Paul Joe Maliakel

LG
h-index40
3papers
43citations
Novelty33%
AI Score35

3 Papers

LGMay 13
INAR-VL: Input-Aware Routing for Edge-Cloud Vision-Language Inference

Ahmed Šabanović, Paul Joe Maliakel, Ivona Brandić

Edge deployment of Vision-Language Models (VLMs) faces a tradeoff between latency and accuracy: cloud execution provides high-quality predictions but incurs communication delay and energy cost, while edge-only execution is faster but less accurate due to limited model capacity. This trade-off is further complicated by heterogeneity in image quality and reasoning complexity, making static placement suboptimal. We present INAR-VL, a lightweight edge-cloud routing system for multimodal inference in a two-tier deployment. INAR-VL maintains complementary VLMs across edge and cloud and uses lightweight image and text complexity signals to guide routing and model selection, executing simple queries locally while offloading complex ones when beneficial. Evaluation on visual question answering shows that INAR-VL executes 36% of requests on the edge, reduces latency by 24%, lowers energy by 26%, and preserves 97% of cloud-level accuracy.

LGMar 25, 2024
FLIGAN: Enhancing Federated Learning with Incomplete Data using GAN

Paul Joe Maliakel, Shashikant Ilager, Ivona Brandic

Federated Learning (FL) provides a privacy-preserving mechanism for distributed training of machine learning models on networked devices (e.g., mobile devices, IoT edge nodes). It enables Artificial Intelligence (AI) at the edge by creating models without sharing actual data across the network. Existing research typically focuses on generic aspects of non-IID data and heterogeneity in client's system characteristics, but they often neglect the issue of insufficient data for model development, which can arise from uneven class label distribution and highly variable data volumes across edge nodes. In this work, we propose FLIGAN, a novel approach to address the issue of data incompleteness in FL. First, we leverage Generative Adversarial Networks (GANs) to adeptly capture complex data distributions and generate synthetic data that closely resemble real-world data. Then, we use synthetic data to enhance the robustness and completeness of datasets across nodes. Our methodology adheres to FL's privacy requirements by generating synthetic data in a federated manner without sharing the actual data in the process. We incorporate techniques such as classwise sampling and node grouping, designed to improve the federated GAN's performance, enabling the creation of high-quality synthetic datasets and facilitating efficient FL training. Empirical results from our experiments demonstrate that FLIGAN significantly improves model accuracy, especially in scenarios with high class imbalances, achieving up to a 20% increase in model accuracy over traditional FL baselines.

LGJan 14, 2025
Investigating Energy Efficiency and Performance Trade-offs in LLM Inference Across Tasks and DVFS Settings

Paul Joe Maliakel, Shashikant Ilager, Ivona Brandic

Large Language Models (LLMs) have demonstrated remarkable performance across a wide range of natural language processing (NLP) tasks, leading to widespread adoption in both research and industry. However, their inference workloads are computationally and energy intensive, raising concerns about sustainability and environmental impact. As LLMs continue to scale, it becomes essential to identify and optimize the factors that influence their runtime efficiency without compromising performance. In this work, we systematically investigate the energy-performance trade-offs of LLMs during inference. We benchmark models of varying sizes and architectures, including Falcon-7B, Mistral-7B-v0.1, LLaMA-3.2-1B, LLaMA-3.2-3B, and GPT-Neo-2.7B, across tasks such as question answering, commonsense reasoning, and factual generation. We analyze the effect of input characteristics, such as sequence length, entropy, named entity density and so on. Furthermore, we examine the impact of hardware-level optimizations through Dynamic Voltage and Frequency Scaling (DVFS), measuring how different GPU clock settings affect latency and power consumption. Our empirical findings show that model architecture, input complexity, and clock configuration significantly influence inference efficiency. By correlating input features with energy metrics and evaluating DVFS behavior, we identify practical strategies that reduce energy consumption by up to 30% while preserving model quality. This study provides actionable insights for designing energy-efficient and sustainable LLM inference systems.