Jinse Kwon

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2papers

2 Papers

CLSep 17, 2024
Exploring the Trade-Offs: Quantization Methods, Task Difficulty, and Model Size in Large Language Models From Edge to Giant

Jemin Lee, Sihyeong Park, Jinse Kwon et al.

Quantization has gained attention as a promising solution for the cost-effective deployment of large and small language models. However, most prior work has been limited to perplexity or basic knowledge tasks and lacks a comprehensive evaluation of recent models like Llama-3.3. In this paper, we conduct a comprehensive evaluation of instruction-tuned models spanning 1B to 405B parameters, applying four quantization methods across 13 datasets. Our findings reveal that (1) quantized models generally surpass smaller FP16 baselines, yet they often struggle with instruction-following and hallucination detection; (2) FP8 consistently emerges as the most robust option across tasks, and AWQ tends to outperform GPTQ in weight-only quantization; (3) smaller models can suffer severe accuracy drops at 4-bit quantization, while 70B-scale models maintain stable performance; (4) notably, \textit{hard} tasks do not always experience the largest accuracy losses, indicating that quantization magnifies a model's inherent weaknesses rather than simply correlating with task difficulty; and (5) an LLM-based judge (MT-Bench) highlights significant performance declines in Coding and STEM tasks, though it occasionally reports improvements in reasoning.

LGNov 16, 2024
ML$^2$Tuner: Efficient Code Tuning via Multi-Level Machine Learning Models

JooHyoung Cha, Munyoung Lee, Jinse Kwon et al.

The increasing complexity of deep learning models necessitates specialized hardware and software optimizations, particularly for deep learning accelerators. Existing autotuning methods often suffer from prolonged tuning times due to profiling invalid configurations, which can cause runtime errors. We introduce ML$^2$Tuner, a multi-level machine learning tuning technique that enhances autotuning efficiency by incorporating a validity prediction model to filter out invalid configurations and an advanced performance prediction model utilizing hidden features from the compilation process. Experimental results on an extended VTA accelerator demonstrate that ML$^2$Tuner achieves equivalent performance improvements using only 12.3% of the samples required with a similar approach as TVM and reduces invalid profiling attempts by an average of 60.8%, Highlighting its potential to enhance autotuning performance by filtering out invalid configurations