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Neiwen Ling

Neiwen Ling contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

2 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

Diagnosing Training Inference Mismatch in LLM Reinforcement Learning

Modern LLM RL systems separate rollout generation from policy optimization. These two stages are expected to produce token probabilities that match exactly. However, implementation differences can make them assign different values to the same sequence under the same model weights, inducing Training-Inference Mismatch (TIM). TIM is difficult to inspect because it is entangled with off-policy drift and common stabilization mechanisms. In this work, we isolate TIM in a zero-mismatch diagnostic setting (VeXact), and show that small token-level numerical disagreements can independently cause training collapse. We further show that TIM changes the effective optimization problem, and identify a set of remedies that could mitigate TIM. Our results suggest that TIM is not benign numerical noise, but a systems-level perturbation that should be treated as a first-order factor in analyzing LLM RL stability.

preprint2022arXiv

Moses: Efficient Exploitation of Cross-device Transferable Features for Tensor Program Optimization

Achieving efficient execution of machine learning models has attracted significant attention recently. To generate tensor programs efficiently, a key component of DNN compilers is the cost model that can predict the performance of each configuration on specific devices. However, due to the rapid emergence of hardware platforms, it is increasingly labor-intensive to train domain-specific predictors for every new platform. Besides, current design of cost models cannot provide transferable features between different hardware accelerators efficiently and effectively. In this paper, we propose Moses, a simple and efficient design based on the lottery ticket hypothesis, which fully takes advantage of the features transferable to the target device via domain adaptation. Compared with state-of-the-art approaches, Moses achieves up to 1.53X efficiency gain in the search stage and 1.41X inference speedup on challenging DNN benchmarks.