Liang Du


2025

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AdaV: Adaptive Text-visual Redirection for Vision-Language Models
Jiayi Han | Liang Du | Yiwen Wu | Guanming Liang | Xiangguo Zhou | Weibo Zheng | Donghong Han | Zixun Sun
Findings of the Association for Computational Linguistics: ACL 2025

The success of Vision-Language Models (VLMs) often relies on high-resolution schemes that preserve image details, while these approaches also generate an excess of visual tokens, leading to a substantial decrease in model efficiency. A typical VLM includes a visual encoder, a text encoder, and an LLM. Recent studies suggest pruning visual tokens based on visual and textual priors to accelerate VLMs without additional training costs. However, these methods often overlook prompt semantics or suffer from biased self-attention in the LLM. Inspired by the efficient mechanisms of the human brain for multimodal understanding, we introduce AdaV, a novel training-free visual token pruning method. By emulating the neural pathways that preprocess visual and auditory information before the reasoning stage, we shift text-guided visual attention redirection to the pre-LLM stage, which reduces biased token pruning and enhances model robustness with a limited visual token budget. A Self-adaptive Cross-modality Attention Redirection (SCAR) module is further proposed that effectively merges and redirects visual attention with text-to-image attention. Extensive experiments on seven challenging benchmarks demonstrate that our AdaV achieves SOTA performance in training-free VLM acceleration and can be plug-and-play on various VLMs. We plan to open-source the code upon publication.

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SLIM: Let LLM Learn More and Forget Less with Soft LoRA and Identity Mixture
Jiayi Han | Liang Du | Hongwei Du | Xiangguo Zhou | Yiwen Wu | Yuanfang Zhang | Weibo Zheng | Donghong Han
Proceedings of the 2025 Conference of the Nations of the Americas Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics: Human Language Technologies (Volume 1: Long Papers)

Despite the recent efforts from the NLP community, balancing the training budget, downstream performance, and general capabilities of large language models (LLM) remains a challenge in many applications. Training the entire model for downstream tasks is expensive, and could easily result in catastrophic forgetting. Parameter-efficient fine-tuning (PEFT) could reduce the training cost, but it still suffers from forgetting, and limits the learning on the downstream tasks. To address the aforementioned issues, we propose a novel mixture of expert (MoE) framework based on Soft LoRA and Identity Mixture (SLIM). SLIM allows dynamic routing between LoRA adapters and identity layers, thus enabling the bypass of LoRA adapters to suppress forgetting of general capacity. We adopt weight yielding with sliding clustering for better out-of-domain distinguish to enhance the routing. We also convert the mixture of LoRA adapters to the model merging formulation and introduce dynamic merging with its fast implementation for LoRA adapters to keep the general capabilities. Extensive experiments demonstrate that the proposed SLIM is comparable to the state-of-the-art PEFT approaches on the downstream tasks while achieving the leading performance in mitigating catastrophic forgetting. We plan to open-source the code upon publication.

2023

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MathPrompter: Mathematical Reasoning using Large Language Models
Shima Imani | Liang Du | Harsh Shrivastava
Proceedings of the 61st Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (Volume 5: Industry Track)

Large Language Models (LLMs) have limited performance when solving arithmetic reasoning tasks and often provide incorrect answers. Unlike natural language understanding, math problems typically have a single correct answer, making the task of generating accurate solutions more challenging for LLMs. To the best of our knowledge, we are not aware of any LLMs that indicate their level of confidence in their responses which fuels a trust deficit in these models impeding their adoption. To address this deficiency, we propose ‘MathPrompter’, a technique that improves performance of LLMs on arithmetic problems along with increased reliance in the predictions. MathPrompter uses the Zero-shot chain-of-thought prompting technique to generate multiple algebraic expressions or python functions to solve the same math problem in different ways and thereby raise the confidence level in the output results. This is in contrast to other prompt based CoT methods, where there is no check on the validity of the intermediate steps followed. Our technique improves over state-of-the-art on the ‘MultiArith’ dataset (78.7% - 92.5%) evaluated using 175B parameter GPT-based LLM.

2022

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Multilingual Molecular Representation Learning via Contrastive Pre-training
Zhihui Guo | Pramod Sharma | Andy Martinez | Liang Du | Robin Abraham
Proceedings of the 60th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (Volume 1: Long Papers)

Molecular representation learning plays an essential role in cheminformatics. Recently, language model-based approaches have gained popularity as an alternative to traditional expert-designed features to encode molecules. However, these approaches only utilize a single molecular language for representation learning. Motivated by the fact that a given molecule can be described using different languages such as Simplified Molecular Line Entry System (SMILES), The International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC), and The IUPAC International Chemical Identifier (InChI), we propose a multilingual molecular embedding generation approach called MM-Deacon (multilingual molecular domain embedding analysis via contrastive learning). MM-Deacon is pre-trained using SMILES and IUPAC as two different languages on large-scale molecules. We evaluated the robustness of our method on seven molecular property prediction tasks from MoleculeNet benchmark, zero-shot cross-lingual retrieval, and a drug-drug interaction prediction task.