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Xing Luo

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3 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

MARR: Module-Adaptive Residual Reconstruction for Low-Bit Post-Training Quantization

Recently, residual reconstruction-based model quantization methods have achieved promising performance in low-bit post-training quantization (PTQ) by introducing cross-layer residuals to reduce error accumulated from previous layers.However, these residuals may also introduce additional bias arising from the Hessian-approximation (HA) assumption underlying reconstruction-based PTQ, leading to suboptimal quantization performance.In this work, we analyze that multiplying the residual term by a scaling coefficient provides a direct way to mitigate the HA bias associated with residual strength, while preserving accumulated-error correction. More importantly, we observe that this trade-off is module-dependent, making a single global residual strength insufficient to balance effective correction and residual-related bias across modules.Based on these observations, we propose Module-Adaptive Residual Reconstruction (MARR), which assigns a module-specific scaling coefficient to adaptively balance accumulated-error correction and residual-related HA bias for each module.To avoid expensive per-module coefficient search and obtain a stable coefficient estimate, we design a Proportional-Integral-Derivative (PID)-based adaptive update strategy that uses reconstruction error as feedback to progressively refine this coefficient. Experiments on several typical large language models (LLMs) and vision transformers (ViTs) demonstrate the effectiveness of MARR under low-bit quantization (less than or equal to 4-bit), achieving up to 20.2% performance gains on LLMs and up to 4.6% relative gains on ViTs over the residual reconstruction state-of-the-art methods.Code will be made publicly available upon acceptance.

preprint2021arXiv

An Adaptive Deep Learning Framework for Day-ahead Forecasting of Photovoltaic Power Generation

Accurate forecasts of photovoltaic power generation (PVPG) are essential to optimize operations between energy supply and demand. Recently, the propagation of sensors and smart meters has produced an enormous volume of data, which supports the development of data based PVPG forecasting. Although emerging deep learning (DL) models, such as the long short-term memory (LSTM) model, based on historical data, have provided effective solutions for PVPG forecasting with great successes, these models utilize offline learning. As a result, DL models cannot take advantage of the opportunity to learn from newly-arrived data, and are unable to handle concept drift caused by installing extra PV units and unforeseen PV unit failures. Consequently, to improve day-ahead PVPG forecasting accuracy, as well as eliminate the impacts of concept drift, this paper proposes an adaptive LSTM (AD-LSTM) model, which is a DL framework that can not only acquire general knowledge from historical data, but also dynamically learn specific knowledge from newly-arrived data. A two-phase adaptive learning strategy (TP-ALS) is integrated into AD-LSTM, and a sliding window (SDWIN) algorithm is proposed, to detect concept drift in PV systems. Multiple datasets from PV systems are utilized to assess the feasibility and effectiveness of the proposed approaches. The developed AD-LSTM model demonstrates greater forecasting capability than the offline LSTM model, particularly in the presence of concept drift. Additionally, the proposed AD-LSTM model also achieves superior performance in terms of day-ahead PVPG forecasting compared to other traditional machine learning models and statistical models in the literature.

preprint2014arXiv

Design and test of frequency tuner for CAEP high power THz free-electron laser

Peking University is developing a 1.3 GHz superconducting accelerating section for China Academy of Engineering Physics (CAEP) high power THz free-electron laser. A compact fast/slow tuner has developed by Institute of High Energy Physics (IHEP) for the accelerating section, to control Lorentz detuning, beam loading effect, compensate for microphonics and liquid Helium pressure fluctuations. The tuner design, warm test and cold test of the first prototype are presented.