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Wanling Gao

Wanling Gao contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

9 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

CombinationTS: A Modular Framework for Understanding Time-Series Forecasting Models

Recent progress in time-series forecasting has led to rapidly increasing architectural complexity, yet many reported State-of-the-Art gains are statistically fragile or misattributed. We argue that progress requires a shift from model selection to modular attribution, identifying which components truly drive performance. We propose CombinationTS, a self-contained probabilistic evaluation framework that decomposes forecasting models into orthogonal modules--Input Transformation, Embedding, Encoder, Decoder, and Output Transformation--and evaluates them under a shared evaluation condition space. By quantifying each component via marginalized performance ($μ$) and stability ($σ$), CombinationTS enables robust attribution beyond fragile point estimates. Through large-scale paired evaluation, we uncover the Identity Paradox: once the data view (Embedding) is well-designed, a parameter-free Identity Encoder often matches or outperforms complex backbones. We further show that explicit structural priors introduced via Input Transformations yield a more favorable performance-stability trade-off than increasing Encoder complexity, establishing a principled baseline for architectural necessity.

preprint2022arXiv

OLxPBench: Real-time, Semantically Consistent, and Domain-specific are Essential in Benchmarking, Designing, and Implementing HTAP Systems

As real-time analysis of the new data become increasingly compelling, more organizations deploy Hybrid Transactional/Analytical Processing (HTAP) systems to support real-time queries on data recently generated by online transaction processing. This paper argues that real-time queries, semantically consistent schema, and domain-specific workloads are essential in benchmarking, designing, and implementing HTAP systems. However, most state-of-the-art and state-of-the-practice benchmarks ignore those critical factors. Hence, they are incommensurable and, at worst, misleading in benchmarking, designing, and implementing HTAP systems. This paper presents OLxPBench, a composite HTAP benchmark suite. OLxPBench proposes: (1) the abstraction of a hybrid transaction, performing a real-time query in-between an online transaction, to model widely-observed behavior pattern -- making a quick decision while consulting real-time analysis; (2) a semantically consistent schema to express the relationships between OLTP and OLAP schema; (3) the combination of domain-specific and general benchmarks to characterize diverse application scenarios with varying resource demands. Our evaluations justify the three design decisions of OLxPBench and pinpoint the bottlenecks of two mainstream distributed HTAP DBMSs. International Open Benchmark Council (BenchCouncil) sets up the OLxPBench homepage at https://www.benchcouncil.org/olxpbench/. Its source code is available from https://github.com/BenchCouncil/olxpbench.git.

preprint2021arXiv

HPC AI500: Representative, Repeatable and Simple HPC AI Benchmarking

Recent years witness a trend of applying large-scale distributed deep learning algorithms (HPC AI) in both business and scientific computing areas, whose goal is to speed up the training time to achieve a state-of-the-art quality. The HPC AI benchmarks accelerate the process. Unfortunately, benchmarking HPC AI systems at scale raises serious challenges. This paper presents a representative, repeatable and simple HPC AI benchmarking methodology. Among the seventeen AI workloads of AIBench Training -- by far the most comprehensive AI Training benchmarks suite -- we choose two representative and repeatable AI workloads. The selected HPC AI benchmarks include both business and scientific computing: Image Classification and Extreme Weather Analytics. To rank HPC AI systems, we present a new metric named Valid FLOPS, emphasizing both throughput performance and a target quality. The specification, source code, datasets, and HPC AI500 ranking numbers are publicly available from \url{https://www.benchcouncil.org/HPCAI500/}.

preprint2020arXiv

AI-oriented Medical Workload Allocation for Hierarchical Cloud/Edge/Device Computing

In a hierarchically-structured cloud/edge/device computing environment, workload allocation can greatly affect the overall system performance. This paper deals with AI-oriented medical workload generated in emergency rooms (ER) or intensive care units (ICU) in metropolitan areas. The goal is to optimize AI-workload allocation to cloud clusters, edge servers, and end devices so that minimum response time can be achieved in life-saving emergency applications. In particular, we developed a new workload allocation method for the AI workload in distributed cloud/edge/device computing systems. An efficient scheduling and allocation strategy is developed in order to reduce the overall response time to satisfy multi-patient demands. We apply several ICU AI workloads from a comprehensive edge computing benchmark Edge AIBench. The healthcare AI applications involved are short-of-breath alerts, patient phenotype classification, and life-death threats. Our experimental results demonstrate the high efficiency and effectiveness in real-life health-care and emergency applications.

preprint2020arXiv

AIBench: An Agile Domain-specific Benchmarking Methodology and an AI Benchmark Suite

Domain-specific software and hardware co-design is encouraging as it is much easier to achieve efficiency for fewer tasks. Agile domain-specific benchmarking speeds up the process as it provides not only relevant design inputs but also relevant metrics, and tools. Unfortunately, modern workloads like Big data, AI, and Internet services dwarf the traditional one in terms of code size, deployment scale, and execution path, and hence raise serious benchmarking challenges. This paper proposes an agile domain-specific benchmarking methodology. Together with seventeen industry partners, we identify ten important end-to-end application scenarios, among which sixteen representative AI tasks are distilled as the AI component benchmarks. We propose the permutations of essential AI and non-AI component benchmarks as end-to-end benchmarks. An end-to-end benchmark is a distillation of the essential attributes of an industry-scale application. We design and implement a highly extensible, configurable, and flexible benchmark framework, on the basis of which, we propose the guideline for building end-to-end benchmarks, and present the first end-to-end Internet service AI benchmark. The preliminary evaluation shows the value of our benchmark suite---AIBench against MLPerf and TailBench for hardware and software designers, micro-architectural researchers, and code developers. The specifications, source code, testbed, and results are publicly available from the web site \url{http://www.benchcouncil.org/AIBench/index.html}.

preprint2020arXiv

Comparison and Benchmarking of AI Models and Frameworks on Mobile Devices

Due to increasing amounts of data and compute resources, deep learning achieves many successes in various domains. The application of deep learning on the mobile and embedded devices is taken more and more attentions, benchmarking and ranking the AI abilities of mobile and embedded devices becomes an urgent problem to be solved. Considering the model diversity and framework diversity, we propose a benchmark suite, AIoTBench, which focuses on the evaluation of the inference abilities of mobile and embedded devices. AIoTBench covers three typical heavy-weight networks: ResNet50, InceptionV3, DenseNet121, as well as three light-weight networks: SqueezeNet, MobileNetV2, MnasNet. Each network is implemented by three frameworks which are designed for mobile and embedded devices: Tensorflow Lite, Caffe2, Pytorch Mobile. To compare and rank the AI capabilities of the devices, we propose two unified metrics as the AI scores: Valid Images Per Second (VIPS) and Valid FLOPs Per Second (VOPS). Currently, we have compared and ranked 5 mobile devices using our benchmark. This list will be extended and updated soon after.

preprint2020arXiv

Extended Batch Normalization

Batch normalization (BN) has become a standard technique for training the modern deep networks. However, its effectiveness diminishes when the batch size becomes smaller, since the batch statistics estimation becomes inaccurate. That hinders batch normalization's usage for 1) training larger model which requires small batches constrained by memory consumption, 2) training on mobile or embedded devices of which the memory resource is limited. In this paper, we propose a simple but effective method, called extended batch normalization (EBN). For NCHW format feature maps, extended batch normalization computes the mean along the (N, H, W) dimensions, as the same as batch normalization, to maintain the advantage of batch normalization. To alleviate the problem caused by small batch size, extended batch normalization computes the standard deviation along the (N, C, H, W) dimensions, thus enlarges the number of samples from which the standard deviation is computed. We compare extended batch normalization with batch normalization and group normalization on the datasets of MNIST, CIFAR-10/100, STL-10, and ImageNet, respectively. The experiments show that extended batch normalization alleviates the problem of batch normalization with small batch size while achieving close performances to batch normalization with large batch size.

preprint2020arXiv

Finet: Using Fine-grained Batch Normalization to Train Light-weight Neural Networks

To build light-weight network, we propose a new normalization, Fine-grained Batch Normalization (FBN). Different from Batch Normalization (BN), which normalizes the final summation of the weighted inputs, FBN normalizes the intermediate state of the summation. We propose a novel light-weight network based on FBN, called Finet. At training time, the convolutional layer with FBN can be seen as an inverted bottleneck mechanism. FBN can be fused into convolution at inference time. After fusion, Finet uses the standard convolution with equal channel width, thus makes the inference more efficient. On ImageNet classification dataset, Finet achieves the state-of-art performance (65.706% accuracy with 43M FLOPs, and 73.786% accuracy with 303M FLOPs), Moreover, experiments show that Finet is more efficient than other state-of-art light-weight networks.

preprint2020arXiv

HPC AI500: The Methodology, Tools, Roofline Performance Models, and Metrics for Benchmarking HPC AI Systems

The recent years witness a trend of applying large-scale distributed deep learning in both business and scientific computing areas, whose goal is to speed up the training time to achieve a state-of-the-art quality. The HPC community feels a great interest in building the HPC AI systems that are dedicated to running those workloads. The HPC AI benchmarks accelerate the process. Unfortunately, benchmarking HPC AI systems at scale raises serious challenges. None of previous HPC AI benchmarks achieve the goal of being equivalent, relevant, representative, affordable, and repeatable. This paper presents a comprehensive methodology, tools, Roofline performance models, and innovative metrics for benchmarking, optimizing, and ranking HPC AI systems, which we call HPC AI500 V2.0. We abstract the HPC AI system into nine independent layers, and present explicit benchmarking rules and procedures to assure equivalence of each layer, repeatability, and replicability. On the basis of AIBench -- by far the most comprehensive AI benchmarks suite, we present and build two HPC AI benchmarks from both business and scientific computing: Image Classification, and Extreme Weather Analytics, achieving both representativeness and affordability. To rank the performance and energy-efficiency of HPC AI systems, we propose Valid FLOPS, and Valid FLOPS per watt, which impose a penalty on failing to achieve the target quality. We propose using convolution and GEMM -- the two most intensively-used kernel functions to measure the upper bound performance of the HPC AI systems, and present HPC AI roofline models for guiding performance optimizations. The evaluations show our methodology, benchmarks, performance models, and metrics can measure, optimize, and rank the HPC AI systems in a scalable, simple, and affordable way. HPC AI500 V2.0 are publicly available from http://www.benchcouncil.org/benchhub/hpc-ai500-benchmark.