Chonglin Sun

CL
h-index13
10papers
1,154citations
Novelty50%
AI Score53

10 Papers

92.7CLApr 24
Learning Evidence Highlighting for Frozen LLMs

Shaoang Li, Yanhang Shi, Yufei Li et al.

Large Language Models (LLMs) can reason well, yet often miss decisive evidence when it is buried in long, noisy contexts. We introduce HiLight, an Evidence Emphasis framework that decouples evidence selection from reasoning for frozen LLM solvers. HiLight avoids compressing or rewriting the input, which can discard or distort evidence, by training a lightweight Emphasis Actor to insert minimal highlight tags around pivotal spans in the unaltered context. A frozen Solver then performs downstream reasoning on the emphasized input. We cast highlighting as a weakly supervised decision-making problem and optimize the Actor with reinforcement learning using only the Solver's task reward, requiring no evidence labels and no access to or modification of the Solver. Across sequential recommendation and long-context question answering, HiLight consistently improves performance over strong prompt-based and automated prompt-optimization baselines. The learned emphasis policy transfers zero-shot to both smaller and larger unseen Solver families, including an API-based Solver, suggesting that the Actor captures genuine, reusable evidence structure rather than overfitting to a single backbone.

34.6IRApr 14
Efficient Retrieval Scaling with Hierarchical Indexing for Large Scale Recommendation

Dongqi Fu, Kaushik Rangadurai, Haiyu Lu et al.

The increase in data volume, computational resources, and model parameters during training has led to the development of numerous large-scale industrial retrieval models for recommendation tasks. However, effectively and efficiently deploying these large-scale foundational retrieval models remains a critical challenge that has not been fully addressed. Common quick-win solutions for deploying these massive models include relying on offline computations (such as cached user dictionaries) or distilling large models into smaller ones. Yet, both approaches fall short of fully leveraging the representational and inference capabilities of foundational models. In this paper, we explore whether it is possible to learn a hierarchical organization over the memory of foundational retrieval models. Such a hierarchical structure would enable more efficient search by reducing retrieval costs while preserving exactness. To achieve this, we propose jointly learning a hierarchical index using cross-attention and residual quantization for large-scale retrieval models. We also present its real-world deployment at Meta, supporting daily advertisement recommendations for billions of Facebook and Instagram users. Interestingly, we discovered that the intermediate nodes in the learned index correspond to a small set of high-quality data. Fine-tuning the model on this set further improves inference performance, and concretize the concept of "test-time training" within the recommendation system domain. We demonstrate these findings using both internal and public datasets with strong baseline comparisons and hope they contribute to the community's efforts in developing the next generation of foundational retrieval models.

41.2LGApr 13
SOLARIS: Speculative Offloading of Latent-bAsed Representation for Inference Scaling

Zikun Liu, Liang Luo, Qianru Li et al.

Recent advances in recommendation scaling laws have led to foundation models of unprecedented complexity. While these models offer superior performance, their computational demands make real-time serving impractical, often forcing practitioners to rely on knowledge distillation-compromising serving quality for efficiency. To address this challenge, we present SOLARIS (Speculative Offloading of Latent-bAsed Representation for Inference Scaling), a novel framework inspired by speculative decoding. SOLARIS proactively precomputes user-item interaction embeddings by predicting which user-item pairs are likely to appear in future requests, and asynchronously generating their foundation model representations ahead of time. This approach decouples the costly foundation model inference from the latency-critical serving path, enabling real-time knowledge transfer from models previously considered too expensive for online use. Deployed across Meta's advertising system serving billions of daily requests, SOLARIS achieves 0.67% revenue-driving top-line metrics gain, demonstrating its effectiveness at scale.

IRAug 13, 2024
Hierarchical Structured Neural Network: Efficient Retrieval Scaling for Large Scale Recommendation

Kaushik Rangadurai, Siyang Yuan, Minhui Huang et al.

Retrieval, the initial stage of a recommendation system, is tasked with down-selecting items from a pool of tens of millions of candidates to a few thousands. Embedding Based Retrieval (EBR) has been a typical choice for this problem, addressing the computational demands of deep neural networks across vast item corpora. EBR utilizes Two Tower or Siamese Networks to learn representations for users and items, and employ Approximate Nearest Neighbor (ANN) search to efficiently retrieve relevant items. Despite its popularity in industry, EBR faces limitations. The Two Tower architecture, relying on a single dot product interaction, struggles to capture complex data distributions due to limited capability in learning expressive interactions between users and items. Additionally, ANN index building and representation learning for user and item are often separate, leading to inconsistencies exacerbated by representation (e.g. continuous online training) and item drift (e.g. items expired and new items added). In this paper, we introduce the Hierarchical Structured Neural Network (HSNN), an efficient deep neural network model to learn intricate user and item interactions beyond the commonly used dot product in retrieval tasks, achieving sublinear computational costs relative to corpus size. A Modular Neural Network (MoNN) is designed to maintain high expressiveness for interaction learning while ensuring efficiency. A mixture of MoNNs operate on a hierarchical item index to achieve extensive computation sharing, enabling it to scale up to large corpus size. MoNN and the hierarchical index are jointly learnt to continuously adapt to distribution shifts in both user interests and item distributions. HSNN achieves substantial improvement in offline evaluation compared to prevailing methods.

IRFeb 20, 2025
External Large Foundation Model: How to Efficiently Serve Trillions of Parameters for Online Ads Recommendation

Mingfu Liang, Xi Liu, Rong Jin et al.

Ads recommendation is a prominent service of online advertising systems and has been actively studied. Recent studies indicate that scaling-up and advanced design of the recommendation model can bring significant performance improvement. However, with a larger model scale, such prior studies have a significantly increasing gap from industry as they often neglect two fundamental challenges in industrial-scale applications. First, training and inference budgets are restricted for the model to be served, exceeding which may incur latency and impair user experience. Second, large-volume data arrive in a streaming mode with data distributions dynamically shifting, as new users/ads join and existing users/ads leave the system. We propose the External Large Foundation Model (ExFM) framework to address the overlooked challenges. Specifically, we develop external distillation and a data augmentation system (DAS) to control the computational cost of training/inference while maintaining high performance. We design the teacher in a way like a foundation model (FM) that can serve multiple students as vertical models (VMs) to amortize its building cost. We propose Auxiliary Head and Student Adapter to mitigate the data distribution gap between FM and VMs caused by the streaming data issue. Comprehensive experiments on internal industrial-scale applications and public datasets demonstrate significant performance gain by ExFM.

CLOct 8, 2025
Haystack Engineering: Context Engineering for Heterogeneous and Agentic Long-Context Evaluation

Mufei Li, Dongqi Fu, Limei Wang et al. · gatech

Modern long-context large language models (LLMs) perform well on synthetic "needle-in-a-haystack" (NIAH) benchmarks, but such tests overlook how noisy contexts arise from biased retrieval and agentic workflows. We argue that haystack engineering is necessary to construct noisy long contexts that faithfully capture key real-world factors -- distraction from heterogeneous biased retrievers and cascading errors in agentic workflows -- to test models' long-context robustness. We instantiate it through HaystackCraft, a new NIAH benchmark built on the full English Wikipedia hyperlink network with multi-hop questions. HaystackCraft evaluates how heterogeneous retrieval strategies (e.g., sparse, dense, hybrid, and graph-based) affect distractor composition, haystack ordering, and downstream LLM performance. HaystackCraft further extends NIAH to dynamic, LLM-dependent settings that simulate agentic operations, where models refine queries, reflect on their past reasonings, and decide when to stop. Experiments with 15 long-context models show that (1) while stronger dense retrievers can introduce more challenging distractors, graph-based reranking simultaneously improves retrieval effectiveness and mitigates more harmful distractors; (2) in agentic tests, even advanced models like Gemini 2.5 Pro and GPT-5 suffer cascading failures from self-generated distractors or struggle to perform early stops. These results highlight persistent challenges in agentic long-context reasoning and establish HaystackCraft as a valuable testbed for future progress.

DCApr 12, 2021
Software-Hardware Co-design for Fast and Scalable Training of Deep Learning Recommendation Models

Dheevatsa Mudigere, Yuchen Hao, Jianyu Huang et al.

Deep learning recommendation models (DLRMs) are used across many business-critical services at Facebook and are the single largest AI application in terms of infrastructure demand in its data-centers. In this paper we discuss the SW/HW co-designed solution for high-performance distributed training of large-scale DLRMs. We introduce a high-performance scalable software stack based on PyTorch and pair it with the new evolution of Zion platform, namely ZionEX. We demonstrate the capability to train very large DLRMs with up to 12 Trillion parameters and show that we can attain 40X speedup in terms of time to solution over previous systems. We achieve this by (i) designing the ZionEX platform with dedicated scale-out network, provisioned with high bandwidth, optimal topology and efficient transport (ii) implementing an optimized PyTorch-based training stack supporting both model and data parallelism (iii) developing sharding algorithms capable of hierarchical partitioning of the embedding tables along row, column dimensions and load balancing them across multiple workers; (iv) adding high-performance core operators while retaining flexibility to support optimizers with fully deterministic updates (v) leveraging reduced precision communications, multi-level memory hierarchy (HBM+DDR+SSD) and pipelining. Furthermore, we develop and briefly comment on distributed data ingestion and other supporting services that are required for the robust and efficient end-to-end training in production environments.

IRAug 27, 2020
Time-based Sequence Model for Personalization and Recommendation Systems

Tigran Ishkhanov, Maxim Naumov, Xianjie Chen et al.

In this paper we develop a novel recommendation model that explicitly incorporates time information. The model relies on an embedding layer and TSL attention-like mechanism with inner products in different vector spaces, that can be thought of as a modification of multi-headed attention. This mechanism allows the model to efficiently treat sequences of user behavior of different length. We study the properties of our state-of-the-art model on statistically designed data set. Also, we show that it outperforms more complex models with longer sequence length on the Taobao User Behavior dataset.

CLNov 27, 2015
A C-LSTM Neural Network for Text Classification

Chunting Zhou, Chonglin Sun, Zhiyuan Liu et al.

Neural network models have been demonstrated to be capable of achieving remarkable performance in sentence and document modeling. Convolutional neural network (CNN) and recurrent neural network (RNN) are two mainstream architectures for such modeling tasks, which adopt totally different ways of understanding natural languages. In this work, we combine the strengths of both architectures and propose a novel and unified model called C-LSTM for sentence representation and text classification. C-LSTM utilizes CNN to extract a sequence of higher-level phrase representations, and are fed into a long short-term memory recurrent neural network (LSTM) to obtain the sentence representation. C-LSTM is able to capture both local features of phrases as well as global and temporal sentence semantics. We evaluate the proposed architecture on sentiment classification and question classification tasks. The experimental results show that the C-LSTM outperforms both CNN and LSTM and can achieve excellent performance on these tasks.

CLNov 27, 2015
Category Enhanced Word Embedding

Chunting Zhou, Chonglin Sun, Zhiyuan Liu et al.

Distributed word representations have been demonstrated to be effective in capturing semantic and syntactic regularities. Unsupervised representation learning from large unlabeled corpora can learn similar representations for those words that present similar co-occurrence statistics. Besides local occurrence statistics, global topical information is also important knowledge that may help discriminate a word from another. In this paper, we incorporate category information of documents in the learning of word representations and to learn the proposed models in a document-wise manner. Our models outperform several state-of-the-art models in word analogy and word similarity tasks. Moreover, we evaluate the learned word vectors on sentiment analysis and text classification tasks, which shows the superiority of our learned word vectors. We also learn high-quality category embeddings that reflect topical meanings.