Paper List
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MCP-AI: Protocol-Driven Intelligence Framework for Autonomous Reasoning in Healthcare
This paper addresses the critical gap in healthcare AI systems that lack contextual reasoning, long-term state management, and verifiable workflows by...
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Model Gateway: Model Management Platform for Model-Driven Drug Discovery
This paper addresses the critical bottleneck of fragmented, ad-hoc model management in pharmaceutical research by providing a centralized, scalable ML...
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Tree Thinking in the Genomic Era: Unifying Models Across Cells, Populations, and Species
This paper addresses the fragmentation of tree-based inference methods across biological scales by identifying shared algorithmic principles and stati...
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SSDLabeler: Realistic semi-synthetic data generation for multi-label artifact classification in EEG
This paper addresses the core challenge of training robust multi-label EEG artifact classifiers by overcoming the scarcity and limited diversity of ma...
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Decoding Selective Auditory Attention to Musical Elements in Ecologically Valid Music Listening
This paper addresses the core challenge of objectively quantifying listeners' selective attention to specific musical components (e.g., vocals, drums,...
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Physics-Guided Surrogate Modeling for Machine Learning–Driven DLD Design Optimization
This paper addresses the core bottleneck of translating microfluidic DLD devices from research prototypes to clinical applications by replacing weeks-...
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Mechanistic Interpretability of Antibody Language Models Using SAEs
This work addresses the core challenge of achieving both interpretability and controllable generation in domain-specific protein language models, spec...
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Fluctuating Environments Favor Extreme Dormancy Strategies and Penalize Intermediate Ones
This paper addresses the core challenge of determining how organisms should tune dormancy duration to match the temporal autocorrelation of their envi...
Equivariant Asynchronous Diffusion: An Adaptive Denoising Schedule for Accelerated Molecular Conformation Generation
Shanghai Academy of Artificial Intelligence for Science, SAIS | Artificial Intelligence Innovation and Incubation (AI3) Institute, Fudan University
30秒速读
IN SHORT: This paper addresses the core challenge of generating physically plausible 3D molecular structures by bridging the gap between autoregressive methods (which capture hierarchy but lack global context) and synchronous diffusion models (which offer global conditioning but ignore molecular causality).
核心创新
- Methodology Proposes Equivariant Asynchronous Diffusion (EAD), a novel framework that assigns independent noise levels to different atoms, enabling asynchronous denoising while maintaining SE(3)-equivariance through graph neural networks.
- Methodology Introduces a constrained independent sampling strategy during training (Algorithm 1) that reduces combinatorial complexity from O(T^M) to O((2C)^M), making asynchronous diffusion tractable.
- Methodology Develops a dynamic denoising schedule (Algorithm 2) that uses historical velocity states to adaptively prioritize which atoms to denoise, mimicking hierarchical molecular construction without imposing rigid causal chains.
主要结论
- EAD outperforms the synchronous denoising baseline EDM (using identical architecture and training iterations) across all metrics, achieving an 8% increase in molecular stability and a 3% improvement in validity.
- The framework demonstrates that traditional full-molecule diffusion models are special cases of EAD, and the method can be integrated into various diffusion architectures without retraining.
- Experimental validation shows EAD's ability to generate complete, valid molecules while effectively minimizing cumulative errors that plague autoregressive approaches.
摘要: Recent 3D molecular generation methods primarily use asynchronous auto-regressive or synchronous diffusion models. While auto-regressive models build molecules sequentially, they’re limited by a short horizon and a discrepancy between training and inference. Conversely, synchronous diffusion models denoise all atoms at once, offering a molecule-level horizon but failing to capture the causal relationships inherent in hierarchical molecular structures. We introduce Equivariant Asynchronous Diffusion (EAD) to overcome these limitations. EAD is a novel diffusion model that combines the strengths of both approaches: it uses an asynchronous denoising schedule to better capture molecular hierarchy while maintaining a molecule-level horizon. Since these relationships are often complex, we propose a dynamic scheduling mechanism to adaptively determine the denoising timestep. Experimental results show that EAD achieves state-of-the-art performance in 3D molecular generation.