CLAILGMay 27

Pruning and Distilling Mixture-of-Experts into Dense Language Models

arXiv:2605.2820790.8
Predicted impact top 29% in CL · last 90 daysOriginality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

For practitioners deploying large language models in memory-constrained settings, this provides a practical method to convert MoE models into dense ones without sacrificing performance.

This work presents the first systematic framework to convert a trained MoE model into a dense architecture, achieving +6.3 pp average accuracy improvement over dense-to-dense pruning at matched parameter count after ~4B-token distillation, with 1.6x faster training speed.

Mixture-of-Experts (MoE) is now the dominant architecture for frontier language models, yet it requires all expert parameters to be loaded in memory, making it less preferable for memory-constrained deployment. Existing compression methods reduce the number of experts but the output remains an MoE model with the same fundamental limitation. We present the first systematic framework for converting a trained MoE into a standard fully dense architecture: experts are scored, selected, and grouped, then concatenated into a dense FFN and refined by knowledge distillation from the MoE teacher. We evaluate 7 scoring, 5 grouping, and 2 magnitude scaling methods across a range of selected expert counts on Qwen3-30B-A3B, yielding 350 configurations. We find that the choice of scoring method is the most impactful, with our novel diversity-aware scoring consistently outperforming prior methods on Qwen3-30B-A3B, DeepSeek-V2-Lite, and GPT-OSS-20B. Under a controlled comparison at matched parameter count, MoE-to-dense outperforms dense-to-dense pruning by +6.3 pp in average downstream accuracy after ~4B-token distillation at 1.6x faster training wall-clock speed.

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