a concept-bottleneck linear filtering layer.
- Information-Maximizing Fusion (IMF) dynamically injects global context into local SSM dynamics.
- Extensive experiments show superior performance compared to existing Transformer and SSM models.
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InfoMamba: An Attention-Free Hybrid Mamba-Transformer Model
Summary
The paper introduces InfoMamba, a novel hybrid architecture that addresses the challenges of sequence modeling by combining the strengths of Mamba-style selective state-space models (SSMs) and Transformers while avoiding their limitations. Traditional Transformers excel in capturing global dependencies but suffer from quadratic complexity, making them inefficient for long sequences. In contrast, Mamba-style SSMs offer linear complexity but often lack the ability to model fine-grained local interactions effectively. The authors conduct a consistency boundary analysis to identify the regimes where SSMs can approximate causal attention and highlight the structural gaps that remain. To overcome these limitations, InfoMamba employs a concept-bottleneck linear filtering layer as a minimal-bandwidth global interface, coupled with a selective recurrent stream through Information-Maximizing Fusion (IMF). This approach allows for dynamic integration of global context into SSM dynamics while enforcing complementary information usage through a mutual-information-inspired objective. The results demonstrate that InfoMamba consistently outperforms state-of-the-art Transformer and SSM baselines across various tasks, achieving a favorable accuracy-efficiency trade-off with near-linear scaling.
Methodology
The authors develop a consistency boundary analysis to identify the conditions under which diagonal short-memory SSMs can approximate causal attention. They propose InfoMamba, which combines a concept-bottleneck linear filtering layer with selective recurrence through IMF, guided by a mutual-information-inspired redundancy-reduction objective. This design allows for efficient modeling of both local and global interactions without the quadratic overhead of traditional attention mechanisms.
Results
InfoMamba consistently outperforms state-of-the-art models in classification, dense prediction, and non-vision tasks. The architecture achieves strong accuracy-efficiency trade-offs, demonstrating near-linear scaling in performance across various benchmarks.
Implications
The development of InfoMamba suggests new pathways for efficient sequence modeling in various applications, including natural language processing, computer vision, and time-series forecasting, where balancing local and global context is crucial.