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[2302.00670] Stable Target Field for Reduced Variance Score Estimation in Diffusion Models

#artificialintelligence

Diffusion models generate samples by reversing a fixed forward diffusion process. Despite already providing impressive empirical results, these diffusion models algorithms can be further improved by reducing the variance of the training targets in their denoising score-matching objective. We argue that the source of such variance lies in the handling of intermediate noise-variance scales, where multiple modes in the data affect the direction of reverse paths. We propose to remedy the problem by incorporating a reference batch which we use to calculate weighted conditional scores as more stable training targets. We show that the procedure indeed helps in the challenging intermediate regime by reducing (the trace of) the covariance of training targets. The new stable targets can be seen as trading bias for reduced variance, where the bias vanishes with increasing reference batch size. Empirically, we show that the new objective improves the image quality, stability, and training speed of various popular diffusion models across datasets with both general ODE and SDE solvers. When used in combination with EDM, our method yields a current SOTA FID of 1.90 with 35 network evaluations on the unconditional CIFAR-10 generation task. The code is available at https://github.com/Newbeeer/stf


Safe Optimization of an Industrial Refrigeration Process Using an Adaptive and Explorative Framework

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Many industrial applications rely on real-time optimization to improve key performance indicators. In the case of unknown process characteristics, real-time optimization becomes challenging, particularly for the satisfaction of safety constraints. In this paper, we demonstrate the application of an adaptive and explorative real-time optimization framework to an industrial refrigeration process, where we learn the process characteristics through changes in process control targets and through exploration to satisfy safety constraints. We quantify the uncertainty in unknown compressor characteristics of the refrigeration plant by using Gaussian processes and incorporate this uncertainty into the objective function of the real-time optimization problem as a weighted cost term. We adaptively control the weight of this term to drive exploration. The results of our simulation experiments indicate the proposed approach can help to increase the energy efficiency of the considered refrigeration process, closely approximating the performance of a solution that has complete information about the compressor performance characteristics.


Energy Efficiency of Training Neural Network Architectures: An Empirical Study

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

The evaluation of Deep Learning models has traditionally focused on criteria such as accuracy, F1 score, and related measures. The increasing availability of high computational power environments allows the creation of deeper and more complex models. However, the computations needed to train such models entail a large carbon footprint. In this work, we study the relations between DL model architectures and their environmental impact in terms of energy consumed and CO$_2$ emissions produced during training by means of an empirical study using Deep Convolutional Neural Networks. Concretely, we study: (i) the impact of the architecture and the location where the computations are hosted on the energy consumption and emissions produced; (ii) the trade-off between accuracy and energy efficiency; and (iii) the difference on the method of measurement of the energy consumed using software-based and hardware-based tools.


Physics Informed Piecewise Linear Neural Networks for Process Optimization

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Constructing first-principles models is usually a challenging and time-consuming task due to the complexity of the real-life processes. On the other hand, data-driven modeling, and in particular neural network models often suffer from issues such as overfitting and lack of useful and highquality data. At the same time, embedding trained machine learning models directly into the optimization problems has become an effective and state-of-the-art approach for surrogate optimization, whose performance can be improved by physics-informed training. In this study, it is proposed to upgrade piece-wise linear neural network models with physics informed knowledge for optimization problems with neural network models embedded. In addition to using widely accepted and naturally piece-wise linear rectified linear unit (ReLU) activation functions, this study also suggests piece-wise linear approximations for the hyperbolic tangent activation function to widen the domain. Optimization of three case studies, a blending process, an industrial distillation column and a crude oil column are investigated. For all cases, physics-informed trained neural network based optimal results are closer to global optimality. Finally, associated CPU times for the optimization problems are much shorter than the standard optimization results.


Randomized prior wavelet neural operator for uncertainty quantification

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

In this paper, we propose a novel data-driven operator learning framework referred to as the \textit{Randomized Prior Wavelet Neural Operator} (RP-WNO). The proposed RP-WNO is an extension of the recently proposed wavelet neural operator, which boasts excellent generalizing capabilities but cannot estimate the uncertainty associated with its predictions. RP-WNO, unlike the vanilla WNO, comes with inherent uncertainty quantification module and hence, is expected to be extremely useful for scientists and engineers alike. RP-WNO utilizes randomized prior networks, which can account for prior information and is easier to implement for large, complex deep-learning architectures than its Bayesian counterpart. Four examples have been solved to test the proposed framework, and the results produced advocate favorably for the efficacy of the proposed framework.


A comparative study of statistical and machine learning models on near-real-time daily emissions prediction

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

The rapid ascent in carbon dioxide emissions is a major cause of global warming and climate change, which pose a huge threat to human survival and impose far-reaching influence on the global ecosystem. Therefore, it is very necessary to effectively control carbon dioxide emissions by accurately predicting and analyzing the change trend timely, so as to provide a reference for carbon dioxide emissions mitigation measures. This paper is aiming to select a suitable model to predict the near-real-time daily emissions based on univariate daily time-series data from January 1st, 2020 to September 30st, 2022 of all sectors (Power, Industry, Ground Transport, Residential, Domestic Aviation, International Aviation) in China. We proposed six prediction models, which including three statistical models: Grey prediction (GM(1,1)), autoregressive integrated moving average (ARIMA) and seasonal autoregressive integrated moving average with exogenous factors (SARIMAX); three machine learning models: artificial neural network (ANN), random forest (RF) and long short term memory (LSTM). To evaluate the performance of these models, five criteria: Mean Squared Error (MSE), Root Mean Squared Error (RMSE), Mean Absolute Error (MAE), Mean Absolute Percentage Error (MAPE) and Coefficient of Determination () are imported and discussed in detail. In the results, three machine learning models perform better than that three statistical models, in which LSTM model performs the best on five criteria values for daily emissions prediction with the 3.5179e-04 MSE value, 0.0187 RMSE value, 0.0140 MAE value, 14.8291% MAPE value and 0.9844 value.


Multiplier Bootstrap-based Exploration

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Despite the great interest in the bandit problem, designing efficient algorithms for complex models remains challenging, as there is typically no analytical way to quantify uncertainty. In this paper, we propose Multiplier Bootstrap-based Exploration (MBE), a novel exploration strategy that is applicable to any reward model amenable to weighted loss minimization. We prove both instance-dependent and instance-independent rate-optimal regret bounds for MBE in sub-Gaussian multi-armed bandits. With extensive simulation and real data experiments, we show the generality and adaptivity of MBE.


Machine Learning Extreme Acoustic Non-reciprocity in a Linear Waveguide with Multiple Nonlinear Asymmetric Gates

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

This work is a study of acoustic non-reciprocity exhibited by a passive (i.e., with no active or semiactive feedback) one-dimensional (1D) linear waveguide incorporating two local strongly nonlinear, asymmetric gates. Strong coupling between the constituent oscillators of the linear waveguide is assumed, resulting in broadband capacity for wave transmission in its passband. Two local nonlinear gates break the symmetry and linearity of the waveguide, yielding strong global non-reciprocal acoustics, in the way that extremely different acoustical responses occur depending on the side of application of harmonic excitation, that is, for left-to-right (L-R) or right-to-left (R-L) wave propagation. To the authors' best knowledge that the present two-gated waveguide is capable of extremely high acoustic non-reciprocity, at a much higher level to what is reported by active or passive devices in the current literature; moreover, this extreme performance combines with acceptable levels of transmissibility in the desired (preferred) direction of wave propagation. Machine learning is utilized for predictive design of this gated waveguide in terms of the measures of transmissibility and non-reciprocity, with the aim of reducing the required computational time for high-dimensional parameter space analysis. The study sheds new light into the physics of these media and considers the advantages and limitations of using neural networks (NNs) to analyze this type of physical problems. In the predicted desirable parameter space for intense non-reciprocity, the maximum transmissibility reaches as much as 40%, and the transmitted energy from upstream (i.e., the part of the waveguide where the excitation is applied) to downstream (i.e., in the part of the waveguide after the two nonlinear gates) varies by up to nine orders of magnitude, depending on the direction of wave transmission. The machine learning tools along with the numerical methods of this work can inform predictive designs of practical non-reciprocal waveguides and acoustic metamaterials that incorporate local nonlinear gates. The current paper shows that combinations of nonlinear gates can lead to extremely high non-reciprocity while maintaining desired levels of transmissibility.


FiT: Parameter Efficient Few-shot Transfer Learning for Personalized and Federated Image Classification

arXiv.org Machine Learning

Modern deep learning systems are increasingly deployed in situations such as personalization and federated learning where it is necessary to support i) learning on small amounts of data, and ii) communication efficient distributed training protocols. In this work, we develop FiLM Transfer (FiT) which fulfills these requirements in the image classification setting by combining ideas from transfer learning (fixed pretrained backbones and fine-tuned FiLM adapter layers) and meta-learning (automatically configured Naive Bayes classifiers and episodic training) to yield parameter efficient models with superior classification accuracy at low-shot. The resulting parameter efficiency is key for enabling few-shot learning, inexpensive model updates for personalization, and communication efficient federated learning. We experiment with FiT on a wide range of downstream datasets and show that it achieves better classification accuracy than the leading Big Transfer (BiT) algorithm at low-shot and achieves state-of-the art accuracy on the challenging VTAB-1k benchmark, with fewer than 1% of the updateable parameters. Finally, we demonstrate the parameter efficiency and superior accuracy of FiT in distributed low-shot applications including model personalization and federated learning where model update size is an important performance metric.


Unsupervised Learning of Sampling Distributions for Particle Filters

arXiv.org Machine Learning

Accurate estimation of the states of a nonlinear dynamical system is crucial for their design, synthesis, and analysis. Particle filters are estimators constructed by simulating trajectories from a sampling distribution and averaging them based on their importance weight. For particle filters to be computationally tractable, it must be feasible to simulate the trajectories by drawing from the sampling distribution. Simultaneously, these trajectories need to reflect the reality of the nonlinear dynamical system so that the resulting estimators are accurate. Thus, the crux of particle filters lies in designing sampling distributions that are both easy to sample from and lead to accurate estimators. In this work, we propose to learn the sampling distributions. We put forward four methods for learning sampling distributions from observed measurements. Three of the methods are parametric methods in which we learn the mean and covariance matrix of a multivariate Gaussian distribution; each methods exploits a different aspect of the data (generic, time structure, graph structure). The fourth method is a nonparametric alternative in which we directly learn a transform of a uniform random variable. All four methods are trained in an unsupervised manner by maximizing the likelihood that the states may have produced the observed measurements. Our computational experiments demonstrate that learned sampling distributions exhibit better performance than designed, minimum-degeneracy sampling distributions.