Researcher profile

Sushrut Karmalkar

Sushrut Karmalkar contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

2 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

Forward-Learned Discrete Diffusion: Learning how to noise to denoise faster

Discrete diffusion models are a powerful class of generative models with strong performance across many domains. For efficiency, however, discrete diffusion typically parameterizes the generative (reverse) process with factorized distributions, which makes it difficult for the model to learn the target process in a small number of steps and necessitates a long, computationally expensive sampling procedure. To reduce the gap between the target and model distributions and enable few-step generation, we propose Forward-Learned Discrete Diffusion (FLDD), which introduces discrete diffusion with a learnable forward (noising) process. Rather than fixing a Markovian forward chain, we adopt a non-Markovian formulation with learnable marginal and posterior distributions. This allows the generative process to remain factorized while matching the target defined by the noising process. We train all parameters end-to-end under the standard variational objective. Experiments on various benchmarks show that, for a given number of sampling steps, our approach produces a higher quality samples than conventional discrete diffusion models using the same reverse parameterization.

preprint2020arXiv

Robustly Learning any Clusterable Mixture of Gaussians

We study the efficient learnability of high-dimensional Gaussian mixtures in the outlier-robust setting, where a small constant fraction of the data is adversarially corrupted. We resolve the polynomial learnability of this problem when the components are pairwise separated in total variation distance. Specifically, we provide an algorithm that, for any constant number of components $k$, runs in polynomial time and learns the components of an $ε$-corrupted $k$-mixture within information theoretically near-optimal error of $\tilde{O}(ε)$, under the assumption that the overlap between any pair of components $P_i, P_j$ (i.e., the quantity $1-TV(P_i, P_j)$) is bounded by $\mathrm{poly}(ε)$. Our separation condition is the qualitatively weakest assumption under which accurate clustering of the samples is possible. In particular, it allows for components with arbitrary covariances and for components with identical means, as long as their covariances differ sufficiently. Ours is the first polynomial time algorithm for this problem, even for $k=2$. Our algorithm follows the Sum-of-Squares based proofs to algorithms approach. Our main technical contribution is a new robust identifiability proof of clusters from a Gaussian mixture, which can be captured by the constant-degree Sum of Squares proof system. The key ingredients of this proof are a novel use of SoS-certifiable anti-concentration and a new characterization of pairs of Gaussians with small (dimension-independent) overlap in terms of their parameter distance.