Tingwei Lu
2026
Read As Human: Compressing Context via Parallelizable Close Reading and Skimming
Jiwei Tang | Shilei Liu | Zhicheng Zhang | Qingsong Lv | Runsong Zhao | Tingwei Lu | Langming Liu | Haibin Chen | Yujin Yuan | Hai-Tao Zheng | Wenbo Su | Bo Zheng
Proceedings of the 64th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (Volume 1: Long Papers)
Jiwei Tang | Shilei Liu | Zhicheng Zhang | Qingsong Lv | Runsong Zhao | Tingwei Lu | Langming Liu | Haibin Chen | Yujin Yuan | Hai-Tao Zheng | Wenbo Su | Bo Zheng
Proceedings of the 64th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (Volume 1: Long Papers)
Large Language Models (LLMs) demonstrate exceptional capability across diverse tasks. However, their deployment in long-context scenarios is hindered by two challenges: computational inefficiency and redundant information. We propose RAM (Read As HuMan), a context compression framework that adopts an adaptive hybrid reading strategy, to address these challenges. Inspired by human reading behavior (i.e., close reading important content while skimming less relevant content), RAM partitions the context into segments and encodes them with the input query in parallel. High-relevance segments are fully retained (close reading), while low-relevance ones are query-guided compressed into compact summary vectors (skimming). Both explicit textual segments and implicit summary vectors are concatenated and fed into decoder to achieve both superior performance and natural language format interpretability. To refine the decision boundary between close reading and skimming, we further introduce a contrastive learning objective based on positive and negative query–segment pairs. Experiments demonstrate that RAM outperforms existing baselines on multiple question answering and summarization benchmarks across two backbones, while delivering up to a 12x end-to-end speedup on long inputs (average length 16K; maximum length 32K).
GMSA: Enhancing Context Compression via Group Merging and Layer Semantic Alignment
Jiwei Tang | Zhicheng Zhang | Shunlong Wu | Jingheng Ye | Lichen Bai | Zitai Wang | Tingwei Lu | Lin Hai | Yiming Zhao | Hai-Tao Zheng | Hong-Gee Kim
Proceedings of the 64th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (Volume 1: Long Papers)
Jiwei Tang | Zhicheng Zhang | Shunlong Wu | Jingheng Ye | Lichen Bai | Zitai Wang | Tingwei Lu | Lin Hai | Yiming Zhao | Hai-Tao Zheng | Hong-Gee Kim
Proceedings of the 64th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (Volume 1: Long Papers)
Large Language Models (LLMs) have achieved remarkable performance across a wide range of Natural Language Processing (NLP) tasks. However, in long-context scenarios, they face two challenges: high computational cost and information redundancy. To address these challenges, we propose GMSA, an encoder-decoder context compression framework that generates a compact sequence of soft tokens for downstream tasks. GMSA introduces Group Merging to achieve more uniform aggregation, mitigating semantic dominance during autoencoder pretraining, and Layer Semantic Alignment (LSA) to bridge the semantic gap between high-level abstract semantics and low-level input semantics. We first pretrain GMSA as an autoencoder and then fine-tune it for downstream tasks. Experiments demonstrate that GMSA improves context reconstruction compared to existing soft prompt compression paradigm and outperforms baselines on multiple long-context question answering and summarization benchmarks across two backbone models, while maintaining low end-to-end latency.
2025
Teaching According to Talents! Instruction Tuning LLMs with Competence-Aware Curriculum Learning
Yangning Li | Tingwei Lu | Yinghui Li | Yankai Chen | Wei-Chieh Huang | Wenhao Jiang | Hui Wang | Hai-Tao Zheng | Philip S. Yu
Findings of the Association for Computational Linguistics: EMNLP 2025
Yangning Li | Tingwei Lu | Yinghui Li | Yankai Chen | Wei-Chieh Huang | Wenhao Jiang | Hui Wang | Hai-Tao Zheng | Philip S. Yu
Findings of the Association for Computational Linguistics: EMNLP 2025
Efficient instruction tuning aims to enhance the ultimate performance of large language models (LLMs) trained on a given instruction dataset. Curriculum learning as a typical data organization strategy has shown preliminary effectiveness in instruction tuning. However, current curriculum tuning methods suffer from the curriculum rigidity, since they rely solely on static heuristic difficulty metrics. These methods fail to adapt to the evolving capabilities of models during training, resulting in a fixed and potentially sub-optimal learning trajectory. To address the issue, **C**ompetence-**A**ware **M**ulti-**P**erspective c**U**rriculum in**S**truction tuning framework termed **CAMPUS** is proposed. CAMPUS offers several advantages: (1) Dynamic selection for sub-curriculum. (2) Competency-aware adjustment to the curriculum schedule. (3) Multiple difficulty-based scheduling. Extensive experiments prove the superior performance of CAMPUS, compared to other state-of-the-art baselines for efficient instruction tuning.
Perception Compressor: A Training-Free Prompt Compression Framework in Long Context Scenarios
Jiwei Tang | Jin Xu | Tingwei Lu | Zhicheng Zhang | Yiming Zhao | Lin Hai | Hai-Tao Zheng
Findings of the Association for Computational Linguistics: NAACL 2025
Jiwei Tang | Jin Xu | Tingwei Lu | Zhicheng Zhang | Yiming Zhao | Lin Hai | Hai-Tao Zheng
Findings of the Association for Computational Linguistics: NAACL 2025
Large language models (LLMs) demonstrate exceptional capabilities in various scenarios. However, they suffer from much redundant information and are sensitive to the position of key information in long context scenarios. To address these challenges, we present Perception Compressor, a training-free prompt compression framework. It includes a perception retriever that leverages guiding questions and instruction to retrieve the most relevant demonstrations, a dual-slope ratio allocator to dynamically allocate compression ratios and open-book ratios, and a semi-guided iterative compression that retains key information at the token level while removing tokens that distract the LLM. We conduct extensive experiments on long context benchmarks, i.e., NaturalQuestions, LongBench, and MuSiQue. Experiment results show that Perception Compressor outperforms existing methods by a large margin, achieving state-of-the-art performance.
RAISE: Reinforced Adaptive Instruction Selection For Large Language Models
Qingsong Lv | Yangning Li | Zihua Lan | Zishan Xu | Jiwei Tang | Tingwei Lu | Yinghui Li | Wenhao Jiang | Hong-Gee Kim | Hai-Tao Zheng | Philip S. Yu
Findings of the Association for Computational Linguistics: EMNLP 2025
Qingsong Lv | Yangning Li | Zihua Lan | Zishan Xu | Jiwei Tang | Tingwei Lu | Yinghui Li | Wenhao Jiang | Hong-Gee Kim | Hai-Tao Zheng | Philip S. Yu
Findings of the Association for Computational Linguistics: EMNLP 2025
Instruction tuning of large language models (LLMs) benefits more from a handful of high-quality examples than from hordes of low-quality ones. Existing selection methods typically rely on static, heuristic quality scores and are executed only once before training. Consequently, they neither adapt to the changing state of the model nor target downstream objectives, leaving substantial room for optimization. We propose RAISE (**R**einforced **A**daptive **I**nstruction **SE**lection), a *dynamic*, *task-driven* framework that integrates selection into every training step. At each step, RAISE estimates the expected contribution of each candidate instruction to task performance and admits only the most helpful. By modeling this process as sequential decision making, we optimize the selector with reinforcement learning, yielding an interpretable policy specialized for the target task. Extensive experiments show that RAISE reaches comparable or better results than full-data training while updating only 1% of the steps, demonstrating both high efficacy and significant computational savings.