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Jun 11

Efficient Parallel Samplers for Recurrent-Depth Models and Their Connection to Diffusion Language Models

Language models with recurrent depth, also referred to as universal or looped when considering transformers, are defined by the capacity to increase their computation through the repetition of layers. Recent efforts in pretraining have demonstrated that these architectures can scale to modern language modeling tasks while exhibiting advantages in reasoning tasks. In this work, we examine the relationship between recurrent-depth models and diffusion language models. Building on their similarities, we develop a new diffusion forcing sampler for these models to accelerate generation. The sampler advances by decoding new tokens at every forward pass of the model, while the latent states of these tokens can be further refined in parallel through recurrence. Theoretically, generation with our sampler is strictly more expressive than the baseline autoregressive generation using the same time budget on modern hardware. Moreover, this sampler, based on principles from diffusion literature, can be directly applied to existing 3.5B recurrent-depth transformers without any tuning, leading to up to a 5x speedup. Consequently, our findings not only provide an efficient mechanism for parallelizing the extra computation in recurrent-depth models at inference, but also suggest that such models can be naturally viewed as strong continuous, though causal, diffusion language models.

BlockGen: Flexible Blockwise Sequence Modeling with Hybrid Samplers

Is the uniform-state diffusion framework a more powerful paradigm for discrete diffusion? Recent studies indicate that this may be the case. In combination with predictor-corrector samplers, uniform-state diffusion models (USDMs) produce samples of higher-quality than masked diffusion models (MDMs), and USDMs equal or outperform MDMs in downstream tasks, even though they exhibit greater perplexity. Two issues remain unresolved. First, existing work compares uniform and masked diffusion with un-informed correctors that re-inject noise at random positions, rather than targeting tokens most likely to be wrong. Second, prior work compares full-sequence diffusion models, so we do not know whether the same conclusion holds when tokens are generated block by block. To address these issues, we introduce BlockGen, a blockwise sequence model that we instantiate with both masked and uniform diffusion. BlockGen trains on a mixture of block sizes and its likelihood interpolates between AR and pure diffusion more finely than models with a fixed block size. BlockGen enables AR-informed predictor-corrector sampling (ARPC), which combines AR and diffusion predictions to re-generate unlikely tokens without an auxiliary verifier. Under ancestral sampling, uniform outperforms masked in the block-by-block setting, especially in the few-step regime. Under ARPC, the gap closes and reverses at high NFE. With block size 16 on GSM8K, MDMs reach slightly higher accuracy than USDMs, and we observe a similar trend in Generative Perplexity on OpenWebText. Find our code at https://github.com/jdeschena/blockgen.

  • 2 authors
·
May 31

Transition Path Sampling with Improved Off-Policy Training of Diffusion Path Samplers

Understanding transition pathways between two meta-stable states of a molecular system is crucial to advance drug discovery and material design. However, unbiased molecular dynamics (MD) simulations are computationally infeasible because of the high energy barriers that separate these states. Although recent machine learning techniques are proposed to sample rare events, they are often limited to simple systems and rely on collective variables (CVs) derived from costly domain expertise. In this paper, we introduce a novel approach that trains diffusion path samplers (DPS) to address the transition path sampling (TPS) problem without requiring CVs. We reformulate the problem as an amortized sampling from the transition path distribution by minimizing the log-variance divergence between the path distribution induced by DPS and the transition path distribution. Based on the log-variance divergence, we propose learnable control variates to reduce the variance of gradient estimators and the off-policy training objective with replay buffers and simulated annealing techniques to improve sample efficiency and diversity. We also propose a scale-based equivariant parameterization of the bias forces to ensure scalability for large systems. We extensively evaluate our approach, termed TPS-DPS, on a synthetic system, small peptide, and challenging fast-folding proteins, demonstrating that it produces more realistic and diverse transition pathways than existing baselines.

  • 5 authors
·
May 30, 2024