Zhangzhang Si

AI
h-index6
3papers
15citations
Novelty50%
AI Score44

3 Papers

LGOct 23, 2023
Serverless Federated Learning with flwr-serverless

Sanjeev V. Namjoshi, Reese Green, Krishi Sharma et al.

Federated learning is becoming increasingly relevant and popular as we witness a surge in data collection and storage of personally identifiable information. Alongside these developments there have been many proposals from governments around the world to provide more protections for individuals' data and a heightened interest in data privacy measures. As deep learning continues to become more relevant in new and existing domains, it is vital to develop strategies like federated learning that can effectively train data from different sources, such as edge devices, without compromising security and privacy. Recently, the Flower (\texttt{Flwr}) Python package was introduced to provide a scalable, flexible, and easy-to-use framework for implementing federated learning. However, to date, Flower is only able to run synchronous federated learning which can be costly and time-consuming to run because the process is bottlenecked by client-side training jobs that are slow or fragile. Here, we introduce \texttt{flwr-serverless}, a wrapper around the Flower package that extends its functionality to allow for both synchronous and asynchronous federated learning with minimal modification to Flower's design paradigm. Furthermore, our approach to federated learning allows the process to run without a central server, which increases the domains of application and accessibility of its use. This paper presents the design details and usage of this approach through a series of experiments that were conducted using public datasets. Overall, we believe that our approach decreases the time and cost to run federated training and provides an easier way to implement and experiment with federated learning systems.

AIMay 12
Operationalizing Document AI: A Microservice Architecture for OCR and LLM Pipelines in Production

Yao Fehlis, Benjamin Bengfort, Zhangzhang Si et al.

Academic research tends to focus on new models for document understanding creating a wide gap in the literature between model definition and running models at production scale. To close that gap, we present a microservice architecture that encapsulates pipelines of multiple models for classification, optical character recognition (OCR), and large language model structured field extraction as well as our experience running this pipeline on thousands of multi-page documents per hour. We describe our primary design decisions, including a hybrid classification, separation of GPU-bound inference from CPU-bound orchestration, use of asynchronous processing for the many IO-bound operations in the pipeline, and an independent, horizontal scaling strategy. Using batch profiling, we identified two surprising qualitative findings that shape production deployments: OCR, not language-model parsing, dominates end-to-end latency, and the system saturates at a concurrency determined by shared GPU-inference capacity rather than worker count. Our goal is to provide practitioners with concrete architectural patterns for building document understanding systems that work beyond the benchmark; effectively operationalizing models in production.

CLFeb 3, 2025
Latent Thought Models with Variational Bayes Inference-Time Computation

Deqian Kong, Minglu Zhao, Dehong Xu et al.

We propose a novel class of language models, Latent Thought Models (LTMs), which incorporate explicit latent thought vectors that follow an explicit prior model in latent space. These latent thought vectors guide the autoregressive generation of ground tokens through a Transformer decoder. Training employs a dual-rate optimization process within the classical variational Bayes framework: fast learning of local variational parameters for the posterior distribution of latent vectors (inference-time computation), and slow learning of global decoder parameters. Empirical studies reveal that LTMs possess additional scaling dimensions beyond traditional Large Language Models (LLMs), such as the number of iterations in inference-time computation and number of latent thought vectors. Higher sample efficiency can be achieved by increasing training compute per token, with further gains possible by trading model size for more inference steps. Designed based on these scaling properties, LTMs demonstrate superior sample and parameter efficiency compared to autoregressive models and discrete diffusion models. They significantly outperform these counterparts in validation perplexity and zero-shot language modeling tasks. Additionally, LTMs exhibit emergent few-shot in-context reasoning capabilities that scale with model size, and achieve competitive performance in conditional and unconditional text generation.