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Collaborating Authors

 Liu, Sichao


EFPC: Towards Efficient and Flexible Prompt Compression

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

The emergence of large language models (LLMs) like GPT-4 has revolutionized natural language processing (NLP), enabling diverse, complex tasks. However, extensive token counts lead to high computational and financial burdens. To address this, we propose Efficient and Flexible Prompt Compression (EFPC), a novel method unifying task-aware and task-agnostic compression for a favorable accuracy-efficiency trade-off. EFPC uses GPT-4 to generate compressed prompts and integrates them with original prompts for training. During training and inference, we selectively prepend user instructions and compress prompts based on predicted probabilities. EFPC is highly data-efficient, achieving significant performance with minimal data. Compared to the state-of-the-art method LLMLingua-2, EFPC achieves a 4.8% relative improvement in F1-score with 1% additional data at a 4x compression rate, and an 11.4% gain with 10% additional data on the LongBench single-doc QA benchmark. EFPC's unified framework supports broad applicability and enhances performance across various models, tasks, and domains, offering a practical advancement in NLP.


Rethinking Optimization and Architecture for Tiny Language Models

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

The power of large language models (LLMs) has been demonstrated through numerous data and computing resources. However, the application of language models on mobile devices is facing huge challenge on the computation and memory costs, that is, tiny language models with high performance are urgently required. Limited by the highly complex training process, there are many details for optimizing language models that are seldom studied carefully. In this study, based on a tiny language model with 1B parameters, we carefully design a series of empirical study to analyze the effect of each component. Three perspectives are mainly discussed, \ie, neural architecture, parameter initialization, and optimization strategy. Several design formulas are empirically proved especially effective for tiny language models, including tokenizer compression, architecture tweaking, parameter inheritance and multiple-round training. Then we train PanGu-$\pi$-1B Pro and PanGu-$\pi$-1.5B Pro on 1.6T multilingual corpora, following the established formulas. Experimental results demonstrate the improved optimization and architecture yield a notable average improvement of 8.87 on benchmark evaluation sets for PanGu-$\pi$-1B Pro. Besides, PanGu-$\pi$-1.5B Pro surpasses a range of SOTA models with larger model sizes, validating its superior performance. The code is available at https://github.com/YuchuanTian/RethinkTinyLM.