Neural Scaling Laws and Foundation Models

IFT 6760B & 6167 Winter 2022, Université de Montréal / Mila - Quebec AI Institute

Course Description   Topics&Papers   Schedule     Invited Talks   

Call-in link (4:30pm EST Mon & Thu) Discussions: AGI discord Video/slides:  schedule

Course Description

This seminar-style course will focus on recent advances in the rapidly developing area of "foundation models", i.e. large-scale neural network models  (e.g., GPT-3, CLIP, DALL-e, etc) pretrained on very large, diverse datasets. Such models often demonstrate significant improvement in their few-shot generalization abilities, as compared to their smaller-scale counterparts, across a wide range of downstream tasks - what one could call a "transformation of quantity into quality"  or an "emergent behavior".  This is an important step towards a long-standing objective of achieving Artificial General Intelligence (AGI). By AGI here we mean literally a "general", i.e. broad, versatile AI capable of quickly adapting  to a wide range of  situations and tasks, both novel and those encountered before - i.e. achieving a good stability (memory) vs plasticity (adaptation) trade-off, using the continual learning terminology. In this course, we will survey most recent advances in large-scale pretrained models, focusing specifically on  empirical scaling laws of such systems' performance, with increasing compute, model size, and pretraining data (power laws, phase transitions). We will also explore the trade-off between the increasing AI capabilities and AI safety/alignment with human values, considering a range of evaluation metrics beyond the predictive performance. Finally, we will touch upon several related fields, including transfer-, continual- and meta-learning, as well as out-of-distribution generalization, robustness and invariant/causal predictive modeling.  

In this course, besides several introductory and invited lectures by the instructor and guest speakers, respectively, we will survey and present recent papers listed in the "Topics & Papers" section from the menu on top of this page. If you have any suggestions about the papers to review, please contact the instructor and/or the TAs.

Class info 


Links




Evaluation Criteria 

Note: due to time zone differences, it may be difficult for all students to join all classes in person; the classes will be recorded, and questions regarding the papers to be discussed can be submitted on the course slack.