Abstract:Large language models (LLMs) require reliable evaluation from pre-training to test-time scaling, making evaluation a recurring rather than one-off cost. As model scales grow and target tasks increasingly demand expert annotators, both the compute and labeling costs needed for each evaluation rise rapidly. Active testing aims to alleviate this bottleneck by approximating the evaluation result from a small but informative subset of the evaluation pool. However, existing approaches primarily target classification and break down on generative tasks. We introduce a novel active testing algorithm tailored to generative tasks. Our method leverages semantic entropy from surrogate models to stratify the evaluation pool and then conducts approximate Neyman allocation based on signals extracted from these surrogates. Across multiple language and multimodal benchmarks and a range of surrogate-target model pairs, our method significantly improves on baselines and closely tracks Oracle-Neyman, delivering up to 28\% MSE reduction over Uniform Sampling and an average of 22.9\% budget savings.
Abstract:Federated Learning (FL) enables distributed training on edge devices but faces significant challenges due to resource constraints in edge environments, impacting both communication and computational efficiency. Existing iterative pruning techniques improve communication efficiency but are limited by their centralized design, which struggles with FL's decentralized and data-imbalanced nature, resulting in suboptimal sparsity levels. To address these issues, we propose FedPaI, a novel efficient FL framework that leverages Pruning at Initialization (PaI) to achieve extreme sparsity. FedPaI identifies optimal sparse connections at an early stage, maximizing model capacity and significantly reducing communication and computation overhead by fixing sparsity patterns at the start of training. To adapt to diverse hardware and software environments, FedPaI supports both structured and unstructured pruning. Additionally, we introduce personalized client-side pruning mechanisms for improved learning capacity and sparsity-aware server-side aggregation for enhanced efficiency. Experimental results demonstrate that FedPaI consistently outperforms existing efficient FL that applies conventional iterative pruning with significant leading in efficiency and model accuracy. For the first time, our proposed FedPaI achieves an extreme sparsity level of up to 98% without compromising the model accuracy compared to unpruned baselines, even under challenging non-IID settings. By employing our FedPaI with joint optimization of model learning capacity and sparsity, FL applications can benefit from faster convergence and accelerate the training by 6.4 to 7.9 times.