Researcher profile

Celine Lee

Celine Lee contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

2 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

The Efficiency Gap in Byte Modeling

Modern language models have historically relied on two dominant design choices: subword tokenization and autoregressive (AR) ordering. These design decisions bake in priors that dictate a model's learning. Recently, two alternative paradigms have challenged this: byte-level modeling, which bypasses static statistically-derived token vocabularies, and masked diffusion modeling (MDM), which conducts parallel, non-sequential generation. Their intersection represents a fully end-to-end modality-agnostic generative prototype; however, removing these structural priors incurs a significant computational cost. In this work, we investigate this cost through a compute-matched scaling study. Our results reveal that the performance penalty of byte modeling is not uniform; across scale, the scaling overhead of byte modeling is worse for MDM than for AR. We hypothesize that this disparity stems from context fragility: while AR's stable causal history allows models to naturally rediscover subword patterns, the MDM objective destroys the local contiguity required to efficiently resolve semantics from raw bytes. Our findings from controlled permutation experiments suggest that future modality-agnostic designs must incorporate alternative structural biases to maintain viable scaling trajectories in the byte regime.

preprint2022arXiv

MP-CodeCheck: Evolving Logical Expression Code Anomaly Learning with Iterative Self-Supervision

Machine programming (MP) is concerned with automating software development. According to studies, software engineers spend upwards of 50% of their development time debugging software. To help accelerate debugging, we present MP-CodeCheck (MPCC). MPCC is an MP system that attempts to identify anomalous code patterns within logical program expressions. In designing MPCC, we developed two novel programming language representations, the formations of which are critical in its ability to exhaustively and efficiently process the billions of lines of code that are used in its self-supervised training. To quantify MPCC's performance, we compare it against ControlFlag, a state-of-the-art self-supervised code anomaly detection system; we find that MPCC is more spatially and temporally efficient. We demonstrate MPCC's anomalous code detection capabilities by exercising it on a variety of open-source GitHub repositories and one proprietary code base. We also provide a brief qualitative study on some of the different classes of code anomalies that MPCC can detect to provide an abbreviated insight into its capabilities.