multiscale autoregressive framework).Multi-Head LatentMoE and Head Parallelism).Policy Divergence).Potential Energy Surface).This section focuses on Exposure Bias, a common problem in autoregressive models, especially when generating sequences like sentences or protein structures. Exposure bias happens because the model is trained on perfect, real data but then has to create new data on its own, which can lead to errors accumulating over time. It's like learning to drive by only watching videos of perfect drivers—you never learn how to correct mistakes.
To fix this, techniques like Noisy Context Learning and Scheduled Sampling are used. Noisy Context Learning trains the model with slightly imperfect data, forcing it to learn how to correct errors. Scheduled Sampling gradually replaces real data with the model's own generated data during training, helping it become more comfortable with its own output.
Think of learning to ride a bike. If someone always holds you perfectly steady, you never learn to balance yourself. Noisy Context Learning is like letting go a little bit so you wobble and learn to adjust. Scheduled Sampling is like gradually taking away the training wheels, forcing you to rely on your own balance.
In more technical terms, Exposure Bias arises because the model's training distribution differs from its inference distribution in autoregressive models. During training, the model conditions on ground truth prefixes, while during inference, it conditions on its own generated prefixes. Noisy Context Learning introduces perturbations to the ground truth context during training, promoting robustness. Scheduled Sampling gradually transitions from conditioning on ground truth to conditioning on generated tokens, bridging the gap between training and inference.
Overcoming Exposure Bias is crucial for practical AI development because it enables the creation of more robust and reliable generative models. This is especially important in applications where the model needs to generate long sequences or handle noisy or incomplete data.
The paper "Protein Autoregressive Modeling via Multiscale Structure Generation" Protein Autoregressive Modeling via Multiscale Structure Generation utilizes Noisy Context Learning and Scheduled Sampling to mitigate Exposure Bias in protein structure generation.
Engineers can apply these techniques in their own projects by incorporating Noisy Context Learning and Scheduled Sampling into the training of their autoregressive models. This can lead to improved generalization and robustness, especially when dealing with limited or noisy training data.
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