Oceania
RU-AI: A Large Multimodal Dataset for Machine Generated Content Detection
Huang, Liting, Zhang, Zhihao, Zhang, Yiran, Zhou, Xiyue, Wang, Shoujin
The recent advancements in generative AI models, which can create realistic and human-like content, are significantly transforming how people communicate, create, and work. While the appropriate use of generative AI models can benefit the society, their misuse poses significant threats to data reliability and authentication. However, due to a lack of aligned multimodal datasets, effective and robust methods for detecting machine-generated content are still in the early stages of development. In this paper, we introduce RU-AI, a new large-scale multimodal dataset designed for the robust and efficient detection of machine-generated content in text, image, and voice. Our dataset is constructed from three large publicly available datasets: Flickr8K, COCO, and Places205, by combining the original datasets and their corresponding machine-generated pairs. Additionally, experimental results show that our proposed unified model, which incorporates a multimodal embedding module with a multilayer perceptron network, can effectively determine the origin of the data (i.e., original data samples or machine-generated ones) from RU-AI. However, future work is still required to address the remaining challenges posed by RU-AI. The source code and dataset are available at https://github.com/ZhihaoZhang97/RU-AI.
Critical Phase Transition in a Large Language Model
Nakaishi, Kai, Nishikawa, Yoshihiko, Hukushima, Koji
The performance of large language models (LLMs) strongly depends on the \textit{temperature} parameter. Empirically, at very low temperatures, LLMs generate sentences with clear repetitive structures, while at very high temperatures, generated sentences are often incomprehensible. In this study, using GPT-2, we numerically demonstrate that the difference between the two regimes is not just a smooth change but a phase transition with singular, divergent statistical quantities. Our extensive analysis shows that critical behaviors, such as a power-law decay of correlation in a text, emerge in the LLM at the transition temperature as well as in a natural language dataset. We also discuss that several statistical quantities characterizing the criticality should be useful to evaluate the performance of LLMs.
OFDM-Standard Compatible SC-NOFS Waveforms for Low-Latency and Jitter-Tolerance Industrial IoT Communications
Xu, Tongyang, Li, Shuangyang, Yuan, Jinhong
Traditional communications focus on regular and orthogonal signal waveforms for simplified signal processing and improved spectral efficiency. In contrast, the next-generation communications would aim for irregular and non-orthogonal signal waveforms to introduce new capabilities. This work proposes a spectrally efficient irregular Sinc (irSinc) shaping technique, revisiting the traditional Sinc back to 1924, with the aim of enhancing performance in industrial Internet of things (IIoT). In time-critical IIoT applications, low-latency and time-jitter tolerance are two critical factors that significantly impact the performance and reliability. Recognizing the inevitability of latency and jitter in practice, this work aims to propose a waveform technique to mitigate these effects via reducing latency and enhancing the system robustness under time jitter effects. The utilization of irSinc yields a signal with increased spectral efficiency without sacrificing error performance. Integrating the irSinc in a two-stage framework, a single-carrier non-orthogonal frequency shaping (SC-NOFS) waveform is developed, showcasing perfect compatibility with 5G standards, enabling the direct integration of irSinc in existing industrial IoT setups. Through 5G standard signal configuration, our signal achieves faster data transmission within the same spectral bandwidth. Hardware experiments validate an 18% saving in timing resources, leading to either reduced latency or enhanced jitter tolerance.
Extremization to Fine Tune Physics Informed Neural Networks for Solving Boundary Value Problems
Thiruthummal, Abhiram Anand, Shelyag, Sergiy, Kim, Eun-jin
We propose a novel method for fast and accurate training of physics-informed neural networks (PINNs) to find solutions to boundary value problems (BVPs) and initial boundary value problems (IBVPs). By combining the methods of training deep neural networks (DNNs) and Extreme Learning Machines (ELMs), we develop a model which has the expressivity of DNNs with the fine-tuning ability of ELMs. We showcase the superiority of our proposed method by solving several BVPs and IBVPs which include linear and non-linear ordinary differential equations (ODEs), partial differential equations (PDEs) and coupled PDEs. The examples we consider include a stiff coupled ODE system where traditional numerical methods fail, a 3+1D non-linear PDE, Kovasznay flow and Taylor-Green vortex solutions to incompressible Navier-Stokes equations and pure advection solution of 1+1 D compressible Euler equation. The Theory of Functional Connections (TFC) is used to exactly impose initial and boundary conditions (IBCs) of (I)BVPs on PINNs. We propose a modification to the TFC framework named Reduced TFC and show a significant improvement in the training and inference time of PINNs compared to IBCs imposed using TFC. Furthermore, Reduced TFC is shown to be able to generalize to more complex boundary geometries which is not possible with TFC. We also introduce a method of applying boundary conditions at infinity for BVPs and numerically solve the pure advection in 1+1 D Euler equations using these boundary conditions.
Towards objective and interpretable speech disorder assessment: a comparative analysis of CNN and transformer-based models
Maisonneuve, Malo, Fredouille, Corinne, Lalain, Muriel, Ghio, Alain, Woisard, Virginie
Some research has been focused on using these models to automatically assess Head and Neck Cancers (HNC) significantly impact patients' the speech severity level [13, 14, 15]. Other studies analysed ability to speak, affecting their quality of life. Commonly how well diseases can be predicted by these models. For instance, used metrics for assessing pathological speech are subjective, A. Favaro et al. [16] compared interpretable speech prompting the need for automated and unbiased evaluation features to embeddings produced by SSL models on predicting methods. This study proposes a self-supervised Wav2Vec2-the presence of Parkinson's disease. They showed that based model for phone classification with HNC patients, to enhance using embeddings provides better detection accuracies at the accuracy and improve the discrimination of phonetic features cost of losing the insight into speech and language deterioration for subsequent interpretability purpose. The impact of given by interpretable features. While being able to detect pre-training datasets, model size, and fine-tuning datasets and a disease and assess its severity is important, we believe it parameters are explored. Evaluation on diverse corpora reveals is as important to interpret the output of these models, in order the effectiveness of the Wav2Vec2 architecture, outperforming to enhance trust that clinicians can have in these systems.
On Ambiguity and the Expressive Function of Law: The Role of Pragmatics in Smart Legal Ecosystems
This is a long paper, an essay, on ambiguity, pragmatics, legal ecosystems, and the expressive function of law. It is divided into two parts and fifteen sections. The first part (Pragmatics) addresses ambiguity from the perspective of linguistic and cognitive pragmatics in the legal field. The second part (Computing) deals with this issue from the point of view of human-centered design and artificial intelligence, specifically focusing on the notion and modelling of rules and what it means to comply with the rules. This is necessary for the scaffolding of smart legal ecosystems (SLE). I will develop this subject with the example of the architecture, information flows, and smart ecosystem of OPTIMAI, an EU project of Industry 4.0 for zero-defect manufacturing (Optimizing Manufacturing Processes through Artificial Intelligence and Virtualization).
Artifacts or Abduction: How Do LLMs Answer Multiple-Choice Questions Without the Question?
Balepur, Nishant, Ravichander, Abhilasha, Rudinger, Rachel
Multiple-choice question answering (MCQA) is often used to evaluate large language models (LLMs). To see if MCQA assesses LLMs as intended, we probe if LLMs can perform MCQA with choices-only prompts, where models must select the correct answer only from the choices. In three MCQA datasets and four LLMs, this prompt bests a majority baseline in 11/12 cases, with up to 0.33 accuracy gain. To help explain this behavior, we conduct an in-depth, black-box analysis on memorization, choice dynamics, and question inference. Our key findings are threefold. First, we find no evidence that the choices-only accuracy stems from memorization alone. Second, priors over individual choices do not fully explain choices-only accuracy, hinting that LLMs use the group dynamics of choices. Third, LLMs have some ability to infer a relevant question from choices, and surprisingly can sometimes even match the original question. Inferring the original question is an impressive reasoning strategy, but it cannot fully explain the high choices-only accuracy of LLMs in MCQA. Thus, while LLMs are not fully incapable of reasoning in MCQA, we still advocate for the use of stronger baselines in MCQA benchmarks, the design of robust MCQA datasets for fair evaluations, and further efforts to explain LLM decision-making.
When and How: Learning Identifiable Latent States for Nonstationary Time Series Forecasting
Li, Zijian, Cai, Ruichu, Yang, Zhenhui, Huang, Haiqin, Chen, Guangyi, Shen, Yifan, Chen, Zhengming, Song, Xiangchen, Zhang, Kun
Temporal distribution shifts are ubiquitous in time series data. One of the most popular methods assumes that the temporal distribution shift occurs uniformly to disentangle the stationary and nonstationary dependencies. But this assumption is difficult to meet, as we do not know when the distribution shifts occur. To solve this problem, we propose to learn IDentifiable latEnt stAtes (IDEA) to detect when the distribution shifts occur. Beyond that, we further disentangle the stationary and nonstationary latent states via sufficient observation assumption to learn how the latent states change. Specifically, we formalize the causal process with environment-irrelated stationary and environment-related nonstationary variables. Under mild conditions, we show that latent environments and stationary/nonstationary variables are identifiable. Based on these theories, we devise the IDEA model, which incorporates an autoregressive hidden Markov model to estimate latent environments and modular prior networks to identify latent states. The IDEA model outperforms several latest nonstationary forecasting methods on various benchmark datasets, highlighting its advantages in real-world scenarios.
Deep Neural Networks are Adaptive to Function Regularity and Data Distribution in Approximation and Estimation
Liu, Hao, Cheng, Jiahui, Liao, Wenjing
Deep learning has exhibited remarkable results across diverse areas. To understand its success, substantial research has been directed towards its theoretical foundations. Nevertheless, the majority of these studies examine how well deep neural networks can model functions with uniform regularity. In this paper, we explore a different angle: how deep neural networks can adapt to different regularity in functions across different locations and scales and nonuniform data distributions. More precisely, we focus on a broad class of functions defined by nonlinear tree-based approximation. This class encompasses a range of function types, such as functions with uniform regularity and discontinuous functions. We develop nonparametric approximation and estimation theories for this function class using deep ReLU networks. Our results show that deep neural networks are adaptive to different regularity of functions and nonuniform data distributions at different locations and scales. We apply our results to several function classes, and derive the corresponding approximation and generalization errors. The validity of our results is demonstrated through numerical experiments.
Dynamical mixture modeling with fast, automatic determination of Markov chains
Miles, Christopher E., Webber, Robert J.
Markov state modeling has gained popularity in various scientific fields due to its ability to reduce complex time series data into transitions between a few states. Yet, current frameworks are limited by assuming a single Markov chain describes the data, and they suffer an inability to discern heterogeneities. As a solution, this paper proposes a variational expectation-maximization algorithm that identifies a mixture of Markov chains in a time-series data set. The method is agnostic to the definition of the Markov states, whether data-driven (e.g. by spectral clustering) or based on domain knowledge. Variational EM efficiently and organically identifies the number of Markov chains and dynamics of each chain without expensive model comparisons or posterior sampling. The approach is supported by a theoretical analysis and numerical experiments, including simulated and observational data sets based on ${\tt Last.fm}$ music listening, ultramarathon running, and gene expression. The results show the new algorithm is competitive with contemporary mixture modeling approaches and powerful in identifying meaningful heterogeneities in time series data.