Cai, Shuzhang
The Power of Adaptation: Boosting In-Context Learning through Adaptive Prompting
Cai, Shuzhang, Mensah-Boateng, Twumasi, Kuksov, Xander, Yuan, Jing, Tang, Shaojie
Large Language Models (LLMs) have demonstrated exceptional abilities across a broad range of language-related tasks, including generating solutions to complex reasoning problems. An effective technique to enhance LLM performance is in-context learning, which encourages a step-by-step reasoning process by including explanatory examples to guide the model's responses. However, selecting appropriate exemplars for the model poses a challenge, as each dataset demands a distinct set of exemplars to enable the LLM to learn effectively and perform well on the test set. Current studies often rely on uncertainty- or diversity-based selection strategies to select exemplars for annotation and to improve model learning. However, these studies typically employ a non-adaptive approach, selecting a set of exemplars all at once. We argue that this non-adaptive strategy may result in a set of exemplars with high redundancy in terms of the knowledge covered, ultimately reducing their overall informativeness. To address this limitation, we propose \textsc{Adaptive-Prompt}, a novel method that adaptively selects exemplars by leveraging model feedback from previously chosen exemplars. Experimental results show that \textsc{Adaptive-Prompt} significantly enhances LLM performance across a variety of reasoning tasks.
Benchmarking Large Language Models for Image Classification of Marine Mammals
Qi, Yijiashun, Cai, Shuzhang, Zhao, Zunduo, Li, Jiaming, Lin, Yanbin, Wang, Zhiqiang
As Artificial Intelligence (AI) has developed rapidly over the past few decades, the new generation of AI, Large Language Models (LLMs) trained on massive datasets, has achieved ground-breaking performance in many applications. Further progress has been made in multimodal LLMs, with many datasets created to evaluate LLMs with vision abilities. However, none of those datasets focuses solely on marine mammals, which are indispensable for ecological equilibrium. In this work, we build a benchmark dataset with 1,423 images of 65 kinds of marine mammals, where each animal is uniquely classified into different levels of class, ranging from species-level to medium-level to group-level. Moreover, we evaluate several approaches for classifying these marine mammals: (1) machine learning (ML) algorithms using embeddings provided by neural networks, (2) influential pre-trained neural networks, (3) zero-shot models: CLIP and LLMs, and (4) a novel LLM-based multi-agent system (MAS). The results demonstrate the strengths of traditional models and LLMs in different aspects, and the MAS can further improve the classification performance. The dataset is available on GitHub: https://github.com/yeyimilk/LLM-Vision-Marine-Animals.git.
Assortment Planning with Sponsored Products
Tang, Shaojie, Cai, Shuzhang, Yuan, Jing, Han, Kai
In the rapidly evolving landscape of retail, assortment planning plays a crucial role in determining the success of a business. With the rise of sponsored products and their increasing prominence in online marketplaces, retailers face new challenges in effectively managing their product assortment in the presence of sponsored products. Remarkably, previous research in assortment planning largely overlooks the existence of sponsored products and their potential impact on overall recommendation effectiveness. Instead, they commonly make the simplifying assumption that all products are either organic or non-sponsored. This research gap underscores the necessity for a more thorough investigation of the assortment planning challenge when sponsored products are in play. We formulate the assortment planning problem in the presence of sponsored products as a combinatorial optimization task. The ultimate objective is to compute an assortment plan that optimizes expected revenue while considering the specific requirements of placing sponsored products strategically.