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Smith42

322 karmajoined há 7 anos

Submissions

Stream the Universe from Your Laptop

asciinema.org
1 points·by Smith42·há 8 dias·0 comments

80TB+ of astronomy for the HDD-poor: crossmatch the Universe from your laptop

huggingface.co
2 points·by Smith42·há 15 dias·1 comments

Opencode

opencode.ai
4 points·by Smith42·ano passado·0 comments

US halts student visa appointments and plans expanded social media vetting

bbc.co.uk
8 points·by Smith42·ano passado·3 comments

Mistral Small 3 Announcement

twitter.com
15 points·by Smith42·ano passado·0 comments

The Multimodal Universe: Enabling Large-Scale ML with 100TB of Astro Data

arxiv.org
2 points·by Smith42·há 2 anos·0 comments

Will we run out of data? Limits of LLM scaling based on human-generated data

arxiv.org
1 points·by Smith42·há 2 anos·1 comments

Astronomy Generates Mountains of Data. That's Perfect for AI – Universe Today

universetoday.com
2 points·by Smith42·há 2 anos·2 comments

AstroPT: Scaling Large Observation Models for Astronomy

arxiv.org
2 points·by Smith42·há 2 anos·1 comments

EarthPT: A time series transformer foundation model

github.com
2 points·by Smith42·há 2 anos·1 comments

The Executive Order on AI, with notes on computing budget

old.reddit.com
1 points·by Smith42·há 3 anos·0 comments

The 'it' in AI models is the dataset

nonint.com
3 points·by Smith42·há 3 anos·1 comments

EarthPT: A foundation model for EO (i.e. scaling GPT with more than text)

arxiv.org
1 points·by Smith42·há 3 anos·0 comments

EarthPT: A foundation model for Earth Observation

arxiv.org
1 points·by Smith42·há 3 anos·0 comments

A History of Neural Networks

royalsocietypublishing.org
24 points·by Smith42·há 3 anos·6 comments

Startup Wants to Give Farmers a Closer Look at Crops–From Space

wired.com
1 points·by Smith42·há 3 anos·0 comments

PhD Simulator

research.wmz.ninja
828 points·by Smith42·há 3 anos·273 comments

Astronomia ex machina: a history, primer and outlook on neural nets in astronomy

doi.org
2 points·by Smith42·há 3 anos·1 comments

comments

Smith42
·há 15 dias·discuss
The Multimodal Universe (MMU) pools together 80TB+ of data from over 30 astronomical surveys into one place. Crossmatching (linking observations of the same object across surveys) is its killer feature, but until now it required downloading hefty chunks of data to local disk. We got tired of needing a cluster just to run a crossmatch, so we gathered in the UniverseTBD and Hugging Science Discord servers to fix that. We've converted the MMU to the parquet-based HATS format so that you can use the LSDB and Hugging Face ecosystems to crossmatch from a laptop. The datasets are here https://huggingface.co/collections/UniverseTBD/multimodal-un.... No bulk downloads are necessary, and 4GB of RAM is enough even at Gaia scale.
Smith42
·mês passado·discuss
It's always been this way ever since the first industrial revolution.
Smith42
·há 4 meses·discuss
So write it! Shouldn't be much extra to add to the AGPL licence?
Smith42
·há 2 anos·discuss
We investigate the potential constraints on LLM scaling posed by the availability of public human-generated text data. We forecast the growing demand for training data based on current trends and estimate the total stock of public human text data. Our findings indicate that if current LLM development trends continue, models will be trained on datasets roughly equal in size to the available stock of public human text data between 2026 and 2032, or slightly earlier if models are overtrained. We explore how progress in language modeling can continue when human-generated text datasets cannot be scaled any further. We argue that synthetic data generation, transfer learning from data-rich domains, and data efficiency improvements might support further progress.
Smith42
·há 2 anos·discuss
That really isn't the case, and I am not sure how you could arrive at that unsubstantiated conclusion.
Smith42
·há 2 anos·discuss
Abstract:

This work presents AstroPT, an autoregressive pretrained transformer developed with astronomical use-cases in mind. The AstroPT models presented here have been pretrained on 8.6 million 512 × 512 pixel grz-band galaxy postage stamp observations from the DESI Legacy Survey DR8. We train a selection of foundation models of increasing size from 1 million to 2.1 billion parameters, and find that AstroPT follows a similar saturating log-log scaling law to textual models. We also find that the models' performances on downstream tasks as measured by linear probing improves with model size up to the model parameter saturation point. We believe that collaborative community development paves the best route towards realising an open source `Large Observation Model' -- a model trained on data taken from the observational sciences at the scale seen in natural language processing. To this end, we release the source code, weights, and dataset for AstroPT under the MIT license, and invite potential collaborators to join us in collectively building and researching these models.
Smith42
·há 2 anos·discuss
$15k!
Smith42
·há 2 anos·discuss
"Large Observation Model" has a nice ring to it
Smith42
·há 2 anos·discuss
If you are interested in this also check out EarthPT, which is also a time series decoding transformer (and has the code and weights released under the MIT licence): https://arxiv.org/abs/2309.07207
Smith42
·há 2 anos·discuss
What's new with SXMO? Haven't been keeping up since 2021. Is there a stable phone to run this on now?
Smith42
·há 2 anos·discuss
Wanted to share the code release of EarthPT, a model that predicts future satellite observations in a zero shot setting! I'm the first author so please shoot any questions you have at me.

EarthPT is a 700 million parameter decoding transformer foundation model trained in an autoregressive self-supervised manner and developed specifically with EO use-cases in mind. EarthPT can accurately predict future satellite observations across the 400-2300 nm range well into the future (we found six months!).

The embeddings learnt by EarthPT hold semantically meaningful information and could be exploited for downstream tasks such as highly granular, dynamic land use classification.

The coolest takeaway for me is that EO data provides us with -- in theory -- quadrillions of training tokens. Therefore, if we assume that EarthPT follows neural scaling laws akin to those derived for Large Language Models (LLMs), there is currently no data-imposed limit to scaling EarthPT and other similar ‘Large Observation Models.’(!)

Code: https://github.com/aspiaspace/EarthPT

Paper: https://arxiv.org/abs/2309.07207
Smith42
·há 3 anos·discuss
Wishful thinkin buddy
Smith42
·há 3 anos·discuss
Anyone have a paste of the article? There is a paywall
Smith42
·há 3 anos·discuss
Check out EarthPT! https://arxiv.org/abs/2309.07207
Smith42
·há 3 anos·discuss
This isn't the first foundation model for time series, see EarthPT from last month: https://arxiv.org/abs/2309.07207
Smith42
·há 3 anos·discuss
Yep we are running out of text data, see https://doi.org/10.1098/rsos.221454
Smith42
·há 3 anos·discuss
Please give it a read! It begins from first principles (Rosenblatts perceptron!) and builds from there so you might find it more general than you expect.
Smith42
·há 3 anos·discuss
I wanted it to reach a more general audience, as the review is very general in itself (but maybe the original title does not reflect this as I thought)! There are alternating sections concentrating on the astronomy and the deep learning sides.
Smith42
·há 3 anos·discuss
Author here! We explore the past, present, and future of deep learning in astronomy. We predict that GPT-like foundation models will make a huge impact on the field, and that astronomy is ideally placed to supercharge open source large language modelling (Section 9).

My favourite excerpt, where we propose foundation model-powered scientists:

Autonomous agents are no longer science fiction; task-driven autonomous agents powered by the simulacra of a foundation model are capable of solving very general tasks when given only a high-level prompt by a human operator [305,306]. One could therefore imagine a semi-automated research pipeline, where an autonomous agent with astronomical knowledge is given access to a set of astronomical data through an API. The agent would be prompted with a high-level research goal (such as ‘find something interesting and surprising within this dataset’), and would then take steps to achieve this task. These steps could include querying research papers for a literature review, searching a large multi-modal astronomical dataset to find data that supports a theory, evoking and discussing its findings with additional simulacra, or spinning up simulations to test a hypothesis [307]. While the agent operates in the background, the human researcher would be able to provide high-level interpretation of the results, and would be a steady hand providing guidance and refinement of a more general research direction. In this way, an astronomical foundation model would provide the tools to make all astronomers the principal investigator of their own powerful ‘AI lab’