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Connor T. Jerzak

Connor T. Jerzak contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

3 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

FastRerandomize: Fast Rerandomization Using Accelerated Computing

We present fastrerandomize, an R package for fast, scalable rerandomization in experimental design. Rerandomization improves precision by discarding treatment assignments that fail a prespecified covariate-balance criterion, but existing implementations can become computationally prohibitive as the number of units or covariates grows. fastrerandomize introduces three complementary advances: (i) optional GPU/TPU acceleration to parallelize balance checks, (ii) memory-efficient key-only storage that avoids retaining full assignment matrices, and (iii) auto-vectorized, just-in-time compiled kernels for batched candidate generation and inference. This approach enables exact or Monte Carlo rerandomization at previously intractable scales, making it practical to adopt the tighter balance thresholds required in modern high-dimensional experiments while simultaneously quantifying the resulting gains in precision and power for a given covariate set. Our approach also supports randomization-based testing conditioned on acceptance. In controlled benchmarks, we observe order-of-magnitude speedups over baseline workflows, with larger gains as the sample size or dimensionality grows, translating into improved precision of causal estimates.

preprint2026arXiv

Queryable LoRA: Instruction-Regularized Routing Over Shared Low-Rank Update Atoms

We present a data-adaptive method for parameter-efficient fine-tuning of large neural networks. Standard low-rank adaptation methods improve efficiency by restricting each layer update to a fixed low-rank form, but this static parameterization can be too rigid when the appropriate correction depends on the input and on the evolving depth-wise computation of the network. Our approach replaces a purely layer-local adapter with a shared queryable memory of low-rank update atoms. For each block of layers, the model forms a query from the current low-rank state and a running summary of previous blocks, uses this query to retrieve a content-dependent combination of shared update components via attention, and applies the resulting routed operator within the low-rank bottleneck. In this way, the method retains the efficiency and scalability of low-rank adaptation while allowing the effective update to vary across inputs and to share reusable structure across layers. The resulting architecture provides a principled middle ground between static LoRA-style updates and fully generated parameter updates: it remains compact and parameter-efficient while supporting dynamic, context-sensitive adaptation. Further, we incorporate instruction-regularization by augmenting routing logits with a language-induced prior over update atoms, thereby biasing the selection of low-rank transformations toward semantically relevant directions without generating unconstrained parameter updates. Experiments on noisy non-linear regression tasks and LLM fine-tuning suggest that this queryable update-memory formulation can improve final test performance and training stability compared to standard low-rank adaptation, while using a comparable number of trainable parameters.

preprint2025arXiv

Detecting and Mitigating Treatment Leakage in Text-Based Causal Inference: Distillation and Sensitivity Analysis

Text-based causal inference increasingly employs textual data as proxies for unobserved confounders, yet this approach introduces a previously undertheorized source of bias: treatment leakage. Treatment leakage occurs when text intended to capture confounding information also contains signals predictive of treatment status, thereby inducing post-treatment bias in causal estimates. Critically, this problem can arise even when documents precede treatment assignment, as authors may employ future-referencing language that anticipates subsequent interventions. Despite growing recognition of this issue, no systematic methods exist for identifying and mitigating treatment leakage in text-as-confounder applications. This paper addresses this gap through three contributions. First, we provide formal statistical and set-theoretic definitions of treatment leakage that clarify when and why bias occurs. Second, we propose four text distillation methods -- similarity-based passage removal, distant supervision classification, salient feature removal, and iterative nullspace projection -- designed to eliminate treatment-predictive content while preserving confounder information. Third, we validate these methods through simulations using synthetic text and an empirical application examining International Monetary Fund structural adjustment programs and child mortality. Our findings indicate that moderate distillation optimally balances bias reduction against confounder retention, whereas overly stringent approaches degrade estimate precision.