J

Jiaru Zhang

Total Citations
278
h-index
6
Papers
3

Publications

#1 2605.30015v1 May 28, 2026

Test Time Training for Supervised Causal Learning

Supervised Causal Learning (SCL) has shown promise in causal discovery by framing it as a supervised learning problem. However, it suffers from significant out-of-distribution generalization challenges. We reveal three limitations of previous SCL practices: a significant performance gap between synthetic benchmarks and real-world data, fragility to distribution shifts, and failure in compositional generalization, collectively questioning its real-world applicability. To address this, we propose Test-Time Training for Supervised Causal Learning (TTT-SCL), a novel framework that dynamically generates training sets explicitly aligned with any specific test instance. We demonstrate the correlation between TTT-SCL and score-based methods, and design an efficient module for generating training sets based on the classic scoring function. Experiments on synthetic benchmarks, pseudo-real and real-world datasets demonstrate that TTT-SCL significantly outperforms existing SCL and traditional causal discovery methods.

Qiang Fu Rui Ding Dongmei Zhang Jiaru Zhang Zizhen Deng +3
0 Citations
#2 2603.08014v1 Mar 09, 2026

FedMomentum: Preserving LoRA Training Momentum in Federated Fine-Tuning

Federated fine-tuning of large language models (LLMs) with low-rank adaptation (LoRA) offers a communication-efficient and privacy-preserving solution for task-specific adaptation. Naive aggregation of LoRA modules introduces noise due to mathematical incorrectness when averaging the downsampling and upsampling matrices independently. However, existing noise-free aggregation strategies inevitably compromise the structural expressiveness of LoRA, limiting its ability to retain client-specific adaptations by either improperly reconstructing the low-rank structure or excluding partially trainable components. We identify this problem as loss of training momentum, where LoRA updates fail to accumulate effectively across rounds, resulting in slower convergence and suboptimal performance. To address this, we propose FedMomentum, a novel framework that enables structured and momentum-preserving LoRA aggregation via singular value decomposition (SVD). Specifically, after aggregating low-rank updates in a mathematically correct manner, FedMomentum applies SVD to extract the dominant components that capture the main update directions. These components are used to reconstruct the LoRA modules with the same rank, while residual components can be retained and later merged into the backbone to preserve semantic information and ensure robustness. Extensive experiments across multiple tasks demonstrate that FedMomentum consistently outperforms prior state-of-the-art methods in convergence speed and final accuracy.

Hao Wang Yang Hua Tao Song Haibing Guan Peishen Yan +2
0 Citations
#3 2601.21284v1 Jan 29, 2026

PILD: Physics-Informed Learning via Diffusion

Diffusion models have emerged as powerful generative tools for modeling complex data distributions, yet their purely data-driven nature limits applicability in practical engineering and scientific problems where physical laws need to be followed. This paper proposes Physics-Informed Learning via Diffusion (PILD), a framework that unifies diffusion modeling and first-principles physical constraints by introducing a virtual residual observation sampled from a Laplace distribution to supervise generation during training. To further integrate physical laws, a conditional embedding module is incorporated to inject physical information into the denoising network at multiple layers, ensuring consistent guidance throughout the diffusion process. The proposed PILD framework is concise, modular, and broadly applicable to problems governed by ordinary differential equations, partial differential equations, as well as algebraic equations or inequality constraints. Extensive experiments across engineering and scientific tasks including estimating vehicle trajectories, tire forces, Darcy flow and plasma dynamics, demonstrate that our PILD substantially improves accuracy, stability, and generalization over existing physics-informed and diffusion-based baselines.

Sikai Chen J. Jiao Christian Claudel Tianyi Zeng Tianyi Wang +7
1 Citations