Industry
Beyond the Surface: Enhancing LLM-as-a-Judge Alignment with Human via Internal Representations
The growing scale of evaluation tasks has led to the widespread adoption of automated evaluation using LLMs, a paradigm known as "LLM-as-a-judge". However, improving its alignment with human preferences without complex prompts or finetuning remains challenging. Previous studies mainly optimize based on shallow outputs, overlooking rich cross-layer representations. In this work, motivated by preliminary findings that middle-to-upper layers encode semantically and taskrelevant representations that are often more aligned with human judgments than the final layer, we propose LAGER, a post-hoc, plug-and-play framework for improving the alignment of LLM-as-a-Judge point-wise evaluations with human scores, by leveraging internal representations.
Multi-Modal View Enhanced Large Vision Models for Long-Term Time Series Forecasting
Time series, typically represented as numerical sequences, can also be transformed into images and texts, offering multi-modal views (MMVs) of the same underlying signal. These MMVs can reveal complementary patterns and enable the use of powerful pre-trained large models, such as large vision models (LVMs), for long-term time series forecasting (LTSF). However, as we identified in this work, the state-ofthe-art (SOTA) LVM-based forecaster poses an inductive bias towards "forecasting periods". To harness this bias, we propose DMMV, a novel decomposition-based multi-modal view framework that leverages trend-seasonal decomposition and a novel backcast-residual based adaptive decomposition to integrate MMVs for LTSF. Comparative evaluations against 14 SOTA models across diverse datasets show that DMMV outperforms single-view and existing multi-modal baselines, achieving the best mean squared error (MSE) on 6 out of 8 benchmark datasets. The code for this paper is available at: https://github.com/D2I-Group/dmmv.
Risk-Averse Total-Reward Reinforcement Learning
Existing model-based algorithms for risk measures like the entropic risk measure (ERM) and entropic value-at-risk (EVaR) are effective in small problems, but require full access to transition probabilities. We propose a Q-learning algorithm to compute the optimal stationary policy for total-reward ERM and EVaR objectives with strong convergence and performance guarantees. The algorithm and its optimality are made possible by ERM's dynamic consistency and elicitability. Our numerical results on tabular domains demonstrate quick and reliable convergence of the proposed Q-learning algorithm to the optimal risk-averse value function.
Optimal Adjustment Sets for Nonparametric Estimation of Weighted Controlled Direct Effect
The weighted controlled direct effect (WCDE) generalizes the standard controlled direct effect (CDE) by averaging over the mediator distribution, providing a robust estimate when treatment effects vary across mediator levels. This makes the WCDE especially relevant in fairness analysis, where it isolates the direct effect of an exposure on an outcome, independent of mediating pathways. This work establishes three fundamental advances for WCDE in observational studies: First, we establish necessary and sufficient conditions for the identifiability of the WCDE, clarifying when it diverges from the CDE. Next, we consider nonparametric estimation of the WCDE and derive its influence function, focusing on the class of regular and asymptotically linear estimators. Lastly, we characterize the optimal covariate adjustment set that minimizes the asymptotic variance, demonstrating how mediator-confounder interactions introduce distinct requirements compared to average treatment effect (ATE) estimation. Using synthetic and real-world data, we validate our theory numerically, showing that the proposed optimal valid adjustment set yields the lowest variance at practical sample sizes. Our results offer a principled framework for efficient estimation of direct effects in complex causal systems, with practical applications in fairness and mediation analysis.
VividFace: ARobost and High-Fidelity Video Face Swapping Framework
Video face swapping has seen increasing adoption in diverse applications, yet existing methods primarily trained on static images struggle to address temporal consistency and complex real-world scenarios. To overcome these limitations, we propose the first video face swapping framework, VividFace, a robust and high-fidelity diffusion-based framework. VividFace employs a novel hybrid training strategy that leverages abundant static image data alongside temporal video sequences, enabling it to effectively model temporal coherence and identity consistency in videos. Central to our approach is a carefully designed diffusion model integrated with a specialized VAE, capable of processing image-video hybrid data efficiently. To further enhance identity and pose disentanglement, we introduce and release the Attribute-Identity Disentanglement Triplet (AIDT) dataset, comprising a large-scale collection of triplets where each set contains three face images--two sharing the same pose and two sharing the same identity. Augmented comprehensively with occlusion scenarios, AIDT significantly boosts the robustness of VividFace against occlusions.
85ec26ef94c3acb4c195e905df1ff4f7-Paper-Conference.pdf
Machine unlearning techniques aim to mitigate unintended memorization in large language models (LLMs). However, existing approaches predominantly focus on the explicit removal of isolated facts, often overlooking latent inferential dependencies and the non-deterministic nature of knowledge within LLMs. Consequently, facts presumed forgotten may persist implicitly through correlated information. To address these challenges, we propose a knowledge unlearning evaluation framework that more accurately captures the implicit structure of real-world knowledge by representing relevant factual contexts as knowledge graphs with associated confidence scores. We further develop an inference-based evaluation protocol leveraging powerful LLMs as judges; these judges reason over the extracted knowledge subgraph to determine unlearning success. Our LLM judges utilize carefully designed prompts and are calibrated against human evaluations to ensure their trustworthiness and stability. Extensive experiments on our newly constructed benchmark demonstrate that our framework provides a more realistic and rigorous assessment of unlearning performance. Moreover, our findings reveal that current evaluation strategies tend to overestimate unlearning effectiveness.
A new tool writes better AI prompts, and a lifetime subscription is only 42 for Deal Days
When you purchase through links in our articles, we may earn a small commission. Prompting Systems is an AI tool that turns rough ideas into expert-level prompts, and a lifetime subscription is on sale for $42 if you use code DEAL30 during Deal Days. Getting a good answer out of an AI model often comes down to how you ask, and most people are stuck guessing. Prompting Systems turns a rough idea into a polished, expert-level prompt, and a lifetime Silver Plan is on sale for $41.99 (reg. Prompting Systems is a web-based platform that builds optimized prompts for any major AI tool, including ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, Midjourney, and DALL-E.
Time-Masked Transformers with Lightweight Test-Time Adaptation for Neural Speech Decoding
Speech neuroprostheses aim to restore communication for people with severe paralysis by decoding speech directly from neural activity. To accelerate algorithmic progress, a recent benchmark released intracranial recordings from a paralyzed participant attempting to speak, along with a baseline decoding algorithm. Prior work on the benchmark showed impressive accuracy gains. However, these gains increased computational costs and were not demonstrated in a real-time decoding setting. Here, we make three contributions that pave the way towards accurate, efficient, and real-time neural speech decoding.
Knowledge Starts with Practice: Knowledge-Aware Exercise Generative Recommendation with Adaptive Multi-Agent Cooperation
Adaptive learning, which requires the in-depth understanding of students' learning processes and rational planning of learning resources, plays a crucial role in intelligent education. However, how to effectively model these two processes and seamlessly integrate them poses significant implementation challenges for adaptive learning. As core learning resources, exercises have the potential to diagnose students' knowledge states during the learning processes and provide personalized learning recommendations to strengthen students' knowledge, thereby serving as a bridge to boost student-oriented adaptive learning. Therefore, we introduce a novel task called Knowledge-aware Exercise Generative Recommendation (KEGR). It aims to dynamically infer students' knowledge states from their past exercise responses and customizably generate new exercises. To achieve KEGR, we propose an adaptive multi-agent cooperation framework, called ExeGen, inspired by the excellent reasoning and generative capabilities of LLM-based AI agents. Specifically, ExeGen coordinates four specialized agents for supervision, knowledge state perception, exercise generation, and quality refinement through an adaptive loop workflow pipeline. More importantly, we devise two enhancement mechanisms in ExeGen: 1) A human-simulated knowledge perception mechanism mimics students' cognitive processes and generates interpretable knowledge state descriptions via demonstration-based In-Context Learning (ICL). In this mechanism, a dualmatching strategy is further designed to retrieve highly relevant demonstrations for reliable ICL reasoning.
ABayesian Fast-Slow Framework to Mitigate Interference in Non-Stationary Reinforcement Learning
Given the ever-changing nature of the world and its inhabitants, agents must possess the ability to adapt and evolve over time. Recent research in Given the ever-changing nature of the world and its inhabitants, agents must possess the ability to adapt and evolve over time. Recent research in non-stationary MDPs has focused on addressing this challenge, providing algorithms inspired by task inference techniques. However, these methods ignore the detrimental effects of interference, which particularly harm performance in contradictory tasks, leading to low efficiency in some environments. To address this issue, we propose a Bayesian Fast-Slow Framework (BFSF) that tackles both cross-task generalization and resistance to cross-task interference.