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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Layer-wise Derivative Controlled Networks Achieve Competitive Accuracy and Gradient Stability Across Data Regimes
NLP
Theory
Efficient ML
- CR networks achieve strong low-data performance and maintain accuracy across various training data volumes.
- Layer-wise derivative control enhances gradient stability, reducing the impact of noise and distribution shifts.
- The gradient tail ratio serves as a reliable, label-free diagnostic for generalization capability.
- CR outperforms traditional models and BERT baselines in low-resource settings, demonstrating its efficiency.
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Layer-wise Derivative Controlled Networks Achieve Competitive Accuracy and Gradient Stability Across Data Regimes
Summary
This paper evaluates the generalization properties of ChainzRule (CR), a derivative-controlled network architecture that combines cubic polynomial layers with a per-layer Jacobian penalty (DREG). The study focuses on how the shape of the DREG coefficient schedule impacts performance across varying data regimes, particularly in low-data scenarios. The authors demonstrate that CR achieves superior performance on the Pima Diabetes dataset, maintaining a consistent accuracy advantage over baseline models from 5% to 100% training data, while also exhibiting stable gradient tail ratios. Additionally, CR shows competitive results on the SST-5 dataset, outperforming prior BERT baselines with significantly less training data. The findings suggest that layer-wise derivative control fosters low-frequency, stable representations that generalize well across different domains and data conditions. The gradient tail ratio is proposed as a reliable diagnostic for assessing generalization capabilities without the need for labeled data.
Methodology
The authors conducted experiments using the Pima Diabetes dataset for tabular data and the SST-5 dataset for NLP tasks. They compared CR against several baseline models, including standard ReLU networks and those with dropout and weight decay. The study involved ablation studies on the DREG coefficient schedule and evaluated model performance across different data fractions, using statistical significance tests to validate results.
Results
CR demonstrated superior accuracy on the Pima Diabetes dataset, with stable gradient tail ratios (βΌ1.01β1.02) compared to ReLU networks (1.07β1.09). On the SST-5 dataset, CR achieved competitive or superior results in both frozen-embedding and fine-tuned regimes, outperforming prior BERT baselines despite using less training data. The results were statistically significant (p < 0.05), confirming the effectiveness of CR in various data regimes.
Implications
The findings suggest that derivative-controlled networks can be particularly beneficial in low-data scenarios, such as medical diagnostics and low-resource NLP applications. The ability to maintain accuracy and stability across different data conditions could lead to more robust machine learning models in practical applications.
Blurry Window Attention
NLP
Large Language Models
Efficient ML
- BLA achieves 8Γ better state efficiency than Sliding Window Attention (SWA).
- It effectively combines the retrieval capabilities of SWA with the long-range dependencies of SSMs and linear attention models.
- BLA's implementation utilizes Dirichlet kernels for reconstructing KV history, enhancing performance in recall-intensive tasks.
- The method is competitive with popular linear attention models, showing promise for applications requiring long context processing.
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Blurry Window Attention
Summary
The paper introduces Blurry Window Attention (BLA), a novel attention mechanism designed to address the limitations of traditional Softmax Attention in Transformer models, particularly its quadratic complexity and growing key-value (KV) cache size during inference. BLA is inspired by State-Space Models (SSMs) and combines the advantages of Sliding Window Attention (SWA) and Attention with Bounded-memory Control (ABC). It reconstructs a blurry KV history using interpolation with Dirichlet kernels, allowing for efficient state management while maintaining long-range dependencies. The authors detail the theoretical foundation and efficient implementation of BLA, demonstrating its effectiveness in recall-intensive tasks. BLA shows significant improvements in state efficiency compared to SWA and competes well with existing linear attention models, making it a promising alternative for long context scenarios in language processing.
Methodology
The authors develop Blurry Window Attention (BLA) by generalizing the Sliding Window Attention (SWA) mechanism. BLA maintains separate key and value states and employs a writing mechanism that accumulates incoming keys and values across a finite set of Fourier modes. This approach allows for lossy interpolation in the time domain using Dirichlet kernels, enabling efficient computation of softmax attention over the interpolated keys and values.
Results
In experiments, BLA demonstrated an 8Γ improvement in state efficiency over SWA on the Multi-Query Associate Recall (MQAR) task and showed competitive performance with popular linear attention models. On the RegBench synthetic task, BLA and SWA were the only models to improve performance as state size increased, indicating BLA's effectiveness in handling larger contexts.
Implications
The development of BLA has significant implications for the design of efficient attention mechanisms in large language models, particularly in scenarios requiring long context processing. Its ability to efficiently manage state size while maintaining retrieval accuracy could enhance performance in various NLP applications, such as dialogue systems, document summarization, and other tasks that involve extensive context.
Semantic Cache Distillation: Efficient State Transfer via Reuse and Selective Patching
Large Language Models
Efficient ML
NLP
- SCD replaces raw KV transmission with compact semantic codes to reduce communication overhead.
- The framework integrates REUSE for bandwidth efficiency and PATCH for semantic alignment.
- SCD achieves significant speedup in TTFT while maintaining high generation quality.
- The proposed methods are particularly effective in bandwidth-constrained environments.
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Semantic Cache Distillation: Efficient State Transfer via Reuse and Selective Patching
Summary
The paper addresses the communication bottlenecks in Large Language Model (LLM) inference caused by disaggregated serving, where transmitting high-dimensional Key-Value (KV) caches can dominate the time-to-first-token (TTFT). The authors propose a novel framework called Semantic Cache Distillation (SCD) that replaces raw KV transmission with compact semantic codes to enhance efficiency. SCD employs two main mechanisms: REUSE, which reconstructs most layers from low-rank subspaces to minimize transfer costs, and PATCH, which predicts normalized inputs at sparse transition layers to mitigate error propagation. The framework is designed for scenarios where producer and consumer models share the same architecture but differ in weights, allowing for efficient state transfer while maintaining generation quality. The empirical results demonstrate that SCD achieves up to 2.65Γ TTFT speedup compared to the oracle consumer prefill and outperforms existing methods like quantization and selective recomputation on the quality-latency Pareto frontier, while keeping generation quality within 5% F1 of the oracle.
Methodology
The authors developed the Semantic Cache Distillation framework, which includes two main mechanisms: REUSE, which utilizes low-rank projections to reconstruct states efficiently, and PATCH, which predicts inputs at critical layers to minimize error propagation without full recomputation. The framework is designed for shared-architecture, weight-mismatched producer-consumer pairs.
Results
SCD demonstrated up to 2.65Γ speedup in TTFT over the oracle consumer prefill and maintained generation quality within 5% F1 of the oracle. It outperformed quantization and selective recomputation methods on the quality-latency Pareto frontier in bandwidth-limited scenarios.
Implications
The findings suggest that SCD can significantly enhance the efficiency of LLM inference in real-world applications, particularly in scenarios where models differ in weights but share the same architecture. This could lead to improved performance in various applications such as online services requiring rapid response times.
Encoding the Euler Characteristic Transform
Computer Vision
Graph Learning
Theory
- Introduction of a continuous encoding for the Euler Characteristic Transform (ECT) that avoids discretization.
- The new encoding records net Euler characteristic changes attributed to vertices, enhancing accuracy and efficiency.
- Empirical evaluation across six classification benchmarks shows improved performance with the continuous encoding.
- The representation architecture is less important than the encoding method itself.
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Encoding the Euler Characteristic Transform
Summary
This paper introduces a novel continuous encoding of the Euler Characteristic Transform (ECT), which is a powerful shape descriptor used in shape analysis. The ECT is derived from the Euler Characteristic Curve (ECC), which captures the topological features of a cell complex as a function of filtration height across multiple directions. Traditional methods discretize the ECC, which introduces a resolution hyperparameter that can affect performance. The authors propose a continuous representation that records the net Euler characteristic change attributed to each vertex for each direction, eliminating the need for discretization. This representation is inherently differentiable and allows for a more accurate and efficient encoding of shape information. The authors evaluate six different neural network architectures, including feedforward networks and convolutional models, to process the continuous ECT representation. Their empirical results demonstrate that the continuous encoding improves classification accuracy across five out of six datasets, suggesting that the encoding method is more critical than the specific architecture used. The findings indicate that the continuous encoding provides a more robust and flexible approach to shape representation in neural networks.
Methodology
The authors developed a continuous representation of the ECT that records changes in Euler characteristic for each vertex across multiple directions. They implemented a small transformer to map these changes into fixed-length feature vectors. Six different neural network architectures were systematically studied to evaluate their performance with both continuous and traditional discretized ECT representations.
Results
The continuous encoding improved classification accuracy on five out of six datasets tested, outperforming traditional discretized methods. The study found that the architecture's inductive biases were less impactful than the encoding method, with a feedforward network performing best under continuous encoding but showing less robustness under discretization.
Implications
This work suggests that continuous representations can significantly enhance shape analysis tasks in machine learning, providing a more effective way to encode topological information. The findings could lead to improved performance in various applications, including computer vision, 3D shape recognition, and other domains requiring robust shape descriptors.
Between Amnesia and Chaos: A Memory Stability Expressivity Trilemma for Trainable Dissipative Oscillator Networks
Theory
Time Series
Optimization
- Introduces a trilemma of memory horizon, gradient stability, and dynamical expressivity in dissipative oscillator networks.
- Demonstrates that damping controls the balance between memory retention and gradient stability.
- Presents empirical evidence showing learned substrates outperform frozen ones at short memory horizons.
- Confirms theoretical predictions regarding the critical horizon and damping effects on training.
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Between Amnesia and Chaos: A Memory Stability Expressivity Trilemma for Trainable Dissipative Oscillator Networks
Summary
This paper explores the potential of trainable dissipative oscillator networks in the context of physical reservoir computing, challenging the conventional approach of freezing the substrate and only training a linear readout. The author introduces a trilemma involving memory horizon, gradient stability, and dynamical expressivity, which cannot be maximized simultaneously due to their dependence on the damping coefficient. The study employs a symplectic integrator to learn the mass, damping, and stiffness of a network of nonlinear oscillators end-to-end. The findings reveal that strong damping leads to stable gradients but short memory, while weak damping allows for longer memory but risks chaos and exploding gradients. The paper presents a controlled experiment comparing learned versus frozen substrates, demonstrating that the learned substrate outperforms the frozen one at short horizons, with the advantage diminishing as the horizon increases. The results confirm the theoretical predictions regarding the critical horizon and the relationship between damping and training feasibility, providing a geometric understanding of when training a physical substrate is beneficial.
Methodology
The study employs a differentiable oscillator network with a symplectic integrator to learn the parameters of the system. It utilizes the adjoint sensitivity method for gradient computation and conducts a damping sweep to estimate Lyapunov exponents, followed by a controlled comparison of learned versus frozen substrates across multiple memory horizons.
Results
The results indicate that the largest Lyapunov exponent is monotonic and crosses zero at a specific damping value, confirming the theoretical framework. The learned substrate shows superior performance in delayed recall tasks at shorter horizons, with the advantage decreasing as the horizon approaches the predicted critical point.
Implications
The findings suggest that training physical substrates can be advantageous under certain conditions, providing insights into the design of more effective reservoir computing systems. This work may influence future research in physical computing and the development of systems that leverage nonlinear dynamics for computational tasks.
Representation-Aware Advantage Estimation: Your Reward Model Provides More Than A Scalar Output
Reinforcement Learning
Large Language Models
Graph Learning
- Scalar rewards from reward models often fail to capture fine-grained preference differences.
- Graph-based Advantage Estimation (GraphAE) utilizes RM hidden states to improve advantage estimation.
- GraphAE constructs a similarity graph to incorporate contextual information from responses.
- Empirical results show significant performance improvements across various benchmarks.
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Representation-Aware Advantage Estimation: Your Reward Model Provides More Than A Scalar Output
Summary
This paper addresses the limitations of current reinforcement learning from human feedback (RLHF) methods, which predominantly rely on scalar rewards from trained reward models (RMs). The authors argue that scalar rewards are often noisy and insufficient for capturing nuanced preference differences. To overcome this, they introduce a novel approach called Representation-Aware Advantage Estimation, which utilizes the hidden states of RMs as auxiliary signals for more accurate advantage estimation. The proposed method, Graph-based Advantage Estimation (GraphAE), constructs a similarity graph from sampled responses based on their RM representations, allowing advantages to be computed through graph propagation. This approach integrates contextual information from neighboring samples, leading to improved performance in existing group-based RL algorithms. Extensive experiments demonstrate that GraphAE consistently enhances performance across multiple benchmarks, indicating that leveraging RM representations can lead to more sample-efficient and robust RLHF.
Methodology
The authors propose GraphAE, which constructs a similarity graph from sampled responses based on their RM hidden states. Advantages are computed through graph propagation, balancing fidelity to scalar rewards with smoothness over the graph. This method allows for a more informative advantage estimation that incorporates both individual reward signals and local structural information.
Results
GraphAE was tested on benchmarks including Arena-Hard-v0.1, AlpacaEval 2.0, and MT-Bench, showing performance improvements of up to +6.3, +8.27, and +0.22 respectively. The method also reduces within-group reward variance and accelerates convergence, demonstrating enhanced alignment quality and robustness.
Implications
The findings suggest that incorporating RM representations can lead to more effective RLHF strategies, potentially improving the alignment of large language models with human preferences. This approach could be applied to various tasks requiring nuanced understanding of human feedback.
Teacher-Free Self-Training Amplifies but Does Not Compound: A Pass@$K$ Crossover on a Free-Verifier Domain
Large Language Models
Theory
NLP
- Critic-guided selection significantly outperforms verifier-filtered methods in specific task scenarios.
- Self-training leads to amplification of capabilities without accelerating learning, indicating a non-compounding effect.
- The study identifies a pass@K crossover where the base model eventually outperforms the trained model at larger budgets.
- The findings challenge the validity of the '0% to climb = emergence' test in compositional domains.
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Teacher-Free Self-Training Amplifies but Does Not Compound: A Pass@$K$ Crossover on a Free-Verifier Domain
Summary
This paper investigates whether a language model can enhance its capabilities through self-training on its own verified outputs, distinguishing between amplification and compounding of skills. The study employs a teacher-free framework consisting of a generator, a learned critic, and a free exact verifier within a FlashFill-style domain, where verified problem-solution pairs are easy to generate but difficult to invert. The experiments reveal that critic-guided selection outperforms verifier-filtered best-of-k methods, particularly in scenarios where candidates disagree on held-out inputs. The self-training process increases the model's performance ceiling but does not accelerate its learning, indicating that the model merely amplifies existing capabilities rather than developing new ones. The findings are supported by a pass@K crossover analysis, demonstrating that while the trained model performs better at lower operational budgets, the base model surpasses it at higher budgets, confirming that self-training concentrates probability mass rather than expanding reach.
Methodology
The research utilizes a teacher-free constellation comprising a generator, a learned critic, and a free exact verifier to synthesize verified outputs in a trapdoor domain. The model's performance is evaluated using a pass@K metric across multiple independent training trajectories, focusing on the differences in performance at varying operational budgets.
Results
The results indicate that critic-guided selection leads to a +9.1 percentage point improvement over verifier-filtered methods. Self-training raises the performance ceiling without accelerating learning, and a pass@K crossover shows that the trained model performs better at lower budgets but is outperformed by the base model at higher budgets, confirming the amplification rather than compounding of capabilities.
Implications
The findings suggest that self-training methods in language models may enhance existing capabilities but do not necessarily lead to the development of new skills. This has implications for the design of self-training algorithms and the understanding of model improvement dynamics in machine learning.
Escaping the KL Agreement Trap in On-Policy Distillation
NLP
Large Language Models
Efficient ML
- Identification of low-KL agreement traps in on-policy distillation, where persistent agreement indicates weak supervision.
- Development of KAT, an adaptive online termination rule that enhances training efficiency by removing uninformative suffixes.
- Empirical validation showing KAT improves average accuracy and pass rates while significantly reducing rollout lengths.
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Escaping the KL Agreement Trap in On-Policy Distillation
Summary
This paper addresses a critical challenge in on-policy distillation (OPD) for training smaller models using larger teacher models. The authors identify a phenomenon termed the 'low-KL agreement trap,' where the student model, during rollouts, may drift into a corrupted state that leads to low reverse KL divergence with the teacher model. This situation results in weak supervision signals, as the teacher's responses become aligned with the erroneous state rather than providing corrective feedback. To mitigate this issue, the authors propose a novel method called KAT (KL Agreement Trap Termination), which dynamically detects persistent low-KL agreement and terminates rollouts that are unlikely to yield useful supervision. By focusing on informative tokens before the trap, KAT enhances the efficiency of the training process. The empirical results demonstrate that KAT significantly improves accuracy and pass rates while reducing the average length of rollouts, indicating its effectiveness in filtering out uninformative supervision.
Methodology
The authors introduce KAT, which utilizes the existing reverse KL divergence computed during OPD to monitor the KL agreement over consecutive local regions. A dynamic threshold is employed to detect when the KL remains low persistently, indicating a low-KL agreement trap. Once detected, KAT terminates the rollout, thereby focusing updates on more informative tokens and improving the overall training signal without altering the OPD objective.
Results
KAT improves average accuracy (avg@k) by 2.66% and pass rate (pass@k) by 3.43% across four mathematical benchmarks. Additionally, it reduces the average rollout length by 59.73%, outperforming both random termination and fixed-prefix truncation methods.
Implications
The findings suggest that KAT can be integrated into existing OPD frameworks to enhance the training of smaller models, potentially leading to more efficient deployment of large language models in practical applications. This approach could improve the performance of models in various reasoning tasks and applications where efficient learning from teacher models is crucial.
Adaptive Loss Balancing for Noise-Robust GRPO in Generative Recommendation
Reinforcement Learning
Generative Models
Optimization
- AdaGRPO selectively applies reward signals based on sample difficulty and reward model reliability.
- The framework mitigates the risks associated with exposure bias in reward models.
- AdaGRPO outperforms traditional fixed NLLβGRPO mixtures in terms of retrieval and validity.
- The approach leads to statistically significant improvements in click-through rates and dwell time in production settings.
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Adaptive Loss Balancing for Noise-Robust GRPO in Generative Recommendation
Summary
This paper addresses the challenges of applying reinforcement learning (RL) in generative recommendation systems, particularly focusing on the reliability of reward models trained on exposure-biased logs. The authors introduce AdaGRPO, a novel framework that selectively applies reward-guided optimization based on the difficulty of the policy and the discriminability of the reward model. By employing a binary gating mechanism, AdaGRPO ensures that only samples with reliable reward signals influence the training process, while others revert to supervised learning. The framework is validated on a large-scale e-commerce dataset, demonstrating significant improvements in recommendation performance while maintaining low hallucination rates. The findings suggest that the key to successful RL in generative recommendation lies in discerning when reward signals can be trusted, rather than merely enhancing the reward design.
Methodology
The authors developed AdaGRPO, which integrates a binary gating mechanism to filter samples based on two diagnostics: policy-side difficulty and reward discriminability. This allows for a hybrid training approach that combines supervised learning with selective reward-guided optimization, ensuring stability and reducing the impact of noisy gradients.
Results
AdaGRPO achieved an increase in hit rate at 10 (HR@10) from 11.01% to 12.18% at the best intermediate checkpoint, while keeping hallucination rates below 0.22%. At the final checkpoint, HR@10 was maintained at 11.63% with a hallucination rate of 0.27%. In A/B tests, AdaGRPO demonstrated statistically significant improvements in click-through rates and dwell time.
Implications
The findings suggest that AdaGRPO can enhance the effectiveness of generative recommendation systems in real-world applications, particularly in e-commerce. By improving the reliability of reward signals, the framework can lead to better user engagement and satisfaction.
A Geometric Measure of Linear Separability for Neural Representations
Theory
Interpretability
- Introduces the directional linear separability measure (LSM) for assessing one-sided affine separability.
- LSM provides a geometric interpretation of class-wise representation arrangements, distinguishing it from traditional accuracy metrics.
- Establishes a relationship between LSM and optimal affine classification accuracy, emphasizing their complementary roles.
- Proposes a method for estimating LSM in high-dimensional spaces, enhancing its practical applicability.
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A Geometric Measure of Linear Separability for Neural Representations
Summary
This paper introduces the directional linear separability measure (LSM), a novel diagnostic tool for assessing one-sided affine separability in neural representations. Traditional predictive metrics fail to capture the geometric arrangement of class-wise representations, which is crucial for understanding the effectiveness of neural classifiers. The LSM quantifies how many competing samples intrude into the target class's side of the representation space, normalized by the size of the target class. The measure is asymmetric and class-wise, allowing for a nuanced analysis of the geometry of representations. The authors establish a supporting-hyperplane characterization of LSM, demonstrating its relationship to optimal affine classification accuracy and proving its invariance under full-rank linear embeddings. They also propose a penalty-based search method for estimating LSM in high-dimensional feature spaces. Empirical evaluations using LSM reveal insights into class-wise intrusion across various deep learning architectures, highlighting the measure's utility in representation analysis.
Methodology
The authors define the directional LSM mathematically as a measure of the smallest competing-sample intrusion that must remain on the target side of an affine halfspace containing all samples of a target class. They provide a supporting-hyperplane characterization and relate LSM to optimal affine classification accuracy. A penalty-based affine search method is developed for estimating LSM in high-dimensional feature spaces.
Results
The study shows that LSM effectively quantifies one-sided affine nonseparability, revealing class-specific intrusion patterns that are not captured by aggregate accuracy metrics. The measure's values range from 1 (perfect separation) to negative values, indicating varying degrees of intrusion. The relationship between LSM and classification accuracy is established, demonstrating that high accuracy does not guarantee high separability.
Implications
The findings suggest that LSM can be a valuable tool for researchers and practitioners in understanding the geometric properties of neural representations, potentially guiding improvements in model architectures and training strategies. It emphasizes the importance of representation geometry in achieving robust classification performance.
Causal Agent Replay: Counterfactual Attribution for LLM-Agent Failures
Large Language Models
Interpretability
Theory
- CAR provides a causal framework for understanding failures in LLM agents by modeling agent runs as structural causal models.
- The framework includes a novel intervention algebra and a point-of-commitment rule to accurately attribute failures.
- Validation against synthetic models shows CAR's effectiveness in identifying pivotal steps and interactions in agent failures.
- CAR incorporates confidence intervals in its outcome distributions, enhancing the reliability of causal attributions.
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Causal Agent Replay: Counterfactual Attribution for LLM-Agent Failures
Summary
The paper introduces Causal Agent Replay (CAR), a novel framework designed to identify the specific steps in a multi-step trajectory of a large language model (LLM) agent that lead to failures. Traditional methods focus on observability and evaluation but fail to pinpoint the exact cause of an agent's failure, often attributing blame incorrectly. CAR models the agent's execution as a structural causal model (SCM) and employs a do(Β·) operation to intervene at specific steps, allowing for the re-execution of the trajectory under the same stochastic policy. This approach provides a distribution of outcomes rather than a single result, enabling the assessment of causal effects with confidence intervals. The paper presents a contrastive estimator that resolves confounding issues unique to stochastic processes and a Monte-Carlo Shapley estimator for attributing credit across interacting steps. Validation against synthetic SCMs demonstrates the effectiveness of CAR in accurately identifying pivotal steps and interactions in agent failures, with results showing high efficiency in credit assignment. CAR is open-source and can be utilized with both hosted and local models.
Methodology
The methodology involves modeling agent trajectories as structural causal models and defining an intervention algebra with five operations. A contrastive estimator is used to assess the impact of individual steps, while a Monte-Carlo Shapley estimator is employed to account for interactions between steps. The framework emphasizes the importance of outcome distributions and confidence intervals in causal attribution.
Results
The results indicate that CAR successfully identifies pivotal steps and interactions in agent failures, achieving a high efficiency sum in credit assignment (0.909 versus the analytic 0.91). The contrastive estimator effectively recovers the pivotal step in synthetic models, demonstrating the framework's robustness in causal analysis.
Implications
The implications of CAR extend to improving the reliability of LLM agents in various applications, such as customer support and decision-making systems. By accurately attributing failures, developers can implement targeted fixes, enhancing overall agent performance and user trust. The open-source nature of CAR encourages further research and adaptation in the field of causal inference for machine learning.
UPLOTS: A Unified Pretrained Language Model for Constrained Time-series Generation
Time Series
Generative Models
Large Language Models
- UPLOTS provides a unified approach to time-series generation, eliminating the need for task-specific models.
- The framework employs prompt-guided generation, allowing for flexible control over generated patterns.
- Dynamic multi-dataset loss re-weighting enhances model training efficiency and generalization.
- UPLOTS demonstrates superior performance in data augmentation and constraint-combination tasks.
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UPLOTS: A Unified Pretrained Language Model for Constrained Time-series Generation
Summary
The paper introduces UPLOTS, a unified framework for constrained time-series generation that leverages a single pretrained language model to overcome the limitations of existing methods, which typically require separate models for each dataset. UPLOTS utilizes a prompt-guided approach to enable on-demand generation with precise control over temporal patterns. A key innovation is the dynamic multi-dataset loss re-weighting and prompt-to-pattern mapping, which allows the model to internalize diverse temporal structures during training. The authors evaluate UPLOTS on four real-world benchmarks under various constraint settings, demonstrating its ability to generalize beyond the original peak-pattern setting and improve data augmentation in scenarios with limited real data. The framework combines the stability of diffusion models with the adaptability of prompt-guided inference, addressing issues such as high computational costs and poor generalization associated with traditional time-series generation methods.
Methodology
UPLOTS utilizes a single pretrained transformer backbone, integrating dataset-specific constraints as natural language prompts. The framework incorporates a Time-series Prompt Embedding Module (TPEM) to condition on diverse temporal patterns. A Dynamic Weighted Training Strategy is employed to optimize training across multiple datasets, focusing on underperforming tasks and down-weighting trivial ones.
Results
UPLOTS was evaluated on four real-world benchmarks, showing improved generalization capabilities and performance in constrained time-series generation. The model effectively handles various constraint settings, including peak-period and volatility patterns, and enhances data augmentation under limited data conditions.
Implications
The UPLOTS framework has significant implications for applications in finance, healthcare, and transportation modeling, where efficient and scalable time-series generation is crucial. Its ability to generalize across domains can lead to more robust predictive models and better resource utilization in data-scarce environments.
Minibatch Selection via Partition Matroid Constrained Gradient Matching
Large Language Models
Optimization
Efficient ML
- PartitionSel maximizes a validation-guided gradient-matching utility under partition-matroid constraints for minibatch selection.
- The method reduces redundancy in sample selection across heterogeneous domains, improving training compatibility.
- PartitionSel is shown to be weakly submodular and can be efficiently implemented with provable approximation guarantees.
- Empirical results indicate significant performance improvements over existing minibatch selection methods.
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Minibatch Selection via Partition Matroid Constrained Gradient Matching
Summary
This paper introduces PartitionSel, a novel approach for minibatch selection in training large language models (LLMs) on heterogeneous data. The key challenge addressed is the need to balance convergence speed with domain coverage while avoiding redundancy in sample selection. Unlike existing methods that either select samples independently or rely on costly proxy models, PartitionSel employs a partition-matroid constraint to encode per-domain budgets and maximizes a validation-guided gradient-matching utility. This approach allows for joint sample selection across domains, leading to more compatible training updates. The authors demonstrate that the proposed method is weakly submodular and can be efficiently implemented using an orthogonal matching pursuit algorithm with provable approximation guarantees. Empirical evaluations on fine-tuning Qwen2.5 and Llama-3 on MetaMathQA and Mol-Instructions show that PartitionSel outperforms both per-domain and domain-agnostic baselines, significantly reducing conflicting gradient pairs within batches and enhancing overall training efficiency.
Methodology
The authors propose a combinatorial approach to minibatch selection that encodes per-domain capacities as partition-matroid constraints. They maximize a single utility function across domains, which rewards samples for both their alignment with domain signals and their non-redundancy with samples from other domains. The resulting optimization problem is weakly submodular, allowing the use of an orthogonal matching pursuit algorithm for efficient selection.
Results
PartitionSel consistently outperformed strong baselines, including GREATS, COLM, and DoReMi, during the fine-tuning of Qwen2.5 and Llama-3 on the MetaMathQA and Mol-Instructions datasets. The method also demonstrated a reduction in conflicting gradient pairs within each batch, indicating improved compatibility of training updates.
Implications
The proposed method has significant implications for training large language models on diverse datasets, particularly in scenarios where computational resources are limited. By improving minibatch selection, PartitionSel can enhance model performance and training efficiency, making it a valuable tool for practitioners in the field of machine learning.
Strained Coherence: A Pre-Failure Signal in Coding Agent Execution Trajectories
NLP
Large Language Models
Interpretability
- Introduces the concept of 'strained coherence' as a critical failure mode in coding agents.
- Develops a detection mechanism that flags trajectories where agents acknowledge conflicts but do not resolve them.
- Demonstrates a significant predictive gap in failure rates between flagged and unflagged trajectories.
- Provides a robust evaluation across multiple model families and conditions.
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Strained Coherence: A Pre-Failure Signal in Coding Agent Execution Trajectories
Summary
This paper introduces the concept of 'strained coherence' in the context of coding agents, particularly those based on large language models (LLMs). Strained coherence occurs when an agent explicitly acknowledges a conflict in its reasoning but proceeds with an action that does not resolve this conflict. This phenomenon is significant as it highlights a safety-relevant subclass of failures where agents have the information to act correctly but choose not to. The authors provide an operational definition of strained coherence, develop a detection mechanism using a Claude Sonnet 4.6 judge, and evaluate its effectiveness on 44 trajectories from the Terminal-bench-2 dataset using a Qwen3.5-35B-A3B model. The results indicate that flagged trajectories exhibit a failure rate of 94%, compared to 46% for unflagged ones, demonstrating a significant predictive capability of the detection method. The study also replicates findings on a second model family (Gemma4-31B) and explores the robustness of the detection mechanism against paraphrased inputs. The paper emphasizes the interpretability of the detection output, allowing for better understanding and monitoring of agent behavior.
Methodology
The authors operationalize the concept of strained coherence and create a detection system using a Claude Sonnet 4.6 judge that analyzes full agent trajectories. The system flags spans of text where the pattern occurs, providing detailed outputs that include quoted acknowledgments and conflict types. The evaluation is conducted on two model families, with statistical analysis to assess the predictive power of the detection mechanism.
Results
The evaluation on 44 Qwen3.5-35B-A3B trajectories shows that flagged trajectories fail 94% of the time compared to 46% for unflagged ones, with a statistically significant difference (p = 0.003). The detection mechanism achieves 94% precision, outperforming a lexical discourse-marker baseline. A replication on 43 Gemma4-31B trajectories shows a directional gap in failure rates, particularly in high-verbosity cases, although not statistically significant overall (p = 0.31).
Implications
The findings suggest that detecting strained coherence can enhance the safety and reliability of coding agents by identifying potential failures before they occur. This could lead to improved monitoring systems for AI agents, allowing for timely interventions and better alignment with intended goals. The interpretability of the detection output also facilitates human oversight and understanding of agent decision-making processes.
Temporal Context Conditioning for Seasonality-Aware Precipitation Nowcasting of High-Intensity Rainfall
Time Series
- Introduction of TA-SmaAt-UNet model with temporal conditioning for improved precipitation nowcasting.
- Temporal context enhances predictions for high-intensity rainfall and seasonal variability.
- Layer conductance analysis shows effective utilization of temporal conditioning layers.
- Demonstrates the potential of lightweight temporal context in deep learning models.
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Temporal Context Conditioning for Seasonality-Aware Precipitation Nowcasting of High-Intensity Rainfall
Summary
This paper addresses the limitations of current deep learning models in precipitation nowcasting, particularly their lack of broader contextual information about meteorological conditions. The authors propose a novel model, the Time-Aware Small-Attention U-Net (TA-SmaAt-UNet), which incorporates temporal conditioning layers that utilize cyclical encodings of time-of-day and time-of-year. This enhancement aims to improve the model's performance in predicting high-intensity rainfall events by providing it with essential temporal context. Experiments conducted using KNMI radar precipitation data demonstrate that the inclusion of temporal conditioning significantly benefits the model's ability to predict rare, high-intensity precipitation events and enhances the representation of seasonal variability. A layer conductance analysis reveals that the temporal conditioning layers are effectively utilized by the model, indicating their importance despite the minimal additional parameter cost. The findings suggest that integrating simple, physically motivated temporal context can enhance the realism and reliability of deep learning-based precipitation nowcasting.
Methodology
The authors developed the TA-SmaAt-UNet model by extending the existing SmaAt-UNet architecture with temporal conditioning layers. These layers incorporate cyclical encodings of time-of-day and time-of-year to modulate intermediate feature representations. The model was trained and evaluated using KNMI radar precipitation data, focusing on its performance in predicting high-intensity rainfall events.
Results
The experiments showed that the TA-SmaAt-UNet model outperformed traditional models in predicting rare, high-intensity precipitation events. The inclusion of temporal conditioning improved the representation of seasonal variability and rainfall-intensity distributions. The analysis indicated that the model effectively utilized the additional temporal context provided by the conditioning layers.
Implications
The findings suggest that incorporating temporal context into deep learning models can significantly enhance their predictive capabilities in meteorological applications, particularly for nowcasting high-intensity rainfall. This approach could lead to more reliable weather forecasting systems that are better equipped to handle extreme weather events.
Unsupervised Style Representation Learning for AI-Text Detection via Paraphrase Inversion
NLP
Large Language Models
- Introduces an unsupervised method for style representation learning without requiring authorship labels.
- Utilizes a paraphrase inversion task to separate style from content effectively.
- Demonstrates strong performance in both few-shot and zero-shot detection settings.
- Achieves competitive results in related tasks like authorship verification and style discrimination.
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Unsupervised Style Representation Learning for AI-Text Detection via Paraphrase Inversion
Summary
This paper addresses the growing concerns regarding the misuse of large language models (LLMs) for tasks like plagiarism and misinformation by proposing a novel approach for detecting AI-generated text. The authors introduce an unsupervised method for learning style representations, termed Unsupervised Style Representation Learning (USRL), which does not require authorship labels. The core idea is to train a style encoder to reconstruct human-authored text from its machine-generated paraphrase, effectively capturing non-semantic features that define writing style. By freezing a semantic encoder during training, the model learns to differentiate style from content. The authors evaluate their approach using two detection strategies: a few-shot detector and a zero-shot DeepSVDD-based detector. The results demonstrate that USRL outperforms existing style-based detectors in few-shot settings and competes well with fully supervised classifiers in zero-shot scenarios, showing better generalization to unseen LLMs. Additionally, the learned representations are versatile, achieving competitive performance in tasks like authorship verification and fine-grained style discrimination without specific training for those tasks.
Methodology
The authors propose a training objective that involves a style encoder tasked with reconstructing human-authored text from its machine-generated paraphrase. The semantic encoder is frozen during training to ensure that the style encoder captures only the non-semantic features necessary for reconstruction. The learned representations are evaluated through a few-shot detector and a zero-shot DeepSVDD-based detector.
Results
The proposed USRL method matches or outperforms existing baselines in few-shot detection and is competitive with fully supervised classifiers in zero-shot detection, particularly excelling in generalization to unseen LLMs. The representations also perform well in tasks like authorship verification and style discrimination, despite not being specifically trained for these objectives.
Implications
The findings suggest that the proposed unsupervised approach can enhance the robustness of AI-text detection systems, making them less reliant on labeled data and more adaptable to new LLMs. This has significant implications for academic integrity, misinformation detection, and automated influence operations.
Safe-RULE: Safe Reinforcement UnLEarning
Reinforcement Learning
Robotics
Theory
- Introduction of Safe-RULE, a framework for safe reinforcement unlearning.
- Addresses vulnerabilities of offline Safe RL to data poisoning attacks.
- Allows unlearning of poisoned data without full retraining.
- Balances task performance and safety during the unlearning process.
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Safe-RULE: Safe Reinforcement UnLEarning
Summary
The paper introduces Safe-RULE, a novel framework for safe reinforcement unlearning (Safe RL), addressing the vulnerabilities of offline safe reinforcement learning (Safe RL) to data poisoning attacks. Offline Safe RL is crucial for safety-critical applications like robotics, but its reliance on static datasets makes it susceptible to adversarial manipulation. The authors propose Safe-RULE as a defense mechanism that allows for the removal of the influence of poisoned data without the need for retraining from scratch or accessing the original training environment. The framework balances task performance and safety constraints during the unlearning process. Extensive experiments conducted on benchmark Safe RL tasks demonstrate that Safe-RULE significantly enhances safety performance against various data poisoning attacks, marking a significant advancement in the field of safe reinforcement learning.
Methodology
The authors formulate the problem of safe reinforcement unlearning and develop Safe-RULE, which operates by identifying and removing the influence of poisoned samples from the learned policy. The framework incorporates both task performance and safety constraints, ensuring that the unlearning process does not compromise the policy's effectiveness on clean data. The methodology is validated through extensive experiments on benchmark tasks, specifically designed to test the resilience of Safe RL against data poisoning.
Results
The experiments show that Safe-RULE effectively enhances the safety performance of offline Safe RL policies when subjected to data poisoning attacks. The results indicate that the proposed framework can successfully mitigate the adverse effects of poisoned data while maintaining comparable performance on clean datasets.
Implications
Safe-RULE has significant implications for the deployment of reinforcement learning systems in safety-critical environments, such as robotics and autonomous driving. By providing a robust defense against data poisoning, it enhances the reliability and safety of learned policies, making them more trustworthy for real-world applications.
Bittensor Agent Arenas as a Trajectory Primitive: Distilling a Shopping Agent from ShoppingBench Subnet Traces
Reinforcement Learning
Large Language Models
NLP
- Introduction of an incentive-aligned agent arena for generating high-quality training trajectories.
- Demonstration of significant performance improvements in a shopping agent through post-training on a curated corpus.
- Development of a structural-quality filter to enhance trajectory selection for training.
- Identification of the need for per-trajectory supervision in training effective agentic models.
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Bittensor Agent Arenas as a Trajectory Primitive: Distilling a Shopping Agent from ShoppingBench Subnet Traces
Summary
This paper addresses the limitations of existing trajectory data sources for post-training small-model agents, particularly in the context of shopping agents. The authors propose an innovative solution by engineering an incentive-aligned agent arena, ORO Subnet 15 (SN15), within the Bittensor framework. This arena is designed to generate high-quality trajectories that are diverse, per-trajectory judged, and resistant to memorization. The authors highlight the shortcomings of both synthetic data and unfiltered production logs, which either inherit biases or are contaminated by shortcut behaviors. By implementing a structural-quality filter, they convert raw trajectories into a trainable corpus, which is then used to post-train the Qwen3-4B model. The results demonstrate a significant improvement in performance, with the model achieving a 42.7% ASR on a held-out partition, a substantial increase from the baseline of 18.0%. The paper concludes by emphasizing the potential for continuous improvement through the feedback loop created by allowing the distilled agent to re-enter the arena as a miner, thus raising the bar for future trajectory generation.
Methodology
The authors constructed the ORO Subnet 15 (SN15) arena to generate trajectories through a competitive environment where independent agents are incentivized to discover effective policies. They employed a scoring pipeline that includes an LLM reasoning judge to evaluate the quality of each trajectory. A structural-quality filter was then applied to select agentic trajectories for training the Qwen3-4B model using a post-training recipe that includes several stages of supervised fine-tuning and reinforcement learning.
Results
The Qwen3-4B model, after post-training on the curated corpus, achieved an ASR of 42.7% on a leak-cluster-guarded held-out partition, marking a 24.7-point improvement from the baseline of 18.0%. This performance is competitive with existing benchmarks, indicating the effectiveness of the proposed methodology.
Implications
The findings suggest that engineered environments can significantly enhance the quality of training data for agentic models, leading to better performance in real-world applications such as e-commerce. The approach also opens avenues for continuous improvement in model training through iterative feedback mechanisms.
Drawing with Strangers: Population Scaling Drives Zero-Shot Mutual Intelligibility in Emergent Sketching
Multimodal
Theory
- Introduction of zero-shot mutual intelligibility (ZMI) as a new measure of communication success between disjoint agent populations.
- Empirical evidence shows that population scaling improves ZMI through emergent sketching, with linear training costs.
- Increased in-group diversity and decreased cross-group variation contribute to the emergence of universal communication protocols.
- Perceptual grounding plays a crucial role in enhancing ZMI by anchoring communication to visual features.
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Drawing with Strangers: Population Scaling Drives Zero-Shot Mutual Intelligibility in Emergent Sketching
Summary
This paper introduces the concept of zero-shot mutual intelligibility (ZMI), which refers to the ability of independently trained agent populations to communicate successfully without prior exposure. The study focuses on emergent sketching, where agents use drawn strokes to convey information. The authors demonstrate that increasing the training population size significantly enhances ZMI across disjoint groups. As the population scales, in-group communicative variation rises, preventing co-adaptation into homogeneous communication styles, while cross-group variation decreases, indicating a convergence towards universal communication protocols. The research highlights that this universality is achieved through perceptual grounding, where agents anchor their sketches based on the visual resemblance to target images. The findings suggest that scaling social interactions can promote universally intelligible communication conventions among artificial agents, positioning ZMI as a new axis of generalization in emergent communication.
Methodology
The authors conducted experiments using emergent sketching as a communication modality among independently trained agent populations. They analyzed the effects of population scaling on ZMI, communicative variance, and perceptual grounding, employing empirical evaluations to measure communication success.
Results
The study found that scaling the training population significantly improved ZMI, with agents achieving high mutual intelligibility without prior exposure. The results indicated that larger populations led to increased in-group variation and decreased cross-group variation, facilitating the emergence of shared communication protocols. Additionally, a strong correlation was observed between higher ZMI and greater visual resemblance of sketches to target images.
Implications
The findings have implications for the development of artificial agents capable of effective communication across diverse groups, enhancing their interoperability in social contexts. This research could inform future work in emergent communication, multi-agent systems, and the design of AI that can interact seamlessly with unfamiliar agents.
Transformer Based Model for Spatiotemporal Feature Learning in EEG Emotion Recognition
Time Series
- Introduction of EEG-TransNet for enhanced EEG emotion recognition.
- Utilization of Local Self-Attention Block for improved regional feature learning.
- Implementation of Fuzzy-Attention Synchronous Transformer (FAST) to handle noisy EEG data.
- Demonstrated superior performance on multiple EEG datasets.
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Transformer Based Model for Spatiotemporal Feature Learning in EEG Emotion Recognition
Summary
This paper presents EEG-TransNet, a novel architecture designed for emotion recognition using electroencephalography (EEG) signals. EEG is a valuable tool for monitoring brain activity due to its high temporal resolution. The proposed model aims to enhance the analysis of complex EEG data by capturing temporal, regional, and synchronous features. EEG-TransNet consists of three main modules: a preprocessing and feature extraction module that employs ResNet and wavelet-based denoising, a Local Self-Attention Block for regional feature learning, and a Fuzzy-Attention Synchronous Transformer (FAST) to model spatiotemporal dependencies. The model was evaluated on three EEG datasetsβBETA, SEED, and DepEEGβdemonstrating superior classification accuracy and robustness compared to existing methods. Ablation studies highlighted the importance of the Local Self-Attention Block in improving performance, while the use of depthwise separable convolutions in the decoder reduced computational complexity without sacrificing accuracy. EEG-TransNet's ability to generalize across subjects with minimal performance variation suggests its potential as a reliable tool for EEG-based brain activity classification and emotion recognition tasks.
Methodology
The methodology involves a three-module architecture: a preprocessing module for feature extraction using Discrete Wavelet Transform (DWT) and 1D-CNN, a Transformer-based encoder with Local Self-Attention and FAST for learning dependencies, and a decoder using depthwise separable convolutions for efficient classification.
Results
The EEG-TransNet model consistently outperformed other methods in classification accuracy across the BETA, SEED, and DepEEG datasets. Ablation studies confirmed the effectiveness of the Local Self-Attention Block, and the model maintained high accuracy while reducing computational demands.
Implications
The findings suggest that EEG-TransNet can serve as a robust tool for real-time emotion recognition and brain-computer interface applications, potentially improving the effectiveness of EEG signal processing in various neurological studies.
Bandits for Efficient Experimentation: Adapting to Control Group, Preferences, and Context Drifts
Reinforcement Learning
Optimization
Theory
- Dri-MED algorithm effectively manages non-stationary heteroskedastic noise in multi-armed bandit settings.
- The algorithm ensures that recommendations exceed a baseline strategy's performance at each decision step.
- Instance-dependent regret scales as ΛO(ΞΊΛβdΒ²(log(T))), indicating efficient performance under constraints.
- Numerical results show significant improvement over conservative baselines that ignore context drifts.
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Bandits for Efficient Experimentation: Adapting to Control Group, Preferences, and Context Drifts
Summary
This paper addresses a variant of the linear contextual stochastic multi-armed bandit problem, focusing on providing recommendations to users with personalized preferences while accounting for context drifts over time. The authors introduce Dri-MED, an algorithm designed to manage non-stationary heteroskedastic noise and ensure that the mean reward of each decision surpasses a baseline strategy at every decision step. By reducing the problem to a linear bandit framework with stationary means but variable noise, they derive an instance-dependent regret bound and demonstrate that Dri-MED achieves expected constraint violations that scale linearly with the number of users. The numerical experiments indicate that Dri-MED significantly outperforms conservative baselines that overlook the drift and preference structures, showcasing its effectiveness in real-world experimentation scenarios.
Methodology
The authors formalize the problem as a multi-armed bandit scenario where a learner recommends actions to multiple users with evolving contexts and personalized preferences. They introduce the Dri-MED algorithm, which adapts the linear MED strategy to handle the complexities of non-stationary noise and ensure compliance with performance constraints relative to a baseline policy. The performance is evaluated based on cumulative regret and constraint violations.
Results
The Dri-MED algorithm demonstrates an instance-dependent regret bound and achieves expected constraint violations that scale linearly with the number of users. The numerical experiments reveal that Dri-MED significantly outperforms conservative baselines, validating its effectiveness in adapting to user preferences and context drifts.
Implications
The findings suggest that Dri-MED can be applied to various fields requiring efficient experimentation, such as agriculture, clinical trials, and personalized recommendation systems, where user preferences and environmental contexts are critical for decision-making.
From Observation to Intervention: A Causal Audit of Expert Importance in Mixture-of-Experts Models
Interpretability
- Observational metrics do not reliably predict causal expert importance in MoE models.
- No significant correlation was found between routing statistics and expert importance across multiple architectures.
- Existing pruning methods succeed due to redundancy in early layers rather than accurate identification of dispensable experts.
- A significant effect was only observed in one model at a specific layer, highlighting the limitations of generalizing findings.
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From Observation to Intervention: A Causal Audit of Expert Importance in Mixture-of-Experts Models
Summary
This paper investigates the validity of using observational metrics to infer causal expert importance in Mixture-of-Experts (MoE) models. It critiques the common practice of treating population-level statistics, such as routing weights and activation norms, as reliable predictors for which experts can be pruned without affecting model performance. The authors conduct a token-level interventional audit across three high-redundancy MoE architectures: OLMoE-1B-7B-0924, Qwen1.5-MoE-A2.7B, and DeepSeek-V2-Lite. Their findings reveal that no observational metric successfully predicts causal expert importance after correcting for multiple comparisons, with effect sizes remaining below Cohenβs d = 0.17 across all tested combinations. The only significant result was found in the OLMoE model at its final layer, suggesting that existing pruning methods do not effectively identify dispensable experts but rather exploit early-layer redundancy. This study serves as a counterexample to the assumption that population-level summaries can inform token-level interventions, emphasizing the need for rigorous interventional audits in interpretability claims.
Methodology
The authors performed a token-level interventional audit using router-aware per-token ablation across three MoE architectures. They evaluated four canonical observational pruning metrics and compared them against a control using per-token routing weights to assess expert importance.
Results
The study found no observational metric reached Bonferroni-corrected significance across all tested layers in any of the three models. The only significant result was a small effect size in the OLMoE model's final layer, indicating that the existing metrics do not serve as reliable predictors for expert importance.
Implications
The findings challenge the validity of current interpretability methods that rely on observational statistics for making interventional claims. This has implications for the development of more robust pruning techniques and the understanding of expert contributions in MoE models.
Have I Solved This Before? Retrieving Similar Segmentation Problems for Evolutionary Learning
Computer Vision
Efficient ML
Optimization
- Proposes a shift from traditional algorithm design to a focus on problem analysis in monitoring systems.
- Introduces a method for retrieving and reusing filter pipelines to enhance efficiency in segmentation tasks.
- Analyzes the cross-domain transferability of filter pipelines for different segmentation problems.
- Demonstrates that simpler models can effectively manage complexity while ensuring reliability.
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Have I Solved This Before? Retrieving Similar Segmentation Problems for Evolutionary Learning
Summary
This paper addresses the challenges in the design and configuration of monitoring systems in manufacturing environments, emphasizing the need for efficient and reliable solutions. The authors propose a novel approach that shifts focus from traditional algorithm design to a deeper analysis of segmentation problems. By collecting and storing knowledge in an abstract system model, the paper introduces a method for retrieving similar filter pipelines from previously solved tasks. This approach allows for incremental refinement of existing configurations rather than starting model training from scratch, thus reducing the risk of costly revisions. The study particularly explores the cross-domain transferability of filter pipelines for image segmentation tasks and evaluates the effectiveness of this 'transfer learning' method. The authors argue that simple models can balance the trade-off between complexity, technical requirements, and reliability, ultimately leading to more efficient monitoring systems that adapt over time.
Methodology
The authors employ a 'retrieve and adapt' strategy that involves maintaining a database of model configurations and filter pipelines from previously solved tasks. They statistically analyze the performance of retrieved pipelines on new, similar problems, validating their hypotheses through experimental analysis.
Results
The experimental results indicate that similar filter pipelines can perform comparably on analogous segmentation tasks, supporting the effectiveness of the proposed retrieval method. The study demonstrates that leveraging past solutions can significantly reduce design time and improve system adaptability.
Implications
This research has implications for the development of self-adaptive monitoring systems in industrial settings, suggesting that knowledge reuse can lead to more efficient processes and reduced operational costs. The findings could influence future designs of monitoring systems that require rapid adaptation to changing conditions.
Learning Entropy and Spatial Adaptation Dynamics of Multilayer Perceptrons for Structural Point Extraction
Computer Vision
Interpretability
Robotics
- Introduces Learning Entropy as a measure of spatial adaptation dynamics in MLPs.
- Develops Spatial Learning Entropy Maps (SLEM) to identify critical image regions for learning.
- Provides a new perspective on feature extraction that focuses on learning impact rather than local image properties.
- Demonstrates the potential of LE in enhancing explainability and interpretability of neural networks.
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Learning Entropy and Spatial Adaptation Dynamics of Multilayer Perceptrons for Structural Point Extraction
Summary
This paper introduces a novel approach to feature extraction in image data using Learning Entropy (LE) within multilayer perceptron (MLP) networks. The authors extend the concept of LE, traditionally applied to temporal adaptive systems, to analyze spatial learning dynamics in MLPs. Instead of relying on conventional methods that assess image structure through gradients or covariance, the proposed method evaluates the learning process itself by examining the adaptation of neural weights during training. An MLP is trained to predict the intensity of a center pixel based on its surrounding context, and the resulting Spatial Learning Entropy Maps (SLEM) highlight regions of the image that induce significant adaptation in the network. This approach reveals spatial locations that are critical for learning, offering a complementary perspective to existing feature extraction and explainability techniques. The findings suggest that spatial Learning Entropy can enhance understanding of neural network behavior and may lead to advancements in image analysis across various fields, including computer vision and robotics.
Methodology
The authors train a multilayer perceptron to predict the intensity of a center pixel from its surrounding spatial context. They evaluate Learning Entropy based on the incremental adaptation of neural weights during the learning process, analyzing how different image regions induce weight updates in the network.
Results
The results indicate that Spatial Learning Entropy effectively identifies unusual image points and regions that significantly influence the learning process. This approach provides insights into the adaptation dynamics of the neural network, highlighting areas that are crucial for effective learning.
Implications
The proposed framework may lead to improved methods for image and scene analysis, enhancing the performance of computer vision systems. It opens new avenues for research in learning-driven analysis, potentially impacting fields such as robotics and smart manufacturing.
Enabling KV Caching of Shared Prefix for Diffusion Language Models
NLP
Large Language Models
Efficient ML
- BICACHE is the first KV caching technique specifically designed for shared prefixes in DLMs.
- Shared prefix KVs can be reused in shallow layers, significantly improving efficiency.
- The method achieves a throughput increase of 36.3% to 98.3% while maintaining model accuracy.
- Dynamic identification of safe layer depths for KV reuse is a key innovation.
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Enabling KV Caching of Shared Prefix for Diffusion Language Models
Summary
This paper addresses the challenges of key-value (KV) caching for shared prefixes in diffusion language models (DLMs), which utilize bidirectional attention. Traditional KV caching techniques, designed for autoregressive models (ARMs), fail in DLMs as updating any token alters the entire context and its corresponding KVs, leading to significant accuracy loss. The authors propose a novel technique called bidirectional prefix caching (BICACHE), which allows for the safe reuse of shared prefix KVs by dynamically determining the appropriate layer depth for caching based on the fraction of shared prefix tokens in each request. Through comprehensive analysis, the authors identify that shared prefix KVs remain stable in shallow layers and can be reused effectively. BICACHE introduces mechanisms such as shared prefix profiling and layer-partitioned caching to enhance throughput while maintaining accuracy. Experimental results demonstrate that BICACHE improves serving throughput by 36.3% to 98.3% without significant accuracy degradation (only 0-1.8% difference).
Methodology
The authors conducted a comprehensive analysis of how shared prefix KVs change across requests, layers, and denoising steps in DLMs. They developed BICACHE, which includes shared prefix profiling to determine safe layer depths for KV reuse and layer-partitioned caching to optimize computation across shallow and deep layers.
Results
BICACHE significantly enhances serving throughput by 36.3% to 98.3% compared to existing techniques, with minimal accuracy loss (0-1.8% difference). This demonstrates the effectiveness of the proposed caching strategy in practical applications.
Implications
The findings suggest that BICACHE can facilitate the deployment of DLMs in high-throughput environments, making them more efficient for real-world applications where shared prefixes are common. This could lead to broader adoption of DLMs in various NLP tasks.
Beyond Explaining Predictions: Logic-Based Explanations for Confidence in Machine Learning Models
Interpretability
- Introduces Minimum Confidence Threshold (MCT) for abductive explanations.
- Proposes confidence-aware abductive explanations that ensure both correctness and user-defined confidence levels.
- Demonstrates significant improvements in confidence guarantees over traditional abductive explanations.
- Methodology is applicable to various machine learning models that provide confidence scores.
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Beyond Explaining Predictions: Logic-Based Explanations for Confidence in Machine Learning Models
Summary
This paper addresses the need for enhanced interpretability in machine learning models, particularly in critical applications where both predictions and their confidence levels are crucial. The authors introduce the concept of Minimum Confidence Threshold (MCT), which quantifies the lowest confidence guarantee provided by an abductive explanation. Traditional logic-based abductive explanations focus on classification correctness but often overlook the confidence associated with predictions, potentially leading to misleading interpretations of model reliability. The proposed confidence-aware abductive explanations not only preserve the predicted class but also enforce a user-defined confidence threshold. The authors formulate the MCT computation as an optimization problem and present an algorithm to generate minimal explanations that satisfy this threshold. The framework is evaluated using boosted trees for binary classification, demonstrating that confidence-aware explanations significantly improve the minimum confidence guaranteed compared to traditional methods, while only slightly increasing explanation length. This advancement is particularly beneficial in high-stakes decision-making scenarios where both accuracy and reliability are paramount.
Methodology
The authors develop a framework that incorporates a Minimum Confidence Threshold (MCT) into the generation of abductive explanations. They formulate the MCT computation as an optimization problem and propose an algorithm to generate minimal explanations that meet the specified confidence threshold. The methodology is evaluated using gradient-boosted trees for binary classification.
Results
Experimental results indicate that traditional abductive explanations often provide weaker confidence guarantees than the actual confidence of the explained instance. In contrast, the proposed confidence-aware explanations consistently improve the minimum confidence guaranteed while requiring only a modest increase in explanation length.
Implications
The proposed approach enhances the interpretability and reliability of machine learning models, making it particularly suitable for applications in critical domains such as healthcare and finance, where understanding model confidence is essential for trustworthy decision-making.
UNIQ: Conformal Calibration for Adaptive Conservatism in Offline Reinforcement Learning
Reinforcement Learning
- UNIQ adapts conservatism in offline RL using conformally calibrated uncertainty.
- The method employs a multi-expectile value ensemble to enhance uncertainty estimation.
- UNIQ outperforms IQL on specific tasks while maintaining low computational costs.
- The approach allows for state-adaptive expectile adjustments, improving efficiency.
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UNIQ: Conformal Calibration for Adaptive Conservatism in Offline Reinforcement Learning
Summary
The paper introduces UNIQ (Uncertainty-Informed Quantile), a novel offline reinforcement learning (RL) method that addresses the challenge of distribution shift by adapting conservatism on a per-state basis using conformally calibrated uncertainty. Traditional offline RL methods apply a fixed penalty across all states, which can lead to inefficiencies in well-covered regions and overestimation in sparsely covered areas. UNIQ builds upon the implicit Q-learning framework of IQL, enhancing it with a multi-expectile value ensemble and distribution-free uncertainty bounds derived from split conformal prediction. This allows UNIQ to dynamically adjust the expectile Ο(s) based on the uncertainty of value function estimates, thereby optimizing performance in various state distributions. The method was evaluated on D4RL MuJoCo benchmarks, where it demonstrated superior performance compared to IQL in specific tasks, particularly in replay-heavy settings, while maintaining a low memory footprint. The authors emphasize that UNIQ serves as a practical contribution to the performance-efficiency frontier rather than claiming to be the overall state-of-the-art.
Methodology
UNIQ extends the IQL framework by incorporating three main components: a multi-expectile value ensemble to capture uncertainty, split conformal calibration to normalize this uncertainty, and a state-adaptive expectile controller that adjusts the conservatism based on the data coverage of each state.
Results
On the D4RL MuJoCo benchmarks, UNIQ showed improved performance over IQL in Walker2d tasks and replay-heavy settings, achieving these results with approximately 250 MB peak VRAM, which is a significant reduction compared to other methods like EDAC.
Implications
The adaptive conservatism mechanism of UNIQ could be applied to other offline RL scenarios, enhancing the robustness of learned policies in real-world applications where data collection is limited or costly. This method may also inspire further research into uncertainty-guided approaches in reinforcement learning.
FailureScope: Cross-Regime Behavioral Diagnosis of Language Model Weaknesses
NLP
Large Language Models
Interpretability
- FAILURESCOPE provides a unified methodology for diagnosing language model weaknesses across different evaluation regimes.
- The clustering approach yields stable, interpretable failure taxonomies, significantly improving diagnostic efficiency.
- Unique failure patterns are identified in multi-turn dialogues that are not observable in single-turn analyses.
- The methodology exposes a critical meta-failure mode in adversarial evaluations, highlighting discrepancies between model performance and evaluation metrics.
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FailureScope: Cross-Regime Behavioral Diagnosis of Language Model Weaknesses
Summary
The paper introduces FAILURESCOPE, a novel behavioral-diagnosis methodology aimed at identifying specific weaknesses in language models (LMs) across different evaluation regimes, including single-turn benchmarks, multi-turn dialogue, and adversarial agent attacks. Traditional benchmarks often provide aggregate accuracy, which fails to inform practitioners about the specific capabilities that models lack. FAILURESCOPE addresses this gap by clustering evaluation probes based on their pass/fail patterns across multiple models, utilizing a leave-one-model-out (LOMO) approach. The methodology demonstrates strong performance in creating interpretable failure taxonomies, achieving a Kendall's Ο of 0.81 for taxonomy-conditioned sampling on single-turn tasks and an AUC of 0.88 for cross-model failure prediction. The approach is validated across three distinct regimes, revealing unique failure patterns and a meta-failure mode in adversarial settings. The authors release the pipeline, annotated corpora, and taxonomies to facilitate further research and application.
Methodology
FAILURESCOPE employs a five-step process: (1) constructing a probe-by-model pass/fail matrix, (2) imputing missing entries, (3) clustering using HDBSCAN, (4) labeling clusters with LLM-prompted exemplars, and (5) utilizing the resulting taxonomy for downstream diagnosis. This method is consistently applied across single-turn, multi-turn, and adversarial regimes.
Results
The methodology achieves a Kendall's Ο of 0.81 for taxonomy-conditioned sampling on single-turn tasks, outperforming random selection (Ο = 0.34). In multi-turn dialogues, it identifies six distinct clusters with a silhouette score of 0.92. In adversarial settings, a significant gap (73β100 percentage points) is found between LLM-judge ASR and real execution ASR, indicating a failure in the evaluation instrument rather than the model itself.
Implications
FAILURESCOPE has the potential to enhance the understanding of language model capabilities and weaknesses, guiding practitioners in model selection and improvement. By providing a clearer diagnosis of model failures, it can inform the development of more robust and capable language models, especially in complex multi-turn and adversarial contexts.
C$^3$ache: Accelerating World Action Models with Cross Inference Chunk Cache
Robotics
Efficient ML
- C3ache exploits cross-chunk redundancy in WAMs to enhance inference efficiency.
- The method caches residuals from denoising steps and reuses them across inference chunks.
- C3ache achieves up to a 2.5Γ speedup in inference time with negligible degradation in performance.
- The approach is training-free and can be integrated with existing caching methods.
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C$^3$ache: Accelerating World Action Models with Cross Inference Chunk Cache
Summary
The paper introduces C3ache, a novel method aimed at accelerating World Action Models (WAMs) by leveraging cross-chunk redundancy in inference processes. WAMs are advantageous over traditional Vision-Language-Action (VLA) models as they utilize a video-modeling objective, allowing them to learn from abundant unlabeled video data. However, the inference process for WAMs is computationally intensive due to the need for multiple denoising steps across inference chunks. Previous acceleration methods focused on optimizing within a single chunk, but the authors identify significant redundancy across chunks that has been overlooked. C3ache addresses this by caching and reusing residuals computed at the same denoising step across different chunks, resulting in a substantial reduction in computational cost. The empirical results demonstrate that C3ache can achieve up to a 2.5Γ speedup in inference time with minimal impact on task success rates, showcasing its effectiveness in enhancing the efficiency of WAMs while maintaining their generalization capabilities.
Methodology
C3ache is a training-free method that caches the residuals produced at each denoising step of a WAM and reuses them in subsequent inference chunks. This approach is based on the observation that the residuals from consecutive chunks are strongly correlated, allowing for significant computational savings without altering the model's weights or training process.
Results
Experiments conducted on benchmarks such as LIBERO and RoboTwin with a Fast-WAM backbone demonstrated that C3ache can achieve up to a 2.5Γ reduction in total wall-clock inference time while maintaining a high task success rate, indicating its effectiveness in improving the efficiency of WAMs.
Implications
The findings suggest that leveraging cross-chunk redundancy can significantly enhance the efficiency of inference in WAMs, making them more viable for real-time applications in robotics and other domains where quick decision-making is critical. This could lead to broader adoption of WAMs in practical scenarios, improving their performance in dynamic environments.
Forward-Only Convolutional Neural Networks with Learnable Channel-Class Assignment
Computer Vision
Theory
Efficient ML
- Introduction of a learnable channel-class assignment mechanism for adaptive specialization in CNNs.
- Implementation of entropy and orthogonality regularization to enhance learning performance.
- Development of a loss-aware layer contribution strategy for improved intermediate-layer prediction weighting.
- Demonstration of state-of-the-art performance on CIFAR-10, CIFAR-100, and Tiny-ImageNet datasets.
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Forward-Only Convolutional Neural Networks with Learnable Channel-Class Assignment
Summary
This paper introduces a novel approach to enhancing Forward-Forward (FF) Convolutional Neural Networks (CNNs) by implementing a learnable channel-class assignment mechanism. The FF algorithm serves as a biologically inspired alternative to backpropagation, focusing on local forward objectives rather than gradient-based credit assignment. Previous FF adaptations struggled with static channel-class partitions, limiting their effectiveness in complex tasks. The authors propose a method that allows for adaptive specialization of convolutional channels, supported by entropy and orthogonality regularization to improve learning performance. Additionally, they introduce a loss-aware layer contribution strategy that weights intermediate-layer predictions based on validation performance, enhancing forward-only inference. The proposed method, integrated into residual CNNs, demonstrates superior performance on benchmark datasets such as CIFAR-10, CIFAR-100, and Tiny-ImageNet, achieving state-of-the-art results among FF-based models and significantly narrowing the performance gap with traditional backpropagation methods. The findings suggest that learnable channel specialization and adaptive layer contribution weighting can substantially enhance the representational capacity of forward-only learning in deep CNNs.
Methodology
The authors enhance the FF algorithm by allowing dynamic adjustments in channel contributions to classification tasks, rather than relying on static assignments. They incorporate entropy and orthogonality regularization to promote effective learning and propose a layer contribution strategy that adapts based on validation performance. This methodology is integrated into residual CNN architectures to evaluate its effectiveness.
Results
The proposed method achieves superior performance across multiple datasets, establishing new state-of-the-art results for FF-based models. It demonstrates that the adaptive channel-class assignment and layer contribution weighting significantly improve the representational capacity and efficiency of forward-only learning in deep CNNs.
Implications
The findings suggest that forward-only learning approaches can be made more effective and competitive with traditional backpropagation methods, potentially leading to more biologically plausible and efficient neural network training paradigms. This could have applications in various domains requiring deep learning, particularly where backpropagation's limitations are a concern.
Mechanistic Analysis of Alignment Algorithms in Language Models
NLP
Large Language Models
Interpretability
- The paper evaluates six alignment algorithms, revealing distinct internal representation changes rather than uniform effects.
- KTO and GRPO enhance linear separability, while DPO and ORPO degrade it through different geometric transformations.
- The study highlights the architecture-dependent variability of alignment effects, necessitating context-specific evaluations.
- The findings advocate for a mechanistic understanding of alignment to predict unintended side effects in language models.
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Mechanistic Analysis of Alignment Algorithms in Language Models
Summary
This paper presents a systematic mechanistic analysis of six post-training alignment algorithmsβPPO, DPO, SimPO, ORPO, GRPO, and KTOβacross three open-weight model families. The authors aim to understand how these algorithms reshape the internal computations of language models, moving beyond traditional black-box evaluations. By employing techniques such as layer-wise linear probing, Sparse Autoencoders, and crosscoders, the study localizes preference representations and quantifies the geometric transformations induced by alignment. The findings reveal that preference signals tend to concentrate in specific layers, with different algorithms causing distinct representational shifts. Notably, KTO and GRPO improve linear separability, while DPO and ORPO degrade it through non-constructive transformations. The results indicate that alignment effects are architecture-dependent, emphasizing the need for mechanism-aware optimization objectives and standardized feature-level auditing for enhanced safety and interpretability in AI systems.
Methodology
The authors conducted a comparative analysis of six alignment algorithms using three open-weight model families. They employed layer-wise linear probing to identify preference-relevant representations, Sparse Autoencoders to analyze feature activations, and crosscoders to compare feature distributions between base and aligned models. This multi-faceted approach allowed for a detailed examination of the internal changes induced by each alignment method.
Results
The analysis demonstrated that each alignment method produced unique internal representation characteristics. KTO and GRPO were found to enhance linear separability, while DPO and ORPO resulted in reduced separability due to non-constructive geometric transformations. The study also revealed that the same alignment objective could lead to inconsistent feature distributions across different model architectures, underscoring the importance of architecture-specific evaluations.
Implications
The findings suggest that understanding the internal mechanisms of alignment algorithms is crucial for developing safer and more interpretable AI systems. The research advocates for the implementation of standardized feature-level auditing to mitigate potential risks associated with misalignment in language models. Additionally, the insights gained could inform the design of future alignment algorithms that are more effective and transparent.
Dropout-GRPO: Variational Stochasticity for Continuous Latent Reasoning
Reinforcement Learning
Large Language Models
Optimization
- Introduces dropout-GRPO to address the lack of stochasticity in continuous latent reasoning models.
- Proves theoretical properties of the proposed method, including unbiasedness and variance reduction.
- Empirical results show a significant performance improvement on the GSM8K benchmark.
- Provides implementation refinements and a reference code for practical application.
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Dropout-GRPO: Variational Stochasticity for Continuous Latent Reasoning
Summary
This paper addresses the challenges of applying Group Relative Policy Optimization (GRPO) to continuous latent reasoning models, specifically in the context of the COCONUT framework. Traditional GRPO relies on diverse rollouts to compute advantages, but in continuous latent reasoning, multiple rollouts yield identical trajectories, leading to optimization stagnation. The author proposes a novel approach called dropout-GRPO, which introduces structured dropout to create necessary stochasticity. By applying a single Bernoulli mask across all latent recurrence steps for each rollout, the method generates variance in trajectories, allowing GRPO to function effectively. The paper provides theoretical justification for this approach, demonstrating unbiasedness and variance reduction, and empirically validates it on the GSM8K benchmark, showing an improvement in performance. The work contributes to the understanding of reinforcement learning in latent reasoning models and offers practical implementation refinements.
Methodology
The methodology involves applying a single Bernoulli mask across all latent recurrence steps for each rollout, which generates variance in the trajectories. This mask is treated as a posterior sample from a variational distribution, allowing GRPO to optimize the expected reward of a Bayesian model-average policy. The paper includes theoretical analysis of the dropout-GRPO surrogate gradient and empirical validation on the GSM8K dataset.
Results
The dropout-GRPO method improved the COCONUT baseline performance from 27.29% to 29.01% pass@1 on the GSM8K benchmark, demonstrating its effectiveness in generating a viable learning signal where traditional GRPO fails.
Implications
The findings suggest that dropout-GRPO can enhance the performance of continuous latent reasoning models, making it a valuable approach for post-training reinforcement learning in large language models. This could lead to more efficient reasoning capabilities in applications requiring complex decision-making and logical reasoning.
VFUSE: Virulent Feature Understanding with Sparse autoEncoders
Generative Models
Interpretability
- Introduction of VFUSE, a mechanistic interpretability approach using Sparse Autoencoders.
- Demonstrated improved detection of hazardous protein designs using SAE latent space.
- Identification of monosemantic features linked to hazardous designs with high AUROC scores.
- First feature-level virulence audit of a protein design model.
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VFUSE: Virulent Feature Understanding with Sparse autoEncoders
Summary
The paper introduces VFUSE (Virulent Feature Understanding with Sparse autoEncoders), a novel approach aimed at enhancing the interpretability of generative protein models, particularly in the context of biosecurity. The authors highlight the dual-use nature of protein diffusion models, which can be used to design both beneficial and hazardous proteins. VFUSE employs Sparse Autoencoders (SAEs) to analyze the activations of diffusion-transformer models, specifically RoseTTAFold3 and RFDiffusion3, to identify hazardous features in protein designs. The study demonstrates that SAEs can effectively capture monosemantic features that correlate with hazardous designs, achieving an area under the receiver operating characteristic (AUROC) score of up to 0.84. The authors also provide a catalog of hazard-associated features and release SAE checkpoints for further research. This work represents a significant advancement in the mechanistic interpretability of protein design models, paving the way for safer and more interpretable applications in protein engineering.
Methodology
The authors trained Sparse Autoencoders on the activations of two protein diffusion models (RoseTTAFold3 and RFDiffusion3) to audit and interpret the features associated with hazardous protein designs. They utilized a Matryoshka BatchTopK SAE architecture to capture and analyze the latent representations of the models, focusing on specific blocks of the diffusion models. The training involved a dataset of virulent and benign protein sequences, and the performance was evaluated using logistic regression probes fitted on the SAE activations.
Results
The results indicate that the SAE-encoded representations significantly outperform the raw activations from the original models in detecting hazardous designs. The study achieved an AUROC score of up to 0.84 for certain features, indicating a strong correlation between the identified features and hazardous protein designs. The trained SAEs explained 96.9% of the variance in held-out activation data, confirming their effectiveness in capturing relevant features.
Implications
The findings of this research have significant implications for biosecurity and protein engineering, as they provide a framework for auditing generative models to prevent the design of hazardous proteins. The ability to interpret and understand the features associated with virulence can lead to safer applications in synthetic biology and therapeutic protein design.
Reformulate LLM Reinforcement Learning for Efficient Training under Black-box Discrepancy
Reinforcement Learning
Large Language Models
Optimization
- Introduces the Discrepancy-Constrained Markov Decision Process (DCMDP) to address train-inference discrepancies in RL for LLMs.
- Identifies a discrepancy tolerance region that allows for efficient learning without aggressive penalties.
- Employs a Lagrangian relaxation mechanism to dynamically adjust the balance between performance improvement and discrepancy control.
- Demonstrates significant performance improvements in large models through the proposed framework.
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Reformulate LLM Reinforcement Learning for Efficient Training under Black-box Discrepancy
Summary
This paper addresses the challenges faced in Reinforcement Learning (RL) for Large Language Models (LLMs), particularly the issues stemming from train-inference discrepancies that lead to unpredictable performance and training collapses. The authors propose a novel framework called Discrepancy-Constrained Markov Decision Process (DCMDP), which integrates reward maximization with a constraint that aligns training and inference behaviors. They empirically identify a discrepancy tolerance region, where minor discrepancies can be tolerated without negatively impacting learning efficiency. The DCMDP framework allows for adaptive balancing of performance improvement and discrepancy control through a Lagrangian relaxation mechanism. This approach enables stable dual-objective optimization, allowing policies to explore freely within the tolerance region while being guided back when discrepancies exceed safe boundaries. The empirical results demonstrate that DCMDP significantly enhances the performance of both an 8B dense model and a 30B Mixture-of-Expert model, facilitating a heterogeneous training paradigm that optimizes LLMs for high-fidelity training while ensuring alignment for low-cost inference deployment.
Methodology
The authors reformulate the RL problem as a Discrepancy-Constrained Markov Decision Process (DCMDP), where they introduce a penalty metric based on the absolute value of token-level probability differences to guide the training policy. They utilize a Lagrangian relaxation mechanism to adaptively balance the dual objectives of reward maximization and discrepancy minimization, allowing for flexible exploration within a defined tolerance region.
Results
The implementation of DCMDP resulted in significant performance enhancements for both the 8B dense model (Qwen-3-8b) and the 30B Mixture-of-Expert model (Qwen-3-30bA3b). The framework successfully enabled a heterogeneous training paradigm, optimizing LLMs for high-fidelity training while ensuring alignment for low-cost inference deployment.
Implications
The findings suggest that the proposed DCMDP framework can lead to more efficient training of LLMs, reducing computational resource waste and improving deployment performance. This has potential applications in various industries where LLMs are deployed in resource-constrained environments, enhancing their usability and effectiveness.
Beyond Accuracy: Interpreting Topic Representation in Suicide Ideation Detection Models
NLP
Interpretability
- The study emphasizes the need for interpretability in suicide ideation detection models beyond mere accuracy metrics.
- Topic-aware data augmentation improves the clarity and distinctness of psychological risk factors in model representations.
- The use of overcomplete sparse autoencoders allows for a mechanistic analysis of how psychological concepts are encoded in models.
- The introduction of a geometric separability framework provides a quantitative measure of representational clarity.
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Beyond Accuracy: Interpreting Topic Representation in Suicide Ideation Detection Models
Summary
This paper addresses the interpretability of suicide ideation detection models, which are often evaluated solely on performance metrics without understanding their internal representations of psychological risk factors. The authors emphasize the importance of interpretability in high-stakes mental health applications to ensure safety and accountability. They investigate how models trained on original and topic-augmented datasets encode psychological risk factors, using visualization and geometric analysis to assess the coherence and separability of topic-related features. The study finds that topic-aware augmentation enhances the clarity and distinctness of underrepresented psychosocial risk factors, suggesting that such augmentation not only improves performance but also leads to more interpretable internal representations. The authors employ overcomplete sparse autoencoders to analyze the internal activation space of the models, revealing that certain features align with specific psychosocial topics and form coherent clusters. They introduce a geometric separability framework to quantify representational clarity and demonstrate how augmentation reshapes internal feature structures.
Methodology
The authors utilized overcomplete sparse autoencoders to extract interpretable feature directions from the internal activation space of suicide ideation detection models. They applied visualization techniques, including UMAP, to analyze feature specialization and monosemanticity, and introduced a geometric separability framework to measure the clarity of psychological concepts in the models.
Results
The results indicate that topic-aware augmentation significantly enhances the clarity and separability of underrepresented psychosocial risk factors, such as immigration and financial crises, in the internal representation space of the models. The analysis revealed coherent clusters of features aligned with specific psychosocial topics, demonstrating improved interpretability.
Implications
The findings suggest that enhancing the interpretability of suicide ideation detection models through topic-aware augmentation can lead to safer and more accountable applications in mental health. This approach may help in identifying gaps in topic coverage and improving the generalizability of models in real-world scenarios.
RKSC: Reasoning-Aware KV Cache Sharing and Confident Early Exit for Multi-Step LLM Inference
Large Language Models
Efficient ML
NLP
- RKSC eliminates redundancies in multi-branch LLM reasoning pipelines.
- ASKS enables efficient KV cache sharing based on hidden-state similarity.
- CGEE provides dual-level exit mechanisms to reduce verification overhead.
- The framework achieves a mean speedup of 3.008Γ over traditional methods.
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RKSC: Reasoning-Aware KV Cache Sharing and Confident Early Exit for Multi-Step LLM Inference
Summary
The paper introduces RKSC (Reasoning-Aware KV Cache Sharing), a novel inference framework designed to optimize multi-branch reasoning pipelines in large language models (LLMs) without requiring training or architectural changes. RKSC addresses two main inefficiencies: redundant computation of key-value (KV) caches across branches and excessive verification passes during reasoning. The framework employs ASKS (Attention-Similarity KV Sharing) to compute a shared prefix KV cache based on hidden-state cosine similarity, allowing for significant reuse of computations across semantically similar branches. Additionally, CGEE (Confidence-Gated Early Exit) implements two exit strategies to minimize unnecessary verification: skipping the verification pass when generation confidence is high and terminating the verification early when per-layer entropy stabilizes. The RSBCM (Reasoning-Selective Block Cache Manager) manages cache growth effectively. The proposed methods were evaluated across five model families and four benchmarks, demonstrating substantial speed improvements and minimal error rates, thus showcasing RKSC's potential to enhance the efficiency of LLM inference.
Methodology
RKSC employs three main mechanisms: ASKS for KV cache sharing based on cosine similarity of hidden states, CGEE for confidence-based early exit strategies during verification, and RSBCM for managing cache size through attention-weighted eviction. These mechanisms work together to optimize the inference process without introducing new computations or requiring additional training.
Results
The RKSC framework achieved a mean speedup of 3.008Γ compared to the No-KV baseline, with a peak speedup of 3.990Γ. It also demonstrated a 1.66Γ improvement over vLLM-equivalent prefix caching, while maintaining a low error rate of 0.37% across 1,616 verification calls.
Implications
RKSC's approach can significantly enhance the efficiency of LLM inference in various applications, particularly in scenarios requiring multi-step reasoning. Its training-free nature allows for easy integration into existing systems, potentially leading to faster and more resource-efficient language model deployments.
Autonomous Aerial Manipulation via Contextual Contrastive Meta Reinforcement Learning
Reinforcement Learning
Robotics
- Aco2 enables fully autonomous aerial manipulation of diverse payloads using a lightweight hook.
- The contextual observation encoder allows for online adaptation to varying flight dynamics.
- A contrastive objective improves generalization across different payloads without manual calibration.
- The framework is trained in simulation and successfully transferred to real-world applications.
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Autonomous Aerial Manipulation via Contextual Contrastive Meta Reinforcement Learning
Summary
This paper presents a novel approach to autonomous aerial manipulation using Contextual Contrastive Meta Reinforcement Learning (Aco2). The authors address the challenge of UAVs autonomously picking up, transporting, and delivering diverse payloads without human intervention. Traditional methods often require pre-attached payloads or specialized grippers, limiting their applicability in real-world scenarios. Aco2 utilizes a contextual observation encoder to infer a compact latent context from recent interactions, allowing the UAV to adapt to varying payload dynamics in real-time. The introduction of a contrastive objective enhances the quality of the context embedding, improving generalization across different payloads without explicit system identification. The framework is trained entirely in simulation with extensive domain randomization, enabling direct deployment on physical quadrotors without the need for real-world fine-tuning. The experiments demonstrate Aco2's capability to autonomously deliver heavy and bulky handle-equipped objects, showcasing its potential for scalable applications in logistics, emergency supply delivery, and industrial transport.
Methodology
The authors developed a history-conditioned policy that maintains a compact latent embedding for online dynamics inference. A contrastive auxiliary objective was introduced to structure this embedding, separating representations of different payloads. The training involved curriculum learning to decompose the task into manageable stages, alongside a threshold-based reward formulation to balance task completion and control. Extensive domain randomization was employed to enhance robustness to the sim-to-real gap.
Results
The Aco2 framework was evaluated in both simulated and real-world environments. The results demonstrated its ability to perform unattended deliveries of handle-equipped objects, effectively managing the challenges posed by varying payload weights and shapes. The experiments confirmed the successful zero-shot transfer of the policy from simulation to real-world deployment, highlighting the robustness of the learned policy.
Implications
The findings suggest that Aco2 can significantly enhance the capabilities of UAVs in logistics and emergency supply delivery, enabling efficient transport of diverse payloads in various environments. This approach could lead to advancements in industrial material handling and scalable aerial logistics solutions.
The Confidence Trap: Calibration Attacks for Graph Neural Networks
Graph Learning
- Introduces a Unified Graph Calibration Attack (UGCA) framework for analyzing GNN calibration robustness.
- Addresses unique challenges in calibration attacks on graph structures, including discrete optimization and edge sensitivity.
- Establishes theoretical links between model accuracy, dataset complexity, and calibration vulnerability.
- Demonstrates that UGCA increases Expected Calibration Error while preserving classification accuracy.
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The Confidence Trap: Calibration Attacks for Graph Neural Networks
Summary
This paper addresses the vulnerability of Graph Neural Networks (GNNs) to calibration attacks, which can undermine the reliability of confidence scores crucial for decision-making in safety-critical applications. The authors introduce a Unified Graph Calibration Attack (UGCA) framework that tackles the unique challenges posed by graph structures, such as discrete optimization and sensitivity to edge perturbations. The UGCA framework employs a KL-divergence loss to promote uniform predictive distributions, a reranking mechanism to minimize label flipping, a hybrid loss to recover labels during violations, and beam search to explore a wider adversarial space. Theoretical insights are provided, linking model generalization and dataset complexity to calibration vulnerabilities, revealing that higher accuracy models or those trained on more complex datasets are more susceptible to these attacks. Extensive experiments demonstrate that UGCA significantly increases Expected Calibration Error while maintaining classification accuracy, highlighting the subtle yet damaging nature of calibration attacks on GNNs.
Methodology
The UGCA framework incorporates a KL-divergence loss for uniform distribution, a reranking mechanism to reduce label flipping, a hybrid loss for label recovery, and beam search for broader adversarial exploration.
Results
The experiments show that UGCA substantially increases the Expected Calibration Error of GNNs while maintaining their classification accuracy, indicating a significant vulnerability in calibrated GNNs under adversarial conditions.
Implications
The findings underscore the need for improved calibration methods in GNNs, particularly for applications in critical domains like healthcare and finance, where miscalibrated confidence scores can lead to severe consequences.
Conformal Prediction for Neural Operators: Distribution-Free Uncertainty Quantification in Physics Simulation
Theory
- First application of split conformal prediction to neural operators for physics simulations.
- Provides distribution-free prediction intervals with finite-sample coverage guarantees.
- Introduces adaptive-width intervals using Monte Carlo Dropout uncertainty estimates.
- Develops an uncertainty decomposition framework to differentiate between epistemic and aleatoric uncertainties.
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Conformal Prediction for Neural Operators: Distribution-Free Uncertainty Quantification in Physics Simulation
Summary
This paper introduces the first application of split conformal prediction to neural operator-based physics simulations, specifically targeting the Fourier Neural Operator (FNO) for solving partial differential equations (PDEs). The author highlights the necessity for rigorous uncertainty quantification (UQ) in safety-critical engineering applications, where not only accurate predictions but also formal coverage guarantees are essential. Existing UQ methods like Monte Carlo Dropout and Deep Ensembles fall short in providing these guarantees. The proposed method offers distribution-free prediction intervals with finite-sample coverage guarantees, ensuring that the true value is contained within the prediction interval with a specified probability. Additionally, a normalized conformal prediction scheme is introduced, which utilizes Monte Carlo Dropout uncertainty to create adaptive-width intervals, resulting in tighter predictions in low-uncertainty regions and wider intervals where uncertainty is high. The paper also presents an uncertainty decomposition framework that distinguishes between epistemic and aleatoric uncertainties, providing insights for data collection and model enhancement. Experimental results on steady-state heat conduction benchmarks demonstrate that the method achieves 89.1% empirical coverage at a target level of Ξ± = 0.1, showcasing the practical applicability of conformal prediction in industrial physics simulations.
Methodology
The methodology involves applying split conformal prediction to neural operators, specifically the Fourier Neural Operator (FNO). It introduces a normalized conformal prediction scheme that leverages Monte Carlo Dropout for uncertainty estimation, producing adaptive-width prediction intervals. An uncertainty decomposition framework is also developed to separate epistemic from aleatoric uncertainties.
Results
The proposed method demonstrated 89.1% empirical coverage at a target level of Ξ± = 0.1 in full-scale experiments on steady-state heat conduction benchmarks, effectively producing spatially adaptive prediction intervals that align with the underlying physical uncertainty structure.
Implications
The findings suggest that conformal prediction can significantly enhance the reliability of neural operator models in safety-critical applications, such as thermal management in engineering, by providing formal uncertainty quantification. This can lead to more trustworthy simulations and designs in industrial contexts.
Instrumented data for causal scientific machine learning
Theory
Generative Models
Optimization
- Instrumented data provides a mechanistic model for each datum, addressing the limitations of observational and synthetic data.
- The approach supports causal interventions through Pearl's do-operator, enhancing the interpretability of machine learning models.
- Instrumented data can improve validation and auditing processes across various scientific disciplines.
- The methodology is operationally feasible, demonstrated through multi-agent systems that autonomously generate detailed reports from sensor data.
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Instrumented data for causal scientific machine learning
Summary
This paper introduces the concept of instrumented data as a solution to the limitations of current machine learning approaches in scientific domains. Traditional data types, such as observational and synthetic data, fail to provide the necessary causal insights required for effective modeling. Instrumented data, which includes mechanistic models, uncertainties, and counterfactuals, aims to bridge this gap. The author argues that each datum should encapsulate the model that generated it, allowing for causal interventions and better validation processes. The paper discusses various applications across fields like computational biology, climate science, and medical imaging, highlighting the operational feasibility of creating instrumented data through advanced pipelines. The proposed approach enhances the robustness of machine learning models by ensuring that they are grounded in specific mechanistic frameworks, thus enabling more accurate predictions and interventions.
Methodology
The paper proposes a framework for generating instrumented data through verification-and-validation (V&V) pipelines that convert sensor observations into mechanistic simulations. Each datum is structured as a tuple containing the observation, the mechanistic model, uncertainties, and simulation outputs. The methodology emphasizes the importance of case-specific data generation and the ability to perform counterfactual reasoning.
Results
The author presents a multi-agent demonstration showing that it is feasible to autonomously produce instrumented data from a single photograph, extracting relevant geometrical and material information. This process involves meshing, solving, and verifying the data against analytical bounds, resulting in a comprehensive report that can be used for further analysis.
Implications
The introduction of instrumented data has significant implications for various fields, including computational biology, climate modeling, materials science, and medical imaging. It enables more accurate modeling and predictions by grounding machine learning in mechanistic frameworks, thus facilitating causal reasoning and interventions. This approach could lead to the development of more robust foundation models for scientific reasoning.
Convergence of Monte Carlo Optimistic Policy Iteration: Beyond Uniform State-Action Updates
Reinforcement Learning
Theory
Optimization
- Proves convergence of MC-O-PI under relaxed conditions for state-action updates.
- Demonstrates that uniform updates over actions within states are sufficient for convergence.
- Introduces new proof techniques that do not rely on classical commutativity arguments.
- Highlights practical implications for implementing MC-O-PI in large or unknown state spaces.
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Convergence of Monte Carlo Optimistic Policy Iteration: Beyond Uniform State-Action Updates
Summary
This paper addresses the long-standing question of the convergence behavior of Monte Carlo Optimistic Policy Iteration (MC-O-PI) in reinforcement learning, particularly when the model of the environment is unknown. The authors relax the impractical requirement that all state-action pairs must be updated uniformly, proving that initial-visit MC-O-PI can converge to optimality even when updates are uniform only over actions within each state. This finding is significant for practical implementations, especially in large or unknown state spaces where uniform state sampling is not feasible. The proof diverges from classical methods by demonstrating that the mean-field dynamics of MC-O-PI lead to monotonically improving policies under the new update conditions. The paper also extends the lock-in argument of the stability-ODE method to show that stochastic noise does not prevent convergence to optimal policies, suggesting a new approach to studying optimistic policy-iteration algorithms more broadly.
Methodology
The authors employ a theoretical approach to analyze the convergence of MC-O-PI by tracking the evolution of policies rather than value estimates. They establish a new theorem that shows the conditions under which policies improve monotonically and extend existing arguments to account for stochastic perturbations.
Results
The main result is that initial-visit MC-O-PI converges almost surely to the optimal action values when updates are uniform over actions within each state, allowing for arbitrary frequencies of state updates. This result extends previous convergence guarantees and provides a more practical framework for applying MC-O-PI in real-world scenarios.
Implications
The findings have significant implications for reinforcement learning applications, particularly in environments with large or complex state spaces where uniform sampling is impractical. The results can enhance the efficiency and effectiveness of policy iteration algorithms in various domains, including robotics and automated decision-making systems.
Embedding Hybrid Systems into Continuous Latent Vector Fields
Theory
Optimization
Robotics
- Proves that n-dimensional hybrid systems can be embedded into m-dimensional spaces with continuous vector fields when m > 2n.
- Introduces a latent Neural ODE framework that leverages consistency loss for improved recovery of hybrid system dynamics.
- Demonstrates superior performance over existing methods in learning hybrid systems from time series data.
- Addresses the differentiability challenges in hybrid systems, making them amenable to optimization techniques.
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Embedding Hybrid Systems into Continuous Latent Vector Fields
Summary
This paper presents a theoretical and algorithmic framework for embedding n-dimensional hybrid systems into m-dimensional Euclidean spaces with continuous vector fields, provided that m > 2n. The authors demonstrate that this embedding allows for a continuous extrinsic representation of intrinsically discontinuous hybrid systems, making them suitable for differentiable optimization. Building on this theoretical foundation, they introduce a latent Neural ODE framework that incorporates a consistency loss in both the latent and state spaces, enabling accurate recovery of hybrid system flows from time series data. The proposed method outperforms existing techniques in learning hybrid systems with diverse geometries, addressing the challenges posed by traditional methods that struggle with mode selection and discontinuities in state evolution.
Methodology
The authors utilize differential geometry to establish the theoretical basis for embedding hybrid systems into continuous latent vector fields. They develop a latent Neural ODE framework that incorporates a consistency loss mechanism to effectively learn the dynamics of hybrid systems from time series data. The approach builds on previous work that represented hybrid systems as continuous flows and employs the Whitney Embedding Theorem to ensure a singularity-free representation.
Results
The experiments conducted show that the proposed method significantly outperforms traditional approaches in accurately recovering the dynamics of hybrid systems with varying geometries. The consistency loss in both the latent and observation spaces is identified as a critical factor for the success of the method.
Implications
This work has potential applications in various fields that involve hybrid systems, such as robotics, autonomous systems, and cyber-physical systems. The ability to learn hybrid systems from time series data with improved differentiability can enhance the design and optimization of complex systems that exhibit both continuous and discrete behaviors.
Evaluating the Representation Space of Diffusion Models via Self-Supervised Principles
Generative Models
Computer Vision
Theory
- Introduces the Invariant Contamination Ratio (ICR) as a metric for evaluating diffusion models.
- Finds that representation invariance peaks at intermediate noise levels, enhancing classification performance.
- Demonstrates that ICR can predict the onset of memorization during training in data-limited scenarios.
- Establishes a connection between representation learning and generative modeling in diffusion models.
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Evaluating the Representation Space of Diffusion Models via Self-Supervised Principles
Summary
This paper explores the dual capabilities of diffusion models in generative modeling and self-supervised representation learning. The authors introduce a framework that evaluates these capabilities by decomposing features into invariant and residual components, leading to the development of the Invariant Contamination Ratio (ICR). This Fisher-based metric quantifies how residual variations affect the invariant signal in feature space. The study reveals that representation invariance peaks at intermediate noise levels, correlating with optimal classification performance. Additionally, it investigates the transition from generalization to memorization during training, identifying ICR as a sensitive indicator of early learning. The findings suggest that diffusion models can be effectively monitored through the geometry of their learned representations, providing insights into their generative and discriminative behaviors.
Methodology
The authors propose a framework that decomposes the features extracted from diffusion models into invariant and residual components. They derive the Invariant Contamination Ratio (ICR) based on Fisher metrics to quantify the contamination of invariant signals by residual variations. The study involves analyzing the behavior of diffusion models across varying noise levels and during different training phases, focusing on both generative and discriminative tasks.
Results
The analysis shows that the ICR metric effectively tracks the quality of representations across noise levels and correlates with generative quality metrics like FrΓ©chet Inception Distance (FID) in data-rich regimes. It also indicates that increasing residual energy along Fisher directions signals the transition to memorization in data-limited settings, which can be detected without external evaluators.
Implications
The findings suggest that the proposed framework can enhance the understanding and monitoring of diffusion models, particularly in assessing their generalization capabilities. This could lead to improved training strategies and better performance in tasks requiring generative modeling and representation learning.
GENERIC-FNO: Embedding Energy Conservation and Entropy Production into Fourier Neural Operators
Theory
- First neural operator to fully embed GENERIC structure in function space.
- Exact enforcement of degeneracy conditions ensures thermodynamic consistency.
- Demonstrates zero-shot performance across a 4Γ super-resolution range.
- Introduces a gauge-invariant diagnostic for assessing reversible vs. dissipative dynamics.
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GENERIC-FNO: Embedding Energy Conservation and Entropy Production into Fourier Neural Operators
Summary
The paper introduces GENERIC-FNO, a novel neural operator that integrates the full GENERIC structure of nonequilibrium thermodynamics into function space. Unlike existing neural operators that enforce only single conservation laws or reversible dynamics, GENERIC-FNO captures both reversible energy-conserving and irreversible entropy-producing dynamics. The authors parameterize the Poisson and friction operators as diagonal Fourier multipliers, ensuring that degeneracy conditions are satisfied exactly, which allows for precise conservation of energy and production of entropy during continuous-time dynamics. The model demonstrates robustness across various spatial dimensions and grid resolutions, maintaining structural guarantees even when evaluated at super-resolution. The paper also presents a gauge-invariant dissipation diagnostic to differentiate between reversible and dissipative dynamics. Empirical evaluations across multiple PDEs show that GENERIC-FNO outperforms traditional unconstrained and energy-penalized models in several scenarios, particularly in dissipative and mixed regimes, while remaining competitive in accuracy.
Methodology
The methodology involves learning energy and entropy functionals as neural operators and parameterizing reversible and irreversible dynamics using diagonal Fourier multipliers. The model enforces degeneracy conditions exactly through rank-one projections, ensuring that the learned dynamics conserve energy and produce entropy to machine precision. The approach is tested on various PDEs using different operator backbones, including 1D and 2D Fourier neural operators and DeepONet.
Results
The results indicate that GENERIC-FNO maintains structural guarantees with machine precision across different configurations and grid resolutions. The model successfully identifies the correct ordering of physical dissipation and demonstrates competitive performance against both unconstrained and energy-penalized baselines, particularly excelling in dissipative and mixed dynamics.
Implications
The implications of this work extend to the development of more physically consistent neural operators for simulating complex dynamical systems, particularly in fields such as fluid dynamics, thermodynamics, and other areas where energy conservation and entropy production are critical. This approach could enhance the reliability of machine learning models in scientific computing and engineering applications.
Thresholded Local Hyper-Flow Diffusion
Graph Learning
Optimization
Theory
- Introduction of TL-HFD, a locality-focused first-order method for hypergraph clustering.
- Proven exactness of local updates and finite-time dual suboptimality.
- Development of an activated-volume bound for controlling volume promotion.
- Empirical results demonstrate improved performance over traditional HFD, especially in noisy scenarios.
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Thresholded Local Hyper-Flow Diffusion
Summary
This paper introduces Thresholded Local Hyper-Flow Diffusion (TL-HFD), a novel first-order optimization method designed for local clustering in submodular hypergraphs. TL-HFD builds upon the Local Hyper-Flow Diffusion (HFD) framework, which provides a Cheeger-type guarantee for seeded clustering. Unlike traditional HFD solvers that do not maintain locality during intermediate computations, TL-HFD ensures that updates are confined to a dynamically growing active region around the seed vertices and their immediate boundaries. The authors prove that the local updates are exact and establish finite-time dual suboptimality for both exact and thresholded updates. They also derive an activated-volume bound that controls the volume promoted into the active region based on local subgradient norms. Empirical evaluations show that TL-HFD often matches or improves upon HFD while activating less volume, particularly in noisy instances, thereby enhancing clustering quality and efficiency.
Methodology
The TL-HFD method employs a projected subgradient approach that maintains an active region around seed vertices. It performs updates only within this region and its boundary, expanding through a thresholded top-k activation strategy. The method's locality is explicitly designed, ensuring that intermediate computations remain confined to the active area. The authors analyze the convergence properties and guarantees of the method, establishing its effectiveness in optimizing the HFD dual.
Results
The paper demonstrates that TL-HFD achieves finite-time convergence and maintains locality during updates. The empirical results indicate that TL-HFD activates smaller volumes than HFD while improving clustering quality, particularly in noisy hypergraph instances. The method shows robustness in terms of sweep-cut guarantees and F1 scores in various experimental settings.
Implications
The TL-HFD method has potential applications in various domains involving higher-order interactions, such as social networks, biological networks, and recommendation systems, where efficient local clustering of hypergraphs is crucial. Its locality-focused approach can lead to more efficient algorithms in practice, especially in scenarios with noisy data.
Rotate2Think: Geometric Priming via Orthogonal Rotation to Improve Language Model Reasoning
NLP
Large Language Models
Multimodal
- Introduction of Rotate2Think, a training-free method for improving language model reasoning.
- Geometric characterization of reasoning representations shows distinct regions for input and thinking embeddings.
- High fidelity in mapping between input and thinking embeddings via orthogonal rotation.
- Significant accuracy improvements across multiple benchmarks and model families.
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Rotate2Think: Geometric Priming via Orthogonal Rotation to Improve Language Model Reasoning
Summary
The paper introduces Rotate2Think, a novel method aimed at enhancing the reasoning capabilities of language models by leveraging geometric properties of their hidden representations. The authors investigate the transition from input embeddings to thinking embeddings, revealing that both exhibit high conicity and occupy distinct geometric regions in representation space. This observation leads to the formulation of the input-to-thinking transition as a rotation problem, which can be solved using orthogonal Procrustes analysis. Rotate2Think is a training-free approach that estimates this rotation from a small set of correctly solved examples, allowing for the injection of a synthetic thinking vector at inference time. The method is evaluated across various benchmarks and model families, demonstrating significant improvements in accuracy and generalization to zero-shot multimodal reasoning tasks. The findings suggest that the geometry of reasoning representations is a model property, enabling effective cross-domain application without the need for target-domain data.
Methodology
The authors extract mean-pooled last-layer embeddings for input and thinking states from language models. They analyze the geometric properties of these embeddings, finding high conicity and non-alignment between input and thinking directions. Using orthogonal Procrustes analysis, they derive a rotation that maps input embeddings to thinking embeddings. This rotation is estimated from a small set of correctly solved examples and applied at inference time to generate synthetic thinking vectors.
Results
Rotate2Think improves accuracy in 30 out of 32 model-benchmark configurations across mathematics, science, and code tasks. The method shows high fidelity in reconstructing thinking embeddings (cosine similarity > 0.96) and demonstrates zero-shot generalization to visual reasoning tasks, outperforming traditional reasoning modes.
Implications
The findings suggest that understanding and manipulating the geometric properties of language model representations can lead to significant enhancements in reasoning capabilities. This approach could be applied to various domains, including education, automated reasoning systems, and multimodal AI applications.
Efficiently Learning Drifting Halfspaces with Massart Noise
Theory
Efficient ML
- Introduces efficient learning algorithms for drifting halfspaces under Massart noise.
- Achieves improved error rates in the realizable setting compared to prior work.
- Establishes a lower bound on algorithm performance, indicating a tradeoff between information and computation.
- Demonstrates the applicability of the proposed methods to real-world scenarios with distribution drift.
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Efficiently Learning Drifting Halfspaces with Massart Noise
Summary
This paper addresses the challenge of learning drifting concepts in the presence of Massart noise, where the target concept can change over time and the labels are noisy versions of this concept. The authors focus on margin-separable linear classifiers, specifically halfspaces, and propose a computationally efficient learning algorithm that achieves an error rate of Ξ· + ΛO(β1/3/Ξ³), where Ξ· is the Massart noise rate, β is the drift rate, and Ξ³ is the margin. In the realizable setting, their approach improves upon previous work by yielding a better error rate. The paper also establishes a lower bound on the performance of learning algorithms, indicating an information-computation tradeoff that suggests the proposed algorithm's performance is nearly optimal. The results highlight the complexities of learning in non-stationary environments and provide insights into the limitations of existing methods for handling distribution drift and label noise.
Methodology
The authors develop an online learning algorithm that utilizes empirical risk minimization (ERM) tailored for the class of margin-separable halfspaces. They analyze the statistical complexity of learning under Massart noise and derive bounds on the error rates achievable by their algorithm. The study also involves theoretical proofs to establish lower bounds on performance, particularly focusing on the relationship between drift rate and error scaling.
Results
The proposed algorithm achieves an error rate of Ξ· + ΛO(β1/3/Ξ³) for learning drifting halfspaces with Massart noise. In the realizable setting, it provides an improved error rate compared to existing methods. The authors also demonstrate that while the optimal error rate scales with β1/2, their algorithm's performance is constrained to a β1/3 scaling for low-degree polynomial tests, indicating a fundamental limit in the learning process.
Implications
The findings have significant implications for applications in dynamic environments where data distributions change over time, such as financial forecasting, consumer behavior analysis, and adaptive machine learning systems. The efficient learning algorithms developed can enhance the robustness of models deployed in such scenarios, ensuring better performance despite label noise and distribution drift.
Trajectory Geometry of Transformer Representations Across Layers
NLP
Large Language Models
Interpretability
- Introduces a trajectory-geometric framework for understanding transformer representations.
- Identifies significant trajectory convergence for semantically related prompts in deeper layers.
- Demonstrates that reasoning tasks lead to greater trajectory curvature than lexical tasks.
- Shows measurable bifurcation for ambiguous tokens, indicating a clear disambiguation signature.
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Trajectory Geometry of Transformer Representations Across Layers
Summary
This paper addresses the evolution of transformer representations across layers, focusing on the geometric aspects of their trajectories rather than merely what they encode. The authors propose a framework that treats the forward pass of transformers as a discrete population trajectory through a high-dimensional representation manifold, utilizing geometric metrics from computational neuroscience. They define five key metrics: trajectory length, curvature, a semantic convergence index, layerwise cosine similarity, and representational stability. The study is conducted across three transformer models (GPT-2, TinyLlama, Qwen2.5) and five semantically controlled prompt families. The findings reveal significant trajectory convergence for semantically related prompts in middle-to-late layers, higher curvature for reasoning tasks compared to lexical tasks, measurable bifurcation for ambiguous tokens, and a universal three-phase computational structure across architectures. The results are validated against various control experiments, confirming their intrinsic nature. The authors also provide an open-source pipeline for trajectory analysis, emphasizing the potential of trajectory geometry as a probe-free approach to mechanistic interpretability in deep learning.
Methodology
The authors recast the transformer forward pass as a discrete population trajectory through a high-dimensional representation manifold. They employ five geometric metrics to analyze the trajectories of representations across layers in three transformer models, applying these metrics to semantically controlled prompt families.
Results
The study reports four main findings: (1) significant trajectory convergence for semantically related prompts in middle-to-late layers, (2) higher curvature for reasoning tasks compared to lexical tasks, (3) measurable trajectory bifurcation for ambiguous tokens, and (4) a consistent three-phase computational structure across architectures. All effects were confirmed through rigorous control experiments.
Implications
The proposed trajectory geometry framework offers a novel, probe-free lens for mechanistic interpretability in transformers, potentially aiding in the understanding of how these models process information. The open-source pipeline allows for broader application in analyzing various causal language models.