70.4LGMay 28
Foundation-Preserving Adaptation via Generalized Rayleigh-Quotient OptimizationDongjun Kim, Adrian de Wynter, Huancheng Chen et al.
While finetuning effectively adapts foundation models to specialized downstream tasks, it can degrade nontarget capabilities acquired during pretraining. Existing forgetting aware methods typically seek safer updates through specialized initialization or fixed constraints, but do not regulate the adaptation preservation trade-off during training. We propose Foundation Preserving LoRA (FoLoRA), a forgetting aware optimization framework. Guided by a first order preservation condition, FoLoRA defines a forgetting penalty over pretraining-proxy activations and a task utility over downstream task activations. It then scores update directions by task utility per unit forgetting penalty via a generalized Rayleigh quotient. The resulting spectral coordinate system enables direction wise gated Adam updates, attenuating low utility to penalty directions during training. To estimate the forgetting penalty, FoLoRA constructs pretraining proxy calibration data by sampling from the pretrained model rather than relying on a single proxy dataset. Experiments on math, code, and instruction following adaptation show that FoLoRA achieves the strongest preservation adaptation balance over baselines, improving target task performance with best aggregate preservation of non target capabilities.
LGOct 12, 2023
Learning RL-Policies for Joint Beamforming Without Exploration: A Batch Constrained Off-Policy ApproachHeasung Kim, Sravan Kumar Ankireddy
In this work, we consider the problem of network parameter optimization for rate maximization. We frame this as a joint optimization problem of power control, beam forming, and interference cancellation. We consider the setting where multiple Base Stations (BSs) communicate with multiple user equipment (UEs). Because of the exponential computational complexity of brute force search, we instead solve this nonconvex optimization problem using deep reinforcement learning (RL) techniques. Modern communication systems are notorious for their difficulty in exactly modeling their behavior. This limits us in using RL-based algorithms as interaction with the environment is needed for the agent to explore and learn efficiently. Further, it is ill-advised to deploy the algorithm in the real world for exploration and learning because of the high cost of failure. In contrast to the previous RL-based solutions proposed, such as deep-Q network (DQN) based control, we suggest an offline model-based approach. We specifically consider discrete batch-constrained deep Q-learning (BCQ) and show that performance similar to DQN can be achieved with only a fraction of the data without exploring. This maximizes sample efficiency and minimizes risk in deploying a new algorithm to commercial networks. We provide the entire project resource, including code and data, at the following link: https://github.com/Heasung-Kim/ safe-rl-deployment-for-5g.
ITFeb 7, 2025
Generative Diffusion Model-based Compression of MIMO CSIHeasung Kim, Taekyun Lee, Hyeji Kim et al.
While neural lossy compression techniques have markedly advanced the efficiency of Channel State Information (CSI) compression and reconstruction for feedback in MIMO communications, efficient algorithms for more challenging and practical tasks-such as CSI compression for future channel prediction and reconstruction with relevant side information-remain underexplored, often resulting in suboptimal performance when existing methods are extended to these scenarios. To that end, we propose a novel framework for compression with side information, featuring an encoding process with fixed-rate compression using a trainable codebook for codeword quantization, and a decoding procedure modeled as a backward diffusion process conditioned on both the codeword and the side information. Experimental results show that our method significantly outperforms existing CSI compression algorithms, often yielding over twofold performance improvement by achieving comparable distortion at less than half the data rate of competing methods in certain scenarios. These findings underscore the potential of diffusion-based compression for practical deployment in communication systems.
LGFeb 7, 2025
Importance Sampling via Score-based Generative ModelsHeasung Kim, Taekyun Lee, Hyeji Kim et al.
Importance sampling, which involves sampling from a probability density function (PDF) proportional to the product of an importance weight function and a base PDF, is a powerful technique with applications in variance reduction, biased or customized sampling, data augmentation, and beyond. Inspired by the growing availability of score-based generative models (SGMs), we propose an entirely training-free Importance sampling framework that relies solely on an SGM for the base PDF. Our key innovation is realizing the importance sampling process as a backward diffusion process, expressed in terms of the score function of the base PDF and the specified importance weight function--both readily available--eliminating the need for any additional training. We conduct a thorough analysis demonstrating the method's scalability and effectiveness across diverse datasets and tasks, including importance sampling for industrial and natural images with neural importance weight functions. The training-free aspect of our method is particularly compelling in real-world scenarios where a single base distribution underlies multiple biased sampling tasks, each requiring a different importance weight function. To the best of our knowledge our approach is the first importance sampling framework to achieve this.