LGJul 9, 2024Code
Fine-Tuning Attention Modules Only: Enhancing Weight Disentanglement in Task ArithmeticRuochen Jin, Bojian Hou, Jiancong Xiao et al.
In recent years, task arithmetic has garnered increasing attention. This approach edits pre-trained models directly in weight space by combining the fine-tuned weights of various tasks into a unified model. Its efficiency and cost-effectiveness stem from its training-free combination, contrasting with traditional methods that require model training on large datasets for multiple tasks. However, applying such a unified model to individual tasks can lead to interference from other tasks (lack of weight disentanglement). To address this issue, Neural Tangent Kernel (NTK) linearization has been employed to leverage a "kernel behavior", facilitating weight disentanglement and mitigating adverse effects from unrelated tasks. Despite its benefits, NTK linearization presents drawbacks, including doubled training costs, as well as reduced performance of individual models. To tackle this problem, we propose a simple yet effective and efficient method that is to finetune the attention modules only in the Transformer. Our study reveals that the attention modules exhibit kernel behavior, and fine-tuning the attention modules only significantly improves weight disentanglement. To further understand how our method improves the weight disentanglement of task arithmetic, we present a comprehensive study of task arithmetic by differentiating the role of the representation module and task-specific module. In particular, we find that the representation module plays an important role in improving weight disentanglement whereas the task-specific modules such as the classification heads can degenerate the weight disentanglement performance. (The code is available at https://github.com/kyrie-23/task_arithmetic_tangent)
LGMar 20Code
RMNP: Row-Momentum Normalized Preconditioning for Scalable Matrix-Based OptimizationShenyang Deng, Zhuoli Ouyang, Tianyu Pang et al.
Preconditioned adaptive methods have gained significant attention for training deep neural networks, as they capture rich curvature information of the loss landscape . The central challenge in this field lies in balancing preconditioning effectiveness with computational efficiency of implementing the preconditioner. Among recent advances, \textsc{Muon} stands out by using Newton-Schulz iteration to obtain preconditioned updates without explicitly constructing the preconditioning matrix. Despite its advantages, the efficiency of \textsc{Muon} still leaves room for further improvement. In this paper, we introduce \textsc{RMNP} (Row Momentum Normalized Preconditioning), an optimizer that replaces Newton-Schulz iteration with a simple row-wise $\ell_2$ normalization operation, motivated by the empirically observed diagonal block structure of the Transformer layerwise Hessian. This substitution reduces the per-iteration computational complexity from $\mathcal{O}(mn\cdot\min(m,n))$ to $\mathcal{O}(mn)$ for an $m\times n$ weight matrix while maintaining comparable optimization performance. Theoretically, we establish convergence guarantees for \textsc{RMNP} in the non-convex setting that match recent results for \textsc{Muon} optimizers, achieving the information-theoretic minimax optimal complexity. Extensive experiments on large language model pretraining show that \textsc{RMNP} delivers competitive optimization performance compared with \textsc{Muon} while substantially reducing preconditioning wall-clock time. Our code is available at \href{https://anonymous.4open.science/r/RMNP-E8E1/}{this link}.
LGMar 13, 2025Code
MentalChat16K: A Benchmark Dataset for Conversational Mental Health AssistanceJia Xu, Tianyi Wei, Bojian Hou et al.
We introduce MentalChat16K, an English benchmark dataset combining a synthetic mental health counseling dataset and a dataset of anonymized transcripts from interventions between Behavioral Health Coaches and Caregivers of patients in palliative or hospice care. Covering a diverse range of conditions like depression, anxiety, and grief, this curated dataset is designed to facilitate the development and evaluation of large language models for conversational mental health assistance. By providing a high-quality resource tailored to this critical domain, MentalChat16K aims to advance research on empathetic, personalized AI solutions to improve access to mental health support services. The dataset prioritizes patient privacy, ethical considerations, and responsible data usage. MentalChat16K presents a valuable opportunity for the research community to innovate AI technologies that can positively impact mental well-being. The dataset is available at https://huggingface.co/datasets/ShenLab/MentalChat16K and the code and documentation are hosted on GitHub at https://github.com/ChiaPatricia/MentalChat16K.
CLMay 8
A Semantic-Sampling Framework for Evaluating Calibration in Open-Ended Question AnsweringZhanliang Wang, Jiancong Xiao, Ruochen Jin et al.
Calibration measures whether a model's predicted confidence aligns with its empirical accuracy, and is central to the reliable deployment of large language models (LLMs) in high-stakes domains such as medicine and law. While much recent work focuses on improving LLM calibration, the equally important question of how to evaluate it in realistic settings remains underdeveloped. Open-ended question answering (QA), the most common deployment setting for modern LLMs, is where existing evaluation methods fall short: logit-based metrics need restricted output formats and internal probabilities; verbalized confidence is self-reported and often overconfident; and sampling-based methods rely on task-specific extraction rules without a clear finite-sample target. We introduce Sem-ECE (Semantic-Sampling Expected Calibration Error), a calibration evaluation framework for open-ended QA that samples answers from the model, groups them into semantic classes, and uses the resulting frequencies as confidence. We study two estimators within this framework: Sem$_1$-ECE, the same-sample self-consistency score, and Sem$_2$-ECE, a held-out variant that separates answer selection from confidence evaluation. We prove both are asymptotically unbiased, and further show that they agree on easy questions but diverge on hard ones with Sem$_2$ achieving strictly smaller calibration error, so their gap also serves as a diagnostic for question difficulty. Experiments on three open-ended QA benchmarks across five leading commercial LLMs match our theoretical predictions and show that Sem-ECE outperforms verbalized confidence and existing sampling-based methods, while complementing logit-based evaluation when internal probabilities are unavailable.
LGMay 4, 2025
Restoring Calibration for Aligned Large Language Models: A Calibration-Aware Fine-Tuning ApproachJiancong Xiao, Bojian Hou, Zhanliang Wang et al.
One of the key technologies for the success of Large Language Models (LLMs) is preference alignment. However, a notable side effect of preference alignment is poor calibration: while the pre-trained models are typically well-calibrated, LLMs tend to become poorly calibrated after alignment with human preferences. In this paper, we investigate why preference alignment affects calibration and how to address this issue. For the first question, we observe that the preference collapse issue in alignment undesirably generalizes to the calibration scenario, causing LLMs to exhibit overconfidence and poor calibration. To address this, we demonstrate the importance of fine-tuning with domain-specific knowledge to alleviate the overconfidence issue. To further analyze whether this affects the model's performance, we categorize models into two regimes: calibratable and non-calibratable, defined by bounds of Expected Calibration Error (ECE). In the calibratable regime, we propose a calibration-aware fine-tuning approach to achieve proper calibration without compromising LLMs' performance. However, as models are further fine-tuned for better performance, they enter the non-calibratable regime. For this case, we develop an EM-algorithm-based ECE regularization for the fine-tuning loss to maintain low calibration error. Extensive experiments validate the effectiveness of the proposed methods.
LGApr 15, 2025
ICAFS: Inter-Client-Aware Feature Selection for Vertical Federated LearningRuochen Jin, Boning Tong, Shu Yang et al.
Vertical federated learning (VFL) enables a paradigm for vertically partitioned data across clients to collaboratively train machine learning models. Feature selection (FS) plays a crucial role in Vertical Federated Learning (VFL) due to the unique nature that data are distributed across multiple clients. In VFL, different clients possess distinct subsets of features for overlapping data samples, making the process of identifying and selecting the most relevant features a complex yet essential task. Previous FS efforts have primarily revolved around intra-client feature selection, overlooking vital feature interaction across clients, leading to subpar model outcomes. We introduce ICAFS, a novel multi-stage ensemble approach for effective FS in VFL by considering inter-client interactions. By employing conditional feature synthesis alongside multiple learnable feature selectors, ICAFS facilitates ensemble FS over these selectors using synthetic embeddings. This method bypasses the limitations of private gradient sharing and allows for model training using real data with refined embeddings. Experiments on multiple real-world datasets demonstrate that ICAFS surpasses current state-of-the-art methods in prediction accuracy.