Generative diffusion models have recently emerged as a leading approach for generating high-dimensional data. In this paper, we show that the dynamics of these models exhibit a spontaneous symmetry breaking that divides the generative dynamics into two distinct phases: 1) A linear steady-state dynamics around a central fixed-point and 2) an attractor dynamics directed towards the data manifold. These two "phases" are separated by the change in stability of the central fixed-point, with the resulting window of instability being responsible for the diversity of the generated samples. Using both theoretical and empirical evidence, we show that an accurate simulation of the early dynamics does not significantly contribute to the final generation, since early fluctuations are reverted to the central fixed point. To leverage this insight, we propose a Gaussian late initialization scheme, which significantly improves model performance, achieving up to 3x FID improvements on fast samplers, while also increasing sample diversity (e.g., racial composition of generated CelebA images). Our work offers a new way to understand the generative dynamics of diffusion models that has the potential to bring about higher performance and less biased fast-samplers.
In this paper, we give an overview of a recently developed method for dynamic domain adaptation, named DIRA, which relies on a few samples in addition to a regularisation approach, named elastic weight consolidation, to achieve state-of-the-art (SOTA) domain adaptation results. DIRA has been previously shown to perform competitively with SOTA unsupervised adaption techniques. However, a limitation of DIRA is that it relies on labels to be provided for the few samples used in adaption. This makes it a supervised technique. In this paper, we propose a modification to the DIRA method to make it self-supervised i.e. remove the need for providing labels. Our proposed approach will be evaluated experimentally in future work.
In this paper, we study the (decentralized) distributed optimization problem with high-dimensional sparse structure. Building upon the FedDA algorithm, we propose a (Decentralized) FedDA-GT algorithm, which combines the \textbf{gradient tracking} technique. It is able to eliminate the heterogeneity among different clients' objective functions while ensuring a dimension-free convergence rate. Compared to the vanilla FedDA approach, (D)FedDA-GT can significantly reduce the communication complexity, from ${O}(s^2\log d/\varepsilon^{3/2})$ to a more efficient ${O}(s^2\log d/\varepsilon)$. In cases where strong convexity is applicable, we introduce a multistep mechanism resulting in the Multistep ReFedDA-GT algorithm, a minor modified version of FedDA-GT. This approach achieves an impressive communication complexity of ${O}\left(s\log d \log \frac{1}{\varepsilon}\right)$ through repeated calls to the ReFedDA-GT algorithm. Finally, we conduct numerical experiments, illustrating that our proposed algorithms enjoy the dual advantage of being dimension-free and heterogeneity-free.
In this paper, we comprehensively analyze the vertical and horizontal extensions of existing memory hierarchy. The difference between memory and big memory is well reported. We present the state-of-the-art studies upon the big memory systems, together with design methodology and implementations. Persistence is the first principle of big memory systems. We further show the full-stack and moving persistence.
Gradient boosting performs exceptionally in most prediction problems and scales well to large datasets. In this paper we prove that a ``lassoed'' gradient boosted tree algorithm with early stopping achieves faster than $n^{-1/4}$ L2 convergence in the large nonparametric space of cadlag functions of bounded sectional variation. This rate is remarkable because it does not depend on the dimension, sparsity, or smoothness. We use simulation and real data to confirm our theory and demonstrate empirical performance and scalability on par with standard boosting. Our convergence proofs are based on a novel, general theorem on early stopping with empirical loss minimizers of nested Donsker classes.
In this paper, the paraconsistent propositional logic LG is presented, along with its semantic characterization. It is shown that LG's set of theorems corresponds to the set of valid existential graphs, GET, which turns out to be an extension of Peirce's Gamma system, without becoming Zeman's gamma-4 system. All evidence is presented in a complete, rigorous, and detailed manner. This result is generalized by constructing the paraconsistent system of existential graphs GET4, and its semantic-deductive characterization. Finally, Zeman's Gamma-4, Gamma-4.2, and Gamma-5 existential graph systems are proven to be paraconsistent.
In this paper, we extend diagrammatic reasoning in monoidal categories with algebraic operations and equations. We achieve this by considering monoidal categories that are enriched in the category of Eilenberg-Moore algebras for a monad. Under the condition that this monad is monoidal and affine, we construct an adjunction between symmetric monoidal categories and symmetric monoidal categories enriched over algebras for the monad. This allows us to devise an extension, and its semantics, of the ZX-calculus with probabilistic choices by freely enriching over convex algebras, which are the algebras of the finite distribution monad. We show how this construction can be used for diagrammatic reasoning of noise in quantum systems.
This paper serves as a survey of recent advances in large margin training and its theoretical foundations, mostly for (nonlinear) deep neural networks (DNNs) that are probably the most prominent machine learning models for large-scale data in the community over the past decade. We generalize the formulation of classification margins from classical research to latest DNNs, summarize theoretical connections between the margin, network generalization, and robustness, and introduce recent efforts in enlarging the margins for DNNs comprehensively. Since the viewpoint of different methods is discrepant, we categorize them into groups for ease of comparison and discussion in the paper. Hopefully, our discussions and overview inspire new research work in the community that aim to improve the performance of DNNs, and we also point to directions where the large margin principle can be verified to provide theoretical evidence why certain regularizations for DNNs function well in practice. We managed to shorten the paper such that the crucial spirit of large margin learning and related methods are better emphasized.
BERT, a pre-trained Transformer model, has achieved ground-breaking performance on multiple NLP tasks. In this paper, we describe BERTSUM, a simple variant of BERT, for extractive summarization. Our system is the state of the art on the CNN/Dailymail dataset, outperforming the previous best-performed system by 1.65 on ROUGE-L. The codes to reproduce our results are available at //github.com/nlpyang/BertSum
Inferring missing links in knowledge graphs (KG) has attracted a lot of attention from the research community. In this paper, we tackle a practical query answering task involving predicting the relation of a given entity pair. We frame this prediction problem as an inference problem in a probabilistic graphical model and aim at resolving it from a variational inference perspective. In order to model the relation between the query entity pair, we assume that there exists an underlying latent variable (paths connecting two nodes) in the KG, which carries the equivalent semantics of their relations. However, due to the intractability of connections in large KGs, we propose to use variation inference to maximize the evidence lower bound. More specifically, our framework (\textsc{Diva}) is composed of three modules, i.e. a posterior approximator, a prior (path finder), and a likelihood (path reasoner). By using variational inference, we are able to incorporate them closely into a unified architecture and jointly optimize them to perform KG reasoning. With active interactions among these sub-modules, \textsc{Diva} is better at handling noise and coping with more complex reasoning scenarios. In order to evaluate our method, we conduct the experiment of the link prediction task on multiple datasets and achieve state-of-the-art performances on both datasets.
In this paper, we propose a conceptually simple and geometrically interpretable objective function, i.e. additive margin Softmax (AM-Softmax), for deep face verification. In general, the face verification task can be viewed as a metric learning problem, so learning large-margin face features whose intra-class variation is small and inter-class difference is large is of great importance in order to achieve good performance. Recently, Large-margin Softmax and Angular Softmax have been proposed to incorporate the angular margin in a multiplicative manner. In this work, we introduce a novel additive angular margin for the Softmax loss, which is intuitively appealing and more interpretable than the existing works. We also emphasize and discuss the importance of feature normalization in the paper. Most importantly, our experiments on LFW BLUFR and MegaFace show that our additive margin softmax loss consistently performs better than the current state-of-the-art methods using the same network architecture and training dataset. Our code has also been made available at //github.com/happynear/AMSoftmax