Max Milkert

2papers

2 Papers

44.5LGMay 13
ASAP: Amortized Doubly-Stochastic Attention via Sliced Dual Projection

Huy Tran, Max Milkert, David Hyde

Doubly-stochastic attention has emerged as a transport-based alternative to row-softmax attention, with recent Transformer variants using it to reduce attention sinks and rank collapse while improving performance. In this family, the standard approach is Sinkhorn scaling, which trains more efficiently but still repeats matrix scaling in every inference forward pass. Sliced-transport attention removes the online iteration, but its soft sorting approximation materializes dense tensors for each slice, requiring substantially more training resources than Sinkhorn attention. We introduce ASAP: Amortized Doubly-Stochastic Attention via Sliced Dual Projection, a train-then-compile method that trains the doubly-stochastic layer with Sinkhorn, then replaces the iterative scaling loop at inference with a fixed sliced-dual operator. It learns a lightweight parametric map from exact one-dimensional Kantorovich potentials to the Sinkhorn query-side dual, then reconstructs the attention plan with a two-sided entropic c-transform. Across language and vision benchmarks, ASAP keeps the cheaper training setup and remains highly competitive with recent baselines. In the main frozen-layer benchmark, ASAP is 5.3 faster than the trained Sinkhorn teacher while matching its accuracy; in downstream replacements, ASAP recovers most of the teacher performance without any retraining.

LGNov 29, 2023
Compelling ReLU Networks to Exhibit Exponentially Many Linear Regions at Initialization and During Training

Max Milkert, David Hyde, Forrest Laine

In a neural network with ReLU activations, the number of piecewise linear regions in the output can grow exponentially with depth. However, this is highly unlikely to happen when the initial parameters are sampled randomly, which therefore often leads to the use of networks that are unnecessarily large. To address this problem, we introduce a novel parameterization of the network that restricts its weights so that a depth $d$ network produces exactly $2^d$ linear regions at initialization and maintains those regions throughout training under the parameterization. This approach allows us to learn approximations of convex, one dimensional functions that are several orders of magnitude more accurate than their randomly initialized counterparts. We further demonstrate a preliminary extension of our construction to multidimensional and non-convex functions, allowing the technique to replace traditional dense layers in various architectures.