Zijie Xia

2papers

2 Papers

59.7CLApr 29Code
Length Value Model: Scalable Value Pretraining for Token-Level Length Modeling

Zhen Zhang, Changyi Yang, Zijie Xia et al.

Token serves as the fundamental unit of computation in modern autoregressive models, and generation length directly influences both inference cost and reasoning performance. Despite its importance, existing approaches lack fine-grained length modeling, operating primarily at the coarse-grained sequence level. We introduce the Length Value Model (LenVM), a token-level framework that models the remaining generation length. By formulating length modeling as a value estimation problem and assigning a constant negative reward to each generated token, LenVM predicts a bounded, discounted return that serves as a monotone proxy for the remaining generation horizon. This formulation yields supervision that is annotation-free, dense, unbiased, and scalable. Experiments on LLMs and VLMs demonstrate LenVM provides a highly effective signal at inference time. On the LIFEBench exact length matching task, applying LenVM to a 7B model improves the length score from 30.9 to 64.8, significantly outperforming frontier closed-source models. Furthermore, LenVM enables continuous control over the trade off between performance and efficiency. On GSM8K at a budget of 200 tokens, LenVM maintains 63% accuracy compared to 6 percent for token budget baseline. It also accurately predicts total generation length from the prompt boundary. Finally, LenVM's token-level values offer an interpretable view of generation dynamics, revealing how specific tokens shift reasoning toward shorter or longer regimes. Results demonstrate that LenVM supports a broad range of applications and token length can be effectively modeled as a token-level value signal, highlighting the potential of LenVM as a general framework for length modeling and as a length-specific value signal that could support future RL training. Code is available at https://github.com/eric-ai-lab/Length-Value-Model.

LGOct 26, 2021
Multi-Faceted Hierarchical Multi-Task Learning for a Large Number of Tasks with Multi-dimensional Relations

Junning Liu, Zijie Xia, Yu Lei et al.

There has been many studies on improving the efficiency of shared learning in Multi-Task Learning(MTL). Previous work focused on the "micro" sharing perspective for a small number of tasks, while in Recommender Systems(RS) and other AI applications, there are often demands to model a large number of tasks with multi-dimensional task relations. For example, when using MTL to model various user behaviors in RS, if we differentiate new users and new items from old ones, there will be a cartesian product style increase of tasks with multi-dimensional relations. This work studies the "macro" perspective of shared learning network design and proposes a Multi-Faceted Hierarchical MTL model(MFH). MFH exploits the multi-dimension task relations with a nested hierarchical tree structure which maximizes the shared learning. We evaluate MFH and SOTA models in a large industry video platform of 10 billion samples and results show that MFH outperforms SOTA MTL models significantly in both offline and online evaluations across all user groups, especially remarkable for new users with an online increase of 9.1\% in app time per user and 1.85\% in next-day retention rate. MFH now has been deployed in a large scale online video recommender system. MFH is especially beneficial to the cold-start problems in RS where new users and new items often suffer from a "local overfitting" phenomenon. However, the idea is actually generic and widely applicable to other MTL scenarios.