Oceania
\llinstruct: An Instruction-tuned model for English Language Proficiency Assessments
We present \llinstruct: An 8B instruction-tuned model that is designed to generate content for English Language Proficiency Assessments (ELPA) and related applications. Our work involves creating a new dataset of 70K instructions and explanations in the ELPA domain and using these to fine-tune Llama-3 8B models (SFT) of different sizes (e.g., SFT-17K, SFT-50K and SFT-70K). Human evaluations are conducted over unseen instructions to compare these SFT models against SOTA models (e.g., Dolly-2, Mistral, Llama-3 base version, and GPT-3.5). The findings show although all three SFT models perform comparably, the model trained on largest instruction dataset -- SFT-70K - leads to the most valid outputs ready for assessments. However, although the SFT models perform better than larger model, e.g., GPT 3.5 on the aspect of explanations of outputs, many outputs still need human interventions to make them actual ready for real world assessments.
Designing a Classifier for Active Fire Detection from Multispectral Satellite Imagery Using Neural Architecture Search
Cassimon, Amber, Reiter, Phil, Mercelis, Siegfried, Mets, Kevin
This paper showcases the use of a reinforcement learning-based Neural Architecture Search (NAS) agent to design a small neural network to perform active fire detection on multispectral satellite imagery. Specifically, we aim to design a neural network that can determine if a single multispectral pixel is a part of a fire, and do so within the constraints of a Low Earth Orbit (LEO) nanosatellite with a limited power budget, to facilitate on-board processing of sensor data. In order to use reinforcement learning, a reward function is needed. We supply this reward function in the shape of a regression model that predicts the F1 score obtained by a particular architecture, following quantization to INT8 precision, from purely architectural features. This model is trained by collecting a random sample of neural network architectures, training these architectures, and collecting their classification performance statistics. Besides the F1 score, we also include the total number of trainable parameters in our reward function to limit the size of the designed model and ensure it fits within the resource constraints imposed by nanosatellite platforms. Finally, we deployed the best neural network to the Google Coral Micro Dev Board and evaluated its inference latency and power consumption. This neural network consists of 1,716 trainable parameters, takes on average 984{\mu}s to inference, and consumes around 800mW to perform inference. These results show that our reinforcement learning-based NAS approach can be successfully applied to novel problems not tackled before.
Science is Exploration: Computational Frontiers for Conceptual Metaphor Theory
Hicke, Rebecca M. M., Kristensen-McLachlan, Ross Deans
They appear extensively across all domains of natural language, from the most sophisticated poetry to seemingly dry academic prose. A significant body of research in the cognitive science of language argues for the existence of conceptual metaphors, the systematic structuring of one domain of experience in the language of another. Conceptual metaphors are not simply rhetorical flourishes but are crucial evidence of the role of analogical reasoning in human cognition. In this paper, we ask whether Large Language Models (LLMs) can accurately identify and explain the presence of such conceptual metaphors in natural language data. Using a novel prompting technique based on metaphor annotation guidelines, we demonstrate that LLMs are a promising tool for large-scale computational research on conceptual metaphors. Further, we show that LLMs are able to apply procedural guidelines designed for human annotators, displaying a surprising depth of linguistic knowledge.
Contrastive Learning for Implicit Social Factors in Social Media Popularity Prediction
Zhang, Zhizhen, Qiu, Ruihong, Xie, Xiaohui
On social media sharing platforms, some posts are inherently destined for popularity. Therefore, understanding the reasons behind this phenomenon and predicting popularity before post publication holds significant practical value. The previous work predominantly focuses on enhancing post content extraction for better prediction results. However, certain factors introduced by social platforms also impact post popularity, which has not been extensively studied. For instance, users are more likely to engage with posts from individuals they follow, potentially influencing the popularity of these posts. We term these factors, unrelated to the explicit attractiveness of content, as implicit social factors. Through the analysis of users' post browsing behavior (also validated in public datasets), we propose three implicit social factors related to popularity, including content relevance, user influence similarity, and user identity. To model the proposed social factors, we introduce three supervised contrastive learning tasks. For different task objectives and data types, we assign them to different encoders and control their gradient flows to achieve joint optimization. We also design corresponding sampling and augmentation algorithms to improve the effectiveness of contrastive learning. Extensive experiments on the Social Media Popularity Dataset validate the superiority of our proposed method and also confirm the important role of implicit social factors in popularity prediction. We open source the code at https://github.com/Daisy-zzz/PPCL.git.
Enterprise Benchmarks for Large Language Model Evaluation
Zhang, Bing, Takeuchi, Mikio, Kawahara, Ryo, Asthana, Shubhi, Hossain, Md. Maruf, Ren, Guang-Jie, Soule, Kate, Zhu, Yada
The advancement of large language models (LLMs) has led to a greater challenge of having a rigorous and systematic evaluation of complex tasks performed, especially in enterprise applications. Therefore, LLMs need to be able to benchmark enterprise datasets for various tasks. This work presents a systematic exploration of benchmarking strategies tailored to LLM evaluation, focusing on the utilization of domain-specific datasets and consisting of a variety of NLP tasks. The proposed evaluation framework encompasses 25 publicly available datasets from diverse enterprise domains like financial services, legal, cyber security, and climate and sustainability. The diverse performance of 13 models across different enterprise tasks highlights the importance of selecting the right model based on the specific requirements of each task. Code and prompts are available on GitHub.
Fusion Matrix Prompt Enhanced Self-Attention Spatial-Temporal Interactive Traffic Forecasting Framework
Liu, Mu, Li, MingChen Sun YingJi, Wang, Ying
Recently, spatial-temporal forecasting technology has been rapidly developed due to the increasing demand for traffic management and travel planning. However, existing traffic forecasting models still face the following limitations. On one hand, most previous studies either focus too much on real-world geographic information, neglecting the potential traffic correlation between different regions, or overlook geographical position and only model the traffic flow relationship. On the other hand, the importance of different time slices is ignored in time modeling. Therefore, we propose a Fusion Matrix Prompt Enhanced Self-Attention Spatial-Temporal Interactive Traffic Forecasting Framework (FMPESTF), which is composed of spatial and temporal modules for down-sampling traffic data. The network is designed to establish a traffic fusion matrix considering spatial-temporal heterogeneity as a query to reconstruct a data-driven dynamic traffic data structure, which accurately reveal the flow relationship of nodes in the traffic network. In addition, we introduce attention mechanism in time modeling, and design hierarchical spatial-temporal interactive learning to help the model adapt to various traffic scenarios. Through extensive experimental on six real-world traffic datasets, our method is significantly superior to other baseline models, demonstrating its efficiency and accuracy in dealing with traffic forecasting problems.
When Graph meets Multimodal: Benchmarking on Multimodal Attributed Graphs Learning
Yan, Hao, Li, Chaozhuo, Yu, Zhigang, Yin, Jun, Liu, Ruochen, Zhang, Peiyan, Han, Weihao, Li, Mingzheng, Zeng, Zhengxin, Sun, Hao, Deng, Weiwei, Sun, Feng, Zhang, Qi, Wang, Senzhang
Multimodal attributed graphs (MAGs) are prevalent in various real-world scenarios and generally contain two kinds of knowledge: (a) Attribute knowledge is mainly supported by the attributes of different modalities contained in nodes (entities) themselves, such as texts and images. (b) Topology knowledge, on the other hand, is provided by the complex interactions posed between nodes. The cornerstone of MAG representation learning lies in the seamless integration of multimodal attributes and topology. Recent advancements in Pre-trained Language/Vision models (PLMs/PVMs) and Graph neural networks (GNNs) have facilitated effective learning on MAGs, garnering increased research interest. However, the absence of meaningful benchmark datasets and standardized evaluation procedures for MAG representation learning has impeded progress in this field. In this paper, we propose Multimodal Attribute Graph Benchmark (MAGB)}, a comprehensive and diverse collection of challenging benchmark datasets for MAGs. The MAGB datasets are notably large in scale and encompass a wide range of domains, spanning from e-commerce networks to social networks. In addition to the brand-new datasets, we conduct extensive benchmark experiments over MAGB with various learning paradigms, ranging from GNN-based and PLM-based methods, to explore the necessity and feasibility of integrating multimodal attributes and graph topology. In a nutshell, we provide an overview of the MAG datasets, standardized evaluation procedures, and present baseline experiments. The entire MAGB project is publicly accessible at https://github.com/sktsherlock/ATG.
Exploring the Design Space of Cognitive Engagement Techniques with AI-Generated Code for Enhanced Learning
Kazemitabaar, Majeed, Huang, Oliver, Suh, Sangho, Henley, Austin Z., Grossman, Tovi
Novice programmers are increasingly relying on Large Language Models (LLMs) to generate code for learning programming concepts. However, this interaction can lead to superficial engagement, giving learners an illusion of learning and hindering skill development. To address this issue, we conducted a systematic design exploration to develop seven cognitive engagement techniques aimed at promoting deeper engagement with AI-generated code. In this paper, we describe our design process, the initial seven techniques and results from a between-subjects study (N=82). We then iteratively refined the top techniques and further evaluated them through a within-subjects study (N=42). We evaluate the friction each technique introduces, their effectiveness in helping learners apply concepts to isomorphic tasks without AI assistance, and their success in aligning learners' perceived and actual coding abilities. Ultimately, our results highlight the most effective technique: guiding learners through the step-by-step problem-solving process, where they engage in an interactive dialog with the AI, prompting what needs to be done at each stage before the corresponding code is revealed.
PoisonBench: Assessing Large Language Model Vulnerability to Data Poisoning
Fu, Tingchen, Sharma, Mrinank, Torr, Philip, Cohen, Shay B., Krueger, David, Barez, Fazl
Preference learning is a central component for aligning current LLMs, but this process can be vulnerable to data poisoning attacks. To address this concern, we introduce PoisonBench, a benchmark for evaluating large language models' susceptibility to data poisoning during preference learning. Data poisoning attacks can manipulate large language model responses to include hidden malicious content or biases, potentially causing the model to generate harmful or unintended outputs while appearing to function normally. We deploy two distinct attack types across eight realistic scenarios, assessing 21 widely-used models. Our findings reveal concerning trends: (1) Scaling up parameter size does not inherently enhance resilience against poisoning attacks; (2) There exists a log-linear relationship between the effects of the attack and the data poison ratio; (3) The effect of data poisoning can generalize to extrapolated triggers that are not included in the poisoned data. These results expose weaknesses in current preference learning techniques, highlighting the urgent need for more robust defenses against malicious models and data manipulation.
Resource-Constrained Heuristic for Max-SAT
Matejek, Brian, Elenius, Daniel, Gentry, Cale, Stoker, David, Cobb, Adam
We propose a resource-constrained heuristic for instances of Max-SAT that iteratively decomposes a larger problem into smaller subcomponents that can be solved by optimized solvers and hardware. The unconstrained outer loop maintains the state space of a given problem and selects a subset of the SAT variables for optimization independent of previous calls. The resource-constrained inner loop maximizes the number of satisfiable clauses in the "sub-SAT" problem. Our outer loop is agnostic to the mechanisms of the inner loop, allowing for the use of traditional solvers for the optimization step. However, we can also transform the selected "sub-SAT" problem into a quadratic unconstrained binary optimization (QUBO) one and use specialized hardware for optimization. In contrast to existing solutions that convert a SAT instance into a QUBO one before decomposition, we choose a subset of the SAT variables before QUBO optimization. We analyze a set of variable selection methods, including a novel graph-based method that exploits the structure of a given SAT instance. The number of QUBO variables needed to encode a (sub-)SAT problem varies, so we additionally learn a model that predicts the size of sub-SAT problems that will fit a fixed-size QUBO solver. We empirically demonstrate our results on a set of randomly generated Max-SAT instances as well as real world examples from the Max-SAT evaluation benchmarks and outperform existing QUBO decomposer solutions.