Large Language Model
Indigenous groups fear culture distortion as AI learns their languages
When U.S. tech firm OpenAI rolled out Whisper, a speech recognition tool offering audio transcription and translation into English for dozens of languages including Maori, it rang alarm bells for many Indigenous New Zealanders. Whisper, launched in September by the company behind the ChatGPT chatbot, was trained on 680,000 hours of audio from the web, including 1,381 hours of the Maori language. Indigenous tech and culture experts say that while such technologies can help preserve and revive their languages, harvesting their data without consent risks abuse, distorting of Indigenous culture, and depriving minorities of their rights. This could be due to a conflict with your ad-blocking or security software. Please add japantimes.co.jp and piano.io to your list of allowed sites.
Canada's privacy watchdog opens investigation into OpenAI, ChatGPT over complaint
A New York Rabbi recently went viral for delivering a sermon written by ChatGPT to his congregation, causing many to question the humanity in such an act. Canada's privacy watchdog has opened an investigation into OpenAI, the California-based company behind the explosive artificial intelligence chatbot, ChatGPT. Privacy Commissioner Philippe Dufresne said Tuesday his office was investigating OpenAI after receiving complaints alleging "the collection, use and disclosure of personal information without consent." FILE: The logo of the chatbot ChatGPT from the company OpenAI can be seen on a smartphone on April 3, 2023, in Berlin, Germany. "A.I. technology and its effects on privacy is a priority for my Office," Dufresne said in a statement.
Automated Reading Passage Generation with OpenAI's Large Language Model
Bezirhan, Ummugul, von Davier, Matthias
The widespread usage of computer-based assessments and individualized learning platforms has resulted in an increased demand for the rapid production of high-quality items. Automated item generation (AIG), the process of using item models to generate new items with the help of computer technology, was proposed to reduce reliance on human subject experts at each step of the process. AIG has been used in test development for some time. Still, the use of machine learning algorithms has introduced the potential to improve the efficiency and effectiveness of the process greatly. The approach presented in this paper utilizes OpenAI's latest transformer-based language model, GPT-3, to generate reading passages. Existing reading passages were used in carefully engineered prompts to ensure the AI-generated text has similar content and structure to a fourth-grade reading passage. For each prompt, we generated multiple passages, the final passage was selected according to the Lexile score agreement with the original passage. In the final round, the selected passage went through a simple revision by a human editor to ensure the text was free of any grammatical and factual errors. All AI-generated passages, along with original passages were evaluated by human judges according to their coherence, appropriateness to fourth graders, and readability.
Scaling Pre-trained Language Models to Deeper via Parameter-efficient Architecture
Liu, Peiyu, Gao, Ze-Feng, Chen, Yushuo, Zhao, Wayne Xin, Wen, Ji-Rong
In this paper, we propose a highly parameter-efficient approach to scaling pre-trained language models (PLMs) to a deeper model depth. Unlike prior work that shares all parameters or uses extra blocks, we design a more capable parameter-sharing architecture based on matrix product operator (MPO). MPO decomposition can reorganize and factorize the information of a parameter matrix into two parts: the major part that contains the major information (central tensor) and the supplementary part that only has a small proportion of parameters (auxiliary tensors). Based on such a decomposition, our architecture shares the central tensor across all layers for reducing the model size and meanwhile keeps layer-specific auxiliary tensors (also using adapters) for enhancing the adaptation flexibility. To improve the model training, we further propose a stable initialization algorithm tailored for the MPO-based architecture. Extensive experiments have demonstrated the effectiveness of our proposed model in reducing the model size and achieving highly competitive performance.
SAM.MD: Zero-shot medical image segmentation capabilities of the Segment Anything Model
Roy, Saikat, Wald, Tassilo, Koehler, Gregor, Rokuss, Maximilian R., Disch, Nico, Holzschuh, Julius, Zimmerer, David, Maier-Hein, Klaus H.
Foundation models have taken over natural language processing and image generation domains due to the flexibility of prompting. With the recent introduction of the Segment Anything Model (SAM), this prompt-driven paradigm has entered image segmentation with a hitherto unexplored abundance of capabilities. The purpose of this paper is to conduct an initial evaluation of the out-of-the-box zero-shot capabilities of SAM for medical image segmentation, by evaluating its performance on an abdominal CT organ segmentation task, via point or bounding box based prompting. We show that SAM generalizes well to CT data, making it a potential catalyst for the advancement of semi-automatic segmentation tools for clinicians. We believe that this foundation model, while not reaching state-of-the-art segmentation performance in our investigations, can serve as a highly potent starting point for further adaptations of such models to the intricacies of the medical domain. Keywords: medical image segmentation, SAM, foundation models, zero-shot learning
Does Synthetic Data Generation of LLMs Help Clinical Text Mining?
Tang, Ruixiang, Han, Xiaotian, Jiang, Xiaoqian, Hu, Xia
Recent advancements in large language models (LLMs) have led to the development of highly potent models like OpenAI's ChatGPT. These models have exhibited exceptional performance in a variety of tasks, such as question answering, essay composition, and code generation. However, their effectiveness in the healthcare sector remains uncertain. In this study, we seek to investigate the potential of ChatGPT to aid in clinical text mining by examining its ability to extract structured information from unstructured healthcare texts, with a focus on biological named entity recognition and relation extraction. However, our preliminary results indicate that employing ChatGPT directly for these tasks resulted in poor performance and raised privacy concerns associated with uploading patients' information to the ChatGPT API. To overcome these limitations, we propose a new training paradigm that involves generating a vast quantity of high-quality synthetic data with labels utilizing ChatGPT and fine-tuning a local model for the downstream task. Our method has resulted in significant improvements in the performance of downstream tasks, improving the F1-score from 23.37% to 63.99% for the named entity recognition task and from 75.86% to 83.59% for the relation extraction task. Furthermore, generating data using ChatGPT can significantly reduce the time and effort required for data collection and labeling, as well as mitigate data privacy concerns. In summary, the proposed framework presents a promising solution to enhance the applicability of LLM models to clinical text mining.
Randomized and Deterministic Attention Sparsification Algorithms for Over-parameterized Feature Dimension
Deng, Yichuan, Mahadevan, Sridhar, Song, Zhao
Large language models (LLMs) have shown their power in different areas. Attention computation, as an important subroutine of LLMs, has also attracted interests in theory. Recently the static computation and dynamic maintenance of attention matrix has been studied by [Alman and Song 2023] and [Brand, Song and Zhou 2023] from both algorithmic perspective and hardness perspective. In this work, we consider the sparsification of the attention problem. We make one simplification which is the logit matrix is symmetric. Let $n$ denote the length of sentence, let $d$ denote the embedding dimension. Given a matrix $X \in \mathbb{R}^{n \times d}$, suppose $d \gg n$ and $\| X X^\top \|_{\infty} < r$ with $r \in (0,0.1)$, then we aim for finding $Y \in \mathbb{R}^{n \times m}$ (where $m\ll d$) such that \begin{align*} \| D(Y)^{-1} \exp( Y Y^\top ) - D(X)^{-1} \exp( X X^\top) \|_{\infty} \leq O(r) \end{align*} We provide two results for this problem. $\bullet$ Our first result is a randomized algorithm. It runs in $\widetilde{O}(\mathrm{nnz}(X) + n^{\omega} ) $ time, has $1-\delta$ succeed probability, and chooses $m = O(n \log(n/\delta))$. Here $\mathrm{nnz}(X)$ denotes the number of non-zero entries in $X$. We use $\omega$ to denote the exponent of matrix multiplication. Currently $\omega \approx 2.373$. $\bullet$ Our second result is a deterministic algorithm. It runs in $\widetilde{O}(\min\{\sum_{i\in[d]}\mathrm{nnz}(X_i)^2, dn^{\omega-1}\} + n^{\omega+1})$ time and chooses $m = O(n)$. Here $X_i$ denote the $i$-th column of matrix $X$. Our main findings have the following implication for applied LLMs task: for any super large feature dimension, we can reduce it down to the size nearly linear in length of sentence.
Language-Driven Anchors for Zero-Shot Adversarial Robustness
Li, Xiao, Zhang, Wei, Liu, Yining, Hu, Zhanhao, Zhang, Bo, Hu, Xiaolin
Deep neural networks are known to be susceptible to adversarial attacks. In this work, we focus on improving adversarial robustness in the challenging zero-shot image classification setting. To address this issue, we propose LAAT, a novel Language-driven, Anchor-based Adversarial Training strategy. LAAT utilizes a text encoder to generate fixed anchors (normalized feature embeddings) for each category and then uses these anchors for adversarial training. By leveraging the semantic consistency of the text encoders, LAAT can enhance the adversarial robustness of the image model on novel categories without additional examples. We identify the large cosine similarity problem of recent text encoders and design several effective techniques to address it. The experimental results demonstrate that LAAT significantly improves zero-shot adversarial performance, outperforming previous state-of-the-art adversarially robust one-shot methods. Moreover, our method produces substantial zero-shot adversarial robustness when models are trained on large datasets such as ImageNet-1K and applied to several downstream datasets.
Learnings from Data Integration for Augmented Language Models
Halevy, Alon, Dwivedi-Yu, Jane
One of the limitations of large language models is that they do not have access to up-to-date, proprietary or personal data. As a result, there are multiple efforts to extend language models with techniques for accessing external data. In that sense, LLMs share the vision of data integration systems whose goal is to provide seamless access to a large collection of heterogeneous data sources. While the details and the techniques of LLMs differ greatly from those of data integration, this paper shows that some of the lessons learned from research on data integration can elucidate the research path we are conducting today on language models.
Inference with Reference: Lossless Acceleration of Large Language Models
Yang, Nan, Ge, Tao, Wang, Liang, Jiao, Binxing, Jiang, Daxin, Yang, Linjun, Majumder, Rangan, Wei, Furu
We propose LLMA, an LLM accelerator to losslessly speed up Large Language Model (LLM) inference with references. LLMA is motivated by the observation that there are abundant identical text spans between the decoding result by an LLM and the reference that is available in many real world scenarios (e.g., retrieved documents). LLMA first selects a text span from the reference and copies its tokens to the decoder and then efficiently checks the tokens' appropriateness as the decoding result in parallel within one decoding step. The improved computational parallelism allows LLMA to achieve over 2x speed-up for LLMs with identical generation results as greedy decoding in many practical generation scenarios where significant overlap between in-context reference and outputs exists (e.g., search engines and multi-turn conversations).