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Jiang-Xin Shi

Jiang-Xin Shi contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

2 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

Activation Compression in LLMs: Theoretical Analysis and Efficient Algorithm

Training large language models (LLMs) is highly memory-intensive, as training must store not only weights and optimizer states but also intermediate activations for backpropagation. While existing memory-efficient methods largely focus on gradients and optimizer states, activation compression is less well established due to the lack of LLM-tailored theory and guarantees. In this work, we develop a theoretical framework showing that activation compression is safe for linear operators when activation compression is unbiased, but problematic for nonlinear ones. We further derive gradient variance bound and establish convergence guarantees for applying activation compression to all linear operators under the standard $L$-smoothness assumption, showing that it does not change the convergence rate. Guided by the theory, we propose an activation-gradient co-compression method that reuses low-rank activation factors to compress linear-layer gradients without extra computation or additional gradient error. We conduct extensive experiments on Qwen and LLaMA models using a pretraining benchmark and multiple fine-tuning benchmarks to validate our theory and demonstrate competitive performance of our method in both accuracy and compression efficiency. We provide our code in the supplementary material for reproducibility.

preprint2022arXiv

Transfer and Share: Semi-Supervised Learning from Long-Tailed Data

Long-Tailed Semi-Supervised Learning (LTSSL) aims to learn from class-imbalanced data where only a few samples are annotated. Existing solutions typically require substantial cost to solve complex optimization problems, or class-balanced undersampling which can result in information loss. In this paper, we present the TRAS (TRAnsfer and Share) to effectively utilize long-tailed semi-supervised data. TRAS transforms the imbalanced pseudo-label distribution of a traditional SSL model via a delicate function to enhance the supervisory signals for minority classes. It then transfers the distribution to a target model such that the minority class will receive significant attention. Interestingly, TRAS shows that more balanced pseudo-label distribution can substantially benefit minority-class training, instead of seeking to generate accurate pseudo-labels as in previous works. To simplify the approach, TRAS merges the training of the traditional SSL model and the target model into a single procedure by sharing the feature extractor, where both classifiers help improve the representation learning. According to extensive experiments, TRAS delivers much higher accuracy than state-of-the-art methods in the entire set of classes as well as minority classes.