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Sungjae Lee

Sungjae Lee contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

2 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

PaT: Planning-after-Trial for Efficient Test-Time Code Generation

Beyond training-time optimization, scaling test-time computation has emerged as a key paradigm to extend the reasoning capabilities of Large Language Models (LLMs). However, most existing methods adopt a rigid Planning-before-Trial (PbT) policy, which inefficiently allocates test-time compute by incurring planning overhead even on directly solvable problems. We propose Planning-after-Trial (PaT), an adaptive policy for code generation that invokes a planner only upon verification failure. This adaptive policy naturally enables a heterogeneous model configuration: a cost-efficient model handles generation attempts, while a powerful model is reserved for targeted planning interventions. Empirically, across multiple benchmarks and model families, our approach significantly advances the cost-performance Pareto frontier. Notably, our heterogeneous configuration achieves performance comparable to a large homogeneous model while reducing inference cost by approximately 69\%.

preprint2020arXiv

Multitask Learning with Single Gradient Step Update for Task Balancing

Multitask learning is a methodology to boost generalization performance and also reduce computational intensity and memory usage. However, learning multiple tasks simultaneously can be more difficult than learning a single task because it can cause imbalance among tasks. To address the imbalance problem, we propose an algorithm to balance between tasks at the gradient level by applying gradient-based meta-learning to multitask learning. The proposed method trains shared layers and task-specific layers separately so that the two layers with different roles in a multitask network can be fitted to their own purposes. In particular, the shared layer that contains informative knowledge shared among tasks is trained by employing single gradient step update and inner/outer loop training to mitigate the imbalance problem at the gradient level. We apply the proposed method to various multitask computer vision problems and achieve state-of-the-art performance.