Paper List
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Macroscopic Dominance from Microscopic Extremes: Symmetry Breaking in Spatial Competition
This paper addresses the fundamental question of how microscopic stochastic advantages in spatial exploration translate into macroscopic resource domi...
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Linear Readout of Neural Manifolds with Continuous Variables
This paper addresses the core challenge of quantifying how the geometric structure of high-dimensional neural population activity (neural manifolds) d...
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Theory of Cell Body Lensing and Phototaxis Sign Reversal in “Eyeless” Mutants of Chlamydomonas
This paper solves the core puzzle of how eyeless mutants of Chlamydomonas exhibit reversed phototaxis by quantitatively modeling the competition betwe...
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Cross-Species Transfer Learning for Electrophysiology-to-Transcriptomics Mapping in Cortical GABAergic Interneurons
This paper addresses the challenge of predicting transcriptomic identity from electrophysiological recordings in human cortical interneurons, where li...
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Uncovering statistical structure in large-scale neural activity with Restricted Boltzmann Machines
This paper addresses the core challenge of modeling large-scale neural population activity (1500-2000 neurons) with interpretable higher-order interac...
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Realizing Common Random Numbers: Event-Keyed Hashing for Causally Valid Stochastic Models
This paper addresses the critical problem that standard stateful PRNG implementations in agent-based models violate causal validity by making random d...
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A Standardized Framework for Evaluating Gene Expression Generative Models
This paper addresses the critical lack of standardized evaluation protocols for single-cell gene expression generative models, where inconsistent metr...
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Single Molecule Localization Microscopy Challenge: A Biologically Inspired Benchmark for Long-Sequence Modeling
This paper addresses the core challenge of evaluating state-space models on biologically realistic, sparse, and stochastic temporal processes, which a...
Discovery of a Hematopoietic Manifold in scGPT Yields a Method for Extracting Performant Algorithms from Biological Foundation Model Internals
Department of Computer Science, University of Tübingen, Tübingen, Germany
30秒速读
IN SHORT: This work addresses the core challenge of extracting reusable, interpretable, and high-performance biological algorithms from the opaque internal representations of single-cell foundation models.
核心创新
- Methodology Introduces a three-stage pipeline (direct operator export, lightweight adaptor, task readout) to extract standalone algorithms from frozen foundation model weights without target-dataset retraining.
- Biology Discovers a compact (~8-10D) hematopoietic manifold within scGPT's attention geometry, validated with high trustworthiness (0.993) and significant developmental branch structure (e.g., erythroid trajectory ρ=0.768, p=0.0017).
- Methodology Demonstrates multi-stage model compression, reducing the operator from 17.5 MB to 0.73 MB without statistically significant performance loss, and provides mechanistic interpretability via a four-factor core explaining 66.2% of ablation impact.
主要结论
- The extracted algorithm significantly outperforms established baselines (scVI, Palantir, DPT, etc.) on pseudotime-depth ordering (orientation-independent |ρ|=0.439 vs. 0.331 for next-best; Wilcoxon BH-q≤2.7×10−7 on all paired comparisons).
- It achieves superior performance on key subtype classification (CD4/CD8 AUROC 0.867, mono/macro AUROC 0.951) while being 34.5x faster and requiring ~1000x fewer trainable parameters than probing frozen embeddings with a 3-layer MLP.
- Mechanistic analysis reveals the algorithm's core is driven by four interpretable factors (T/lymphoid, B/plasma, granulocytic, monocyte/macrophage) explaining 66.2% of ablation impact, linking model internals to explicit biological programs.
摘要: We report the discovery and extraction of a compact hematopoietic algorithm from the single-cell foundation model scGPT—to our knowledge, the first biologically useful, competitive algorithm extracted from a foundation model via mechanistic interpretability. We show that scGPT internally encodes a compact (∼8–10-dimensional) hematopoietic manifold with significant developmental branch structure, validated on a strict non-overlap Tabula Sapiens external panel (616 anchors, 564,253 cells) and confirmed via frozen-head zero-shot transfer to an independent multi-donor immune panel (trustworthiness 0.993, blocked-permutation p=0.0005). To isolate this geometry, we introduce a general three-stage extraction method—direct operator export from frozen attention weights, lightweight learned adaptor, and task-specific readout—that produces a standalone algorithm without target-dataset retraining. In 88-split donor-holdout benchmarks against scVI, Palantir, DPT, CellTypist, PCA, and raw-expression baselines, the extracted algorithm achieves the strongest pseudotime-depth ordering (orientation-independent |ρ|=0.439 versus 0.331 for the next-best alternative; Wilcoxon BH-q≤2.7×10−7 on all paired comparisons) and leads on key subtype endpoints (CD4/CD8 AUROC 0.867, mono/macro AUROC 0.951). Compared to standard probing of frozen scGPT embeddings with a 3-layer MLP (172k parameters), the extracted head is BH-significantly better on 6/8 classification endpoints while completing a full 12-split evaluation campaign 34.5× faster (∼3.4 versus ∼118 minutes) with ∼1,000× fewer trainable parameters. The exported operator compresses from three pooled attention heads to a single head (L2H5; 17.5→5.9 MB) without statistically significant loss, and further to a rank-64 surrogate (0.73 MB). Mechanistic interpretability of the compact operator reveals a concentrated four-factor core explaining 66.2% of ablation impact, with factors resolving into explicit T/lymphoid, B/plasma, granulocytic, and monocyte/macrophage gene programs. A supplementary second-manifold validation (intercellular communication geometry) confirms that the extraction method generalizes beyond hematopoiesis.