Paper List
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Autonomous Agents Coordinating Distributed Discovery Through Emergent Artifact Exchange
This paper addresses the fundamental limitation of current AI-assisted scientific research by enabling truly autonomous, decentralized investigation w...
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D-MEM: Dopamine-Gated Agentic Memory via Reward Prediction Error Routing
This paper addresses the fundamental scalability bottleneck in LLM agentic memory systems: the O(N²) computational complexity and unbounded API token ...
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Countershading coloration in blue shark skin emerges from hierarchically organized and spatially tuned photonic architectures inside skin denticles
This paper solves the core problem of how blue sharks achieve their striking dorsoventral countershading camouflage, revealing that coloration origina...
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Human-like Object Grouping in Self-supervised Vision Transformers
This paper addresses the core challenge of quantifying how well self-supervised vision models capture human-like object grouping in natural scenes, br...
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Hierarchical pp-Adic Framework for Gene Regulatory Networks: Theory and Stability Analysis
This paper addresses the core challenge of mathematically capturing the inherent hierarchical organization and multi-scale stability of gene regulator...
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Towards unified brain-to-text decoding across speech production and perception
This paper addresses the core challenge of developing a unified brain-to-text decoding framework that works across both speech production and percepti...
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Dual-Laws Model for a theory of artificial consciousness
This paper addresses the core challenge of developing a comprehensive, testable theory of consciousness that bridges biological and artificial systems...
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Pulse desynchronization of neural populations by targeting the centroid of the limit cycle in phase space
This work addresses the core challenge of determining optimal pulse timing and intensity for desynchronizing pathological neural oscillations when the...
How to make the most of your masked language model for protein engineering
BigHat Biosciences
30秒速读
IN SHORT: This paper addresses the critical bottleneck of efficiently sampling high-quality, diverse protein sequences from Masked Language Models (MLMs) for practical antibody engineering, where traditional mutation-centric methods are computationally expensive and often produce dysfunctional variants.
核心创新
- Methodology Proposes a novel sequence-centric stochastic beam search (SBS) method that reframes generation as a search problem, leveraging MLMs' efficiency in evaluating the pseudo-log-likelihood (PLL) of all 1-edit neighbors of a sequence, achieving a 20EL× speedup over mutation-centric methods.
- Methodology Introduces a flexible, gradient-free multi-objective optimization (MOO) framework compatible with the SBS sampler, enabling guidance by arbitrary black-box scoring functions (e.g., binding affinity, humanness, stability) without requiring differentiability or partially-masked sequence inputs.
- Biology Provides the first extensive head-to-head in vitro evaluation of MLM sampling algorithms and models in real antibody therapeutic campaigns, revealing that the choice of sampling algorithm is at least as impactful as the choice of model itself.
主要结论
- The proposed stochastic beam search sampler significantly outperformed traditional Gibbs sampling in vitro, with AbLang2+SBS achieving higher success rates (e.g., perfect 100% success rate when combined with Smooth Tchebycheff Scalarization guidance).
- Model choice matters: ESM2-650M (trained on generic proteins) and AbLang2 (antibody-specific) performed best in silico and in vitro, while the sampling algorithm choice (SBS vs. Gibbs) had an equal or greater impact on outcome quality.
- Supervision is highly effective: Using a trained classifier for post-MLM ranking improved the success rate of AbLang2 outputs considerably, and MOO guidance (NDS/STS) during generation further enhanced performance and eliminated generation of very weak binders.
摘要: A plethora of protein language models have been released in recent years. Yet comparatively little work has addressed how to best sample from them to optimize desired biological properties. We fill this gap by proposing a flexible, effective sampling method for masked language models (MLMs), and by systematically evaluating models and methods both in silico and in vitro on actual antibody therapeutics campaigns. Firstly, we propose sampling with stochastic beam search, exploiting the fact that MLMs are remarkably efficient at evaluating the pseudo-perplexity of the entire 1-edit neighborhood of a sequence. Reframing generation in terms of entire-sequence evaluation enables flexible guidance with multiple optimization objectives. Secondly, we report results from our extensive in vitro head-to-head evaluation for the antibody engineering setting. This reveals that choice of sampling method is at least as impactful as the model used, motivating future research into this under-explored area.