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2407.10972 | VGBench: Evaluating Large Language Models on Vector Graphics
Understanding and Generation | In the realm of vision models, the primary mode of representation is using pixels to rasterize the visual world. Yet this is not always the best or unique way to represent visual content, especially for designers and artists who depict the world using geometry primitives such as polygons. Vector graphics (VG), on the other hand, offer a textual representation of visual content, which can be more concise and powerful for content like cartoons or sketches. Recent studies have shown promising results on processing vector graphics with capable Large Language Models (LLMs). However, such works focus solely on qualitative results, understanding, or a specific type of vector graphics. We propose VGBench, a comprehensive benchmark for LLMs on handling vector graphics through diverse aspects, including (a) both visual understanding and generation, (b) evaluation of various vector graphics formats, (c) diverse question types, (d) wide range of prompting techniques, (e) under multiple LLMs. Evaluating on our collected 4279 understanding and 5845 generation samples, we find that LLMs show strong capability on both aspects while exhibiting less desirable performance on low-level formats (SVG). Both data and evaluation pipeline will be open-sourced at https://vgbench.github.io. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2407.10972v1 | [
"Bocheng Zou",
"Mu Cai",
"Jianrui Zhang",
"Yong Jae Lee"
] | 2024-07-15T17:59:55Z | 2024-07-15T17:59:55Z |
2407.10971 | Walking the Values in Bayesian Inverse Reinforcement Learning | The goal of Bayesian inverse reinforcement learning (IRL) is recovering a posterior distribution over reward functions using a set of demonstrations from an expert optimizing for a reward unknown to the learner. The resulting posterior over rewards can then be used to synthesize an apprentice policy that performs well on the same or a similar task. A key challenge in Bayesian IRL is bridging the computational gap between the hypothesis space of possible rewards and the likelihood, often defined in terms of Q values: vanilla Bayesian IRL needs to solve the costly forward planning problem - going from rewards to the Q values - at every step of the algorithm, which may need to be done thousands of times. We propose to solve this by a simple change: instead of focusing on primarily sampling in the space of rewards, we can focus on primarily working in the space of Q-values, since the computation required to go from Q-values to reward is radically cheaper. Furthermore, this reversion of the computation makes it easy to compute the gradient allowing efficient sampling using Hamiltonian Monte Carlo. We propose ValueWalk - a new Markov chain Monte Carlo method based on this insight - and illustrate its advantages on several tasks. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2407.10971v1 | [
"Ondrej Bajgar",
"Alessandro Abate",
"Konstantinos Gatsis",
"Michael A. Osborne"
] | 2024-07-15T17:59:52Z | 2024-07-15T17:59:52Z |
2407.10969 | Q-Sparse: All Large Language Models can be Fully Sparsely-Activated | We introduce, Q-Sparse, a simple yet effective approach to training sparsely-activated large language models (LLMs). Q-Sparse enables full sparsity of activations in LLMs which can bring significant efficiency gains in inference. This is achieved by applying top-K sparsification to the activations and the straight-through-estimator to the training. The key results from this work are, (1) Q-Sparse can achieve results comparable to those of baseline LLMs while being much more efficient at inference time; (2) We present an inference-optimal scaling law for sparsely-activated LLMs; (3) Q-Sparse is effective in different settings, including training-from-scratch, continue-training of off-the-shelf LLMs, and finetuning; (4) Q-Sparse works for both full-precision and 1-bit LLMs (e.g., BitNet b1.58). Particularly, the synergy of BitNet b1.58 and Q-Sparse (can be equipped with MoE) provides the cornerstone and a clear path to revolutionize the efficiency, including cost and energy consumption, of future LLMs. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2407.10969v1 | [
"Hongyu Wang",
"Shuming Ma",
"Ruiping Wang",
"Furu Wei"
] | 2024-07-15T17:59:29Z | 2024-07-15T17:59:29Z |
2407.10967 | BECAUSE: Bilinear Causal Representation for Generalizable Offline
Model-based Reinforcement Learning | Offline model-based reinforcement learning (MBRL) enhances data efficiency by utilizing pre-collected datasets to learn models and policies, especially in scenarios where exploration is costly or infeasible. Nevertheless, its performance often suffers from the objective mismatch between model and policy learning, resulting in inferior performance despite accurate model predictions. This paper first identifies the primary source of this mismatch comes from the underlying confounders present in offline data for MBRL. Subsequently, we introduce textbf{B}ilintextbf{E}ar textbf{CAUS}al rtextbf{E}presentation~(BECAUSE), an algorithm to capture causal representation for both states and actions to reduce the influence of the distribution shift, thus mitigating the objective mismatch problem. Comprehensive evaluations on 18 tasks that vary in data quality and environment context demonstrate the superior performance of BECAUSE over existing offline RL algorithms. We show the generalizability and robustness of BECAUSE under fewer samples or larger numbers of confounders. Additionally, we offer theoretical analysis of BECAUSE to prove its error bound and sample efficiency when integrating causal representation into offline MBRL. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2407.10967v1 | [
"Haohong Lin",
"Wenhao Ding",
"Jian Chen",
"Laixi Shi",
"Jiacheng Zhu",
"Bo Li",
"Ding Zhao"
] | 2024-07-15T17:59:23Z | 2024-07-15T17:59:23Z |
2407.10964 | No Train, all Gain: Self-Supervised Gradients Improve Deep Frozen
Representations | This paper introduces FUNGI, Features from UNsupervised GradIents, a method to enhance the features of vision encoders by leveraging self-supervised gradients. Our method is simple: given any pretrained model, we first compute gradients from various self-supervised objectives for each input. These are projected to a lower dimension and then concatenated with the model's embedding. The resulting features are evaluated on k-nearest neighbor classification over 11 datasets from vision, 5 from natural language processing, and 2 from audio. Across backbones spanning various sizes and pretraining strategies, FUNGI features provide consistent performance improvements over the embeddings. We also show that using FUNGI features can benefit linear classification and image retrieval, and that they significantly improve the retrieval-based in-context scene understanding abilities of pretrained models, for example improving upon DINO by +17% for semantic segmentation - without any training. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2407.10964v1 | [
"Walter Simoncini",
"Spyros Gidaris",
"Andrei Bursuc",
"Yuki M. Asano"
] | 2024-07-15T17:58:42Z | 2024-07-15T17:58:42Z |
2407.02844 | Multi-Attention Integrated Deep Learning Frameworks for Enhanced Breast
Cancer Segmentation and Identification | Breast cancer poses a profound threat to lives globally, claiming numerous lives each year. Therefore, timely detection is crucial for early intervention and improved chances of survival. Accurately diagnosing and classifying breast tumors using ultrasound images is a persistent challenge in medicine, demanding cutting-edge solutions for improved treatment strategies. This research introduces multiattention-enhanced deep learning (DL) frameworks designed for the classification and segmentation of breast cancer tumors from ultrasound images. A spatial channel attention mechanism is proposed for segmenting tumors from ultrasound images, utilizing a novel LinkNet DL framework with an InceptionResNet backbone. Following this, the paper proposes a deep convolutional neural network with an integrated multi-attention framework (DCNNIMAF) to classify the segmented tumor as benign, malignant, or normal. From experimental results, it is observed that the segmentation model has recorded an accuracy of 98.1%, with a minimal loss of 0.6%. It has also achieved high Intersection over Union (IoU) and Dice Coefficient scores of 96.9% and 97.2%, respectively. Similarly, the classification model has attained an accuracy of 99.2%, with a low loss of 0.31%. Furthermore, the classification framework has achieved outstanding F1-Score, precision, and recall values of 99.1%, 99.3%, and 99.1%, respectively. By offering a robust framework for early detection and accurate classification of breast cancer, this proposed work significantly advances the field of medical image analysis, potentially improving diagnostic precision and patient outcomes. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2407.02844v3 | [
"Pandiyaraju V",
"Shravan Venkatraman",
"Pavan Kumar S",
"Santhosh Malarvannan",
"Kannan A"
] | 2024-07-15T17:55:49Z | 2024-07-03T06:40:26Z |
2407.10960 | Fast Matrix Multiplications for Lookup Table-Quantized LLMs | The deployment of large language models (LLMs) is often constrained by memory bandwidth, where the primary bottleneck is the cost of transferring model parameters from the GPU's global memory to its registers. When coupled with custom kernels that fuse the dequantization and matmul operations, weight-only quantization can thus enable faster inference by reducing the amount of memory movement. However, developing high-performance kernels for weight-quantized LLMs presents substantial challenges, especially when the weights are compressed to non-evenly-divisible bit widths (e.g., 3 bits) with non-uniform, lookup table (LUT) quantization. This paper describes FLUTE, a flexible lookup table engine for LUT-quantized LLMs, which uses offline restructuring of the quantized weight matrix to minimize bit manipulations associated with unpacking, and vectorization and duplication of the lookup table to mitigate shared memory bandwidth constraints. At batch sizes < 32 and quantization group size of 128 (typical in LLM inference), the FLUTE kernel can be 2-4x faster than existing GEMM kernels. As an application of FLUTE, we explore a simple extension to lookup table-based NormalFloat quantization and apply it to quantize LLaMA3 to various configurations, obtaining competitive quantization performance against strong baselines while obtaining an end-to-end throughput increase of 1.5 to 2 times. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2407.10960v1 | [
"Han Guo",
"William Brandon",
"Radostin Cholakov",
"Jonathan Ragan-Kelley",
"Eric P. Xing",
"Yoon Kim"
] | 2024-07-15T17:55:42Z | 2024-07-15T17:55:42Z |
2407.10955 | Enhancing Stochastic Optimization for Statistical Efficiency Using
ROOT-SGD with Diminishing Stepsize | In this paper, we revisit textsf{ROOT-SGD}, an innovative method for stochastic optimization to bridge the gap between stochastic optimization and statistical efficiency. The proposed method enhances the performance and reliability of textsf{ROOT-SGD} by integrating a carefully designed emph{diminishing stepsize strategy}. This approach addresses key challenges in optimization, providing robust theoretical guarantees and practical benefits. Our analysis demonstrates that textsf{ROOT-SGD} with diminishing achieves optimal convergence rates while maintaining computational efficiency. By dynamically adjusting the learning rate, textsf{ROOT-SGD} ensures improved stability and precision throughout the optimization process. The findings of this study offer valuable insights for developing advanced optimization algorithms that are both efficient and statistically robust. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2407.10955v1 | [
"Tong Zhang",
"Chris Junchi Li"
] | 2024-07-15T17:54:03Z | 2024-07-15T17:54:03Z |
2407.10954 | A Unified Differentiable Boolean Operator with Fuzzy Logic | This paper presents a unified differentiable boolean operator for implicit solid shape modeling using Constructive Solid Geometry (CSG). Traditional CSG relies on min, max operators to perform boolean operations on implicit shapes. But because these boolean operators are discontinuous and discrete in the choice of operations, this makes optimization over the CSG representation challenging. Drawing inspiration from fuzzy logic, we present a unified boolean operator that outputs a continuous function and is differentiable with respect to operator types. This enables optimization of both the primitives and the boolean operations employed in CSG with continuous optimization techniques, such as gradient descent. We further demonstrate that such a continuous boolean operator allows modeling of both sharp mechanical objects and smooth organic shapes with the same framework. Our proposed boolean operator opens up new possibilities for future research toward fully continuous CSG optimization. | http://arxiv.org/abs/2407.10954v1 | [
"Hsueh-Ti Derek Liu",
"Maneesh Agrawala",
"Cem Yuksel",
"Tim Omernick",
"Vinith Misra",
"Stefano Corazza",
"Morgan McGuire",
"Victor Zordan"
] | 2024-07-15T17:52:22Z | 2024-07-15T17:52:22Z |
2302.13425 | A Survey on Uncertainty Quantification Methods for Deep Learning | Deep neural networks (DNNs) have achieved tremendous success in making accurate predictions for computer vision, natural language processing, as well as science and engineering domains. However, it is also well-recognized that DNNs sometimes make unexpected, incorrect, but overconfident predictions. This can cause serious consequences in high-stake applications, such as autonomous driving, medical diagnosis, and disaster response. Uncertainty quantification (UQ) aims to estimate the confidence of DNN predictions beyond prediction accuracy. In recent years, many UQ methods have been developed for DNNs. It is of great practical value to systematically categorize these UQ methods and compare their advantages and disadvantages. However, existing surveys mostly focus on categorizing UQ methodologies from a neural network architecture perspective or a Bayesian perspective and ignore the source of uncertainty that each methodology can incorporate, making it difficult to select an appropriate UQ method in practice. To fill the gap, this paper presents a systematic taxonomy of UQ methods for DNNs based on the types of uncertainty sources (data uncertainty versus model uncertainty). We summarize the advantages and disadvantages of methods in each category. We show how our taxonomy of UQ methodologies can potentially help guide the choice of UQ method in different machine learning problems (e.g., active learning, robustness, and reinforcement learning). We also identify current research gaps and propose several future research directions. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2302.13425v5 | [
"Wenchong He",
"Zhe Jiang",
"Tingsong Xiao",
"Zelin Xu",
"Yukun Li"
] | 2024-07-15T17:49:38Z | 2023-02-26T22:30:08Z |
2407.10949 | Representing Rule-based Chatbots with Transformers | Transformer-based chatbots can conduct fluent, natural-sounding conversations, but we have limited understanding of the mechanisms underlying their behavior. Prior work has taken a bottom-up approach to understanding Transformers by constructing Transformers for various synthetic and formal language tasks, such as regular expressions and Dyck languages. However, it is not obvious how to extend this approach to understand more naturalistic conversational agents. In this work, we take a step in this direction by constructing a Transformer that implements the ELIZA program, a classic, rule-based chatbot. ELIZA illustrates some of the distinctive challenges of the conversational setting, including both local pattern matching and long-term dialog state tracking. We build on constructions from prior work -- in particular, for simulating finite-state automata -- showing how simpler constructions can be composed and extended to give rise to more sophisticated behavior. Next, we train Transformers on a dataset of synthetically generated ELIZA conversations and investigate the mechanisms the models learn. Our analysis illustrates the kinds of mechanisms these models tend to prefer -- for example, models favor an induction head mechanism over a more precise, position based copying mechanism; and using intermediate generations to simulate recurrent data structures, like ELIZA's memory mechanisms. Overall, by drawing an explicit connection between neural chatbots and interpretable, symbolic mechanisms, our results offer a new setting for mechanistic analysis of conversational agents. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2407.10949v1 | [
"Dan Friedman",
"Abhishek Panigrahi",
"Danqi Chen"
] | 2024-07-15T17:45:53Z | 2024-07-15T17:45:53Z |
2403.11299 | SQ-LLaVA: Self-Questioning for Large Vision-Language Assistant | Recent advances in vision-language models have shown notable generalization in broad tasks through visual instruction tuning. However, bridging the gap between the pre-trained vision encoder and the large language models (LLMs) becomes the whole network's bottleneck. To improve cross-modality alignment, existing works usually consider more visual instruction data covering a broader range of vision tasks to fine-tune the model for question-answering, which, however, is costly to obtain and has not thoroughly explored the rich contextual information contained in images. This paper first attempts to harness the overlooked context within visual instruction data, training the model to self-supervised "learning" how to ask high-quality questions. In this way, we introduce a novel framework named SQ-LLaVA: Self-Questioning for Large Vision-Language Assistant. SQ-LLaVA exhibits proficiency in generating flexible and meaningful image-related questions while analyzing the visual clue and prior language knowledge, signifying an advanced level of generalized visual understanding. Moreover, fine-tuning SQ-LLaVA on higher-quality instruction data shows a performance improvement compared with traditional visual-instruction tuning methods. This improvement highlights the efficacy of self-questioning techniques in achieving a deeper and more nuanced comprehension of visual content across various contexts. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2403.11299v2 | [
"Guohao Sun",
"Can Qin",
"Jiamian Wang",
"Zeyuan Chen",
"Ran Xu",
"Zhiqiang Tao"
] | 2024-07-15T17:37:11Z | 2024-03-17T18:42:38Z |
2401.03506 | DiarizationLM: Speaker Diarization Post-Processing with Large Language
Models | In this paper, we introduce DiarizationLM, a framework to leverage large language models (LLM) to post-process the outputs from a speaker diarization system. Various goals can be achieved with the proposed framework, such as improving the readability of the diarized transcript, or reducing the word diarization error rate (WDER). In this framework, the outputs of the automatic speech recognition (ASR) and speaker diarization systems are represented as a compact textual format, which is included in the prompt to an optionally finetuned LLM. The outputs of the LLM can be used as the refined diarization results with the desired enhancement. As a post-processing step, this framework can be easily applied to any off-the-shelf ASR and speaker diarization systems without retraining existing components. Our experiments show that a finetuned PaLM 2-S model can reduce the WDER by rel. 55.5% on the Fisher telephone conversation dataset, and rel. 44.9% on the Callhome English dataset. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2401.03506v7 | [
"Quan Wang",
"Yiling Huang",
"Guanlong Zhao",
"Evan Clark",
"Wei Xia",
"Hank Liao"
] | 2024-07-15T17:32:23Z | 2024-01-07T14:54:57Z |
2407.10930 | Fine-Tuning and Prompt Optimization: Two Great Steps that Work Better
Together | Natural Language Processing (NLP) systems are increasingly taking the form of multi-stage pipelines involving multiple distinct language models (LMs) and prompting strategies. Here we address the question of how to fine-tune such systems to improve their performance. We cast this as a problem of optimizing the underlying LM weights and the prompting strategies together, and consider a challenging but highly realistic scenario in which we have no gold labels for any intermediate stages in the pipeline. To address this challenge, we evaluate approximate optimization strategies in which we bootstrap training labels for all pipeline stages and use these to optimize the pipeline's prompts and fine-tune its weights alternatingly. In experiments with multi-hop QA, mathematical reasoning, and feature-based classification, we find that simple approaches for optimizing the prompts and weights together outperform directly optimizing weights alone and prompts alone by up to 65% and 5%, respectively, on average across LMs and tasks. We will release our new optimizers in DSPy at http://dspy.ai | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2407.10930v1 | [
"Dilara Soylu",
"Christopher Potts",
"Omar Khattab"
] | 2024-07-15T17:30:31Z | 2024-07-15T17:30:31Z |
2407.10921 | A Dual-Attention Aware Deep Convolutional Neural Network for Early
Alzheimer's Detection | Alzheimer's disease (AD) represents the primary form of neurodegeneration, impacting millions of individuals each year and causing progressive cognitive decline. Accurately diagnosing and classifying AD using neuroimaging data presents ongoing challenges in medicine, necessitating advanced interventions that will enhance treatment measures. In this research, we introduce a dual attention enhanced deep learning (DL) framework for classifying AD from neuroimaging data. Combined spatial and self-attention mechanisms play a vital role in emphasizing focus on neurofibrillary tangles and amyloid plaques from the MRI images, which are difficult to discern with regular imaging techniques. Results demonstrate that our model yielded remarkable performance in comparison to existing state of the art (SOTA) convolutional neural networks (CNNs), with an accuracy of 99.1%. Moreover, it recorded remarkable metrics, with an F1-Score of 99.31%, a precision of 99.24%, and a recall of 99.5%. These results highlight the promise of cutting edge DL methods in medical diagnostics, contributing to highly reliable and more efficient healthcare solutions. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2407.10921v1 | [
"Pandiyaraju V",
"Shravan Venkatraman",
"Abeshek A",
"Aravintakshan S A",
"Pavan Kumar S",
"Kannan A"
] | 2024-07-15T17:22:16Z | 2024-07-15T17:22:16Z |
2307.07091 | Robotic Manipulation Datasets for Offline Compositional Reinforcement
Learning | Offline reinforcement learning (RL) is a promising direction that allows RL agents to pre-train on large datasets, avoiding the recurrence of expensive data collection. To advance the field, it is crucial to generate large-scale datasets. Compositional RL is particularly appealing for generating such large datasets, since 1)~it permits creating many tasks from few components, 2)~the task structure may enable trained agents to solve new tasks by combining relevant learned components, and 3)~the compositional dimensions provide a notion of task relatedness. This paper provides four offline RL datasets for simulated robotic manipulation created using the $256$ tasks from CompoSuite [Mendez at al., 2022a]. Each dataset is collected from an agent with a different degree of performance, and consists of $256$ million transitions. We provide training and evaluation settings for assessing an agent's ability to learn compositional task policies. Our benchmarking experiments show that current offline RL methods can learn the training tasks to some extent and that compositional methods outperform non-compositional methods. Yet current methods are unable to extract the compositional structure to generalize to unseen tasks, highlighting a need for future research in offline compositional RL. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2307.07091v2 | [
"Marcel Hussing",
"Jorge A. Mendez",
"Anisha Singrodia",
"Cassandra Kent",
"Eric Eaton"
] | 2024-07-15T17:21:48Z | 2023-07-13T23:36:55Z |
2407.10916 | When Heterophily Meets Heterogeneity: New Graph Benchmarks and Effective
Methods | Many real-world graphs frequently present challenges for graph learning due to the presence of both heterophily and heterogeneity. However, existing benchmarks for graph learning often focus on heterogeneous graphs with homophily or homogeneous graphs with heterophily, leaving a gap in understanding how methods perform on graphs that are both heterogeneous and heterophilic. To bridge this gap, we introduce H2GB, a novel graph benchmark that brings together the complexities of both the heterophily and heterogeneity properties of graphs. Our benchmark encompasses 9 diverse real-world datasets across 5 domains, 28 baseline model implementations, and 26 benchmark results. In addition, we present a modular graph transformer framework UnifiedGT and a new model variant, H2G-former, that excels at this challenging benchmark. By integrating masked label embeddings, cross-type heterogeneous attention, and type-specific FFNs, H2G-former effectively tackles graph heterophily and heterogeneity. Extensive experiments across 26 baselines on H2GB reveal inadequacies of current models on heterogeneous heterophilic graph learning, and demonstrate the superiority of our H2G-former over existing solutions. Both the benchmark and the framework are available on GitHub (https://github.com/junhongmit/H2GB) and PyPI (https://pypi.org/project/H2GB), and documentation can be found at https://junhongmit.github.io/H2GB/. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2407.10916v1 | [
"Junhong Lin",
"Xiaojie Guo",
"Shuaicheng Zhang",
"Dawei Zhou",
"Yada Zhu",
"Julian Shun"
] | 2024-07-15T17:18:42Z | 2024-07-15T17:18:42Z |
2407.10910 | DataDream: Few-shot Guided Dataset Generation | While text-to-image diffusion models have been shown to achieve state-of-the-art results in image synthesis, they have yet to prove their effectiveness in downstream applications. Previous work has proposed to generate data for image classifier training given limited real data access. However, these methods struggle to generate in-distribution images or depict fine-grained features, thereby hindering the generalization of classification models trained on synthetic datasets. We propose DataDream, a framework for synthesizing classification datasets that more faithfully represents the real data distribution when guided by few-shot examples of the target classes. DataDream fine-tunes LoRA weights for the image generation model on the few real images before generating the training data using the adapted model. We then fine-tune LoRA weights for CLIP using the synthetic data to improve downstream image classification over previous approaches on a large variety of datasets. We demonstrate the efficacy of DataDream through extensive experiments, surpassing state-of-the-art classification accuracy with few-shot data across 7 out of 10 datasets, while being competitive on the other 3. Additionally, we provide insights into the impact of various factors, such as the number of real-shot and generated images as well as the fine-tuning compute on model performance. The code is available at https://github.com/ExplainableML/DataDream. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2407.10910v1 | [
"Jae Myung Kim",
"Jessica Bader",
"Stephan Alaniz",
"Cordelia Schmid",
"Zeynep Akata"
] | 2024-07-15T17:10:31Z | 2024-07-15T17:10:31Z |
2403.05996 | Dissecting Deep RL with High Update Ratios: Combatting Value Divergence | We show that deep reinforcement learning algorithms can retain their ability to learn without resetting network parameters in settings where the number of gradient updates greatly exceeds the number of environment samples by combatting value function divergence. Under large update-to-data ratios, a recent study by Nikishin et al. (2022) suggested the emergence of a primacy bias, in which agents overfit early interactions and downplay later experience, impairing their ability to learn. In this work, we investigate the phenomena leading to the primacy bias. We inspect the early stages of training that were conjectured to cause the failure to learn and find that one fundamental challenge is a long-standing acquaintance: value function divergence. Overinflated Q-values are found not only on out-of-distribution but also in-distribution data and can be linked to overestimation on unseen action prediction propelled by optimizer momentum. We employ a simple unit-ball normalization that enables learning under large update ratios, show its efficacy on the widely used dm_control suite, and obtain strong performance on the challenging dog tasks, competitive with model-based approaches. Our results question, in parts, the prior explanation for sub-optimal learning due to overfitting early data. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2403.05996v2 | [
"Marcel Hussing",
"Claas Voelcker",
"Igor Gilitschenski",
"Amir-massoud Farahmand",
"Eric Eaton"
] | 2024-07-15T17:08:06Z | 2024-03-09T19:56:40Z |
2407.08868 | Generalizable Physics-Informed Learning for Stochastic Safety-Critical
Systems | Accurate estimate of long-term risk is critical for safe decision-making, but sampling from rare risk events and long-term trajectories can be prohibitively costly. Risk gradient can be used in many first-order techniques for learning and control methods, but gradient estimate is difficult to obtain using Monte Carlo (MC) methods because the infinitesimal divisor may significantly amplify sampling noise. Motivated by this gap, we propose an efficient method to evaluate long-term risk probabilities and their gradients using short-term samples without sufficient risk events. We first derive that four types of long-term risk probability are solutions of certain partial differential equations (PDEs). Then, we propose a physics-informed learning technique that integrates data and physics information (aforementioned PDEs). The physics information helps propagate information beyond available data and obtain provable generalization beyond available data, which in turn enables long-term risk to be estimated using short-term samples of safe events. Finally, we demonstrate in simulation that the proposed technique has improved sample efficiency, generalizes well to unseen regions, and adapts to changing system parameters. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2407.08868v2 | [
"Zhuoyuan Wang",
"Albert Chern",
"Yorie Nakahira"
] | 2024-07-15T16:47:42Z | 2024-07-11T21:10:03Z |
2407.10897 | Optical Diffusion Models for Image Generation | Diffusion models generate new samples by progressively decreasing the noise from the initially provided random distribution. This inference procedure generally utilizes a trained neural network numerous times to obtain the final output, creating significant latency and energy consumption on digital electronic hardware such as GPUs. In this study, we demonstrate that the propagation of a light beam through a semi-transparent medium can be programmed to implement a denoising diffusion model on image samples. This framework projects noisy image patterns through passive diffractive optical layers, which collectively only transmit the predicted noise term in the image. The optical transparent layers, which are trained with an online training approach, backpropagating the error to the analytical model of the system, are passive and kept the same across different steps of denoising. Hence this method enables high-speed image generation with minimal power consumption, benefiting from the bandwidth and energy efficiency of optical information processing. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2407.10897v1 | [
"Ilker Oguz",
"Niyazi Ulas Dinc",
"Mustafa Yildirim",
"Junjie Ke",
"Innfarn Yoo",
"Qifei Wang",
"Feng Yang",
"Christophe Moser",
"Demetri Psaltis"
] | 2024-07-15T16:46:14Z | 2024-07-15T16:46:14Z |
2406.20037 | Explore as a Storm, Exploit as a Raindrop: On the Benefit of Fine-Tuning
Kernel Schedulers with Coordinate Descent | Machine-learning models consist of kernels, which are algorithms applying operations on tensors -- data indexed by a linear combination of natural numbers. Examples of kernels include convolutions, transpositions, and vectorial products. There are many ways to implement a kernel. These implementations form the kernel's optimization space. Kernel scheduling is the problem of finding the best implementation, given an objective function -- typically execution speed. Kernel optimizers such as Ansor, Halide, and AutoTVM solve this problem via search heuristics, which combine two phases: exploration and exploitation. The first step evaluates many different kernel optimization spaces. The latter tries to improve the best implementations by investigating a kernel within the same space. For example, Ansor combines kernel generation through sketches for exploration and leverages an evolutionary algorithm to exploit the best sketches. In this work, we demonstrate the potential to reduce Ansor's search time while enhancing kernel quality by incorporating Droplet Search, an AutoTVM algorithm, into Ansor's exploration phase. The approach involves limiting the number of samples explored by Ansor, selecting the best, and exploiting it with a coordinate descent algorithm. By applying this approach to the first 300 kernels that Ansor generates, we usually obtain better kernels in less time than if we let Ansor analyze 10,000 kernels. This result has been replicated in 20 well-known deep-learning models (AlexNet, ResNet, VGG, DenseNet, etc.) running on four architectures: an AMD Ryzen 7 (x86), an NVIDIA A100 tensor core, an NVIDIA RTX 3080 GPU, and an ARM A64FX. A patch with this combined approach was approved in Ansor in February 2024. As evidence of the generality of this search methodology, a similar patch, achieving equally good results, was submitted to TVM's MetaSchedule in June 2024. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2406.20037v2 | [
"Michael Canesche",
"Gaurav Verma",
"Fernando Magno Quintao Pereira"
] | 2024-07-15T16:42:24Z | 2024-06-28T16:34:22Z |
2407.10886 | SLIP: Securing LLMs IP Using Weights Decomposition | Large language models (LLMs) have recently seen widespread adoption, in both academia and industry. As these models grow, they become valuable intellectual property (IP), reflecting enormous investments by their owners. Moreover, the high cost of cloud-based deployment has driven interest towards deployment to edge devices, yet this risks exposing valuable parameters to theft and unauthorized use. Current methods to protect models' IP on the edge have limitations in terms of practicality, loss in accuracy, or suitability to requirements. In this paper, we introduce a novel hybrid inference algorithm, named SLIP, designed to protect edge-deployed models from theft. SLIP is the first hybrid protocol that is both practical for real-world applications and provably secure, while having zero accuracy degradation and minimal impact on latency. It involves partitioning the model between two computing resources, one secure but expensive, and another cost-effective but vulnerable. This is achieved through matrix decomposition, ensuring that the secure resource retains a maximally sensitive portion of the model's IP while performing a minimal amount of computations, and vice versa for the vulnerable resource. Importantly, the protocol includes security guarantees that prevent attackers from exploiting the partition to infer the secured information. Finally, we present experimental results that show the robustness and effectiveness of our method, positioning it as a compelling solution for protecting LLMs. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2407.10886v1 | [
"Yehonathan Refael",
"Adam Hakim",
"Lev Greenberg",
"Tal Aviv",
"Satya Lokam",
"Ben Fishman",
"Shachar Seidman"
] | 2024-07-15T16:37:55Z | 2024-07-15T16:37:55Z |
2310.12128 | DiagrammerGPT: Generating Open-Domain, Open-Platform Diagrams via LLM
Planning | Text-to-image (T2I) generation has seen significant growth over the past few years. Despite this, there has been little work on generating diagrams with T2I models. A diagram is a symbolic/schematic representation that explains information using structurally rich and spatially complex visualizations (e.g., a dense combination of related objects, text labels, directional arrows/lines, etc.). Existing state-of-the-art T2I models often fail at diagram generation because they lack fine-grained object layout control when many objects are densely connected via complex relations such as arrows/lines, and also often fail to render comprehensible text labels. To address this gap, we present DiagrammerGPT, a novel two-stage text-to-diagram generation framework leveraging the layout guidance capabilities of LLMs to generate more accurate diagrams. In the first stage, we use LLMs to generate and iteratively refine 'diagram plans' (in a planner-auditor feedback loop). In the second stage, we use a diagram generator, DiagramGLIGEN, and a text label rendering module to generate diagrams (with clear text labels) following the diagram plans. To benchmark the text-to-diagram generation task, we introduce AI2D-Caption, a densely annotated diagram dataset built on top of the AI2D dataset. We show that our DiagrammerGPT framework produces more accurate diagrams, outperforming existing T2I models. We also provide comprehensive analysis, including open-domain diagram generation, multi-platform vector graphic diagram generation, human-in-the-loop editing, and multimodal planner/auditor LLMs. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2310.12128v2 | [
"Abhay Zala",
"Han Lin",
"Jaemin Cho",
"Mohit Bansal"
] | 2024-07-15T16:32:39Z | 2023-10-18T17:37:10Z |
2407.10878 | Deep Causal Learning to Explain and Quantify The Geo-Tension's Impact on
Natural Gas Market | Natural gas demand is a crucial factor for predicting natural gas prices and thus has a direct influence on the power system. However, existing methods face challenges in assessing the impact of shocks, such as the outbreak of the Russian-Ukrainian war. In this context, we apply deep neural network-based Granger causality to identify important drivers of natural gas demand. Furthermore, the resulting dependencies are used to construct a counterfactual case without the outbreak of the war, providing a quantifiable estimate of the overall effect of the shock on various German energy sectors. The code and dataset are available at https://github.com/bonaldli/CausalEnergy. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2407.10878v1 | [
"Philipp Kai Peter",
"Yulin Li",
"Ziyue Li",
"Wolfgang Ketter"
] | 2024-07-15T16:28:26Z | 2024-07-15T16:28:26Z |
2407.10874 | Random Channel Ablation for Robust Hand Gesture Classification with
Multimodal Biosignals | Biosignal-based hand gesture classification is an important component of effective human-machine interaction. For multimodal biosignal sensing, the modalities often face data loss due to missing channels in the data which can adversely affect the gesture classification performance. To make the classifiers robust to missing channels in the data, this paper proposes using Random Channel Ablation (RChA) during the training process. Ultrasound and force myography (FMG) data were acquired from the forearm for 12 hand gestures over 2 subjects. The resulting multimodal data had 16 total channels, 8 for each modality. The proposed method was applied to convolutional neural network architecture, and compared with baseline, imputation, and oracle methods. Using 5-fold cross-validation for the two subjects, on average, 12.2% and 24.5% improvement was observed for gesture classification with up to 4 and 8 missing channels respectively compared to the baseline. Notably, the proposed method is also robust to an increase in the number of missing channels compared to other methods. These results show the efficacy of using random channel ablation to improve classifier robustness for multimodal and multi-channel biosignal-based hand gesture classification. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2407.10874v1 | [
"Keshav Bimbraw",
"Jing Liu",
"Ye Wang",
"Toshiaki Koike-Akino"
] | 2024-07-15T16:23:53Z | 2024-07-15T16:23:53Z |
2312.09852 | Learning Distributions on Manifolds with Free-form Flows | We propose Manifold Free-Form Flows (M-FFF), a simple new generative model for data on manifolds. The existing approaches to learning a distribution on arbitrary manifolds are expensive at inference time, since sampling requires solving a differential equation. Our method overcomes this limitation by sampling in a single function evaluation. The key innovation is to optimize a neural network via maximum likelihood on the manifold, possible by adapting the free-form flow framework to Riemannian manifolds. M-FFF is straightforwardly adapted to any manifold with a known projection. It consistently matches or outperforms previous single-step methods specialized to specific manifolds, and is competitive with multi-step methods with typically two orders of magnitude faster inference speed. We make our code public at https://github.com/vislearn/FFF. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2312.09852v2 | [
"Peter Sorrenson",
"Felix Draxler",
"Armand Rousselot",
"Sander Hummerich",
"Ullrich Köthe"
] | 2024-07-15T16:19:13Z | 2023-12-15T14:58:34Z |
2407.10870 | GPT Sonograpy: Hand Gesture Decoding from Forearm Ultrasound Images via
VLM | Large vision-language models (LVLMs), such as the Generative Pre-trained Transformer 4-omni (GPT-4o), are emerging multi-modal foundation models which have great potential as powerful artificial-intelligence (AI) assistance tools for a myriad of applications, including healthcare, industrial, and academic sectors. Although such foundation models perform well in a wide range of general tasks, their capability without fine-tuning is often limited in specialized tasks. However, full fine-tuning of large foundation models is challenging due to enormous computation/memory/dataset requirements. We show that GPT-4o can decode hand gestures from forearm ultrasound data even with no fine-tuning, and improves with few-shot, in-context learning. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2407.10870v1 | [
"Keshav Bimbraw",
"Ye Wang",
"Jing Liu",
"Toshiaki Koike-Akino"
] | 2024-07-15T16:18:06Z | 2024-07-15T16:18:06Z |
2407.10867 | Provable Robustness of (Graph) Neural Networks Against Data Poisoning
and Backdoor Attacks | Generalization of machine learning models can be severely compromised by data poisoning, where adversarial changes are applied to the training data, as well as backdoor attacks that additionally manipulate the test data. These vulnerabilities have led to interest in certifying (i.e., proving) that such changes up to a certain magnitude do not affect test predictions. We, for the first time, certify Graph Neural Networks (GNNs) against poisoning and backdoor attacks targeting the node features of a given graph. Our certificates are white-box and based upon $(i)$ the neural tangent kernel, which characterizes the training dynamics of sufficiently wide networks; and $(ii)$ a novel reformulation of the bilevel optimization problem describing poisoning as a mixed-integer linear program. Consequently, we leverage our framework to provide fundamental insights into the role of graph structure and its connectivity on the worst-case robustness behavior of convolution-based and PageRank-based GNNs. We note that our framework is more general and constitutes the first approach to derive white-box poisoning certificates for NNs, which can be of independent interest beyond graph-related tasks. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2407.10867v1 | [
"Lukas Gosch",
"Mahalakshmi Sabanayagam",
"Debarghya Ghoshdastidar",
"Stephan Günnemann"
] | 2024-07-15T16:12:51Z | 2024-07-15T16:12:51Z |
2407.10854 | Principal Component Flow Map Learning of PDEs from Incomplete, Limited,
and Noisy Data | We present a computational technique for modeling the evolution of dynamical systems in a reduced basis, with a focus on the challenging problem of modeling partially-observed partial differential equations (PDEs) on high-dimensional non-uniform grids. We address limitations of previous work on data-driven flow map learning in the sense that we focus on noisy and limited data to move toward data collection scenarios in real-world applications. Leveraging recent work on modeling PDEs in modal and nodal spaces, we present a neural network structure that is suitable for PDE modeling with noisy and limited data available only on a subset of the state variables or computational domain. In particular, spatial grid-point measurements are reduced using a learned linear transformation, after which the dynamics are learned in this reduced basis before being transformed back out to the nodal space. This approach yields a drastically reduced parameterization of the neural network compared with previous flow map models for nodal space learning. This primarily allows for smaller training data sets, but also enables reduced training times. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2407.10854v1 | [
"Victor Churchill"
] | 2024-07-15T16:06:20Z | 2024-07-15T16:06:20Z |
2407.10844 | Rotationally Invariant Latent Distances for Uncertainty Estimation of
Relaxed Energy Predictions by Graph Neural Network Potentials | Graph neural networks (GNNs) have been shown to be astonishingly capable models for molecular property prediction, particularly as surrogates for expensive density functional theory calculations of relaxed energy for novel material discovery. However, one limitation of GNNs in this context is the lack of useful uncertainty prediction methods, as this is critical to the material discovery pipeline. In this work, we show that uncertainty quantification for relaxed energy calculations is more complex than uncertainty quantification for other kinds of molecular property prediction, due to the effect that structure optimizations have on the error distribution. We propose that distribution-free techniques are more useful tools for assessing calibration, recalibrating, and developing uncertainty prediction methods for GNNs performing relaxed energy calculations. We also develop a relaxed energy task for evaluating uncertainty methods for equivariant GNNs, based on distribution-free recalibration and using the Open Catalyst Project dataset. We benchmark a set of popular uncertainty prediction methods on this task, and show that latent distance methods, with our novel improvements, are the most well-calibrated and economical approach for relaxed energy calculations. Finally, we demonstrate that our latent space distance method produces results which align with our expectations on a clustering example, and on specific equation of state and adsorbate coverage examples from outside the training dataset. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2407.10844v1 | [
"Joseph Musielewicz",
"Janice Lan",
"Matt Uyttendaele",
"John R. Kitchin"
] | 2024-07-15T15:59:39Z | 2024-07-15T15:59:39Z |
2407.10839 | Offline Reinforcement Learning with Imputed Rewards | Offline Reinforcement Learning (ORL) offers a robust solution to training agents in applications where interactions with the environment must be strictly limited due to cost, safety, or lack of accurate simulation environments. Despite its potential to facilitate deployment of artificial agents in the real world, Offline Reinforcement Learning typically requires very many demonstrations annotated with ground-truth rewards. Consequently, state-of-the-art ORL algorithms can be difficult or impossible to apply in data-scarce scenarios. In this paper we propose a simple but effective Reward Model that can estimate the reward signal from a very limited sample of environment transitions annotated with rewards. Once the reward signal is modeled, we use the Reward Model to impute rewards for a large sample of reward-free transitions, thus enabling the application of ORL techniques. We demonstrate the potential of our approach on several D4RL continuous locomotion tasks. Our results show that, using only 1% of reward-labeled transitions from the original datasets, our learned reward model is able to impute rewards for the remaining 99% of the transitions, from which performant agents can be learned using Offline Reinforcement Learning. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2407.10839v1 | [
"Carlo Romeo",
"Andrew D. Bagdanov"
] | 2024-07-15T15:53:13Z | 2024-07-15T15:53:13Z |
2407.10836 | Data-Guided Physics-Informed Neural Networks for Solving Inverse
Problems in Partial Differential Equations | Physics-informed neural networks (PINNs) represent a significant advancement in scientific machine learning by integrating fundamental physical laws into their architecture through loss functions. PINNs have been successfully applied to solve various forward and inverse problems in partial differential equations (PDEs). However, a notable challenge can emerge during the early training stages when solving inverse problems. Specifically, data losses remain high while PDE residual losses are minimized rapidly, thereby exacerbating the imbalance between loss terms and impeding the overall efficiency of PINNs. To address this challenge, this study proposes a novel framework termed data-guided physics-informed neural networks (DG-PINNs). The DG-PINNs framework is structured into two distinct phases: a pre-training phase and a fine-tuning phase. In the pre-training phase, a loss function with only the data loss is minimized in a neural network. In the fine-tuning phase, a composite loss function, which consists of the data loss, PDE residual loss, and, if available, initial and boundary condition losses, is minimized in the same neural network. Notably, the pre-training phase ensures that the data loss is already at a low value before the fine-tuning phase commences. This approach enables the fine-tuning phase to converge to a minimal composite loss function with fewer iterations compared to existing PINNs. To validate the effectiveness, noise-robustness, and efficiency of DG-PINNs, extensive numerical investigations are conducted on inverse problems related to several classical PDEs, including the heat equation, wave equation, Euler--Bernoulli beam equation, and Navier--Stokes equation. The numerical results demonstrate that DG-PINNs can accurately solve these inverse problems and exhibit robustness against noise in training data. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2407.10836v1 | [
"Wei Zhou",
"Y. F. Xu"
] | 2024-07-15T15:47:24Z | 2024-07-15T15:47:24Z |
2407.10835 | Exploration in Knowledge Transfer Utilizing Reinforcement Learning | The contribution focuses on the problem of exploration within the task of knowledge transfer. Knowledge transfer refers to the useful application of the knowledge gained while learning the source task in the target task. The intended benefit of knowledge transfer is to speed up the learning process of the target task. The article aims to compare several exploration methods used within a deep transfer learning algorithm, particularly Deep Target Transfer $Q$-learning. The methods used are $epsilon$-greedy, Boltzmann, and upper confidence bound exploration. The aforementioned transfer learning algorithms and exploration methods were tested on the virtual drone problem. The results have shown that the upper confidence bound algorithm performs the best out of these options. Its sustainability to other applications is to be checked. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2407.10835v1 | [
"Adam Jedlička",
"Tatiana Valentine Guy"
] | 2024-07-15T15:45:29Z | 2024-07-15T15:45:29Z |
2407.10834 | MetaLLM: A High-performant and Cost-efficient Dynamic Framework for
Wrapping LLMs | The rapid progress in machine learning (ML) has brought forth many large language models (LLMs) that excel in various tasks and areas. These LLMs come with different abilities and costs in terms of computation or pricing. Since the demand for each query can vary, e.g., because of the queried domain or its complexity, defaulting to one LLM in an application is not usually the best choice, whether it is the biggest, priciest, or even the one with the best average test performance. Consequently, picking the right LLM that is both accurate and cost-effective for an application remains a challenge. In this paper, we introduce MetaLLM, a framework that dynamically and intelligently routes each query to the optimal LLM (among several available LLMs) for classification tasks, achieving significantly improved accuracy and cost-effectiveness. By framing the selection problem as a multi-armed bandit, MetaLLM balances prediction accuracy and cost efficiency under uncertainty. Our experiments, conducted on popular LLM platforms such as OpenAI's GPT models, Amazon's Titan, Anthropic's Claude, and Meta's LLaMa, showcase MetaLLM's efficacy in real-world scenarios, laying the groundwork for future extensions beyond classification tasks. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2407.10834v1 | [
"Quang H. Nguyen",
"Duy C. Hoang",
"Juliette Decugis",
"Saurav Manchanda",
"Nitesh V. Chawla",
"Khoa D. Doan"
] | 2024-07-15T15:45:07Z | 2024-07-15T15:45:07Z |
2407.10827 | LLM Circuit Analyses Are Consistent Across Training and Scale | Most currently deployed large language models (LLMs) undergo continuous training or additional finetuning. By contrast, most research into LLMs' internal mechanisms focuses on models at one snapshot in time (the end of pre-training), raising the question of whether their results generalize to real-world settings. Existing studies of mechanisms over time focus on encoder-only or toy models, which differ significantly from most deployed models. In this study, we track how model mechanisms, operationalized as circuits, emerge and evolve across 300 billion tokens of training in decoder-only LLMs, in models ranging from 70 million to 2.8 billion parameters. We find that task abilities and the functional components that support them emerge consistently at similar token counts across scale. Moreover, although such components may be implemented by different attention heads over time, the overarching algorithm that they implement remains. Surprisingly, both these algorithms and the types of components involved therein can replicate across model scale. These results suggest that circuit analyses conducted on small models at the end of pre-training can provide insights that still apply after additional pre-training and over model scale. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2407.10827v1 | [
"Curt Tigges",
"Michael Hanna",
"Qinan Yu",
"Stella Biderman"
] | 2024-07-15T15:38:51Z | 2024-07-15T15:38:51Z |
2407.10825 | Wicked Oddities: Selectively Poisoning for Effective Clean-Label
Backdoor Attacks | Deep neural networks are vulnerable to backdoor attacks, a type of adversarial attack that poisons the training data to manipulate the behavior of models trained on such data. Clean-label attacks are a more stealthy form of backdoor attacks that can perform the attack without changing the labels of poisoned data. Early works on clean-label attacks added triggers to a random subset of the training set, ignoring the fact that samples contribute unequally to the attack's success. This results in high poisoning rates and low attack success rates. To alleviate the problem, several supervised learning-based sample selection strategies have been proposed. However, these methods assume access to the entire labeled training set and require training, which is expensive and may not always be practical. This work studies a new and more practical (but also more challenging) threat model where the attacker only provides data for the target class (e.g., in face recognition systems) and has no knowledge of the victim model or any other classes in the training set. We study different strategies for selectively poisoning a small set of training samples in the target class to boost the attack success rate in this setting. Our threat model poses a serious threat in training machine learning models with third-party datasets, since the attack can be performed effectively with limited information. Experiments on benchmark datasets illustrate the effectiveness of our strategies in improving clean-label backdoor attacks. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2407.10825v1 | [
"Quang H. Nguyen",
"Nguyen Ngoc-Hieu",
"The-Anh Ta",
"Thanh Nguyen-Tang",
"Hoang Thanh-Tung",
"Khoa D. Doan"
] | 2024-07-15T15:38:21Z | 2024-07-15T15:38:21Z |
2312.15474 | A Conservative Approach for Few-Shot Transfer in Off-Dynamics
Reinforcement Learning | Off-dynamics Reinforcement Learning (ODRL) seeks to transfer a policy from a source environment to a target environment characterized by distinct yet similar dynamics. In this context, traditional RL agents depend excessively on the dynamics of the source environment, resulting in the discovery of policies that excel in this environment but fail to provide reasonable performance in the target one. In the few-shot framework, a limited number of transitions from the target environment are introduced to facilitate a more effective transfer. Addressing this challenge, we propose an innovative approach inspired by recent advancements in Imitation Learning and conservative RL algorithms. The proposed method introduces a penalty to regulate the trajectories generated by the source-trained policy. We evaluate our method across various environments representing diverse off-dynamics conditions, where access to the target environment is extremely limited. These experiments include high-dimensional systems relevant to real-world applications. Across most tested scenarios, our proposed method demonstrates performance improvements compared to existing baselines. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2312.15474v3 | [
"Paul Daoudi",
"Christophe Prieur",
"Bogdan Robu",
"Merwan Barlier",
"Ludovic Dos Santos"
] | 2024-07-15T15:36:37Z | 2023-12-24T13:09:08Z |
2407.10817 | Foundational Autoraters: Taming Large Language Models for Better
Automatic Evaluation | As large language models (LLMs) advance, it becomes more challenging to reliably evaluate their output due to the high costs of human evaluation. To make progress towards better LLM autoraters, we introduce FLAMe, a family of Foundational Large Autorater Models. FLAMe is trained on our large and diverse collection of 100+ quality assessment tasks comprising 5M+ human judgments, curated and standardized using publicly released human evaluations from previous research. FLAMe significantly improves generalization to a wide variety of held-out tasks, outperforming LLMs trained on proprietary data like GPT-4 and Claude-3 on many tasks. We show that FLAMe can also serve as a powerful starting point for further downstream fine-tuning, using reward modeling evaluation as a case study (FLAMe-RM). Notably, on RewardBench, our FLAMe-RM-24B model (with an accuracy of 87.8%) is the top-performing generative model trained exclusively on permissively licensed data, outperforming both GPT-4-0125 (85.9%) and GPT-4o (84.7%). Additionally, we explore a more computationally efficient approach using a novel tail-patch fine-tuning strategy to optimize our FLAMe multitask mixture for reward modeling evaluation (FLAMe-Opt-RM), offering competitive RewardBench performance while requiring approximately 25x less training datapoints. Overall, our FLAMe variants outperform all popular proprietary LLM-as-a-Judge models we consider across 8 out of 12 autorater evaluation benchmarks, encompassing 53 quality assessment tasks, including RewardBench and LLM-AggreFact. Finally, our analysis reveals that FLAMe is significantly less biased than these LLM-as-a-Judge models on the CoBBLEr autorater bias benchmark, while effectively identifying high-quality responses for code generation. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2407.10817v1 | [
"Tu Vu",
"Kalpesh Krishna",
"Salaheddin Alzubi",
"Chris Tar",
"Manaal Faruqui",
"Yun-Hsuan Sung"
] | 2024-07-15T15:33:45Z | 2024-07-15T15:33:45Z |
2308.12112 | Category Adaptation Meets Projected Distillation in Generalized
Continual Category Discovery | Generalized Continual Category Discovery (GCCD) tackles learning from sequentially arriving, partially labeled datasets while uncovering new categories. Traditional methods depend on feature distillation to prevent forgetting the old knowledge. However, this strategy restricts the model's ability to adapt and effectively distinguish new categories. To address this, we introduce a novel technique integrating a learnable projector with feature distillation, thus enhancing model adaptability without sacrificing past knowledge. The resulting distribution shift of the previously learned categories is mitigated with the auxiliary category adaptation network. We demonstrate that while each component offers modest benefits individually, their combination - dubbed CAMP (Category Adaptation Meets Projected distillation) - significantly improves the balance between learning new information and retaining old. CAMP exhibits superior performance across several GCCD and Class Incremental Learning scenarios. The code is available at https://github.com/grypesc/CAMP. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2308.12112v3 | [
"Grzegorz Rypeść",
"Daniel Marczak",
"Sebastian Cygert",
"Tomasz Trzciński",
"Bartłomiej Twardowski"
] | 2024-07-15T15:33:10Z | 2023-08-23T13:02:52Z |
2402.13654 | Improving a Proportional Integral Controller with Reinforcement Learning
on a Throttle Valve Benchmark | This paper presents a learning-based control strategy for non-linear throttle valves with an asymmetric hysteresis, leading to a near-optimal controller without requiring any prior knowledge about the environment. We start with a carefully tuned Proportional Integrator (PI) controller and exploit the recent advances in Reinforcement Learning (RL) with Guides to improve the closed-loop behavior by learning from the additional interactions with the valve. We test the proposed control method in various scenarios on three different valves, all highlighting the benefits of combining both PI and RL frameworks to improve control performance in non-linear stochastic systems. In all the experimental test cases, the resulting agent has a better sample efficiency than traditional RL agents and outperforms the PI controller. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2402.13654v2 | [
"Paul Daoudi",
"Bojan Mavkov",
"Bogdan Robu",
"Christophe Prieur",
"Emmanuel Witrant",
"Merwan Barlier",
"Ludovic Dos Santos"
] | 2024-07-15T15:27:46Z | 2024-02-21T09:40:26Z |
2407.10811 | GuideLight: "Industrial Solution" Guidance for More Practical Traffic
Signal Control Agents | Currently, traffic signal control (TSC) methods based on reinforcement learning (RL) have proven superior to traditional methods. However, most RL methods face difficulties when applied in the real world due to three factors: input, output, and the cycle-flow relation. The industry's observable input is much more limited than simulation-based RL methods. For real-world solutions, only flow can be reliably collected, whereas common RL methods need more. For the output action, most RL methods focus on acyclic control, which real-world signal controllers do not support. Most importantly, industry standards require a consistent cycle-flow relationship: non-decreasing and different response strategies for low, medium, and high-level flows, which is ignored by the RL methods. To narrow the gap between RL methods and industry standards, we innovatively propose to use industry solutions to guide the RL agent. Specifically, we design behavior cloning and curriculum learning to guide the agent to mimic and meet industry requirements and, at the same time, leverage the power of exploration and exploitation in RL for better performance. We theoretically prove that such guidance can largely decrease the sample complexity to polynomials in the horizon when searching for an optimal policy. Our rigid experiments show that our method has good cycle-flow relation and superior performance. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2407.10811v1 | [
"Haoyuan Jiang",
"Xuantang Xiong",
"Ziyue Li",
"Hangyu Mao",
"Guanghu Sui",
"Jingqing Ruan",
"Yuheng Cheng",
"Hua Wei",
"Wolfgang Ketter",
"Rui Zhao"
] | 2024-07-15T15:26:10Z | 2024-07-15T15:26:10Z |
2407.10810 | FabGPT: An Efficient Large Multimodal Model for Complex Wafer Defect
Knowledge Queries | Intelligence is key to advancing integrated circuit (IC) fabrication. Recent breakthroughs in Large Multimodal Models (LMMs) have unlocked unparalleled abilities in understanding images and text, fostering intelligent fabrication. Leveraging the power of LMMs, we introduce FabGPT, a customized IC fabrication large multimodal model for wafer defect knowledge query. FabGPT manifests expertise in conducting defect detection in Scanning Electron Microscope (SEM) images, performing root cause analysis, and providing expert question-answering (Q&A) on fabrication processes. FabGPT matches enhanced multimodal features to automatically detect minute defects under complex wafer backgrounds and reduce the subjectivity of manual threshold settings. Besides, the proposed modulation module and interactive corpus training strategy embed wafer defect knowledge into the pre-trained model, effectively balancing Q&A queries related to defect knowledge and original knowledge and mitigating the modality bias issues. Experiments on in-house fab data (SEM-WaD) show that our FabGPT achieves significant performance improvement in wafer defect detection and knowledge querying. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2407.10810v1 | [
"Yuqi Jiang",
"Xudong Lu",
"Qian Jin",
"Qi Sun",
"Hanming Wu",
"Cheng Zhuo"
] | 2024-07-15T15:25:45Z | 2024-07-15T15:25:45Z |
2407.10807 | Employing Sentence Space Embedding for Classification of Data Stream
from Fake News Domain | Tabular data is considered the last unconquered castle of deep learning, yet the task of data stream classification is stated to be an equally important and demanding research area. Due to the temporal constraints, it is assumed that deep learning methods are not the optimal solution for application in this field. However, excluding the entire -- and prevalent -- group of methods seems rather rash given the progress that has been made in recent years in its development. For this reason, the following paper is the first to present an approach to natural language data stream classification using the sentence space method, which allows for encoding text into the form of a discrete digital signal. This allows the use of convolutional deep networks dedicated to image classification to solve the task of recognizing fake news based on text data. Based on the real-life Fakeddit dataset, the proposed approach was compared with state-of-the-art algorithms for data stream classification based on generalization ability and time complexity. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2407.10807v1 | [
"Paweł Zyblewski",
"Jakub Klikowski",
"Weronika Borek-Marciniec",
"Paweł Ksieniewicz"
] | 2024-07-15T15:23:21Z | 2024-07-15T15:23:21Z |
2404.15770 | ChEX: Interactive Localization and Region Description in Chest X-rays | Report generation models offer fine-grained textual interpretations of medical images like chest X-rays, yet they often lack interactivity (i.e. the ability to steer the generation process through user queries) and localized interpretability (i.e. visually grounding their predictions), which we deem essential for future adoption in clinical practice. While there have been efforts to tackle these issues, they are either limited in their interactivity by not supporting textual queries or fail to also offer localized interpretability. Therefore, we propose a novel multitask architecture and training paradigm integrating textual prompts and bounding boxes for diverse aspects like anatomical regions and pathologies. We call this approach the Chest X-Ray Explainer (ChEX). Evaluations across a heterogeneous set of 9 chest X-ray tasks, including localized image interpretation and report generation, showcase its competitiveness with SOTA models while additional analysis demonstrates ChEX's interactive capabilities. Code: https://github.com/philip-mueller/chex | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2404.15770v2 | [
"Philip Müller",
"Georgios Kaissis",
"Daniel Rueckert"
] | 2024-07-15T15:22:15Z | 2024-04-24T09:44:44Z |
2407.10803 | DINO Pre-training for Vision-based End-to-end Autonomous Driving | In this article, we focus on the pre-training of visual autonomous driving agents in the context of imitation learning. Current methods often rely on a classification-based pre-training, which we hypothesise to be holding back from extending capabilities of implicit image understanding. We propose pre-training the visual encoder of a driving agent using the self-distillation with no labels (DINO) method, which relies on a self-supervised learning paradigm.% and is trained on an unrelated task. Our experiments in CARLA environment in accordance with the Leaderboard benchmark reveal that the proposed pre-training is more efficient than classification-based pre-training, and is on par with the recently proposed pre-training based on visual place recognition (VPRPre). | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2407.10803v1 | [
"Shubham Juneja",
"Povilas Daniušis",
"Virginijus Marcinkevičius"
] | 2024-07-15T15:18:57Z | 2024-07-15T15:18:57Z |
2407.10802 | Motion-prior Contrast Maximization for Dense Continuous-Time Motion
Estimation | Current optical flow and point-tracking methods rely heavily on synthetic datasets. Event cameras are novel vision sensors with advantages in challenging visual conditions, but state-of-the-art frame-based methods cannot be easily adapted to event data due to the limitations of current event simulators. We introduce a novel self-supervised loss combining the Contrast Maximization framework with a non-linear motion prior in the form of pixel-level trajectories and propose an efficient solution to solve the high-dimensional assignment problem between non-linear trajectories and events. Their effectiveness is demonstrated in two scenarios: In dense continuous-time motion estimation, our method improves the zero-shot performance of a synthetically trained model on the real-world dataset EVIMO2 by 29%. In optical flow estimation, our method elevates a simple UNet to achieve state-of-the-art performance among self-supervised methods on the DSEC optical flow benchmark. Our code is available at https://github.com/tub-rip/MotionPriorCMax. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2407.10802v1 | [
"Friedhelm Hamann",
"Ziyun Wang",
"Ioannis Asmanis",
"Kenneth Chaney",
"Guillermo Gallego",
"Kostas Daniilidis"
] | 2024-07-15T15:18:28Z | 2024-07-15T15:18:28Z |
2407.10793 | GraphEval: A Knowledge-Graph Based LLM Hallucination Evaluation
Framework | Methods to evaluate Large Language Model (LLM) responses and detect inconsistencies, also known as hallucinations, with respect to the provided knowledge, are becoming increasingly important for LLM applications. Current metrics fall short in their ability to provide explainable decisions, systematically check all pieces of information in the response, and are often too computationally expensive to be used in practice. We present GraphEval: a hallucination evaluation framework based on representing information in Knowledge Graph (KG) structures. Our method identifies the specific triples in the KG that are prone to hallucinations and hence provides more insight into where in the response a hallucination has occurred, if at all, than previous methods. Furthermore, using our approach in conjunction with state-of-the-art natural language inference (NLI) models leads to an improvement in balanced accuracy on various hallucination benchmarks, compared to using the raw NLI models. Lastly, we explore the use of GraphEval for hallucination correction by leveraging the structure of the KG, a method we name GraphCorrect, and demonstrate that the majority of hallucinations can indeed be rectified. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2407.10793v1 | [
"Hannah Sansford",
"Nicholas Richardson",
"Hermina Petric Maretic",
"Juba Nait Saada"
] | 2024-07-15T15:11:16Z | 2024-07-15T15:11:16Z |
2212.10678 | Testing Occupational Gender Bias in Language Models: Towards Robust
Measurement and Zero-Shot Debiasing | Generated texts from large language models (LLMs) have been shown to exhibit a variety of harmful, human-like biases against various demographics. These findings motivate research efforts aiming to understand and measure such effects. Prior works have proposed benchmarks for identifying and techniques for mitigating these stereotypical associations. However, as recent research pointed out, existing benchmarks lack a robust experimental setup, hindering the inference of meaningful conclusions from their evaluation metrics. In this paper, we introduce a list of desiderata for robustly measuring biases in generative language models. Building upon these design principles, we propose a benchmark called OCCUGENDER, with a bias-measuring procedure to investigate occupational gender bias. We then use this benchmark to test several state-of-the-art open-source LLMs, including Llama, Mistral, and their instruction-tuned versions. The results show that these models exhibit substantial occupational gender bias. We further propose prompting techniques to mitigate these biases without requiring fine-tuning. Finally, we validate the effectiveness of our methods through experiments on the same set of models. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2212.10678v2 | [
"Yuen Chen",
"Vethavikashini Chithrra Raghuram",
"Justus Mattern",
"Mrinmaya Sachan",
"Rada Mihalcea",
"Bernhard Schölkopf",
"Zhijing Jin"
] | 2024-07-15T15:10:45Z | 2022-12-20T22:41:24Z |
2212.11281 | Language models are better than humans at next-token prediction | Current language models are considered to have sub-human capabilities at natural language tasks like question-answering or writing code. However, language models are not trained to perform well at these tasks, they are trained to accurately predict the next token given previous tokes in tokenized text. It is not clear whether language models are better or worse than humans at next token prediction. To try to answer this question, we performed two distinct experiments to directly compare humans and language models on this front: one measuring top-1 accuracy and the other measuring perplexity. In both experiments, we find humans to be consistently emph{worse} than even relatively small language models like GPT3-Ada at next-token prediction. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2212.11281v2 | [
"Buck Shlegeris",
"Fabien Roger",
"Lawrence Chan",
"Euan McLean"
] | 2024-07-15T15:04:34Z | 2022-12-21T17:58:01Z |
2407.10784 | AdapTable: Test-Time Adaptation for Tabular Data via Shift-Aware
Uncertainty Calibrator and Label Distribution Handler | In real-world applications, tabular data often suffer from distribution shifts due to their widespread and abundant nature, leading to erroneous predictions of pre-trained machine learning models. However, addressing such distribution shifts in the tabular domain has been relatively underexplored due to unique challenges such as varying attributes and dataset sizes, as well as the limited representation learning capabilities of deep learning models for tabular data. Particularly, with the recent promising paradigm of test-time adaptation (TTA), where we adapt the off-the-shelf model to the unlabeled target domain during the inference phase without accessing the source domain, we observe that directly adopting commonly used TTA methods from other domains often leads to model collapse. We systematically explore challenges in tabular data test-time adaptation, including skewed entropy, complex latent space decision boundaries, confidence calibration issues with both overconfident and under-confident, and model bias towards source label distributions along with class imbalances. Based on these insights, we introduce AdapTable, a novel tabular test-time adaptation method that directly modifies output probabilities by estimating target label distributions and adjusting initial probabilities based on calibrated uncertainty. Extensive experiments on both natural distribution shifts and synthetic corruptions demonstrate the adaptation efficacy of the proposed method. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2407.10784v1 | [
"Changhun Kim",
"Taewon Kim",
"Seungyeon Woo",
"June Yong Yang",
"Eunho Yang"
] | 2024-07-15T15:02:53Z | 2024-07-15T15:02:53Z |
2407.10780 | Correlations Are Ruining Your Gradient Descent | Herein the topics of (natural) gradient descent, data decorrelation, and approximate methods for backpropagation are brought into a dialogue. Natural gradient descent illuminates how gradient vectors, pointing at directions of steepest descent, can be improved by considering the local curvature of loss landscapes. We extend this perspective and show that to fully solve the problem illuminated by natural gradients in neural networks, one must recognise that correlations in the data at any linear transformation, including node responses at every layer of a neural network, cause a non-orthonormal relationship between the model's parameters. To solve this requires a solution to decorrelate inputs at each individual layer of a neural network. We describe a range of methods which have been proposed for decorrelation and whitening of node output, while providing a novel method specifically useful for distributed computing and computational neuroscience. Implementing decorrelation within multi-layer neural networks, we can show that not only is training via backpropagation sped up significantly but also existing approximations of backpropagation, which have failed catastrophically in the past, are made performant once more. This has the potential to provide a route forward for approximate gradient descent methods which have previously been discarded, training approaches for analogue and neuromorphic hardware, and potentially insights as to the efficacy and utility of decorrelation processes in the brain. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2407.10780v1 | [
"Nasir Ahmad"
] | 2024-07-15T14:59:43Z | 2024-07-15T14:59:43Z |
2407.10779 | The Missing Link: Allocation Performance in Causal Machine Learning | Automated decision-making (ADM) systems are being deployed across a diverse range of critical problem areas such as social welfare and healthcare. Recent work highlights the importance of causal ML models in ADM systems, but implementing them in complex social environments poses significant challenges. Research on how these challenges impact the performance in specific downstream decision-making tasks is limited. Addressing this gap, we make use of a comprehensive real-world dataset of jobseekers to illustrate how the performance of a single CATE model can vary significantly across different decision-making scenarios and highlight the differential influence of challenges such as distribution shifts on predictions and allocations. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2407.10779v1 | [
"Unai Fischer-Abaigar",
"Christoph Kern",
"Frauke Kreuter"
] | 2024-07-15T14:57:40Z | 2024-07-15T14:57:40Z |
2407.10775 | Last-Iterate Global Convergence of Policy Gradients for Constrained
Reinforcement Learning | Constrained Reinforcement Learning (CRL) tackles sequential decision-making problems where agents are required to achieve goals by maximizing the expected return while meeting domain-specific constraints, which are often formulated as expected costs. In this setting, policy-based methods are widely used since they come with several advantages when dealing with continuous-control problems. These methods search in the policy space with an action-based or parameter-based exploration strategy, depending on whether they learn directly the parameters of a stochastic policy or those of a stochastic hyperpolicy. In this paper, we propose a general framework for addressing CRL problems via gradient-based primal-dual algorithms, relying on an alternate ascent/descent scheme with dual-variable regularization. We introduce an exploration-agnostic algorithm, called C-PG, which exhibits global last-iterate convergence guarantees under (weak) gradient domination assumptions, improving and generalizing existing results. Then, we design C-PGAE and C-PGPE, the action-based and the parameter-based versions of C-PG, respectively, and we illustrate how they naturally extend to constraints defined in terms of risk measures over the costs, as it is often requested in safety-critical scenarios. Finally, we numerically validate our algorithms on constrained control problems, and compare them with state-of-the-art baselines, demonstrating their effectiveness. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2407.10775v1 | [
"Alessandro Montenegro",
"Marco Mussi",
"Matteo Papini",
"Alberto Maria Metelli"
] | 2024-07-15T14:54:57Z | 2024-07-15T14:54:57Z |
2407.10768 | MSegRNN:Enhanced SegRNN Model with Mamba for Long-Term Time Series
Forecasting | The field of long-term time series forecasting demands handling extensive look-back windows and long-range prediction steps, posing significant challenges for RNN-based methodologies. Among these, SegRNN, a robust RNN-driven model, has gained considerable attention in LTSF analysis for achieving state-of-the-art results while maintaining a remarkably streamlined architecture. Concurrently, the Mamba structure has demonstrated its advantages in small to medium-sized models due to its capability for information selection. This study introduces a variant of SegRNN that preprocesses information using a fine-tuned single-layer Mamba structure. Additionally, it incorporates implicit segmentation and residual structures into the model's encoding section to further reduce the inherent data iterative cycles of RNN architectures and implicitly integrate inter-channel correlations. This variant, named MSegRNN, utilizes the Mamba structure to select useful information, resulting in a transformed sequence. The linear-strategy-adapted derivative retains the superior memory efficiency of the original SegRNN while demonstrating enhanced performance. Empirical evaluations on real-world LTSF datasets demonstrate the superior performance of our model, thereby contributing to the advancement of LTSF methodologies. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2407.10768v1 | [
"GaoXiang Zhao",
"XiaoQiang Wang"
] | 2024-07-15T14:50:15Z | 2024-07-15T14:50:15Z |
2407.10761 | Physics-Informed Machine Learning for Smart Additive Manufacturing | Compared to physics-based computational manufacturing, data-driven models such as machine learning (ML) are alternative approaches to achieve smart manufacturing. However, the data-driven ML's "black box" nature has presented a challenge to interpreting its outcomes. On the other hand, governing physical laws are not effectively utilized to develop data-efficient ML algorithms. To leverage the advantages of ML and physical laws of advanced manufacturing, this paper focuses on the development of a physics-informed machine learning (PIML) model by integrating neural networks and physical laws to improve model accuracy, transparency, and generalization with case studies in laser metal deposition (LMD). | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2407.10761v1 | [
"Rahul Sharma",
"Maziar Raissi",
"Y. B. Guo"
] | 2024-07-15T14:40:24Z | 2024-07-15T14:40:24Z |
2407.10759 | Qwen2-Audio Technical Report | We introduce the latest progress of Qwen-Audio, a large-scale audio-language model called Qwen2-Audio, which is capable of accepting various audio signal inputs and performing audio analysis or direct textual responses with regard to speech instructions. In contrast to complex hierarchical tags, we have simplified the pre-training process by utilizing natural language prompts for different data and tasks, and have further expanded the data volume. We have boosted the instruction-following capability of Qwen2-Audio and implemented two distinct audio interaction modes for voice chat and audio analysis. In the voice chat mode, users can freely engage in voice interactions with Qwen2-Audio without text input. In the audio analysis mode, users could provide audio and text instructions for analysis during the interaction. Note that we do not use any system prompts to switch between voice chat and audio analysis modes. Qwen2-Audio is capable of intelligently comprehending the content within audio and following voice commands to respond appropriately. For instance, in an audio segment that simultaneously contains sounds, multi-speaker conversations, and a voice command, Qwen2-Audio can directly understand the command and provide an interpretation and response to the audio. Additionally, DPO has optimized the model's performance in terms of factuality and adherence to desired behavior. According to the evaluation results from AIR-Bench, Qwen2-Audio outperformed previous SOTAs, such as Gemini-1.5-pro, in tests focused on audio-centric instruction-following capabilities. Qwen2-Audio is open-sourced with the aim of fostering the advancement of the multi-modal language community. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2407.10759v1 | [
"Yunfei Chu",
"Jin Xu",
"Qian Yang",
"Haojie Wei",
"Xipin Wei",
"Zhifang Guo",
"Yichong Leng",
"Yuanjun Lv",
"Jinzheng He",
"Junyang Lin",
"Chang Zhou",
"Jingren Zhou"
] | 2024-07-15T14:38:09Z | 2024-07-15T14:38:09Z |
2407.10758 | Continual Deep Learning on the Edge via Stochastic Local Competition
among Subnetworks | Continual learning on edge devices poses unique challenges due to stringent resource constraints. This paper introduces a novel method that leverages stochastic competition principles to promote sparsity, significantly reducing deep network memory footprint and computational demand. Specifically, we propose deep networks that comprise blocks of units that compete locally to win the representation of each arising new task; competition takes place in a stochastic manner. This type of network organization results in sparse task-specific representations from each network layer; the sparsity pattern is obtained during training and is different among tasks. Crucially, our method sparsifies both the weights and the weight gradients, thus facilitating training on edge devices. This is performed on the grounds of winning probability for each unit in a block. During inference, the network retains only the winning unit and zeroes-out all weights pertaining to non-winning units for the task at hand. Thus, our approach is specifically tailored for deployment on edge devices, providing an efficient and scalable solution for continual learning in resource-limited environments. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2407.10758v1 | [
"Theodoros Christophides",
"Kyriakos Tolias",
"Sotirios Chatzis"
] | 2024-07-15T14:36:05Z | 2024-07-15T14:36:05Z |
2403.10153 | Improving Medical Multi-modal Contrastive Learning with Expert
Annotations | We introduce eCLIP, an enhanced version of the CLIP model that integrates expert annotations in the form of radiologist eye-gaze heatmaps. It tackles key challenges in contrastive multi-modal medical imaging analysis, notably data scarcity and the "modality gap" -- a significant disparity between image and text embeddings that diminishes the quality of representations and hampers cross-modal interoperability. eCLIP integrates a heatmap processor and leverages mixup augmentation to efficiently utilize the scarce expert annotations, thus boosting the model's learning effectiveness. eCLIP is designed to be generally applicable to any variant of CLIP without requiring any modifications of the core architecture. Through detailed evaluations across several tasks, including zero-shot inference, linear probing, cross-modal retrieval, and Retrieval Augmented Generation (RAG) of radiology reports using a frozen Large Language Model, eCLIP showcases consistent improvements in embedding quality. The outcomes reveal enhanced alignment and uniformity, affirming eCLIP's capability to harness high-quality annotations for enriched multi-modal analysis in the medical imaging domain. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2403.10153v3 | [
"Yogesh Kumar",
"Pekka Marttinen"
] | 2024-07-15T14:35:13Z | 2024-03-15T09:54:04Z |
2403.17775 | Secure Aggregation is Not Private Against Membership Inference Attacks | Secure aggregation (SecAgg) is a commonly-used privacy-enhancing mechanism in federated learning, affording the server access only to the aggregate of model updates while safeguarding the confidentiality of individual updates. Despite widespread claims regarding SecAgg's privacy-preserving capabilities, a formal analysis of its privacy is lacking, making such presumptions unjustified. In this paper, we delve into the privacy implications of SecAgg by treating it as a local differential privacy (LDP) mechanism for each local update. We design a simple attack wherein an adversarial server seeks to discern which update vector a client submitted, out of two possible ones, in a single training round of federated learning under SecAgg. By conducting privacy auditing, we assess the success probability of this attack and quantify the LDP guarantees provided by SecAgg. Our numerical results unveil that, contrary to prevailing claims, SecAgg offers weak privacy against membership inference attacks even in a single training round. Indeed, it is difficult to hide a local update by adding other independent local updates when the updates are of high dimension. Our findings underscore the imperative for additional privacy-enhancing mechanisms, such as noise injection, in federated learning. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2403.17775v3 | [
"Khac-Hoang Ngo",
"Johan Östman",
"Giuseppe Durisi",
"Alexandre Graell i Amat"
] | 2024-07-15T14:29:33Z | 2024-03-26T15:07:58Z |
2402.11816 | Learning the Unlearned: Mitigating Feature Suppression in Contrastive
Learning | Self-Supervised Contrastive Learning has proven effective in deriving high-quality representations from unlabeled data. However, a major challenge that hinders both unimodal and multimodal contrastive learning is feature suppression, a phenomenon where the trained model captures only a limited portion of the information from the input data while overlooking other potentially valuable content. This issue often leads to indistinguishable representations for visually similar but semantically different inputs, adversely affecting downstream task performance, particularly those requiring rigorous semantic comprehension. To address this challenge, we propose a novel model-agnostic Multistage Contrastive Learning (MCL) framework. Unlike standard contrastive learning which inherently captures one single biased feature distribution, MCL progressively learns previously unlearned features through feature-aware negative sampling at each stage, where the negative samples of an anchor are exclusively selected from the cluster it was assigned to in preceding stages. Meanwhile, MCL preserves the previously well-learned features by cross-stage representation integration, integrating features across all stages to form final representations. Our comprehensive evaluation demonstrates MCL's effectiveness and superiority across both unimodal and multimodal contrastive learning, spanning a range of model architectures from ResNet to Vision Transformers (ViT). Remarkably, in tasks where the original CLIP model has shown limitations, MCL dramatically enhances performance, with improvements up to threefold on specific attributes in the recently proposed MMVP benchmark. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2402.11816v3 | [
"Jihai Zhang",
"Xiang Lan",
"Xiaoye Qu",
"Yu Cheng",
"Mengling Feng",
"Bryan Hooi"
] | 2024-07-15T14:28:46Z | 2024-02-19T04:13:33Z |
2407.07237 | The Quantum Imitation Game: Reverse Engineering of Quantum Machine
Learning Models | Quantum Machine Learning (QML) amalgamates quantum computing paradigms with machine learning models, providing significant prospects for solving complex problems. However, with the expansion of numerous third-party vendors in the Noisy Intermediate-Scale Quantum (NISQ) era of quantum computing, the security of QML models is of prime importance, particularly against reverse engineering, which could expose trained parameters and algorithms of the models. We assume the untrusted quantum cloud provider is an adversary having white-box access to the transpiled user-designed trained QML model during inference. Reverse engineering (RE) to extract the pre-transpiled QML circuit will enable re-transpilation and usage of the model for various hardware with completely different native gate sets and even different qubit technology. Such flexibility may not be obtained from the transpiled circuit which is tied to a particular hardware and qubit technology. The information about the number of parameters, and optimized values can allow further training of the QML model to alter the QML model, tamper with the watermark, and/or embed their own watermark or refine the model for other purposes. In this first effort to investigate the RE of QML circuits, we perform RE and compare the training accuracy of original and reverse-engineered Quantum Neural Networks (QNNs) of various sizes. We note that multi-qubit classifiers can be reverse-engineered under specific conditions with a mean error of order 1e-2 in a reasonable time. We also propose adding dummy fixed parametric gates in the QML models to increase the RE overhead for defense. For instance, adding 2 dummy qubits and 2 layers increases the overhead by ~1.76 times for a classifier with 2 qubits and 3 layers with a performance overhead of less than 9%. We note that RE is a very powerful attack model which warrants further efforts on defenses. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2407.07237v2 | [
"Archisman Ghosh",
"Swaroop Ghosh"
] | 2024-07-15T14:27:14Z | 2024-07-09T21:35:19Z |
2405.10221 | Scalarisation-based risk concepts for robust multi-objective
optimisation | Robust optimisation is a well-established framework for optimising functions in the presence of uncertainty. The inherent goal of this problem is to identify a collection of inputs whose outputs are both desirable for the decision maker, whilst also being robust to the underlying uncertainties in the problem. In this work, we study the multi-objective case of this problem. We identify that the majority of all robust multi-objective algorithms rely on two key operations: robustification and scalarisation. Robustification refers to the strategy that is used to account for the uncertainty in the problem. Scalarisation refers to the procedure that is used to encode the relative importance of each objective to a scalar-valued reward. As these operations are not necessarily commutative, the order that they are performed in has an impact on the resulting solutions that are identified and the final decisions that are made. The purpose of this work is to give a thorough exposition on the effects of these different orderings and in particular highlight when one should opt for one ordering over the other. As part of our analysis, we showcase how many existing risk concepts can be integrated into the specification and solution of a robust multi-objective optimisation problem. Besides this, we also demonstrate how one can principally define the notion of a robust Pareto front and a robust performance metric based on our ``robustify and scalarise'' methodology. To illustrate the efficacy of these new ideas, we present two insightful case studies which are based on real-world data sets. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2405.10221v2 | [
"Ben Tu",
"Nikolas Kantas",
"Robert M. Lee",
"Behrang Shafei"
] | 2024-07-15T14:13:13Z | 2024-05-16T16:11:00Z |
2407.09357 | Any-Property-Conditional Molecule Generation with Self-Criticism using
Spanning Trees | Generating novel molecules is challenging, with most representations leading to generative models producing many invalid molecules. Spanning Tree-based Graph Generation (STGG) is a promising approach to ensure the generation of valid molecules, outperforming state-of-the-art SMILES and graph diffusion models for unconditional generation. In the real world, we want to be able to generate molecules conditional on one or multiple desired properties rather than unconditionally. Thus, in this work, we extend STGG to multi-property-conditional generation. Our approach, STGG+, incorporates a modern Transformer architecture, random masking of properties during training (enabling conditioning on any subset of properties and classifier-free guidance), an auxiliary property-prediction loss (allowing the model to self-criticize molecules and select the best ones), and other improvements. We show that STGG+ achieves state-of-the-art performance on in-distribution and out-of-distribution conditional generation, and reward maximization. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2407.09357v2 | [
"Alexia Jolicoeur-Martineau",
"Aristide Baratin",
"Kisoo Kwon",
"Boris Knyazev",
"Yan Zhang"
] | 2024-07-15T14:10:13Z | 2024-07-12T15:32:44Z |
2404.10700 | Rawformer: Unpaired Raw-to-Raw Translation for Learnable Camera ISPs | Modern smartphone camera quality heavily relies on the image signal processor (ISP) to enhance captured raw images, utilizing carefully designed modules to produce final output images encoded in a standard color space (e.g., sRGB). Neural-based end-to-end learnable ISPs offer promising advancements, potentially replacing traditional ISPs with their ability to adapt without requiring extensive tuning for each new camera model, as is often the case for nearly every module in traditional ISPs. However, the key challenge with the recent learning-based ISPs is the urge to collect large paired datasets for each distinct camera model due to the influence of intrinsic camera characteristics on the formation of input raw images. This paper tackles this challenge by introducing a novel method for unpaired learning of raw-to-raw translation across diverse cameras. Specifically, we propose Rawformer, an unsupervised Transformer-based encoder-decoder method for raw-to-raw translation. It accurately maps raw images captured by a certain camera to the target camera, facilitating the generalization of learnable ISPs to new unseen cameras. Our method demonstrates superior performance on real camera datasets, achieving higher accuracy compared to previous state-of-the-art techniques, and preserving a more robust correlation between the original and translated raw images. The codes and the pretrained models are available at https://github.com/gosha20777/rawformer. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2404.10700v2 | [
"Georgy Perevozchikov",
"Nancy Mehta",
"Mahmoud Afifi",
"Radu Timofte"
] | 2024-07-15T14:09:28Z | 2024-04-16T16:17:48Z |
2404.08666 | Revealing Trends in Datasets from the 2022 ACL and EMNLP Conferences | Natural language processing (NLP) has grown significantly since the advent of the Transformer architecture. Transformers have given birth to pre-trained large language models (PLMs). There has been tremendous improvement in the performance of NLP systems across several tasks. NLP systems are on par or, in some cases, better than humans at accomplishing specific tasks. However, it remains the norm that emph{better quality datasets at the time of pretraining enable PLMs to achieve better performance, regardless of the task.} The need to have quality datasets has prompted NLP researchers to continue creating new datasets to satisfy particular needs. For example, the two top NLP conferences, ACL and EMNLP, accepted ninety-two papers in 2022, introducing new datasets. This work aims to uncover the trends and insights mined within these datasets. Moreover, we provide valuable suggestions to researchers interested in curating datasets in the future. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2404.08666v2 | [
"Jesse Atuhurra",
"Hidetaka Kamigaito"
] | 2024-07-15T14:07:16Z | 2024-03-31T15:13:15Z |
2407.10735 | Transforming Agency. On the mode of existence of Large Language Models | This paper investigates the ontological characterization of Large Language Models (LLMs) like ChatGPT. Between inflationary and deflationary accounts, we pay special attention to their status as agents. This requires explaining in detail the architecture, processing, and training procedures that enable LLMs to display their capacities, and the extensions used to turn LLMs into agent-like systems. After a systematic analysis we conclude that a LLM fails to meet necessary and sufficient conditions for autonomous agency in the light of embodied theories of mind: the individuality condition (it is not the product of its own activity, it is not even directly affected by it), the normativity condition (it does not generate its own norms or goals), and, partially the interactional asymmetry condition (it is not the origin and sustained source of its interaction with the environment). If not agents, then ... what are LLMs? We argue that ChatGPT should be characterized as an interlocutor or linguistic automaton, a library-that-talks, devoid of (autonomous) agency, but capable to engage performatively on non-purposeful yet purpose-structured and purpose-bounded tasks. When interacting with humans, a "ghostly" component of the human-machine interaction makes it possible to enact genuine conversational experiences with LLMs. Despite their lack of sensorimotor and biological embodiment, LLMs textual embodiment (the training corpus) and resource-hungry computational embodiment, significantly transform existing forms of human agency. Beyond assisted and extended agency, the LLM-human coupling can produce midtended forms of agency, closer to the production of intentional agency than to the extended instrumentality of any previous technologies. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2407.10735v1 | [
"Xabier E. Barandiaran",
"Lola S. Almendros"
] | 2024-07-15T14:01:35Z | 2024-07-15T14:01:35Z |
2407.10734 | On-Device Training of Fully Quantized Deep Neural Networks on Cortex-M
Microcontrollers | On-device training of DNNs allows models to adapt and fine-tune to newly collected data or changing domains while deployed on microcontroller units (MCUs). However, DNN training is a resource-intensive task, making the implementation and execution of DNN training algorithms on MCUs challenging due to low processor speeds, constrained throughput, limited floating-point support, and memory constraints. In this work, we explore on-device training of DNNs for Cortex-M MCUs. We present a method that enables efficient training of DNNs completely in place on the MCU using fully quantized training (FQT) and dynamic partial gradient updates. We demonstrate the feasibility of our approach on multiple vision and time-series datasets and provide insights into the tradeoff between training accuracy, memory overhead, energy, and latency on real hardware. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2407.10734v1 | [
"Mark Deutel",
"Frank Hannig",
"Christopher Mutschler",
"Jürgen Teich"
] | 2024-07-15T14:01:34Z | 2024-07-15T14:01:34Z |
2407.10722 | Mitigating Data Imbalance for Software Vulnerability Assessment: Does
Data Augmentation Help? | Background: Software Vulnerability (SV) assessment is increasingly adopted to address the ever-increasing volume and complexity of SVs. Data-driven approaches have been widely used to automate SV assessment tasks, particularly the prediction of the Common Vulnerability Scoring System (CVSS) metrics such as exploitability, impact, and severity. SV assessment suffers from the imbalanced distributions of the CVSS classes, but such data imbalance has been hardly understood and addressed in the literature. Aims: We conduct a large-scale study to quantify the impacts of data imbalance and mitigate the issue for SV assessment through the use of data augmentation. Method: We leverage nine data augmentation techniques to balance the class distributions of the CVSS metrics. We then compare the performance of SV assessment models with and without leveraging the augmented data. Results: Through extensive experiments on 180k+ real-world SVs, we show that mitigating data imbalance can significantly improve the predictive performance of models for all the CVSS tasks, by up to 31.8% in Matthews Correlation Coefficient. We also discover that simple text augmentation like combining random text insertion, deletion, and replacement can outperform the baseline across the board. Conclusions: Our study provides the motivation and the first promising step toward tackling data imbalance for effective SV assessment. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2407.10722v1 | [
"Triet H. M. Le",
"M. Ali Babar"
] | 2024-07-15T13:47:55Z | 2024-07-15T13:47:55Z |
2403.10348 | Denoising Task Difficulty-based Curriculum for Training Diffusion Models | Diffusion-based generative models have emerged as powerful tools in the realm of generative modeling. Despite extensive research on denoising across various timesteps and noise levels, a conflict persists regarding the relative difficulties of the denoising tasks. While various studies argue that lower timesteps present more challenging tasks, others contend that higher timesteps are more difficult. To address this conflict, our study undertakes a comprehensive examination of task difficulties, focusing on convergence behavior and changes in relative entropy between consecutive probability distributions across timesteps. Our observational study reveals that denoising at earlier timesteps poses challenges characterized by slower convergence and higher relative entropy, indicating increased task difficulty at these lower timesteps. Building on these observations, we introduce an easy-to-hard learning scheme, drawing from curriculum learning, to enhance the training process of diffusion models. By organizing timesteps or noise levels into clusters and training models with ascending orders of difficulty, we facilitate an order-aware training regime, progressing from easier to harder denoising tasks, thereby deviating from the conventional approach of training diffusion models simultaneously across all timesteps. Our approach leads to improved performance and faster convergence by leveraging benefits of curriculum learning, while maintaining orthogonality with existing improvements in diffusion training techniques. We validate these advantages through comprehensive experiments in image generation tasks, including unconditional, class-conditional, and text-to-image generation. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2403.10348v2 | [
"Jin-Young Kim",
"Hyojun Go",
"Soonwoo Kwon",
"Hyun-Gyoon Kim"
] | 2024-07-15T13:46:29Z | 2024-03-15T14:34:34Z |
2302.03648 | Class-Incremental Learning: A Survey | Deep models, e.g., CNNs and Vision Transformers, have achieved impressive achievements in many vision tasks in the closed world. However, novel classes emerge from time to time in our ever-changing world, requiring a learning system to acquire new knowledge continually. Class-Incremental Learning (CIL) enables the learner to incorporate the knowledge of new classes incrementally and build a universal classifier among all seen classes. Correspondingly, when directly training the model with new class instances, a fatal problem occurs -- the model tends to catastrophically forget the characteristics of former ones, and its performance drastically degrades. There have been numerous efforts to tackle catastrophic forgetting in the machine learning community. In this paper, we survey comprehensively recent advances in class-incremental learning and summarize these methods from several aspects. We also provide a rigorous and unified evaluation of 17 methods in benchmark image classification tasks to find out the characteristics of different algorithms empirically. Furthermore, we notice that the current comparison protocol ignores the influence of memory budget in model storage, which may result in unfair comparison and biased results. Hence, we advocate fair comparison by aligning the memory budget in evaluation, as well as several memory-agnostic performance measures. The source code is available at https://github.com/zhoudw-zdw/CIL_Survey/ | http://arxiv.org/abs/2302.03648v2 | [
"Da-Wei Zhou",
"Qi-Wei Wang",
"Zhi-Hong Qi",
"Han-Jia Ye",
"De-Chuan Zhan",
"Ziwei Liu"
] | 2024-07-15T13:35:33Z | 2023-02-07T17:59:05Z |
2405.17653 | InversionView: A General-Purpose Method for Reading Information from
Neural Activations | The inner workings of neural networks can be better understood if we can fully decipher the information encoded in neural activations. In this paper, we argue that this information is embodied by the subset of inputs that give rise to similar activations. Computing such subsets is nontrivial as the input space is exponentially large. We propose InversionView, which allows us to practically inspect this subset by sampling from a trained decoder model conditioned on activations. This helps uncover the information content of activation vectors, and facilitates understanding of the algorithms implemented by transformer models. We present four case studies where we investigate models ranging from small transformers to GPT-2. In these studies, we demonstrate the characteristics of our method, show the distinctive advantages it offers, and provide causally verified circuits. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2405.17653v3 | [
"Xinting Huang",
"Madhur Panwar",
"Navin Goyal",
"Michael Hahn"
] | 2024-07-15T13:30:52Z | 2024-05-27T20:53:22Z |
2407.10702 | Geometric Analysis of Unconstrained Feature Models with $d=K$ | Recently, interesting empirical phenomena known as Neural Collapse have been observed during the final phase of training deep neural networks for classification tasks. We examine this issue when the feature dimension d is equal to the number of classes K. We demonstrate that two popular unconstrained feature models are strict saddle functions, with every critical point being either a global minimum or a strict saddle point that can be exited using negative curvatures. The primary findings conclusively confirm the conjecture on the unconstrained feature models in previous articles. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2407.10702v1 | [
"Shao Gu",
"Yi Shen"
] | 2024-07-15T13:17:48Z | 2024-07-15T13:17:48Z |
2306.04621 | Flexible Distribution Alignment: Towards Long-tailed Semi-supervised
Learning with Proper Calibration | Long-tailed semi-supervised learning (LTSSL) represents a practical scenario for semi-supervised applications, challenged by skewed labeled distributions that bias classifiers. This problem is often aggravated by discrepancies between labeled and unlabeled class distributions, leading to biased pseudo-labels, neglect of rare classes, and poorly calibrated probabilities. To address these issues, we introduce Flexible Distribution Alignment (FlexDA), a novel adaptive logit-adjusted loss framework designed to dynamically estimate and align predictions with the actual distribution of unlabeled data and achieve a balanced classifier by the end of training. FlexDA is further enhanced by a distillation-based consistency loss, promoting fair data usage across classes and effectively leveraging underconfident samples. This method, encapsulated in ADELLO (Align and Distill Everything All at Once), proves robust against label shift, significantly improves model calibration in LTSSL contexts, and surpasses previous state-of-of-art approaches across multiple benchmarks, including CIFAR100-LT, STL10-LT, and ImageNet127, addressing class imbalance challenges in semi-supervised learning. Our code is available at https://github.com/emasa/ADELLO-LTSSL. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2306.04621v3 | [
"Emanuel Sanchez Aimar",
"Nathaniel Helgesen",
"Yonghao Xu",
"Marco Kuhlmann",
"Michael Felsberg"
] | 2024-07-15T13:07:02Z | 2023-06-07T17:50:59Z |
2407.10688 | Probability Passing for Graph Neural Networks: Graph Structure and
Representations Joint Learning | Graph Neural Networks (GNNs) have achieved notable success in the analysis of non-Euclidean data across a wide range of domains. However, their applicability is constrained by the dependence on the observed graph structure. To solve this problem, Latent Graph Inference (LGI) is proposed to infer a task-specific latent structure by computing similarity or edge probability of node features and then apply a GNN to produce predictions. Even so, existing approaches neglect the noise from node features, which affects generated graph structure and performance. In this work, we introduce a novel method called Probability Passing to refine the generated graph structure by aggregating edge probabilities of neighboring nodes based on observed graph. Furthermore, we continue to utilize the LGI framework, inputting the refined graph structure and node features into GNNs to obtain predictions. We name the proposed scheme as Probability Passing-based Graph Neural Network (PPGNN). Moreover, the anchor-based technique is employed to reduce complexity and improve efficiency. Experimental results demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed method. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2407.10688v1 | [
"Ziyan Wang",
"YaXuan He",
"Bin Liu"
] | 2024-07-15T13:01:47Z | 2024-07-15T13:01:47Z |
2404.10259 | Uncovering Latent Arguments in Social Media Messaging by Employing
LLMs-in-the-Loop Strategy | The widespread use of social media has led to a surge in popularity for automated methods of analyzing public opinion. Supervised methods are adept at text categorization, yet the dynamic nature of social media discussions poses a continual challenge for these techniques due to the constant shifting of the focus. On the other hand, traditional unsupervised methods for extracting themes from public discourse, such as topic modeling, often reveal overarching patterns that might not capture specific nuances. Consequently, a significant portion of research into social media discourse still depends on labor-intensive manual coding techniques and a human-in-the-loop approach, which are both time-consuming and costly. In this work, we study the problem of discovering arguments associated with a specific theme. We propose a generic LLMs-in-the-Loop strategy that leverages the advanced capabilities of Large Language Models (LLMs) to extract latent arguments from social media messaging. To demonstrate our approach, we apply our framework to contentious topics. We use two publicly available datasets: (1) the climate campaigns dataset of 14k Facebook ads with 25 themes and (2) the COVID-19 vaccine campaigns dataset of 9k Facebook ads with 14 themes. Additionally, we design a downstream task as stance prediction by leveraging talking points in climate debates. Furthermore, we analyze demographic targeting and the adaptation of messaging based on real-world events. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2404.10259v2 | [
"Tunazzina Islam",
"Dan Goldwasser"
] | 2024-07-15T13:00:46Z | 2024-04-16T03:26:43Z |
2403.14797 | Preventing Catastrophic Forgetting through Memory Networks in Continuous
Detection | Modern pre-trained architectures struggle to retain previous information while undergoing continuous fine-tuning on new tasks. Despite notable progress in continual classification, systems designed for complex vision tasks such as detection or segmentation still struggle to attain satisfactory performance. In this work, we introduce a memory-based detection transformer architecture to adapt a pre-trained DETR-style detector to new tasks while preserving knowledge from previous tasks. We propose a novel localized query function for efficient information retrieval from memory units, aiming to minimize forgetting. Furthermore, we identify a fundamental challenge in continual detection referred to as background relegation. This arises when object categories from earlier tasks reappear in future tasks, potentially without labels, leading them to be implicitly treated as background. This is an inevitable issue in continual detection or segmentation. The introduced continual optimization technique effectively tackles this challenge. Finally, we assess the performance of our proposed system on continual detection benchmarks and demonstrate that our approach surpasses the performance of existing state-of-the-art resulting in 5-7% improvements on MS-COCO and PASCAL-VOC on the task of continual detection. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2403.14797v2 | [
"Gaurav Bhatt",
"James Ross",
"Leonid Sigal"
] | 2024-07-15T12:59:02Z | 2024-03-21T19:20:29Z |
2407.10681 | GeoMix: Towards Geometry-Aware Data Augmentation | Mixup has shown considerable success in mitigating the challenges posed by limited labeled data in image classification. By synthesizing samples through the interpolation of features and labels, Mixup effectively addresses the issue of data scarcity. However, it has rarely been explored in graph learning tasks due to the irregularity and connectivity of graph data. Specifically, in node classification tasks, Mixup presents a challenge in creating connections for synthetic data. In this paper, we propose Geometric Mixup (GeoMix), a simple and interpretable Mixup approach leveraging in-place graph editing. It effectively utilizes geometry information to interpolate features and labels with those from the nearby neighborhood, generating synthetic nodes and establishing connections for them. We conduct theoretical analysis to elucidate the rationale behind employing geometry information for node Mixup, emphasizing the significance of locality enhancement-a critical aspect of our method's design. Extensive experiments demonstrate that our lightweight Geometric Mixup achieves state-of-the-art results on a wide variety of standard datasets with limited labeled data. Furthermore, it significantly improves the generalization capability of underlying GNNs across various challenging out-of-distribution generalization tasks. Our code is available at https://github.com/WtaoZhao/geomix. | http://arxiv.org/abs/2407.10681v1 | [
"Wentao Zhao",
"Qitian Wu",
"Chenxiao Yang",
"Junchi Yan"
] | 2024-07-15T12:58:04Z | 2024-07-15T12:58:04Z |
2407.00463 | Open-Source Conversational AI with SpeechBrain 1.0 | SpeechBrain is an open-source Conversational AI toolkit based on PyTorch, focused particularly on speech processing tasks such as speech recognition, speech enhancement, speaker recognition, text-to-speech, and much more. It promotes transparency and replicability by releasing both the pre-trained models and the complete "recipes" of code and algorithms required for training them. This paper presents SpeechBrain 1.0, a significant milestone in the evolution of the toolkit, which now has over 200 recipes for speech, audio, and language processing tasks, and more than 100 models available on Hugging Face. SpeechBrain 1.0 introduces new technologies to support diverse learning modalities, Large Language Model (LLM) integration, and advanced decoding strategies, along with novel models, tasks, and modalities. It also includes a new benchmark repository, offering researchers a unified platform for evaluating models across diverse tasks | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2407.00463v3 | [
"Mirco Ravanelli",
"Titouan Parcollet",
"Adel Moumen",
"Sylvain de Langen",
"Cem Subakan",
"Peter Plantinga",
"Yingzhi Wang",
"Pooneh Mousavi",
"Luca Della Libera",
"Artem Ploujnikov",
"Francesco Paissan",
"Davide Borra",
"Salah Zaiem",
"Zeyu Zhao",
"Shucong Zhang",
"Georgios Karakasidis",
"Sung-Lin Yeh",
"Aku Rouhe",
"Rudolf Braun",
"Florian Mai",
"Juan Zuluaga-Gomez",
"Seyed Mahed Mousavi",
"Andreas Nautsch",
"Xuechen Liu",
"Sangeet Sagar",
"Jarod Duret",
"Salima Mdhaffar",
"Gaelle Laperriere",
"Renato De Mori",
"Yannick Esteve"
] | 2024-07-15T12:56:28Z | 2024-06-29T15:20:11Z |
2403.04884 | Optimizing Retinal Prosthetic Stimuli with Conditional Invertible Neural
Networks | Implantable retinal prostheses offer a promising solution to restore partial vision by circumventing damaged photoreceptor cells in the retina and directly stimulating the remaining functional retinal cells. However, the information transmission between the camera and retinal cells is often limited by the low resolution of the electrode array and the lack of specificity for different ganglion cell types, resulting in suboptimal stimulations. In this work, we propose to utilize normalizing flow-based conditional invertible neural networks to optimize retinal implant stimulation in an unsupervised manner. The invertibility of these networks allows us to use them as a surrogate for the computational model of the visual system, while also encoding input camera signals into optimized electrical stimuli on the electrode array. Compared to other methods, such as trivial downsampling, linear models, and feed-forward convolutional neural networks, the flow-based invertible neural network and its conditional extension yield better visual reconstruction qualities w.r.t. various metrics using a physiologically validated simulation tool. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2403.04884v2 | [
"Yuli Wu",
"Julian Wittmann",
"Peter Walter",
"Johannes Stegmaier"
] | 2024-07-15T12:49:16Z | 2024-03-07T20:16:42Z |
2312.04985 | SparQ Attention: Bandwidth-Efficient LLM Inference | The computational difficulties of large language model (LLM) inference remain a significant obstacle to their widespread deployment. The need for many applications to support long input sequences and process them in large batches typically causes token-generation to be bottlenecked by data transfer. For this reason, we introduce SparQ Attention, a technique for increasing the inference throughput of LLMs by utilising memory bandwidth more efficiently within the attention layers, through selective fetching of the cached history. Our proposed technique can be applied directly to off-the-shelf LLMs during inference, without requiring any modification to the pre-training setup or additional fine-tuning. We show that SparQ Attention brings up to 8x savings in attention data transfers without substantial drops in accuracy, by evaluating Llama 2 and 3, Mistral, Gemma and Pythia models on a wide range of downstream tasks. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2312.04985v4 | [
"Luka Ribar",
"Ivan Chelombiev",
"Luke Hudlass-Galley",
"Charlie Blake",
"Carlo Luschi",
"Douglas Orr"
] | 2024-07-15T12:40:11Z | 2023-12-08T11:47:35Z |
2405.19076 | Cephalo: Multi-Modal Vision-Language Models for Bio-Inspired Materials
Analysis and Design | We present Cephalo, a series of multimodal vision large language models (V-LLMs) designed for materials science applications, integrating visual and linguistic data for enhanced understanding. A key innovation of Cephalo is its advanced dataset generation method. Cephalo is trained on integrated image and text data from thousands of scientific papers and science-focused Wikipedia data demonstrates can interpret complex visual scenes, generate precise language descriptions, and answer queries about images effectively. The combination of a vision encoder with an autoregressive transformer supports multimodal natural language understanding, which can be coupled with other generative methods to create an image-to-text-to-3D pipeline. To develop more capable models from smaller ones, we report both mixture-of-expert methods and model merging. We examine the models in diverse use cases that incorporate biological materials, fracture and engineering analysis, protein biophysics, and bio-inspired design based on insect behavior. Generative applications include bio-inspired designs, including pollen-inspired architected materials, as well as the synthesis of bio-inspired material microstructures from a photograph of a solar eclipse. Additional model fine-tuning with a series of molecular dynamics results demonstrate Cephalo's enhanced capabilities to accurately predict statistical features of stress and atomic energy distributions, as well as crack dynamics and damage in materials. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2405.19076v3 | [
"Markus J. Buehler"
] | 2024-07-15T12:36:42Z | 2024-05-29T13:34:32Z |
2401.05735 | Object-Centric Diffusion for Efficient Video Editing | This paper aims to accelerate video stream processing, such as object detection and semantic segmentation, by leveraging the temporal redundancies that exist between video frames. Instead of propagating and warping features using motion alignment, such as optical flow, we propose a novel knowledge distillation schema coined as Delta Distillation. In our proposal, the student learns the variations in the teacher's intermediate features over time. We demonstrate that these temporal variations can be effectively distilled due to the temporal redundancies within video frames. During inference, both teacher and student cooperate for providing predictions: the former by providing initial representations extracted only on the key-frame, and the latter by iteratively estimating and applying deltas for the successive frames. Moreover, we consider various design choices to learn optimal student architectures including an end-to-end learnable architecture search. By extensive experiments on a wide range of architectures, including the most efficient ones, we demonstrate that delta distillation sets a new state of the art in terms of accuracy vs. efficiency trade-off for semantic segmentation and object detection in videos. Finally, we show that, as a by-product, delta distillation improves the temporal consistency of the teacher model. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2401.05735v2 | [
"Kumara Kahatapitiya",
"Adil Karjauv",
"Davide Abati",
"Fatih Porikli",
"Yuki M. Asano",
"Amirhossein Habibian"
] | 2024-07-15T12:32:19Z | 2024-01-11T08:36:15Z |
2407.10666 | Flow Perturbation to Accelerate Unbiased Sampling of Boltzmann
distribution | Flow-based generative models have been employed for sampling the Boltzmann distribution, but their application to high-dimensional systems is hindered by the significant computational cost of obtaining the Jacobian of the flow. To overcome this challenge, we introduce the flow perturbation method, which incorporates optimized stochastic perturbations into the flow. By reweighting trajectories generated by the perturbed flow, our method achieves unbiased sampling of the Boltzmann distribution with orders of magnitude speedup compared to both brute force Jacobian calculations and the Hutchinson estimator. Notably, it accurately sampled the Chignolin protein with all atomic Cartesian coordinates explicitly represented, which, to our best knowledge, is the largest molecule ever Boltzmann sampled in such detail using generative models. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2407.10666v1 | [
"Xin Peng",
"Ang Gao"
] | 2024-07-15T12:29:17Z | 2024-07-15T12:29:17Z |
2306.05300 | Correlated Noise in Epoch-Based Stochastic Gradient Descent:
Implications for Weight Variances | Stochastic gradient descent (SGD) has become a cornerstone of neural network optimization, yet the noise introduced by SGD is often assumed to be uncorrelated over time, despite the ubiquity of epoch-based training. In this work, we challenge this assumption and investigate the effects of epoch-based noise correlations on the stationary distribution of discrete-time SGD with momentum, limited to a quadratic loss. Our main contributions are twofold: first, we calculate the exact autocorrelation of the noise for training in epochs under the assumption that the noise is independent of small fluctuations in the weight vector, and find that SGD noise is anti-correlated in time. Second, we explore the influence of these anti-correlations on SGD dynamics. We find that for directions with a curvature greater than a hyperparameter-dependent crossover value, the results for uncorrelated noise are recovered. However, for relatively flat directions, the weight variance is significantly reduced, and our variance prediction leads to a considerable reduction in loss fluctuations as compared to the constant weight variance assumption. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2306.05300v2 | [
"Marcel Kühn",
"Bernd Rosenow"
] | 2024-07-15T12:21:02Z | 2023-06-08T15:45:57Z |
2402.12231 | Diffusion Tempering Improves Parameter Estimation with Probabilistic
Integrators for Ordinary Differential Equations | Ordinary differential equations (ODEs) are widely used to describe dynamical systems in science, but identifying parameters that explain experimental measurements is challenging. In particular, although ODEs are differentiable and would allow for gradient-based parameter optimization, the nonlinear dynamics of ODEs often lead to many local minima and extreme sensitivity to initial conditions. We therefore propose diffusion tempering, a novel regularization technique for probabilistic numerical methods which improves convergence of gradient-based parameter optimization in ODEs. By iteratively reducing a noise parameter of the probabilistic integrator, the proposed method converges more reliably to the true parameters. We demonstrate that our method is effective for dynamical systems of different complexity and show that it obtains reliable parameter estimates for a Hodgkin-Huxley model with a practically relevant number of parameters. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2402.12231v4 | [
"Jonas Beck",
"Nathanael Bosch",
"Michael Deistler",
"Kyra L. Kadhim",
"Jakob H. Macke",
"Philipp Hennig",
"Philipp Berens"
] | 2024-07-15T12:14:15Z | 2024-02-19T15:36:36Z |
2403.10707 | Discovering Latent Themes in Social Media Messaging: A
Machine-in-the-Loop Approach Integrating LLMs | Grasping the themes of social media content is key to understanding the narratives that influence public opinion and behavior. The thematic analysis goes beyond traditional topic-level analysis, which often captures only the broadest patterns, providing deeper insights into specific and actionable themes such as "public sentiment towards vaccination", "political discourse surrounding climate policies," etc. In this paper, we introduce a novel approach to uncovering latent themes in social media messaging. Recognizing the limitations of the traditional topic-level analysis, which tends to capture only overarching patterns, this study emphasizes the need for a finer-grained, theme-focused exploration. Traditional theme discovery methods typically involve manual processes and a human-in-the-loop approach. While valuable, these methods face challenges in scalability, consistency, and resource intensity in terms of time and cost. To address these challenges, we propose a machine-in-the-loop approach that leverages the advanced capabilities of Large Language Models (LLMs). To demonstrate our approach, we apply our framework to contentious topics, such as climate debate and vaccine debate. We use two publicly available datasets: (1) the climate campaigns dataset of 21k Facebook ads and (2) the COVID-19 vaccine campaigns dataset of 9k Facebook ads. Our quantitative and qualitative analysis shows that our methodology yields more accurate and interpretable results compared to the baselines. Our results not only demonstrate the effectiveness of our approach in uncovering latent themes but also illuminate how these themes are tailored for demographic targeting in social media contexts. Additionally, our work sheds light on the dynamic nature of social media, revealing the shifts in the thematic focus of messaging in response to real-world events. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2403.10707v2 | [
"Tunazzina Islam",
"Dan Goldwasser"
] | 2024-07-15T12:14:13Z | 2024-03-15T21:54:00Z |
2407.10652 | Cutting Through the Clutter: The Potential of LLMs for Efficient
Filtration in Systematic Literature Reviews | In academic research, systematic literature reviews are foundational and highly relevant, yet tedious to create due to the high volume of publications and labor-intensive processes involved. Systematic selection of relevant papers through conventional means like keyword-based filtering techniques can sometimes be inadequate, plagued by semantic ambiguities and inconsistent terminology, which can lead to sub-optimal outcomes. To mitigate the required extensive manual filtering, we explore and evaluate the potential of using Large Language Models (LLMs) to enhance the efficiency, speed, and precision of literature review filtering, reducing the amount of manual screening required. By using models as classification agents acting on a structured database only, we prevent common problems inherent in LLMs, such as hallucinations. We evaluate the real-world performance of such a setup during the construction of a recent literature survey paper with initially more than 8.3k potentially relevant articles under consideration and compare this with human performance on the same dataset. Our findings indicate that employing advanced LLMs like GPT-4o, Claude 3.5 Sonnet, Gemini 1.5 Flash, or Llama3 with simple prompting can significantly reduce the time required for literature filtering - from usually weeks of manual research to only a few minutes. Simultaneously, we crucially show that false negatives can indeed be controlled through a consensus scheme, achieving recalls >98.8% at or even beyond the typical human error threshold, thereby also providing for more accurate and relevant articles selected. Our research not only demonstrates a substantial improvement in the methodology of literature reviews but also sets the stage for further integration and extensive future applications of responsible AI in academic research practices. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2407.10652v1 | [
"Lucas Joos",
"Daniel A. Keim",
"Maximilian T. Fischer"
] | 2024-07-15T12:13:53Z | 2024-07-15T12:13:53Z |
2403.17806 | Have Faith in Faithfulness: Going Beyond Circuit Overlap When Finding
Model Mechanisms | Many recent language model (LM) interpretability studies have adopted the circuits framework, which aims to find the minimal computational subgraph, or circuit, that explains LM behavior on a given task. Most studies determine which edges belong in a LM's circuit by performing causal interventions on each edge independently, but this scales poorly with model size. Edge attribution patching (EAP), gradient-based approximation to interventions, has emerged as a scalable but imperfect solution to this problem. In this paper, we introduce a new method - EAP with integrated gradients (EAP-IG) - that aims to better maintain a core property of circuits: faithfulness. A circuit is faithful if all model edges outside the circuit can be ablated without changing the model's performance on the task; faithfulness is what justifies studying circuits, rather than the full model. Our experiments demonstrate that circuits found using EAP are less faithful than those found using EAP-IG, even though both have high node overlap with circuits found previously using causal interventions. We conclude more generally that when using circuits to compare the mechanisms models use to solve tasks, faithfulness, not overlap, is what should be measured. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2403.17806v2 | [
"Michael Hanna",
"Sandro Pezzelle",
"Yonatan Belinkov"
] | 2024-07-15T12:07:09Z | 2024-03-26T15:44:58Z |
2310.19919 | Meta-Learning Strategies through Value Maximization in Neural Networks | Biological and artificial learning agents face numerous choices about how to learn, ranging from hyperparameter selection to aspects of task distributions like curricula. Understanding how to make these meta-learning choices could offer normative accounts of cognitive control functions in biological learners and improve engineered systems. Yet optimal strategies remain challenging to compute in modern deep networks due to the complexity of optimizing through the entire learning process. Here we theoretically investigate optimal strategies in a tractable setting. We present a learning effort framework capable of efficiently optimizing control signals on a fully normative objective: discounted cumulative performance throughout learning. We obtain computational tractability by using average dynamical equations for gradient descent, available for simple neural network architectures. Our framework accommodates a range of meta-learning and automatic curriculum learning methods in a unified normative setting. We apply this framework to investigate the effect of approximations in common meta-learning algorithms; infer aspects of optimal curricula; and compute optimal neuronal resource allocation in a continual learning setting. Across settings, we find that control effort is most beneficial when applied to easier aspects of a task early in learning; followed by sustained effort on harder aspects. Overall, the learning effort framework provides a tractable theoretical test bed to study normative benefits of interventions in a variety of learning systems, as well as a formal account of optimal cognitive control strategies over learning trajectories posited by established theories in cognitive neuroscience. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2310.19919v2 | [
"Rodrigo Carrasco-Davis",
"Javier Masís",
"Andrew M. Saxe"
] | 2024-07-15T12:07:03Z | 2023-10-30T18:29:26Z |
2407.10641 | Deep Diffusion Image Prior for Efficient OOD Adaptation in 3D Inverse
Problems | Recent inverse problem solvers that leverage generative diffusion priors have garnered significant attention due to their exceptional quality. However, adaptation of the prior is necessary when there exists a discrepancy between the training and testing distributions. In this work, we propose deep diffusion image prior (DDIP), which generalizes the recent adaptation method of SCD by introducing a formal connection to the deep image prior. Under this framework, we propose an efficient adaptation method dubbed D3IP, specified for 3D measurements, which accelerates DDIP by orders of magnitude while achieving superior performance. D3IP enables seamless integration of 3D inverse solvers and thus leads to coherent 3D reconstruction. Moreover, we show that meta-learning techniques can also be applied to yield even better performance. We show that our method is capable of solving diverse 3D reconstructive tasks from the generative prior trained only with phantom images that are vastly different from the training set, opening up new opportunities of applying diffusion inverse solvers even when training with gold standard data is impossible. Code: https://github.com/HJ-harry/DDIP3D | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2407.10641v1 | [
"Hyungjin Chung",
"Jong Chul Ye"
] | 2024-07-15T12:00:46Z | 2024-07-15T12:00:46Z |
2406.11717 | Refusal in Language Models Is Mediated by a Single Direction | Conversational large language models are fine-tuned for both instruction-following and safety, resulting in models that obey benign requests but refuse harmful ones. While this refusal behavior is widespread across chat models, its underlying mechanisms remain poorly understood. In this work, we show that refusal is mediated by a one-dimensional subspace, across 13 popular open-source chat models up to 72B parameters in size. Specifically, for each model, we find a single direction such that erasing this direction from the model's residual stream activations prevents it from refusing harmful instructions, while adding this direction elicits refusal on even harmless instructions. Leveraging this insight, we propose a novel white-box jailbreak method that surgically disables refusal with minimal effect on other capabilities. Finally, we mechanistically analyze how adversarial suffixes suppress propagation of the refusal-mediating direction. Our findings underscore the brittleness of current safety fine-tuning methods. More broadly, our work showcases how an understanding of model internals can be leveraged to develop practical methods for controlling model behavior. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2406.11717v2 | [
"Andy Arditi",
"Oscar Obeso",
"Aaquib Syed",
"Daniel Paleka",
"Nina Panickssery",
"Wes Gurnee",
"Neel Nanda"
] | 2024-07-15T11:53:41Z | 2024-06-17T16:36:12Z |
2407.10633 | Evaluating Model Bias Requires Characterizing its Mistakes | The ability to properly benchmark model performance in the face of spurious correlations is important to both build better predictors and increase confidence that models are operating as intended. We demonstrate that characterizing (as opposed to simply quantifying) model mistakes across subgroups is pivotal to properly reflect model biases, which are ignored by standard metrics such as worst-group accuracy or accuracy gap. Inspired by the hypothesis testing framework, we introduce SkewSize, a principled and flexible metric that captures bias from mistakes in a model's predictions. It can be used in multi-class settings or generalised to the open vocabulary setting of generative models. SkewSize is an aggregation of the effect size of the interaction between two categorical variables: the spurious variable representing the bias attribute and the model's prediction. We demonstrate the utility of SkewSize in multiple settings including: standard vision models trained on synthetic data, vision models trained on ImageNet, and large scale vision-and-language models from the BLIP-2 family. In each case, the proposed SkewSize is able to highlight biases not captured by other metrics, while also providing insights on the impact of recently proposed techniques, such as instruction tuning. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2407.10633v1 | [
"Isabela Albuquerque",
"Jessica Schrouff",
"David Warde-Farley",
"Taylan Cemgil",
"Sven Gowal",
"Olivia Wiles"
] | 2024-07-15T11:46:21Z | 2024-07-15T11:46:21Z |
2407.10630 | Brain Tumor Classification From MRI Images Using Machine Learning | Brain tumor is a life-threatening problem and hampers the normal functioning of the human body. The average five-year relative survival rate for malignant brain tumors is 35.6 percent. For proper diagnosis and efficient treatment planning, it is necessary to detect the brain tumor in early stages. Due to advancement in medical imaging technology, the brain images are taken in different modalities. The ability to extract relevant characteristics from magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans is a crucial step for brain tumor classifiers. Several studies have proposed various strategies to extract relevant features from different modalities of MRI to predict the growth of abnormal tumors. Most techniques used conventional methods of image processing for feature extraction and machine learning for classification. More recently, the use of deep learning algorithms in medical imaging has resulted in significant improvements in the classification and diagnosis of brain tumors. Since tumors are located at different regions of the brain, localizing the tumor and classifying it to a particular category is a challenging task. The objective of this project is to develop a predictive system for brain tumor detection using machine learning(ensembling). | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2407.10630v1 | [
"Vidhyapriya Ranganathan",
"Celshiya Udaiyar",
"Jaisree Jayanth",
"Meghaa P V",
"Srija B",
"Uthra S"
] | 2024-07-15T11:30:40Z | 2024-07-15T11:30:40Z |
2407.10629 | Balancing the Scales: Reinforcement Learning for Fair Classification | Fairness in classification tasks has traditionally focused on bias removal from neural representations, but recent trends favor algorithmic methods that embed fairness into the training process. These methods steer models towards fair performance, preventing potential elimination of valuable information that arises from representation manipulation. Reinforcement Learning (RL), with its capacity for learning through interaction and adjusting reward functions to encourage desired behaviors, emerges as a promising tool in this domain. In this paper, we explore the usage of RL to address bias in imbalanced classification by scaling the reward function to mitigate bias. We employ the contextual multi-armed bandit framework and adapt three popular RL algorithms to suit our objectives, demonstrating a novel approach to mitigating bias. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2407.10629v1 | [
"Leon Eshuijs",
"Shihan Wang",
"Antske Fokkens"
] | 2024-07-15T11:28:16Z | 2024-07-15T11:28:16Z |
2407.10627 | Arena Learning: Build Data Flywheel for LLMs Post-training via Simulated
Chatbot Arena | Assessing the effectiveness of large language models (LLMs) presents substantial challenges. The method of conducting human-annotated battles in an online Chatbot Arena is a highly effective evaluative technique. However, this approach is limited by the costs and time required for human annotation. In this paper, we introduce Arena Learning, an innovative offline strategy designed to simulate these arena battles using AI-driven annotations to evaluate battle outcomes, thus facilitating the continuous improvement of the target model through both supervised fine-tuning and reinforcement learning. Arena Learning comprises two key elements. First, it ensures precise evaluations and maintains consistency between offline simulations and online competitions via WizardArena, a pipeline developed to accurately predict the Elo rankings of various models using a meticulously designed offline test set. Our results demonstrate that WizardArena's predictions closely align with those from the online Arena. Second, it involves the continuous improvement of training data based on the battle results and the refined model. We establish a data flywheel to iteratively update the training data by highlighting the weaknesses of the target model based on its battle results, enabling it to learn from the strengths of multiple different models. We apply Arena Learning to train our target model, WizardLM-$beta$, and demonstrate significant performance enhancements across various metrics. This fully automated training and evaluation pipeline sets the stage for continuous advancements in various LLMs via post-training. Notably, Arena Learning plays a pivotal role in the success of WizardLM-2, and this paper serves both as an exploration of its efficacy and a foundational study for future discussions related to WizardLM-2 and its derivatives. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2407.10627v1 | [
"Haipeng Luo",
"Qingfeng Sun",
"Can Xu",
"Pu Zhao",
"Qingwei Lin",
"Jianguang Lou",
"Shifeng Chen",
"Yansong Tang",
"Weizhu Chen"
] | 2024-07-15T11:26:07Z | 2024-07-15T11:26:07Z |
2405.19909 | Adaptive Advantage-Guided Policy Regularization for Offline
Reinforcement Learning | In offline reinforcement learning, the challenge of out-of-distribution (OOD) is pronounced. To address this, existing methods often constrain the learned policy through policy regularization. However, these methods often suffer from the issue of unnecessary conservativeness, hampering policy improvement. This occurs due to the indiscriminate use of all actions from the behavior policy that generates the offline dataset as constraints. The problem becomes particularly noticeable when the quality of the dataset is suboptimal. Thus, we propose Adaptive Advantage-guided Policy Regularization (A2PR), obtaining high-advantage actions from an augmented behavior policy combined with VAE to guide the learned policy. A2PR can select high-advantage actions that differ from those present in the dataset, while still effectively maintaining conservatism from OOD actions. This is achieved by harnessing the VAE capacity to generate samples matching the distribution of the data points. We theoretically prove that the improvement of the behavior policy is guaranteed. Besides, it effectively mitigates value overestimation with a bounded performance gap. Empirically, we conduct a series of experiments on the D4RL benchmark, where A2PR demonstrates state-of-the-art performance. Furthermore, experimental results on additional suboptimal mixed datasets reveal that A2PR exhibits superior performance. Code is available at https://github.com/ltlhuuu/A2PR. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2405.19909v3 | [
"Tenglong Liu",
"Yang Li",
"Yixing Lan",
"Hao Gao",
"Wei Pan",
"Xin Xu"
] | 2024-07-15T10:55:57Z | 2024-05-30T10:20:55Z |
2406.18387 | DoubleTake: Geometry Guided Depth Estimation | Estimating depth from a sequence of posed RGB images is a fundamental computer vision task, with applications in augmented reality, path planning etc. Prior work typically makes use of previous frames in a multi view stereo framework, relying on matching textures in a local neighborhood. In contrast, our model leverages historical predictions by giving the latest 3D geometry data as an extra input to our network. This self-generated geometric hint can encode information from areas of the scene not covered by the keyframes and it is more regularized when compared to individual predicted depth maps for previous frames. We introduce a Hint MLP which combines cost volume features with a hint of the prior geometry, rendered as a depth map from the current camera location, together with a measure of the confidence in the prior geometry. We demonstrate that our method, which can run at interactive speeds, achieves state-of-the-art estimates of depth and 3D scene reconstruction in both offline and incremental evaluation scenarios. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2406.18387v2 | [
"Mohamed Sayed",
"Filippo Aleotti",
"Jamie Watson",
"Zawar Qureshi",
"Guillermo Garcia-Hernando",
"Gabriel Brostow",
"Sara Vicente",
"Michael Firman"
] | 2024-07-15T10:15:56Z | 2024-06-26T14:29:05Z |
2402.09821 | Diffusion Models for Audio Restoration | With the development of audio playback devices and fast data transmission, the demand for high sound quality is rising for both entertainment and communications. In this quest for better sound quality, challenges emerge from distortions and interferences originating at the recording side or caused by an imperfect transmission pipeline. To address this problem, audio restoration methods aim to recover clean sound signals from the corrupted input data. We present here audio restoration algorithms based on diffusion models, with a focus on speech enhancement and music restoration tasks. Traditional approaches, often grounded in handcrafted rules and statistical heuristics, have shaped our understanding of audio signals. In the past decades, there has been a notable shift towards data-driven methods that exploit the modeling capabilities of DNNs. Deep generative models, and among them diffusion models, have emerged as powerful techniques for learning complex data distributions. However, relying solely on DNN-based learning approaches carries the risk of reducing interpretability, particularly when employing end-to-end models. Nonetheless, data-driven approaches allow more flexibility in comparison to statistical model-based frameworks, whose performance depends on distributional and statistical assumptions that can be difficult to guarantee. Here, we aim to show that diffusion models can combine the best of both worlds and offer the opportunity to design audio restoration algorithms with a good degree of interpretability and a remarkable performance in terms of sound quality. We explain the diffusion formalism and its application to the conditional generation of clean audio signals. We believe that diffusion models open an exciting field of research with the potential to spawn new audio restoration algorithms that are natural-sounding and remain robust in difficult acoustic situations. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2402.09821v2 | [
"Jean-Marie Lemercier",
"Julius Richter",
"Simon Welker",
"Eloi Moliner",
"Vesa Välimäki",
"Timo Gerkmann"
] | 2024-07-15T10:15:12Z | 2024-02-15T09:36:36Z |
2405.00334 | A Survey on Deep Active Learning: Recent Advances and New Frontiers | Active learning seeks to achieve strong performance with fewer training samples. It does this by iteratively asking an oracle to label new selected samples in a human-in-the-loop manner. This technique has gained increasing popularity due to its broad applicability, yet its survey papers, especially for deep learning-based active learning (DAL), remain scarce. Therefore, we conduct an advanced and comprehensive survey on DAL. We first introduce reviewed paper collection and filtering. Second, we formally define the DAL task and summarize the most influential baselines and widely used datasets. Third, we systematically provide a taxonomy of DAL methods from five perspectives, including annotation types, query strategies, deep model architectures, learning paradigms, and training processes, and objectively analyze their strengths and weaknesses. Then, we comprehensively summarize main applications of DAL in Natural Language Processing (NLP), Computer Vision (CV), and Data Mining (DM), etc. Finally, we discuss challenges and perspectives after a detailed analysis of current studies. This work aims to serve as a useful and quick guide for researchers in overcoming difficulties in DAL. We hope that this survey will spur further progress in this burgeoning field. | http://arxiv.org/pdf/2405.00334v2 | [
"Dongyuan Li",
"Zhen Wang",
"Yankai Chen",
"Renhe Jiang",
"Weiping Ding",
"Manabu Okumura"
] | 2024-07-15T10:07:56Z | 2024-05-01T05:54:33Z |