Paper List
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Nyxus: A Next Generation Image Feature Extraction Library for the Big Data and AI Era
This paper addresses the core pain point of efficiently extracting standardized, comparable features from massive (terabyte to petabyte-scale) biomedi...
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Topological Enhancement of Protein Kinetic Stability
This work addresses the long-standing puzzle of why knotted proteins exist by demonstrating that deep knots provide a functional advantage through enh...
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A Multi-Label Temporal Convolutional Framework for Transcription Factor Binding Characterization
This paper addresses the critical limitation of existing TF binding prediction methods that treat transcription factors as independent entities, faili...
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Social Distancing Equilibria in Games under Conventional SI Dynamics
This paper solves the core problem of proving the existence and uniqueness of Nash equilibria in finite-duration SI epidemic games, showing they are a...
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Binding Free Energies without Alchemy
This paper addresses the core bottleneck of computational expense in Absolute Binding Free Energy calculations by eliminating the need for numerous al...
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SHREC: A Spectral Embedding-Based Approach for Ab-Initio Reconstruction of Helical Molecules
This paper addresses the core bottleneck in cryo-EM helical reconstruction: eliminating the dependency on accurate initial symmetry parameter estimati...
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Budget-Sensitive Discovery Scoring: A Formally Verified Framework for Evaluating AI-Guided Scientific Selection
This paper addresses the critical gap in evaluating AI-guided scientific selection strategies under realistic budget constraints, where existing metri...
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Probabilistic Joint and Individual Variation Explained (ProJIVE) for Data Integration
This paper addresses the core challenge of accurately decomposing shared (joint) and dataset-specific (individual) sources of variation in multi-modal...
Linear Readout of Neural Manifolds with Continuous Variables
Department of Physics and Kempner Institute, Harvard University | Center for Computational Neuroscience, Flatiron Institute
30秒速读
IN SHORT: This paper addresses the core challenge of quantifying how the geometric structure of high-dimensional neural population activity (neural manifolds) determines the efficiency of linearly decoding continuous variables, amidst complex neural variability.
核心创新
- Theory Develops the first statistical-mechanical theory of 'regression capacity,' extending manifold capacity theory from discrete classification to continuous regression problems.
- Methodology Derives closed-form analytical formulas for regression capacity in synthetic models (e.g., spherical manifolds) and provides an instance-based estimator applicable to finite, real-world datasets.
- Biology Applies the framework to primate visual cortex data, quantitatively demonstrating a monotonic increase in linear decodability for object pose parameters (size, position) along the ventral stream (pixels → V4 → IT).
主要结论
- For synthetic spherical manifold models, regression capacity α decreases with increasing manifold dimensionality D and equivalent radius R_equiv (e.g., capacity drops as D increases for fixed R_equiv).
- In the mean-field model for point-like manifolds, capacity depends solely on the asymptotically equivalent tolerance ε_equiv = ε/(σ√(1-ρ)), where σ scales labels and ρ controls label correlations.
- Application to macaque ventral stream data shows regression capacity for object size and position increases (critical dimension N_crit decreases) from early (pixels) to late (IT) processing stages, indicating more efficient geometric organization for linear readout.
摘要: Brains and artificial neural networks compute with continuous variables such as object position or stimulus orientation. However, the complex variability in neural responses makes it difficult to link internal representational structure to task performance. We develop a statistical-mechanical theory of regression capacity that relates linear decoding efficiency of continuous variables to geometric properties of neural manifolds. Our theory handles complex neural variability and applies to real data, revealing increasing capacity for decoding object position and size along the monkey visual stream.