Federated learning has recently been applied to recommendation systems to protect user privacy. In federated learning settings, recommendation systems can train recommendation models only collecting the intermediate parameters instead of the real user data, which greatly enhances the user privacy. Beside, federated recommendation systems enable to collaborate with other data platforms to improve recommended model performance while meeting the regulation and privacy constraints. However, federated recommendation systems faces many new challenges such as privacy, security, heterogeneity and communication costs. While significant research has been conducted in these areas, gaps in the surveying literature still exist. In this survey, we-(1) summarize some common privacy mechanisms used in federated recommendation systems and discuss the advantages and limitations of each mechanism; (2) review some robust aggregation strategies and several novel attacks against security; (3) summarize some approaches to address heterogeneity and communication costs problems; (4)introduce some open source platforms that can be used to build federated recommendation systems; (5) present some prospective research directions in the future. This survey can guide researchers and practitioners understand the research progress in these areas.
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We propose AnyTOD, an end-to-end task-oriented dialog (TOD) system with zero-shot capability for unseen tasks. We view TOD as a program executed by a language model (LM), where program logic and ontology is provided by a designer in the form of a schema. To enable generalization onto unseen schemas and programs without prior training, AnyTOD adopts a neuro-symbolic approach. A neural LM keeps track of events that occur during a conversation, and a symbolic program implementing the dialog policy is executed to recommend next actions AnyTOD should take. This approach drastically reduces data annotation and model training requirements, addressing a long-standing challenge in TOD research: rapidly adapting a TOD system to unseen tasks and domains. We demonstrate state-of-the-art results on the STAR and ABCD benchmarks, as well as AnyTOD's strong zero-shot transfer capability in low-resource settings. In addition, we release STARv2, an updated version of the STAR dataset with richer data annotations, for benchmarking zero-shot end-to-end TOD models.
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This work explores an efficient approach to establish a foundational video-text model for tasks including open-vocabulary video classification, text-to-video retrieval, video captioning and video question-answering. We present VideoCoCa that reuses a pretrained image-text contrastive captioner (CoCa) model and adapt it to video-text tasks with minimal extra training. While previous works adapt image-text models with various cross-frame fusion modules (for example, cross-frame attention layer or perceiver resampler) and finetune the modified architecture on video-text data, we surprisingly find that the generative attentional pooling and contrastive attentional pooling layers in the image-text CoCa design are instantly adaptable to ``flattened frame embeddings'', yielding a strong zero-shot transfer baseline for many video-text tasks. Specifically, the frozen image encoder of a pretrained image-text CoCa takes each video frame as inputs and generates \(N\) token embeddings per frame for totally \(T\) video frames. We flatten \(N \times T\) token embeddings as a long sequence of frozen video representation and apply CoCa's generative attentional pooling and contrastive attentional pooling on top. All model weights including pooling layers are directly loaded from an image-text CoCa pretrained model. Without any video or video-text data, VideoCoCa's zero-shot transfer baseline already achieves state-of-the-art results on zero-shot video classification on Kinetics 400/600/700, UCF101, HMDB51, and Charades, as well as zero-shot text-to-video retrieval on MSR-VTT and ActivityNet Captions. We also explore lightweight finetuning on top of VideoCoCa, and achieve strong results on video question-answering (iVQA, MSRVTT-QA, MSVD-QA) and video captioning (MSR-VTT, ActivityNet, Youcook2). Our approach establishes a simple and effective video-text baseline for future research.
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Objective: We aim to develop an open-source natural language processing (NLP) package, SODA (i.e., SOcial DeterminAnts), with pre-trained transformer models to extract social determinants of health (SDoH) for cancer patients, examine the generalizability of SODA to a new disease domain (i.e., opioid use), and evaluate the extraction rate of SDoH using cancer populations. Methods: We identified SDoH categories and attributes and developed an SDoH corpus using clinical notes from a general cancer cohort. We compared four transformer-based NLP models to extract SDoH, examined the generalizability of NLP models to a cohort of patients prescribed with opioids, and explored customization strategies to improve performance. We applied the best NLP model to extract 19 categories of SDoH from the breast (n=7,971), lung (n=11,804), and colorectal cancer (n=6,240) cohorts. Results and Conclusion: We developed a corpus of 629 cancer patients notes with annotations of 13,193 SDoH concepts/attributes from 19 categories of SDoH. The Bidirectional Encoder Representations from Transformers (BERT) model achieved the best strict/lenient F1 scores of 0.9216 and 0.9441 for SDoH concept extraction, 0.9617 and 0.9626 for linking attributes to SDoH concepts. Fine-tuning the NLP models using new annotations from opioid use patients improved the strict/lenient F1 scores from 0.8172/0.8502 to 0.8312/0.8679. The extraction rates among 19 categories of SDoH varied greatly, where 10 SDoH could be extracted from >70% of cancer patients, but 9 SDoH had a low extraction rate (<70% of cancer patients). The SODA package with pre-trained transformer models is publicly available at https://github.com/uf-hobiinformatics-lab/SDoH_SODA.
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变压器模型最近已成为自然语言处理中的基础模型之一,作为副产品,最近对扩展这些模型具有重大的兴趣和投资。但是,这些大型变压器语言模型的培训和推理成本令人难以置信,因此需要更多的研究来识别更有效的变体。在这项工作中,我们通过用统计语言建模中的文献启发的变压器体系结构提出了一个简单而有效的修改,该架构是通过通过文本序列的离散潜在表示构建的n-grams来增强模型的。我们评估了我们的模型,关于C4数据集的语言建模的N-Strammer以及Superglue数据集的文本分类,并发现它的表现优于诸如变压器和底漆等几个强基线。我们为JAX中的可重复性目的开放源模型。
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我们介绍了自回归文本到图像(Parti)模型的途径,该模型生成高保真的影像图像并支持涉及复杂组成和世界知识的内容丰富的合成。 Parti将文本对图像生成视为类似于机器翻译的序列到序列建模问题,图像令牌的序列是目标输出,而不是其他语言的文本令牌。这种策略自然可以利用大型语言模型的先前工作,通过扩展数据和模型尺寸,能力和性能的持续进展。我们的方法很简单:首先,Parti使用基于变压器的图像令牌VIT-VQGAN将图像编码为离散令牌的序列。其次,我们通过将编码器二次变压器模型缩放到20B参数来实现一致的质量改进,其新的最新零弹药FID得分为7.23,而MS-Coco的FIDED得分为3.22。我们对本地化叙述以及党的详细分析(P2),这是1600多个英语提示的新的整体基准,证明了Parti在各种类别和难度方面的有效性。我们还探索并突出了我们的模型的局限性,以定义和体现关注重点领域以进一步改进。有关高分辨率图像,请参见https://parti.research.google/。
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在本文中,我们分享了我们努力建立能够翻译一千多种语言的实用机器翻译(MT)系统的发现。我们在三个研究领域中描述了结果:(i)通过利用半监督预训练的语言识别和开发数据驱动的过滤技术来构建1500多种语言的清洁,网挖数据集; (ii)通过利用大规模的多语言模型来开发用于服务不足的语言的实用MT模型,该模型训练了有监督的并行数据,以使用100多种高资源语言和单语言数据集,以增加1000多种语言; (iii)研究这些语言的评估指标的局限性,并对我们MT模型的输出进行定性分析,突出显示了这些类型模型的几种频繁误差模式。我们希望我们的工作为旨在为当前研究的语言构建MT系统的从业者提供有用的见解,并突出显示可以补充Data-Sparse设置中大量多语言模型的弱点的研究方向。
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探索大规模预处理的基础模型对计算机视觉具有重大兴趣,因为这些模型可以快速转移到许多下游任务中。本文介绍了对比字幕(COCA),这是一种极简主义的设计,旨在为图像文本编码器编码器基础模型预算与对比度损失和字幕损失,从而从剪辑和诸如simvlm之类的生成方法之类的对比方法中包含模型能力。与所有解码器层都参与编码器输出的标准编码器 - 模块变压器相反,可口可乐省略了解码器层的上半部分的交叉注意,以编码单峰文本表示,并串联到剩余的解码器层,这些解码器与图像编码器相交的解码器层多模式图像文本表示。除了对多模态解码器输出的字幕损失外,我们还应用了单峰图像和文本嵌入之间的对比损失,该输出可以预测文本令牌自动加压。通过共享相同的计算图,可以用最小的开销有效地计算两个培训目标。可口可乐是端到端和从头开始的网络尺度alt-text数据和带注释的图像,通过将所有标签视为文本,无缝地统一自然语言监督以进行表示。从经验上讲,可口可乐通过零拍传输或在广泛的下游任务上进行零摄像转移或最少的特定任务适应,跨越视觉识别(Imagenet,Kinetics-400/600/700,瞬间, ),交叉模式检索(MSCOCO,FLICKR30K,MSR-VTT),多模式理解(VQA,SNLI-VE,NLVR2)和图像字幕(MSCOCO,NOCAPS)。值得注意的是,在Imagenet分类方面,COCA获得了86.3%的TOP-1准确性,带有冷冻编码器和学习的分类头90.6%,以及带有填充编码器的Imagenet上的新最先进的91.0%Top-1 Top-1精度。
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我们提出了一种简单有效的自我监督学习方法,以供语音识别。该方法以随机预测量化器生成的离散标签的形式学习了一个模型,以预测蒙版的语音信号。尤其是量化器的语音输入带有随机初始化的矩阵,并在随机限制的代码簿中进行最近的邻居查找。在自我监督的学习过程中,矩阵和密码簿均未更新。由于未对随机预测量化器进行训练,并与语音识别模型分开,因此该设计使该方法具有灵活性,并且与通用语音识别体系结构兼容。在LibrisPeech上,我们的方法与以前的工作相比,使用非流式模型获得了与以前的工作相似的单词率,并且比WAV2VEC 2.0和WAP2VEC 2.0和w2v-bert提供了较低的单词率率和延迟。在多语言任务上,该方法还提供了与WAV2VEC 2.0和W2V-bert的显着改进。
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There is an increasing interest in developing artificial intelligence (AI) systems to process and interpret electronic health records (EHRs). Natural language processing (NLP) powered by pretrained language models is the key technology for medical AI systems utilizing clinical narratives. However, there are few clinical language models, the largest of which trained in the clinical domain is comparatively small at 110 million parameters (compared with billions of parameters in the general domain). It is not clear how large clinical language models with billions of parameters can help medical AI systems utilize unstructured EHRs. In this study, we develop from scratch a large clinical language model - GatorTron - using >90 billion words of text (including >82 billion words of de-identified clinical text) and systematically evaluate it on 5 clinical NLP tasks including clinical concept extraction, medical relation extraction, semantic textual similarity, natural language inference (NLI), and medical question answering (MQA). We examine how (1) scaling up the number of parameters and (2) scaling up the size of the training data could benefit these NLP tasks. GatorTron models scale up the clinical language model from 110 million to 8.9 billion parameters and improve 5 clinical NLP tasks (e.g., 9.6% and 9.5% improvement in accuracy for NLI and MQA), which can be applied to medical AI systems to improve healthcare delivery. The GatorTron models are publicly available at: https://catalog.ngc.nvidia.com/orgs/nvidia/teams/clara/models/gatortron_og.
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