Education
Noncooperative Equilibrium Selection via a Trading-based Auction
Im, Jaehan, Fotiadis, Filippos, Delahaye, Daniel, Topcu, Ufuk, Fridovich-Keil, David
Noncooperative multi-agent systems often face coordination challenges due to conflicting preferences among agents. In particular, agents acting in their own self-interest can settle on different equilibria, leading to suboptimal outcomes or even safety concerns. We propose an algorithm named trading auction for consensus (TACo), a decentralized approach that enables noncooperative agents to reach consensus without communicating directly or disclosing private valuations. TACo facilitates coordination through a structured trading-based auction, where agents iteratively select choices of interest and provably reach an agreement within an a priori bounded number of steps. A series of numerical experiments validate that the termination guarantees of TACo hold in practice, and show that TACo achieves a median performance that minimizes the total cost across all agents, while allocating resources significantly more fairly than baseline approaches.
Out-of-Distribution Detection using Synthetic Data Generation
Abbas, Momin, Azmat, Muneeza, Horesh, Raya, Yurochkin, Mikhail
Distinguishing in- and out-of-distribution (OOD) inputs is crucial for reliable deployment of classification systems. However, OOD data is typically unavailable or difficult to collect, posing a significant challenge for accurate OOD detection. In this work, we present a method that harnesses the generative capabilities of Large Language Models (LLMs) to create high-quality synthetic OOD proxies, eliminating the dependency on any external OOD data source. We study the efficacy of our method on classical text classification tasks such as toxicity detection and sentiment classification as well as classification tasks arising in LLM development and deployment, such as training a reward model for RLHF and detecting misaligned generations. Extensive experiments on nine InD-OOD dataset pairs and various model sizes show that our approach dramatically lowers false positive rates (achieving a perfect zero in some cases) while maintaining high accuracy on in-distribution tasks, outperforming baseline methods by a significant margin.
E-3SFC: Communication-Efficient Federated Learning with Double-way Features Synthesizing
Zhou, Yuhao, Tian, Yuxin, Shi, Mingjia, Li, Yuanxi, Sun, Yanan, Ye, Qing, Lv, Jiancheng
The exponential growth in model sizes has significantly increased the communication burden in Federated Learning (FL). Existing methods to alleviate this burden by transmitting compressed gradients often face high compression errors, which slow down the model's convergence. To simultaneously achieve high compression effectiveness and lower compression errors, we study the gradient compression problem from a novel perspective. Specifically, we propose a systematical algorithm termed Extended Single-Step Synthetic Features Compressing (E-3SFC), which consists of three sub-components, i.e., the Single-Step Synthetic Features Compressor (3SFC), a double-way compression algorithm, and a communication budget scheduler. First, we regard the process of gradient computation of a model as decompressing gradients from corresponding inputs, while the inverse process is considered as compressing the gradients. Based on this, we introduce a novel gradient compression method termed 3SFC, which utilizes the model itself as a decompressor, leveraging training priors such as model weights and objective functions. 3SFC compresses raw gradients into tiny synthetic features in a single-step simulation, incorporating error feedback to minimize overall compression errors. To further reduce communication overhead, 3SFC is extended to E-3SFC, allowing double-way compression and dynamic communication budget scheduling. Our theoretical analysis under both strongly convex and non-convex conditions demonstrates that 3SFC achieves linear and sub-linear convergence rates with aggregation noise. Extensive experiments across six datasets and six models reveal that 3SFC outperforms state-of-the-art methods by up to 13.4% while reducing communication costs by 111.6 times. These findings suggest that 3SFC can significantly enhance communication efficiency in FL without compromising model performance.
Fast T2T: Optimization Consistency Speeds Up Diffusion-Based Training-to-Testing Solving for Combinatorial Optimization
Li, Yang, Guo, Jinpei, Wang, Runzhong, Zha, Hongyuan, Yan, Junchi
Diffusion models have recently advanced Combinatorial Optimization (CO) as a powerful backbone for neural solvers. However, their iterative sampling process requiring denoising across multiple noise levels incurs substantial overhead. We propose to learn direct mappings from different noise levels to the optimal solution for a given instance, facilitating high-quality generation with minimal shots. This is achieved through an optimization consistency training protocol, which, for a given instance, minimizes the difference among samples originating from varying generative trajectories and time steps relative to the optimal solution. The proposed model enables fast single-step solution generation while retaining the option of multi-step sampling to trade for sampling quality, which offers a more effective and efficient alternative backbone for neural solvers. In addition, within the training-to-testing (T2T) framework, to bridge the gap between training on historical instances and solving new instances, we introduce a novel consistency-based gradient search scheme during the test stage, enabling more effective exploration of the solution space learned during training. It is achieved by updating the latent solution probabilities under objective gradient guidance during the alternation of noise injection and denoising steps. We refer to this model as Fast T2T. Extensive experiments on two popular tasks, the Traveling Salesman Problem (TSP) and Maximal Independent Set (MIS), demonstrate the superiority of Fast T2T regarding both solution quality and efficiency, even outperforming LKH given limited time budgets. Notably, Fast T2T with merely one-step generation and one-step gradient search can mostly outperform the SOTA diffusion-based counterparts that require hundreds of steps, while achieving tens of times speedup.
Complexity in Complexity: Understanding Visual Complexity Through Structure, Color, and Surprise
Sarฤฑtaล, Karahan, Dayan, Peter, Shen, Tingke, Nath, Surabhi S
Understanding human perception of visual complexity is crucial in visual cognition. Recently (Shen, et al. 2024) proposed an interpretable segmentation-based model that accurately predicted complexity across various datasets, supporting the idea that complexity can be explained simply. In this work, we investigate the failure of their model to capture structural, color and surprisal contributions to complexity. To this end, we propose Multi-Scale Sobel Gradient which measures spatial intensity variations, Multi-Scale Unique Color which quantifies colorfulness across multiple scales, and surprise scores generated using a Large Language Model. We test our features on existing benchmarks and a novel dataset containing surprising images from Visual Genome. Our experiments demonstrate that modeling complexity accurately is not as simple as previously thought, requiring additional perceptual and semantic factors to address dataset biases. Thus our results offer deeper insights into how humans assess visual complexity.
Online Learning Algorithms in Hilbert Spaces with $\beta-$ and $\phi-$Mixing Sequences
Roy, Priyanka, Saminger-Platz, Susanne
In this paper, we study an online algorithm in a reproducing kernel Hilbert spaces (RKHS) based on a class of dependent processes, called the mixing process. For such a process, the degree of dependence is measured by various mixing coefficients. As a representative example, we analyze a strictly stationary Markov chain, where the dependence structure is characterized by the \(\beta-\) and \(\phi-\)mixing coefficients. For these dependent samples, we derive nearly optimal convergence rates. Our findings extend existing error bounds for i.i.d. observations, demonstrating that the i.i.d. case is a special instance of our framework. Moreover, we explicitly account for an additional factor introduced by the dependence structure in the Markov chain.
Token Assorted: Mixing Latent and Text Tokens for Improved Language Model Reasoning
Su, DiJia, Zhu, Hanlin, Xu, Yingchen, Jiao, Jiantao, Tian, Yuandong, Zheng, Qinqing
Large Language Models (LLMs) excel at reasoning and planning when trained on chainof-thought (CoT) data, where the step-by-step thought process is explicitly outlined by text tokens. However, this results in lengthy inputs where many words support textual coherence rather than core reasoning information, and processing these inputs consumes substantial computation resources. In this work, we propose a hybrid representation of the reasoning process, where we partially abstract away the initial reasoning steps using latent discrete tokens generated by VQ-VAE, significantly reducing the length of reasoning traces. We explore the use of latent trace abstractions in two scenarios: 1) training the model from scratch for the Keys-Finding Maze problem, 2) fine-tuning LLMs on this hybrid data with an extended vocabulary including unseen latent tokens, for both logical and mathematical reasoning problems. To facilitate effective learning, we introduce a simple training procedure that randomly mixes latent and text tokens, which enables fast adaptation to new latent tokens. Our approach consistently outperforms the baselines methods in various benchmarks.
Do Large Language Model Benchmarks Test Reliability?
Vendrow, Joshua, Vendrow, Edward, Beery, Sara, Madry, Aleksander
When deploying large language models (LLMs), it is important to ensure that these models are not only capable, but also reliable. Many benchmarks have been created to track LLMs' growing capabilities, however there has been no similar focus on measuring their reliability. To understand the potential ramifications of this gap, we investigate how well current benchmarks quantify model reliability. We find that pervasive label errors can compromise these evaluations, obscuring lingering model failures and hiding unreliable behavior. Motivated by this gap in the evaluation of reliability, we then propose the concept of so-called platinum benchmarks, i.e., benchmarks carefully curated to minimize label errors and ambiguity. As a first attempt at constructing such benchmarks, we revise examples from fifteen existing popular benchmarks. We evaluate a wide range of models on these platinum benchmarks and find that, indeed, frontier LLMs still exhibit failures on simple tasks such as elementary-level math word problems. Analyzing these failures further reveals previously unidentified patterns of problems on which frontier models consistently struggle. We provide code at https://github.com/MadryLab/platinum-benchmarks
CSU unveils massive venture to provide free AI skills and training across all 23 campuses
California State University on Tuesday unveiled what is believed to be among the largest and most ambitious efforts in higher education to champion artificial intelligence with an initiative to provide tools and training in the groundbreaking technology across the system's 23 campuses. With generative AI's ability to create new content learned from training data, CSU is working to ensure students in the nation's largest and most diverse public university system have equitable access to the technology. Nearly half of CSU's 450,000 students are low-income and about 30% are the first in their families to attend college. The university has enlisted Gov. Gavin Newsom's office and nearly a dozen leading tech companies -- including Microsoft, Meta, Nvidia, OpenAI, Intel, LinkedIn, Amazon Web Services and Alphabet -- to join academics on an advisory board to help identify AI skills needed in the California workforce and provide advice on how best to teach them. Industry partners will also provide internships and apprenticeships to give students real-world experience with AI on the job.
DIME:Diffusion-Based Maximum Entropy Reinforcement Learning
Celik, Onur, Li, Zechu, Blessing, Denis, Li, Ge, Palanicek, Daniel, Peters, Jan, Chalvatzaki, Georgia, Neumann, Gerhard
Maximum entropy reinforcement learning (MaxEnt-RL) has become the standard approach to RL due to its beneficial exploration properties. Traditionally, policies are parameterized using Gaussian distributions, which significantly limits their representational capacity. Diffusion-based policies offer a more expressive alternative, yet integrating them into MaxEnt-RL poses challenges--primarily due to the intractability of computing their marginal entropy. To overcome this, we propose Diffusion-Based Maximum Entropy RL (DIME). DIME leverages recent advances in approximate inference with diffusion models to derive a lower bound on the maximum entropy objective. Additionally, we propose a policy iteration scheme that provably converges to the optimal diffusion policy. Our method enables the use of expressive diffusion-based policies while retaining the principled exploration benefits of MaxEnt-RL, significantly outperforming other diffusion-based methods on challenging high-dimensional control benchmarks. It is also competitive with state-of-the-art non-diffusion based RL methods while requiring fewer algorithmic design choices and smaller update-to-data ratios, reducing computational complexity.