Researcher profile

Fanzhi Zeng

Fanzhi Zeng contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

3 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

Curriculum Learning-Guided Progressive Distillation in Large Language Models

Knowledge distillation is a key technique for transferring the capabilities of large language models (LLMs) into smaller, more efficient student models. Existing distillation approaches often overlook two critical factors: the learning order of training data and the capacity mismatch between teacher and student models. This oversight limits distillation performance, as manifested by the counter-intuitive phenomenon where stronger teachers fail to produce better students. In this work, we propose Curriculum Learning-Guided Progressive Distillation (CLPD), a unified framework that explicitly accounts for both factors by aligning data difficulty with teacher strength. CLPD constructs an explicit curriculum by organizing training examples from easy to hard, while simultaneously applying an implicit curriculum over supervision signals by progressively scheduling teachers of increasing capacity. Our framework is modular and can be integrated into standard distillation algorithms with minimal overhead. Empirical results on the reasoning benchmarks demonstrate that CLPD consistently outperforms standard distillation, data ordering alone, and teacher scheduling alone across multiple settings. These findings highlight the importance of jointly considering data ordering and teacher capacity when distilling reasoning abilities into small language models.

preprint2026arXiv

PRISM-X: Experiments on Personalised Fine-Tuning with Human and Simulated Users

Personalisation is a standard feature of conversational AI systems used by millions; yet, the efficacy of personalisation methods is often evaluated in academic research using simulated users rather than real people. This raises questions about how users and their simulated counterparts differ in interaction patterns and judgements, as well as whether personalisation is best achieved through context-based prompting or weight-based fine-tuning. Here, in a large-scale within-subject experiment, we re-recruit 530 participants from 52 countries two years after they gave their preferences in the PRISM dataset (Kirk et al., 2024) to evaluate personalised and non-personalised language models in blinded multi-turn conversations. We find preference fine-tuning (P-DPO, Li et al., 2024) significantly outperforms both a generic model and personalised prompting but adapting to individual preference data yields marginal gains over training on pooled preferences from a diverse population. Beyond length biases, fine-tuning amplifies sycophancy and relationship-seeking behaviours that people reward in short-term evaluations but which may introduce deleterious long-term consequences. Replicating this within-subject experiment with simulated users recovers aggregate model hierarchies but simulators perform far below human self-consistency baselines for individual judgements, discuss different topics, exhibit amplified position biases, and produce feedback dynamics that diverge from humans.

preprint2022arXiv

Adaptive Model Refinement Approach for Bayesian Uncertainty Quantification in Turbulence Model

The Bayesian uncertainty quantification technique has become well established in turbulence modeling over the past few years. However, it is computationally expensive to construct a globally accurate surrogate model for Bayesian inference in a high-dimensional design space, which limits uncertainty quantification for complex flow configurations. Borrowing ideas from stratified sampling and inherited sampling, an adaptive model refinement approach is proposed in this work, which concentrates on asymptotically improving the local accuracy of the surrogate model in the high-posterior-density region by adaptively appending model evaluation points. To achieve this goal, a modification of inherited Latin hypercube sampling is proposed and then integrated into the Bayesian framework. The effectiveness and efficiency of the proposed approach are demonstrated through a two-dimensional heat source inversion problem and its extension to a high-dimensional design space. Compared with the prior-based method, the adaptive model refinement approach has the ability to obtain more reliable inference results using fewer evaluation points. Finally, the approach is applied to parametric uncertainty quantification of the Menter shear-stress transport turbulence model for an axisymmetric transonic bump flow and provides convincing numerical results.