Optimization
UAV Path Planning for Object Observation with Quality Constraints: A Dynamic Programming Approach
Wang, Jiawei, Chau, Vincent, Wu, Weiwei
This paper addresses a UAV path planning task that seeks to observe a set of objects while satisfying the observation quality constraint. A dynamic programming algorithm is proposed that enables the UAV to observe the target objects with shortest path while subjecting to the observation quality constraint. The objects have their own facing direction and restricted observation range. With an observing order, the algorithm achieves (1+$\epsilon$)-approximation ratio in theory and runs in polynomial time. The extensive results show that the algorithm produces near-optimal solutions, the effectiveness of which is also tested and proved in the Airsim simulator, a realistic virtual environment.
On the calibration of compartmental epidemiological models
Gupta, Nikunj, Mai, Anh, Abouzied, Azza, Shasha, Dennis
Epidemiological compartmental models are useful for understanding infectious disease propagation and directing public health policy decisions. Calibration of these models is an important step in offering accurate forecasts of disease dynamics and the effectiveness of interventions. In this study, we present an overview of calibrating strategies that can be employed, including several optimization methods and reinforcement learning (RL). We discuss the benefits and drawbacks of these methods and highlight relevant practical conclusions from our experiments. Optimization methods iteratively adjust the parameters of the model until the model output matches the available data, whereas RL uses trial and error to learn the optimal set of parameters by maximizing a reward signal. Finally, we discuss how the calibration of parameters of epidemiological compartmental models is an emerging field that has the potential to improve the accuracy of disease modeling and public health decision-making. Further research is needed to validate the effectiveness and scalability of these approaches in different epidemiological contexts. All codes and resources are available on https://github.com/Nikunj-Gupta/
From Lengthy to Lucid: A Systematic Literature Review on NLP Techniques for Taming Long Sentences
Passali, Tatiana, Chatzikyriakidis, Efstathios, Andreadis, Stelios, Stavropoulos, Thanos G., Matonaki, Anastasia, Fachantidis, Anestis, Tsoumakas, Grigorios
Long sentences have been a persistent issue in written communication for many years since they make it challenging for readers to grasp the main points or follow the initial intention of the writer. This survey, conducted using the PRISMA guidelines, systematically reviews two main strategies for addressing the issue of long sentences: a) sentence compression and b) sentence splitting. An increased trend of interest in this area has been observed since 2005, with significant growth after 2017. Current research is dominated by supervised approaches for both sentence compression and splitting. Yet, there is a considerable gap in weakly and self-supervised techniques, suggesting an opportunity for further research, especially in domains with limited data. In this survey, we categorize and group the most representative methods into a comprehensive taxonomy. We also conduct a comparative evaluation analysis of these methods on common sentence compression and splitting datasets. Finally, we discuss the challenges and limitations of current methods, providing valuable insights for future research directions. This survey is meant to serve as a comprehensive resource for addressing the complexities of long sentences. We aim to enable researchers to make further advancements in the field until long sentences are no longer a barrier to effective communication.
BELT: Old-School Backdoor Attacks can Evade the State-of-the-Art Defense with Backdoor Exclusivity Lifting
Qiu, Huming, Sun, Junjie, Zhang, Mi, Pan, Xudong, Yang, Min
Deep neural networks (DNNs) are susceptible to backdoor attacks, where malicious functionality is embedded to allow attackers to trigger incorrect classifications. Old-school backdoor attacks use strong trigger features that can easily be learned by victim models. Despite robustness against input variation, the robustness however increases the likelihood of unintentional trigger activations. This leaves traces to existing defenses, which find approximate replacements for the original triggers that can activate the backdoor without being identical to the original trigger via, e.g., reverse engineering and sample overlay. In this paper, we propose and investigate a new characteristic of backdoor attacks, namely, backdoor exclusivity, which measures the ability of backdoor triggers to remain effective in the presence of input variation. Building upon the concept of backdoor exclusivity, we propose Backdoor Exclusivity LifTing (BELT), a novel technique which suppresses the association between the backdoor and fuzzy triggers to enhance backdoor exclusivity for defense evasion. Extensive evaluation on three popular backdoor benchmarks validate, our approach substantially enhances the stealthiness of four old-school backdoor attacks, which, after backdoor exclusivity lifting, is able to evade six state-of-the-art backdoor countermeasures, at almost no cost of the attack success rate and normal utility. For example, one of the earliest backdoor attacks BadNet, enhanced by BELT, evades most of the state-of-the-art defenses including ABS and MOTH which would otherwise recognize the backdoored model.
HC-Ref: Hierarchical Constrained Refinement for Robust Adversarial Training of GNNs
Pei, Xiaobing, Yang, Haoran, Shen, Gang
Recent studies have shown that attackers can catastrophically reduce the performance of GNNs by maliciously modifying the graph structure or node features on the graph. Adversarial training, which has been shown to be one of the most effective defense mechanisms against adversarial attacks in computer vision, holds great promise for enhancing the robustness of GNNs. There is limited research on defending against attacks by performing adversarial training on graphs, and it is crucial to delve deeper into this approach to optimize its effectiveness. Therefore, based on robust adversarial training on graphs, we propose a hierarchical constraint refinement framework (HC-Ref) that enhances the anti-perturbation capabilities of GNNs and downstream classifiers separately, ultimately leading to improved robustness. We propose corresponding adversarial regularization terms that are conducive to adaptively narrowing the domain gap between the normal part and the perturbation part according to the characteristics of different layers, promoting the smoothness of the predicted distribution of both parts. Moreover, existing research on graph robust adversarial training primarily concentrates on training from the standpoint of node feature perturbations and seldom takes into account alterations in the graph structure. This limitation makes it challenging to prevent attacks based on topological changes in the graph. This paper generates adversarial examples by utilizing graph structure perturbations, offering an effective approach to defend against attack methods that are based on topological changes. Extensive experiments on two real-world graph benchmarks show that HC-Ref successfully resists various attacks and has better node classification performance compared to several baseline methods.
Gradient-Based Spectral Embeddings of Random Dot Product Graphs
Fiori, Marcelo, Marenco, Bernardo, Larroca, Federico, Bermolen, Paola, Mateos, Gonzalo
The Random Dot Product Graph (RDPG) is a generative model for relational data, where nodes are represented via latent vectors in low-dimensional Euclidean space. RDPGs crucially postulate that edge formation probabilities are given by the dot product of the corresponding latent positions. Accordingly, the embedding task of estimating these vectors from an observed graph is typically posed as a low-rank matrix factorization problem. The workhorse Adjacency Spectral Embedding (ASE) enjoys solid statistical properties, but it is formally solving a surrogate problem and can be computationally intensive. In this paper, we bring to bear recent advances in non-convex optimization and demonstrate their impact to RDPG inference. We advocate first-order gradient descent methods to better solve the embedding problem, and to organically accommodate broader network embedding applications of practical relevance. Notably, we argue that RDPG embeddings of directed graphs loose interpretability unless the factor matrices are constrained to have orthogonal columns. We thus develop a novel feasible optimization method in the resulting manifold. The effectiveness of the graph representation learning framework is demonstrated on reproducible experiments with both synthetic and real network data. Our open-source algorithm implementations are scalable, and unlike the ASE they are robust to missing edge data and can track slowly-varying latent positions from streaming graphs.
iSLAM: Imperative SLAM
Fu, Taimeng, Su, Shaoshu, Lu, Yiren, Wang, Chen
Simultaneous Localization and Mapping (SLAM) stands as one of the critical challenges in robot navigation. A SLAM system often consists of a front-end component for motion estimation and a back-end system for eliminating estimation drift. Recent advancements suggest that data-driven methods are highly effective for front-end tasks, while geometry-based methods continue to be essential in the back-end processes. However, such a decoupled paradigm between the data-driven front-end and geometry-based back-end can lead to sub-optimal performance, consequently reducing system capabilities and generalization potential. To solve this problem, we proposed a novel self-supervised imperative learning framework, named imperative SLAM (iSLAM), which fosters reciprocal correction between the front-end and back-end, thus enhancing performance without necessitating any external supervision. Specifically, we formulate the SLAM problem as a bilevel optimization so that the front-end and back-end are bidirectionally connected. As a result, the front-end model can learn global geometric knowledge obtained through pose graph optimization by back-propagating the residuals from the back-end component. We showcase the effectiveness of this new framework through an application of stereo-inertial SLAM. The experiments show that the iSLAM training strategy achieves an accuracy improvement of 22% on average over a baseline model. To the best of our knowledge, iSLAM is the first SLAM system showing that the front-end and back-end can mutually correct each other in a self-supervised manner.
Knowledge Distillation Performs Partial Variance Reduction
Safaryan, Mher, Peste, Alexandra, Alistarh, Dan
Knowledge Distillation (KD) [13, 3] is a standard tool for transferring information between a machine learning model of lower representational capacity-usually called the student-and a more accurate and powerful teacher model. In the context of classification using neural networks, it is common to consider the student to be a smaller network [2], whereas the teacher is a network that is larger and more computationally-heavy, but also more accurate. Assuming a supervised classification task, distillation consists in training the student to minimize the cross-entropy with respect to the teacher's logits on every given sample, in addition to minimizing the standard cross-entropy loss with respect to the ground truth labels. Since its introduction [3], distillation has been developed and applied in a wide variety of settings, from obtaining compact high-accuracy encodings of model ensembles [13], to boosting the accuracy of compressed models [49, 38, 31], to reinforcement learning [50, 42, 35, 5, 7, 45] and learning with privileged information [51]. Given its apparent simplicity, there has been significant interest in finding explanations for the effectiveness of distillation [2, 13, 37]. For instance, one hypothesis [2, 13] is that the smoothed labels resulting from distillation present the student with a decision surface that is easier to learn than the one presented by the categorical (one-hot) outputs. Another hypothesis [2, 13, 51] starts from the observation that the teacher's outputs have higher entropy than the ground truth labels, and therefore, higher information content. Despite this work, we still have a limited analytical understanding regarding why knowledge distillation is so effective [37].
FedAVO: Improving Communication Efficiency in Federated Learning with African Vultures Optimizer
Hossain, Md Zarif, Imteaj, Ahmed
Federated Learning (FL), a distributed machine learning technique has recently experienced tremendous growth in popularity due to its emphasis on user data privacy. However, the distributed computations of FL can result in constrained communication and drawn-out learning processes, necessitating the client-server communication cost optimization. The ratio of chosen clients and the quantity of local training passes are two hyperparameters that have a significant impact on FL performance. Due to different training preferences across various applications, it can be difficult for FL practitioners to manually select such hyperparameters. In our research paper, we introduce FedAVO, a novel FL algorithm that enhances communication effectiveness by selecting the best hyperparameters leveraging the African Vulture Optimizer (AVO). Our research demonstrates that the communication costs associated with FL operations can be substantially reduced by adopting AVO for FL hyperparameter adjustment. Through extensive evaluations of FedAVO on benchmark datasets, we show that FedAVO achieves significant improvement in terms of model accuracy and communication round, particularly with realistic cases of Non-IID datasets. Our extensive evaluation of the FedAVO algorithm identifies the optimal hyperparameters that are appropriately fitted for the benchmark datasets, eventually increasing global model accuracy by 6% in comparison to the state-of-the-art FL algorithms (such as FedAvg, FedProx, FedPSO, etc.).
Communication and Energy Efficient Wireless Federated Learning with Intrinsic Privacy
Zhang, Zhenxiao, Guo, Yuanxiong, Fang, Yuguang, Gong, Yanmin
Federated Learning (FL) is a collaborative learning framework that enables edge devices to collaboratively learn a global model while keeping raw data locally. Although FL avoids leaking direct information from local datasets, sensitive information can still be inferred from the shared models. To address the privacy issue in FL, differential privacy (DP) mechanisms are leveraged to provide formal privacy guarantee. However, when deploying FL at the wireless edge with over-the-air computation, ensuring client-level DP faces significant challenges. In this paper, we propose a novel wireless FL scheme called private federated edge learning with sparsification (PFELS) to provide client-level DP guarantee with intrinsic channel noise while reducing communication and energy overhead and improving model accuracy. The key idea of PFELS is for each device to first compress its model update and then adaptively design the transmit power of the compressed model update according to the wireless channel status without any artificial noise addition. We provide a privacy analysis for PFELS and prove the convergence of PFELS under general non-convex and non-IID settings. Experimental results show that compared with prior work, PFELS can improve the accuracy with the same DP guarantee and save communication and energy costs simultaneously.