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Zhun Sun

Zhun Sun contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

4 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

Technical Report: Activation Residual Hessian Quantization (ARHQ) for Low-Bit LLM Quantization

We present Activation Residual Hessian Quantization (ARHQ), a post-training weight splitting method designed to mitigate error propagation in low-bit activation-weight quantization. By constructing an input-side residual Hessian from activation quantization residuals (G_x), ARHQ analytically identifies and isolates error-sensitive weight directions into a high-precision low-rank branch. This is achieved via a closed-form truncated SVD on the scaled weight matrix W G^{1/2}_x . Experimental results on Qwen3-4B-Thinking-2507 demonstrate that ARHQ significantly improves layer-wise SNR and preserves downstream reasoning performance on ZebraLogic even under aggressive quantization. The code is available at https://github.com/BeautMoonQ/ARHQ.

preprint2022arXiv

Siamese Prototypical Contrastive Learning

Contrastive Self-supervised Learning (CSL) is a practical solution that learns meaningful visual representations from massive data in an unsupervised approach. The ordinary CSL embeds the features extracted from neural networks onto specific topological structures. During the training progress, the contrastive loss draws the different views of the same input together while pushing the embeddings from different inputs apart. One of the drawbacks of CSL is that the loss term requires a large number of negative samples to provide better mutual information bound ideally. However, increasing the number of negative samples by larger running batch size also enhances the effects of false negatives: semantically similar samples are pushed apart from the anchor, hence downgrading downstream performance. In this paper, we tackle this problem by introducing a simple but effective contrastive learning framework. The key insight is to employ siamese-style metric loss to match intra-prototype features, while increasing the distance between inter-prototype features. We conduct extensive experiments on various benchmarks where the results demonstrate the effectiveness of our method on improving the quality of visual representations. Specifically, our unsupervised pre-trained ResNet-50 with a linear probe, out-performs the fully-supervised trained version on the ImageNet-1K dataset.

preprint2021arXiv

On the Memory Mechanism of Tensor-Power Recurrent Models

Tensor-power (TP) recurrent model is a family of non-linear dynamical systems, of which the recurrence relation consists of a p-fold (a.k.a., degree-p) tensor product. Despite such the model frequently appears in the advanced recurrent neural networks (RNNs), to this date there is limited study on its memory property, a critical characteristic in sequence tasks. In this work, we conduct a thorough investigation of the memory mechanism of TP recurrent models. Theoretically, we prove that a large degree p is an essential condition to achieve the long memory effect, yet it would lead to unstable dynamical behaviors. Empirically, we tackle this issue by extending the degree p from discrete to a differentiable domain, such that it is efficiently learnable from a variety of datasets. Taken together, the new model is expected to benefit from the long memory effect in a stable manner. We experimentally show that the proposed model achieves competitive performance compared to various advanced RNNs in both the single-cell and seq2seq architectures.

preprint2020arXiv

Beyond Unfolding: Exact Recovery of Latent Convex Tensor Decomposition under Reshuffling

Exact recovery of tensor decomposition (TD) methods is a desirable property in both unsupervised learning and scientific data analysis. The numerical defects of TD methods, however, limit their practical applications on real-world data. As an alternative, convex tensor decomposition (CTD) was proposed to alleviate these problems, but its exact-recovery property is not properly addressed so far. To this end, we focus on latent convex tensor decomposition (LCTD), a practically widely-used CTD model, and rigorously prove a sufficient condition for its exact-recovery property. Furthermore, we show that such property can be also achieved by a more general model than LCTD. In the new model, we generalize the classic tensor (un-)folding into reshuffling operation, a more flexible mapping to relocate the entries of the matrix into a tensor. Armed with the reshuffling operations and exact-recovery property, we explore a totally novel application for (generalized) LCTD, i.e., image steganography. Experimental results on synthetic data validate our theory, and results on image steganography show that our method outperforms the state-of-the-art methods.