While reinforcement learning (RL) has shown promising performance, its sample complexity continues to be a substantial hurdle, restricting its broader application across a variety of domains. Imitation learning (IL) utilizes oracles to improve sample efficiency, yet it is often constrained by the quality of the oracles deployed. which actively interleaves between IL and RL based on an online estimate of their performance. RPI draws on the strengths of IL, using oracle queries to facilitate exploration, an aspect that is notably challenging in sparse-reward RL, particularly during the early stages of learning. As learning unfolds, RPI gradually transitions to RL, effectively treating the learned policy as an improved oracle. This algorithm is capable of learning from and improving upon a diverse set of black-box oracles. Integral to RPI are Robust Active Policy Selection (RAPS) and Robust Policy Gradient (RPG), both of which reason over whether to perform state-wise imitation from the oracles or learn from its own value function when the learner's performance surpasses that of the oracles in a specific state. Empirical evaluations and theoretical analysis validate that RPI excels in comparison to existing state-of-the-art methodologies, demonstrating superior performance across various benchmark domains.
Personalized federated learning (PFL) reduces the impact of non-independent and identically distributed (non-IID) data among clients by allowing each client to train a personalized model when collaborating with others. A key question in PFL is to decide which parameters of a client should be localized or shared with others. In current mainstream approaches, all layers that are sensitive to non-IID data (such as classifier layers) are generally personalized. The reasoning behind this approach is understandable, as localizing parameters that are easily influenced by non-IID data can prevent the potential negative effect of collaboration. However, we believe that this approach is too conservative for collaboration. For example, for a certain client, even if its parameters are easily influenced by non-IID data, it can still benefit by sharing these parameters with clients having similar data distribution. This observation emphasizes the importance of considering not only the sensitivity to non-IID data but also the similarity of data distribution when determining which parameters should be localized in PFL. This paper introduces a novel guideline for client collaboration in PFL. Unlike existing approaches that prohibit all collaboration of sensitive parameters, our guideline allows clients to share more parameters with others, leading to improved model performance. Additionally, we propose a new PFL method named FedCAC, which employs a quantitative metric to evaluate each parameter's sensitivity to non-IID data and carefully selects collaborators based on this evaluation. Experimental results demonstrate that FedCAC enables clients to share more parameters with others, resulting in superior performance compared to state-of-the-art methods, particularly in scenarios where clients have diverse distributions.
Personalized federated learning (PFL) is a popular framework that allows clients to have different models to address application scenarios where clients' data are in different domains. The typical model of a client in PFL features a global encoder trained by all clients to extract universal features from the raw data and personalized layers (e.g., a classifier) trained using the client's local data. Nonetheless, due to the differences between the data distributions of different clients (aka, domain gaps), the universal features produced by the global encoder largely encompass numerous components irrelevant to a certain client's local task. Some recent PFL methods address the above problem by personalizing specific parameters within the encoder. However, these methods encounter substantial challenges attributed to the high dimensionality and non-linearity of neural network parameter space. In contrast, the feature space exhibits a lower dimensionality, providing greater intuitiveness and interpretability as compared to the parameter space. To this end, we propose a novel PFL framework named FedPick. FedPick achieves PFL in the low-dimensional feature space by selecting task-relevant features adaptively for each client from the features generated by the global encoder based on its local data distribution. It presents a more accessible and interpretable implementation of PFL compared to those methods working in the parameter space. Extensive experimental results show that FedPick could effectively select task-relevant features for each client and improve model performance in cross-domain FL.
We propose 3Deformer, a general-purpose framework for interactive 3D shape editing. Given a source 3D mesh with semantic materials, and a user-specified semantic image, 3Deformer can accurately edit the source mesh following the shape guidance of the semantic image, while preserving the source topology as rigid as possible. Recent studies of 3D shape editing mostly focus on learning neural networks to predict 3D shapes, which requires high-cost 3D training datasets and is limited to handling objects involved in the datasets. Unlike these studies, our 3Deformer is a non-training and common framework, which only requires supervision of readily-available semantic images, and is compatible with editing various objects unlimited by datasets. In 3Deformer, the source mesh is deformed utilizing the differentiable renderer technique, according to the correspondences between semantic images and mesh materials. However, guiding complex 3D shapes with a simple 2D image incurs extra challenges, that is, the deform accuracy, surface smoothness, geometric rigidity, and global synchronization of the edited mesh should be guaranteed. To address these challenges, we propose a hierarchical optimization architecture to balance the global and local shape features, and propose further various strategies and losses to improve properties of accuracy, smoothness, rigidity, and so on. Extensive experiments show that our 3Deformer is able to produce impressive results and reaches the state-of-the-art level.
Reinforcement learning (RL) has made significant strides in various complex domains. However, identifying an effective policy via RL often necessitates extensive exploration. Imitation learning aims to mitigate this issue by using expert demonstrations to guide exploration. In real-world scenarios, one often has access to multiple suboptimal black-box experts, rather than a single optimal oracle. These experts do not universally outperform each other across all states, presenting a challenge in actively deciding which oracle to use and in which state. We introduce MAPS and MAPS-SE, a class of policy improvement algorithms that perform imitation learning from multiple suboptimal oracles. In particular, MAPS actively selects which of the oracles to imitate and improve their value function estimates, and MAPS-SE additionally leverages an active state exploration criterion to determine which states one should explore. We provide a comprehensive theoretical analysis and demonstrate that MAPS and MAPS-SE enjoy sample efficiency advantage over the state-of-the-art policy improvement algorithms. Empirical results show that MAPS-SE significantly accelerates policy optimization via state-wise imitation learning from multiple oracles across a broad spectrum of control tasks in the DeepMind Control Suite. Our code is publicly available at: https://github.com/ripl/maps.
Federated learning (FL) is a new paradigm for distributed machine learning that allows a global model to be trained across multiple clients without compromising their privacy. Although FL has demonstrated remarkable success in various scenarios, recent studies mainly utilize shallow and small neural networks. In our research, we discover a significant performance decline when applying the existing FL framework to deeper neural networks, even when client data are independently and identically distributed (i.i.d.). Our further investigation shows that the decline is due to the continuous accumulation of dissimilarities among client models during the layer-by-layer back-propagation process, which we refer to as "divergence accumulation." As deeper models involve a longer chain of divergence accumulation, they tend to manifest greater divergence, subsequently leading to performance decline. Both theoretical derivations and empirical evidence are proposed to support the existence of divergence accumulation and its amplified effects in deeper models. To address this issue, we propose several technical guidelines based on reducing divergence, such as using wider models and reducing the receptive field. These approaches can greatly improve the accuracy of FL on deeper models. For example, the application of these guidelines can boost the ResNet101 model's performance by as much as 43\% on the Tiny-ImageNet dataset.
We propose and study a new computer vision task named open-vocabulary video instance segmentation (OpenVIS), which aims to simultaneously segment, detect, and track arbitrary objects in a video according to corresponding text descriptions. Compared to the original video instance segmentation, OpenVIS enables users to identify objects of desired categories, regardless of whether those categories were included in the training dataset. To achieve this goal, we propose a two-stage pipeline for proposing high-quality class-agnostic object masks and predicting their corresponding categories via pre-trained VLM. Specifically, we first employ a query-based mask proposal network to generate masks of all potential objects, where we replace the original class head with an instance head trained with a binary object loss, thereby enhancing the class-agnostic mask proposal ability. Then, we introduce a proposal post-processing approach to adapt the proposals better to the pre-trained VLMs, avoiding distortion and unnatural proposal inputs. Meanwhile, to facilitate research on this new task, we also propose an evaluation benchmark that utilizes off-the-shelf datasets to comprehensively assess its performance. Experimentally, the proposed OpenVIS exhibits a remarkable 148\% improvement compared to the full-supervised baselines on BURST, which have been trained on all categories.
We report an AlGaInAs multiple quantum well integrated source of polarization controlled light consisting of a polarization mode converter PMC, differential phase shifter(DPS), and a side wall grating distributed-feedback DFB laser. We demonstrate an asymmetrical stepped-height ridge waveguide PMC to realize TE to TM polarization conversion and a symmetrical straight waveguide DPS to enable polarization rotation from approximately counterclockwise circular polarization to linear polarization. Based on the identical epitaxial layer scheme, all of the PMC, DPS, and DFB laser can be integrated monolithically using only a single step of metalorganic vapor phase epitaxy and two steps of III V material dry etching. For the DFB-PMC device, a high TE to TM polarization conversion efficiency 98% over a wide range of DFB injection currents is reported at 1555 nm wavelength. For the DFB-PMC-DPS device, a 60 degree rotation of the Stokes vector was obtained on the Poincar\'e sphere with a range of bias voltage from 0 V to -4.0 V at IDFB is 170 mA.
How can we collect the most useful labels to learn a model selection policy, when presented with arbitrary heterogeneous data streams? In this paper, we formulate this task as an online contextual active model selection problem, where at each round the learner receives an unlabeled data point along with a context. The goal is to output the best model for any given context without obtaining an excessive amount of labels. In particular, we focus on the task of selecting pre-trained classifiers, and propose a contextual active model selection algorithm (CAMS), which relies on a novel uncertainty sampling query criterion defined on a given policy class for adaptive model selection. In comparison to prior art, our algorithm does not assume a globally optimal model. We provide rigorous theoretical analysis for the regret and query complexity under both adversarial and stochastic settings. Our experiments on several benchmark classification datasets demonstrate the algorithm's effectiveness in terms of both regret and query complexity. Notably, to achieve the same accuracy, CAMS incurs less than 10% of the label cost when compared to the best online model selection baselines on CIFAR10.
Manga is a popular Japanese-style comic form that consists of black-and-white stroke lines. Compared with images of real-world scenarios, the simpler textures and fewer color gradients of mangas are the extra natures that can be vectorized. In this paper, we propose Mang2Vec, the first approach for vectorizing raster mangas using Deep Reinforcement Learning (DRL). Unlike existing learning-based works of image vectorization, we present a new view that considers an entire manga as a collection of basic primitives "stroke line", and the sequence of strokes lines can be deep decomposed for further vectorization. We train a designed DRL agent to produce the most suitable sequence of stroke lines, which is constrained to follow the visual feature of the target manga. Next, the control parameters of strokes are collected to translated to vector format. To improve our performances on visual quality and storage size, we further propose an SA reward to generate accurate stokes, and a pruning mechanism to avoid producing error and redundant strokes. Quantitative and qualitative experiments demonstrate that our Mang2Vec can produce impressive results and reaches the state-of-the-art level.