Beyond Muon: MUD (MomentUm Decorrelation) for Faster Transformer Training
This addresses the problem of slow transformer training for AI researchers and practitioners, offering a more efficient optimizer with incremental improvements over existing methods.
The paper tackles the computational overhead of orthogonalized-momentum optimizers like Muon in transformer training by introducing MUD, a whitening approach that replaces polar updates with a triangular surrogate, resulting in 10-50% wall-clock improvements and up to 3x faster token processing compared to Muon.
Orthogonalized-momentum optimizers such as Muon improve transformer training by approximately whitening/orthogonalizing matrix-valued momentum updates via a short polar-decomposition iteration. However, polar-factor approximations typically require multiple large matrix multiplications, and the resulting overhead can be substantial and hardware-dependent. We introduce MUD (MomentUm Decorrelation), a complementary whitening approach that replaces Muon's polar update with a triangular (Cholesky-like) whitening surrogate inspired by classical Gram--Schmidt and Gauss-Seidel ideas. We show that row-orthonormal matrices are fixed points of the MUD map, relate the inner step to symmetric Gauss-Seidel preconditioning of the Gram matrix, and prove quadratic local convergence near the fixed point. In terms of time-to-perplexity, MUD yields consistent 10-50\% wall-clock improvements over tuned AdamW and Muon in time-to-perplexity, typically converging slightly slower per step than Muon but with substantially lower optimizer overhead -- relative to Muon, MUD improves peak tokens/s by roughly $1.3-2.6\times$ across most settings and up to nearly $3\times$ on GPT-2 large on an A100. We also demonstrate training a ESM-2 150M protein language model, where MUD matches Muon-level validation perplexity in significantly less wall-clock time.