Shuzi Niu

LG
10papers
1,775citations
Novelty53%
AI Score57

10 Papers

IRApr 25, 2022
Incorporating Explicit Knowledge in Pre-trained Language Models for Passage Re-ranking

Qian Dong, Yiding Liu, Suqi Cheng et al.

Passage re-ranking is to obtain a permutation over the candidate passage set from retrieval stage. Re-rankers have been boomed by Pre-trained Language Models (PLMs) due to their overwhelming advantages in natural language understanding. However, existing PLM based re-rankers may easily suffer from vocabulary mismatch and lack of domain specific knowledge. To alleviate these problems, explicit knowledge contained in knowledge graph is carefully introduced in our work. Specifically, we employ the existing knowledge graph which is incomplete and noisy, and first apply it in passage re-ranking task. To leverage a reliable knowledge, we propose a novel knowledge graph distillation method and obtain a knowledge meta graph as the bridge between query and passage. To align both kinds of embedding in the latent space, we employ PLM as text encoder and graph neural network over knowledge meta graph as knowledge encoder. Besides, a novel knowledge injector is designed for the dynamic interaction between text and knowledge encoder. Experimental results demonstrate the effectiveness of our method especially in queries requiring in-depth domain knowledge.

LGMay 17
Bridging the Gap between Sparse Matrix Reordering and Factorization: A Deep Learning Framework for Fill-in Reduction

Ziwei Li, Tao Yuan, Shuzi Niu et al.

Sparse matrix reordering can significantly reduce the fill-in during matrix factorization, thereby decreasing the computational and storage requirements in sparse matrix computations. Finding a minimal fill-in ordering is known to be an NP-hard problem. Moreover, there is a paradox: matrix reordering is applied before matrix factorization, but fill-ins that matrix reordering methods aim at are generated from matrix factorization. To bridge the gap between reordering and factorization, we propose a deep learning framework to minimize a fill-in surrogate function based on spectral embedding. First, we employ a multi-grid-like GNN architecture to learn to approximate the smallest eigenvectors of its graph Laplacian matrix, i.e. spectral embedding, and capture the global structural information of the matrix. Then, another multi-grid-like GNN architecture is used to minimize the potential space where fill-in can occur based on the rank distribution. Experimental results indicate that our approach achieves competitive performance compared with traditional graph-theoretic algorithms and deep learning methods.

LGMay 17
Self-Supervised Learning for Sparse Matrix Reordering

Ziwei Li, Tao Yuan, Fangfang Liu et al.

Rearranging the rows or columns of a sparse matrix using an appropriate ordering can significantly reduce fill-ins, i.e., new nonzeros introduced during matrix factorization, decreasing memory usage and runtime. However, finding an ordering that minimizes fill-ins is NP-complete. Existing approaches, including graph-theoretic and deep learning methods, rely on surrogate objectives without theoretical guarantees. The Fill-Path Theorem reveals a direct and intrinsic relationship between fill-in generation and the sparse structure of the matrix as path triplet inequalities. Here we first employ a multigrid graph network to capture structural information for each vertex. We then derive a triplet sampling strategy based on inequalities. Finally, we introduce an end-max chain loss function to reduce the number of triplets whose predicted scores satisfy these inequalities. Experimental evaluations on the publicly available SuiteSparse matrix collection demonstrate the superiority of the proposed method in terms of both fill-in reduction and speedup in LU factorization time.

LGMay 17
Learning Fill-in Reduction Ordering via Graph Policy Optimization for Sparse Matrices

Ziwei Li, Shuzi Niu, Huiyuan Li et al.

Matrix reordering in large sparse solvers seeks a permutation that minimizes factorization fill-in to reduce memory and computation. Because the minimum fill-in ordering problem is NP-complete and fill-in is implicit in the sparsity pattern, graph-theoretic heuristics are used. Existing reinforcement learning methods either ignore sparsity patterns--missing the global fill-in--or lack local exact fill-in feedback. We propose a graph policy optimization method, modeling fill-ins from global and local views: both the policy and value networks use a multi-hop graph neural backbone to embed global fill-in; the policy further interacts with symbolic factorization over graphs to extract local, step-level fill-ins, and the resulting feedback is aligned with the value network via an adaptive saturation function to improve convergence. On the SuiteSparse Matrix Collection, our method achieves mean reductions of 29.3 in fill-ins and 31.3 in peak memory usage over state-of-the-art baselines.

LGJan 9
FLRQ: Faster LLM Quantization with Flexible Low-Rank Matrix Sketching

Hongyaoxing Gul, Lijuan Hu, Shuzi Niu et al.

Traditional post-training quantization (PTQ) is considered an effective approach to reduce model size and accelerate inference of large-scale language models (LLMs). However, existing low-rank PTQ methods require costly fine-tuning to determine a compromise rank for diverse data and layers in large models, failing to exploit their full potential. Additionally, the current SVD-based low-rank approximation compounds the computational overhead. In this work, we thoroughly analyze the varying effectiveness of low-rank approximation across different layers in representative models. Accordingly, we introduce \underline{F}lexible \underline{L}ow-\underline{R}ank \underline{Q}uantization (FLRQ), a novel solution designed to quickly identify the accuracy-optimal ranks and aggregate them to achieve minimal storage combinations. FLRQ comprises two powerful components, Rank1-Sketch-based Flexible Rank Selection (R1-FLR) and Best Low-rank Approximation under Clipping (BLC). R1-FLR applies the R1-Sketch with Gaussian projection for the fast low-rank approximation, enabling outlier-aware rank extraction for each layer. Meanwhile, BLC aims at minimizing the low-rank quantization error under the scaling and clipping strategy through an iterative method. FLRQ demonstrates strong effectiveness and robustness in comprehensive experiments, achieving state-of-the-art performance in both quantization quality and algorithm efficiency.

LGNov 12, 2025
Factorization-in-Loop: Proximal Fill-in Minimization for Sparse Matrix Reordering

Ziwei Li, Shuzi Niu, Tao Yuan et al.

Fill-ins are new nonzero elements in the summation of the upper and lower triangular factors generated during LU factorization. For large sparse matrices, they will increase the memory usage and computational time, and be reduced through proper row or column arrangement, namely matrix reordering. Finding a row or column permutation with the minimal fill-ins is NP-hard, and surrogate objectives are designed to derive fill-in reduction permutations or learn a reordering function. However, there is no theoretical guarantee between the golden criterion and these surrogate objectives. Here we propose to learn a reordering network by minimizing \(l_1\) norm of triangular factors of the reordered matrix to approximate the exact number of fill-ins. The reordering network utilizes a graph encoder to predict row or column node scores. For inference, it is easy and fast to derive the permutation from sorting algorithms for matrices. For gradient based optimization, there is a large gap between the predicted node scores and resultant triangular factors in the optimization objective. To bridge the gap, we first design two reparameterization techniques to obtain the permutation matrix from node scores. The matrix is reordered by multiplying the permutation matrix. Then we introduce the factorization process into the objective function to arrive at target triangular factors. The overall objective function is optimized with the alternating direction method of multipliers and proximal gradient descent. Experimental results on benchmark sparse matrix collection SuiteSparse show the fill-in number and LU factorization time reduction of our proposed method is 20% and 17.8% compared with state-of-the-art baselines.

CLFeb 6, 2018
Improving Variational Encoder-Decoders in Dialogue Generation

Xiaoyu Shen, Hui Su, Shuzi Niu et al.

Variational encoder-decoders (VEDs) have shown promising results in dialogue generation. However, the latent variable distributions are usually approximated by a much simpler model than the powerful RNN structure used for encoding and decoding, yielding the KL-vanishing problem and inconsistent training objective. In this paper, we separate the training step into two phases: The first phase learns to autoencode discrete texts into continuous embeddings, from which the second phase learns to generalize latent representations by reconstructing the encoded embedding. In this case, latent variables are sampled by transforming Gaussian noise through multi-layer perceptrons and are trained with a separate VED model, which has the potential of realizing a much more flexible distribution. We compare our model with current popular models and the experiment demonstrates substantial improvement in both metric-based and human evaluations.

CLOct 11, 2017
DailyDialog: A Manually Labelled Multi-turn Dialogue Dataset

Yanran Li, Hui Su, Xiaoyu Shen et al.

We develop a high-quality multi-turn dialog dataset, DailyDialog, which is intriguing in several aspects. The language is human-written and less noisy. The dialogues in the dataset reflect our daily communication way and cover various topics about our daily life. We also manually label the developed dataset with communication intention and emotion information. Then, we evaluate existing approaches on DailyDialog dataset and hope it benefit the research field of dialog systems.

CLApr 30, 2017
A Conditional Variational Framework for Dialog Generation

Xiaoyu Shen, Hui Su, Yanran Li et al.

Deep latent variable models have been shown to facilitate the response generation for open-domain dialog systems. However, these latent variables are highly randomized, leading to uncontrollable generated responses. In this paper, we propose a framework allowing conditional response generation based on specific attributes. These attributes can be either manually assigned or automatically detected. Moreover, the dialog states for both speakers are modeled separately in order to reflect personal features. We validate this framework on two different scenarios, where the attribute refers to genericness and sentiment states respectively. The experiment result testified the potential of our model, where meaningful responses can be generated in accordance with the specified attributes.

LGSep 26, 2013
Stochastic Rank Aggregation

Shuzi Niu, Yanyan Lan, Jiafeng Guo et al.

This paper addresses the problem of rank aggregation, which aims to find a consensus ranking among multiple ranking inputs. Traditional rank aggregation methods are deterministic, and can be categorized into explicit and implicit methods depending on whether rank information is explicitly or implicitly utilized. Surprisingly, experimental results on real data sets show that explicit rank aggregation methods would not work as well as implicit methods, although rank information is critical for the task. Our analysis indicates that the major reason might be the unreliable rank information from incomplete ranking inputs. To solve this problem, we propose to incorporate uncertainty into rank aggregation and tackle the problem in both unsupervised and supervised scenario. We call this novel framework {stochastic rank aggregation} (St.Agg for short). Specifically, we introduce a prior distribution on ranks, and transform the ranking functions or objectives in traditional explicit methods to their expectations over this distribution. Our experiments on benchmark data sets show that the proposed St.Agg outperforms the baselines in both unsupervised and supervised scenarios.