English

PrunePath: Towards Highly Structured Sparse Language Models

Computation and Language 2026-05-28 v1 Artificial Intelligence

Abstract

Feed-forward networks (FFNs) dominate the parameter count and computation of modern language models, yet existing pruning methods often struggle to convert sparsity into hardware-friendly inference efficiency gains. We introduce \textbf{PrunePath}, a budget-adaptive structured sparsification framework for FFN layers. Built on MoEfication, PrunePath replaces independent expert-wise thresholding with a softmax-normalized routing distribution and activates important experts under a cumulative-mass threshold. This formulation imposes a token-level probability budget, enabling adaptive expert counts and a direct inference-time sparsity knob from a single checkpoint. Across NLU, NLG, and instruction-tuning evaluations, PrunePath achieves a favorable sparsity--performance trade-off compared with existing static pruning and MoEfication-based methods. We further implement Triton kernels for KV-cache decoding to translate the resulting structured sparsity into practical memory savings and measurable decoding-speed improvements. These results demonstrate the superior performance of PrunePath for building highly sparse, deployment-friendly large language models.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2605.28283,
  title  = {PrunePath: Towards Highly Structured Sparse Language Models},
  author = {Zhexuan Gu and Zixun Fu and Yancheng Yuan},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2605.28283},
  year   = {2026}
}