fm model
FMPlug: Plug-In Foundation Flow-Matching Priors for Inverse Problems
Wan, Yuxiang, Devera, Ryan, Zhang, Wenjie, Sun, Ju
We present FMPlug, a novel plug-in framework that enhances foundation flow-matching (FM) priors for solving ill-posed inverse problems. Unlike traditional approaches that rely on domain-specific or untrained priors, FMPlug smartly leverages two simple but powerful insights: the similarity between observed and desired objects and the Gaussianity of generative flows. By introducing a time-adaptive warm-up strategy and sharp Gaussianity regularization, FMPlug unlocks the true potential of domain-agnostic foundation models. Our method beats state-of-the-art methods that use foundation FM priors by significant margins, on image super-resolution and Gaussian deblurring.
Saving Foundation Flow-Matching Priors for Inverse Problems
Wan, Yuxiang, Devera, Ryan, Zhang, Wenjie, Sun, Ju
Foundation flow-matching (FM) models promise a universal prior for solving inverse problems (IPs), yet today they trail behind domain-specific or even untrained priors. How can we unlock their potential? We introduce FMPlug, a plug-in framework that redefines how foundation FMs are used in IPs. FMPlug combines an instance-guided, time-dependent warm-start strategy with a sharp Gaussianity regularization, adding problem-specific guidance while preserving the Gaussian structures. This leads to a significant performance boost across image restoration and scientific IPs. Our results point to a path for making foundation FM models practical, reusable priors for IP solving.
Low-Bit, High-Fidelity: Optimal Transport Quantization for Flow Matching
Varam, Dara, Abuhani, Diaa A., Zualkernan, Imran, AlDamani, Raghad, Khalil, Lujain
Flow Matching (FM) generative models offer efficient simulation-free training and deterministic sampling, but their practical deployment is challenged by high-precision parameter requirements. We adapt optimal transport (OT)-based post-training quantization to FM models, minimizing the 2-Wasserstein distance between quantized and original weights, and systematically compare its effectiveness against uniform, piecewise, and logarithmic quantization schemes. Our theoretical analysis provides upper bounds on generative degradation under quantization, and empirical results across five benchmark datasets of varying complexity show that OT-based quantization preserves both visual generation quality and latent space stability down to 2-3 bits per parameter, where alternative methods fail. This establishes OT-based quantization as a principled, effective approach to compress FM generative models for edge and embedded AI applications.
FM-IRL: Flow-Matching for Reward Modeling and Policy Regularization in Reinforcement Learning
Wan, Zhenglin, Wu, Jingxuan, Yu, Xingrui, Zhang, Chubin, Lei, Mingcong, An, Bo, Tsang, Ivor
Flow Matching (FM) has shown remarkable ability in modeling complex distributions and achieves strong performance in offline imitation learning for cloning expert behaviors. However, despite its behavioral cloning expressiveness, FM-based policies are inherently limited by their lack of environmental interaction and exploration. This leads to poor generalization in unseen scenarios beyond the expert demonstrations, underscoring the necessity of online interaction with environment. Unfortunately, optimizing FM policies via online interaction is challenging and inefficient due to instability in gradient computation and high inference costs. To address these issues, we propose to let a student policy with simple MLP structure explore the environment and be online updated via RL algorithm with a reward model. This reward model is associated with a teacher FM model, containing rich information of expert data distribution. Furthermore, the same teacher FM model is utilized to regularize the student policy's behavior to stabilize policy learning. Due to the student's simple architecture, we avoid the gradient instability of FM policies and enable efficient online exploration, while still leveraging the expressiveness of the teacher FM model. Extensive experiments show that our approach significantly enhances learning efficiency, generalization, and robustness, especially when learning from suboptimal expert data.
Even Faster Simulations with Flow Matching: A Study of Zero Degree Calorimeter Responses
Recent advances in generative neural networks, particularly flow matching (FM), have enabled the generation of high-fidelity samples while significantly reducing computational costs. A promising application of these models is accelerating simulations in high-energy physics (HEP), helping research institutions meet their increasing computational demands. In this work, we leverage FM to develop surrogate models for fast simulations of zero degree calorimeters in the ALICE experiment. We present an effective training strategy that enables the training of fast generative models with an exceptionally low number of parameters. This approach achieves state-of-the-art simulation fidelity for both neutron (ZN) and proton (ZP) detectors, while offering substantial reductions in computational costs compared to existing methods. Our FM model achieves a Wasserstein distance of 1.27 for the ZN simulation with an inference time of 0.46 ms per sample, compared to the current best of 1.20 with an inference time of approximately 109 ms. The latent FM model further improves the inference speed, reducing the sampling time to 0.026 ms per sample, with a minimal trade-off in accuracy. Similarly, our approach achieves a Wasserstein distance of 1.30 for the ZP simulation, outperforming the current best of 2.08. The source code is available at https://github.com/m-wojnar/faster_zdc.
Local Flow Matching Generative Models
Xu, Chen, Cheng, Xiuyuan, Xie, Yao
Density estimation is a fundamental problem in statistics and machine learning. We consider a modern approach using flow-based generative models, and propose Local Flow Matching ($\texttt{LFM}$), a computational framework for density estimation based on such models, which learn a continuous and invertible flow to map noise samples to data samples. Unlike existing methods, $\texttt{LFM}$ employs a simulation-free scheme and incrementally learns a sequence of Flow Matching sub-models. Each sub-model matches a diffusion process over a small step size in the data-to-noise direction. This iterative process reduces the gap between the two distributions interpolated by the sub-models, enabling smaller models with faster training times. Theoretically, we prove a generation guarantee of the proposed flow model regarding the $\chi^2$-divergence between the generated and true data distributions. Experimentally, we demonstrate the improved training efficiency and competitive generative performance of $\texttt{LFM}$ compared to FM on the unconditional generation of tabular data and image datasets and its applicability to robotic manipulation policy learning.
Initialization Method for Factorization Machine Based on Low-Rank Approximation for Constructing a Corrected Approximate Ising Model
Seki, Yuya, Nakada, Hyakka, Tanaka, Shu
This paper presents an initialization method that can approximate a given approximate Ising model with a high degree of accuracy using a factorization machine (FM), a machine learning model. The construction of an Ising models using an FM is applied to black-box combinatorial optimization problems using factorization machine with quantum annealing (FMQA). It is anticipated that the optimization performance of FMQA will be enhanced through an implementation of the warm-start method. Nevertheless, the optimal initialization method for leveraging the warm-start approach in FMQA remains undetermined. Consequently, the present study compares initialization methods based on random initialization and low-rank approximation, and then identifies a suitable one for use with warm-start in FMQA through numerical experiments. Furthermore, the properties of the initialization method by the low-rank approximation for the FM are analyzed using random matrix theory, demonstrating that the approximation accuracy of the proposed method is not significantly influenced by the specific Ising model under consideration. The findings of this study will facilitate advancements of research in the field of black-box combinatorial optimization through the use of Ising machines.
Speeding Up Recommender Systems Using Association Rules
Kannout, Eyad, Nguyen, Hung Son, Grzegorowski, Marek
Recommender systems are considered one of the most rapidly growing branches of Artificial Intelligence. The demand for finding more efficient techniques to generate recommendations becomes urgent. However, many recommendations become useless if there is a delay in generating and showing them to the user. Therefore, we focus on improving the speed of recommendation systems without impacting the accuracy. In this paper, we suggest a novel recommender system based on Factorization Machines and Association Rules (FMAR). We introduce an approach to generate association rules using two algorithms: (i) apriori and (ii) frequent pattern (FP) growth. These association rules will be utilized to reduce the number of items passed to the factorization machines recommendation model. We show that FMAR has significantly decreased the number of new items that the recommender system has to predict and hence, decreased the required time for generating the recommendations. On the other hand, while building the FMAR tool, we concentrate on making a balance between prediction time and accuracy of generated recommendations to ensure that the accuracy is not significantly impacted compared to the accuracy of using factorization machines without association rules.
Bid Shading in The Brave New World of First-Price Auctions
Gligorijevic, Djordje, Zhou, Tian, Shetty, Bharatbhushan, Kitts, Brendan, Pan, Shengjun, Pan, Junwei, Flores, Aaron
Online auctions play a central role in online advertising, and are one of the main reasons for the industry's scalability and growth. With great changes in how auctions are being organized, such as changing the second- to first-price auction type, advertisers and demand platforms are compelled to adapt to a new volatile environment. Bid shading is a known technique for preventing overpaying in auction systems that can help maintain the strategy equilibrium in first-price auctions, tackling one of its greatest drawbacks. In this study, we propose a machine learning approach of modeling optimal bid shading for non-censored online first-price ad auctions. We clearly motivate the approach and extensively evaluate it in both offline and online settings on a major demand side platform. The results demonstrate the superiority and robustness of the new approach as compared to the existing approaches across a range of performance metrics.
Which Factorization Machine Modeling is Better: A Theoretical Answer with Optimal Guarantee
Lin, Ming, Qiu, Shuang, Ye, Jieping, Song, Xiaomin, Qian, Qi, Sun, Liang, Zhu, Shenghuo, Jin, Rong
Factorization machine (FM) is a popular machine learning model to capture the second order feature interactions. The optimal learning guarantee of FM and its generalized version is not yet developed. For a rank $k$ generalized FM of $d$ dimensional input, the previous best known sampling complexity is $\mathcal{O}[k^{3}d\cdot\mathrm{polylog}(kd)]$ under Gaussian distribution. This bound is sub-optimal comparing to the information theoretical lower bound $\mathcal{O}(kd)$. In this work, we aim to tighten this bound towards optimal and generalize the analysis to sub-gaussian distribution. We prove that when the input data satisfies the so-called $\tau$-Moment Invertible Property, the sampling complexity of generalized FM can be improved to $\mathcal{O}[k^{2}d\cdot\mathrm{polylog}(kd)/\tau^{2}]$. When the second order self-interaction terms are excluded in the generalized FM, the bound can be improved to the optimal $\mathcal{O}[kd\cdot\mathrm{polylog}(kd)]$ up to the logarithmic factors. Our analysis also suggests that the positive semi-definite constraint in the conventional FM is redundant as it does not improve the sampling complexity while making the model difficult to optimize. We evaluate our improved FM model in real-time high precision GPS signal calibration task to validate its superiority.