Paper List
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STAR-GO: Improving Protein Function Prediction by Learning to Hierarchically Integrate Ontology-Informed Semantic Embeddings
This paper addresses the core challenge of generalizing protein function prediction to unseen or newly introduced Gene Ontology (GO) terms by overcomi...
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Incorporating indel channels into average-case analysis of seed-chain-extend
This paper addresses the core pain point of bridging the theoretical gap for the widely used seed-chain-extend heuristic by providing the first rigoro...
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Competition, stability, and functionality in excitatory-inhibitory neural circuits
This paper addresses the core challenge of extending interpretable energy-based frameworks to biologically realistic asymmetric neural networks, where...
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Enhancing Clinical Note Generation with ICD-10, Clinical Ontology Knowledge Graphs, and Chain-of-Thought Prompting Using GPT-4
This paper addresses the core challenge of generating accurate and clinically relevant patient notes from sparse inputs (ICD codes and basic demograph...
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Learning From Limited Data and Feedback for Cell Culture Process Monitoring: A Comparative Study
This paper addresses the core challenge of developing accurate real-time bioprocess monitoring soft sensors under severe data constraints: limited his...
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Cell-cell communication inference and analysis: biological mechanisms, computational approaches, and future opportunities
This review addresses the critical need for a systematic framework to navigate the rapidly expanding landscape of computational methods for inferring ...
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Generating a Contact Matrix for Aged Care Settings in Australia: an agent-based model study
This study addresses the critical gap in understanding heterogeneous contact patterns within aged care facilities, where existing population-level con...
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Emergent Spatiotemporal Dynamics in Large-Scale Brain Networks with Next Generation Neural Mass Models
This work addresses the core challenge of understanding how complex, brain-wide spatiotemporal patterns emerge from the interaction of biophysically d...
Continuous Diffusion Transformers for Designing Synthetic Regulatory Elements
Department of Computer Science, Princeton University
30秒速读
IN SHORT: This paper addresses the challenge of efficiently generating novel, cell-type-specific regulatory DNA sequences with high predicted activity while minimizing memorization of training data.
核心创新
- Methodology Introduces a parameter-efficient Diffusion Transformer (DiT) with a 2D CNN input encoder for DNA sequence generation, achieving 60x faster convergence and 39% lower validation loss (0.023 vs. 0.037) compared to U-Net baselines.
- Methodology Demonstrates a 38x improvement in predicted regulatory activity (Enformer scores) through DDPO finetuning using Enformer as a reward model, validated by cross-task generalization to DRAKES.
- Biology Reduces sequence memorization from 5.3% (U-Net) to 1.7% (DiT) via BLAT alignment, while maintaining realistic motif usage (JS distance ~0.21-0.22), attributed to the transformer's global attention mechanism.
主要结论
- The CNN encoder is critical for DiT performance; its removal increases validation loss by 70% (from 0.023 to 0.038-0.039), regardless of positional embedding choice (RoPE or learned).
- DDPO finetuning boosts median predicted in-situ activity by 38x (e.g., from ~0.05 to ~4.76 in K562), with over 75% of generated sequences exceeding the baseline median across all cell types.
- Cross-validation against DRAKES shows the model captures 70% (3.86/5.6) of the independent predictor's signal, confirming generalization beyond the reward model (Enformer).
摘要: We present a parameter-efficient Diffusion Transformer (DiT) for generating 200 bp cell-type-specific regulatory DNA sequences. By replacing the U-Net backbone of DNA-Diffusion (DaSilva et al., 2025) with a transformer denoiser equipped with a 2D CNN input encoder, our model matches the U-Net’s best validation loss in 13 epochs (60× fewer) and converges 39% lower, while reducing memorization from 5.3% to 1.7% of generated sequences aligning to training data via BLAT. Ablations show the CNN encoder is essential: without it, validation loss increases 70% regardless of positional embedding choice. We further apply DDPO finetuning using Enformer as a reward model, achieving a 38× improvement in predicted regulatory activity. Cross-validation against DRAKES on an independent prediction task confirms that improvements reflect genuine regulatory signal rather than reward model overfitting.