Abstract:Efficient deep learning traditionally relies on static heuristics like weight magnitude or activation awareness (e.g., Wanda, RIA). While successful in unstructured settings, we observe a critical limitation when applying these metrics to the structural pruning of deep vision networks. These contemporary metrics suffer from a magnitude bias, failing to preserve critical functional pathways. To overcome this, we propose a decoupled kinetic paradigm inspired by Alternating Gradient Flow (AGF), utilizing an absolute feature-space Taylor expansion to accurately capture the network's structural "kinetic utility". First, we uncover a topological phase transition at extreme sparsity, where AGF successfully preserves baseline functionality and exhibits topological implicit regularization, avoiding the collapse seen in models trained from scratch. Second, transitioning to architectures without strict structural priors, we reveal a phenomenon of Sparsity Bottleneck in Vision Transformers (ViTs). Through a gradient-magnitude decoupling analysis, we discover that dynamic signals suffer from signal compression in converged models, rendering them suboptimal for real-time routing. Finally, driven by these empirical constraints, we design a hybrid routing framework that decouples AGF-guided offline structural search from online execution via zero-cost physical priors. We validate our paradigm on large-scale benchmarks: under a 75% compression stress test on ImageNet-1K, AGF effectively avoids the structural collapse where traditional metrics aggressively fall below random sampling. Furthermore, when systematically deployed for dynamic inference on ImageNet-100, our hybrid approach achieves Pareto-optimal efficiency. It reduces the usage of the heavy expert by approximately 50% (achieving an estimated overall cost of 0.92$\times$) without sacrificing the full-model accuracy.
Abstract:Artificial intelligence has advanced significantly through the development of intelligent game-playing systems, providing rigorous testbeds for decision-making, strategic planning, and adaptive learning. However, resource-constrained environments pose critical challenges, as conventional deep learning methods heavily rely on extensive datasets and computational resources. In this paper, we propose a lightweight hybrid framework for the Game of the Amazons, which explores the paradigm of weak-to-strong generalization by integrating the structural reasoning of graph-based learning with the generative capabilities of large language models. Specifically, we leverage a Graph Attention Autoencoder to inform a multi-step Monte Carlo Tree Search, utilize a Stochastic Graph Genetic Algorithm to optimize evaluation signals, and harness GPT-4o-mini to generate synthetic training data. Unlike traditional approaches that rely on expert demonstrations, our framework learns from noisy and imperfect supervision. We demonstrate that the Graph Attention mechanism effectively functions as a structural filter, denoising the LLM's outputs. Experiments on a 10$\times$10 Amazons board show that our hybrid approach not only achieves a 15\%--56\% improvement in decision accuracy over baselines but also significantly outperforms its teacher model (GPT-4o-mini), achieving a competitive win rate of 45.0\% at N=30 nodes and a decisive 66.5\% at only N=50 nodes. These results verify the feasibility of evolving specialized, high-performance game AI from general-purpose foundation models under stringent computational constraints.
Abstract:This work investigated the capabilities of different models, including the Llama-3 series of models and CHATGPT, with different forms of expression in solving discrete optimization problems by testing natural language datasets. In contrast to formal datasets with a limited scope of parameters, our dataset included a variety of problem types in discrete optimization problems and featured a wide range of parameter magnitudes, including instances with large parameter sets, integrated with augmented data. It aimed to (1) provide an overview of LLMs' ability in large-scale problems, (2) offer suggestions to those who want to solve discrete optimization problems automatically, and (3) regard the performance as a benchmark for future research. These datasets included original, expanded and augmented datasets. Among these three datasets, the original and augmented ones aimed for evaluation while the expanded one may help finetune a new model. In the experiment, comparisons were made between strong and week models, CoT methods and No-CoT methods on various datasets. The result showed that stronger model performed better reasonably. Contrary to general agreement, it also showed that CoT technique was not always effective regarding the capability of models and disordered datasets improved performance of models on easy to-understand problems, even though they were sometimes with high variance, a manifestation of instability. Therefore, for those who seek to enhance the automatic resolution of discrete optimization problems, it is recommended to consult the results, including the line charts presented in the Appendix, as well as the conclusions drawn in this study for relevant suggestions.