Paper List
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The Effective Reproduction Number in the Kermack-McKendrick model with age of infection and reinfection
This paper addresses the challenge of accurately estimating the time-varying effective reproduction number ℛ(t) in epidemics by incorporating two crit...
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Covering Relations in the Poset of Combinatorial Neural Codes
This work addresses the core challenge of navigating the complex poset structure of neural codes to systematically test the conjecture linking convex ...
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Collective adsorption of pheromones at the water-air interface
This paper addresses the core challenge of understanding how amphiphilic pheromones, previously assumed to be transported in the gas phase, can be sta...
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pHapCompass: Probabilistic Assembly and Uncertainty Quantification of Polyploid Haplotype Phase
This paper addresses the core challenge of accurately assembling polyploid haplotypes from sequencing data, where read assignment ambiguity and an exp...
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Setting up for failure: automatic discovery of the neural mechanisms of cognitive errors
This paper addresses the core challenge of automating the discovery of biologically plausible recurrent neural network (RNN) dynamics that can replica...
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Influence of Object Affordance on Action Language Understanding: Evidence from Dynamic Causal Modeling Analysis
This study addresses the core challenge of moving beyond correlational evidence to establish the *causal direction* and *temporal dynamics* of how obj...
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Revealing stimulus-dependent dynamics through statistical complexity
This paper addresses the core challenge of detecting stimulus-specific patterns in neural population dynamics that remain hidden to traditional variab...
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Exactly Solvable Population Model with Square-Root Growth Noise and Cell-Size Regulation
This paper addresses the fundamental gap in understanding how microscopic growth fluctuations, specifically those with size-dependent (square-root) no...
Single Molecule Localization Microscopy Challenge: A Biologically Inspired Benchmark for Long-Sequence Modeling
Technische Universität Wien
30秒速读
IN SHORT: This paper addresses the core challenge of evaluating state-space models on biologically realistic, sparse, and stochastic temporal processes, which are not captured by existing benchmarks focused on dense, regularly sampled data.
核心创新
- Methodology Introduces SMLM-C, the first benchmark dataset specifically designed to evaluate long-sequence models on sparse spatiotemporal localization data with known ground truth, spanning dSTORM and DNA-PAINT modalities.
- Methodology Formulates SMLM reconstruction as a sequence-to-set prediction task, requiring models to disentangle overlapping localization clouds by jointly exploiting spatial and temporal context over up to 10,000 frames.
- Biology Reveals that state-space model performance degrades substantially as temporal discontinuity increases (e.g., detection accuracy drops from ~73% to ~62% when average off-time increases from 100 to 1000 frames), highlighting fundamental challenges in modeling heavy-tailed blinking dynamics.
主要结论
- State-space models show limited absolute performance on SMLM reconstruction, with the highest detection accuracy reaching only 73.4% ± 1.23% (S5-L on μ_off=100 frames) and dropping to 69.6% ± 0.21% (Mamba-2-L on μ_off=1000 frames) under a 20 nm matching threshold.
- Model performance is strongly influenced by temporal sparsity, with all evaluated architectures (S5 and Mamba-2) showing degraded performance as average off-time increases from 100 to 1000 frames, indicating fundamental challenges in handling long-range temporal dependencies.
- Mamba-2 demonstrates better robustness to long temporal gaps, outperforming S5 in the long off-time regime (μ_off=1000 frames), while S5 performs better under shorter dark states (μ_off=100 frames), suggesting architectural differences in handling temporal discontinuity.
摘要: State space models (SSMs) have recently achieved strong performance on long-sequence modeling tasks while offering improved memory and computational efficiency compared to transformer-based architectures. However, their evaluation has been largely limited to synthetic benchmarks and application domains such as language and audio, leaving their behavior on sparse and stochastic temporal processes in biological imaging unexplored. In this work, we introduce the Single Molecule Localization Microscopy Challenge (SMLM-C), a benchmark dataset consisting of ten SMLM simulations—spanning dSTORM and DNA-PAINT modalities with varying hyperparameter—designed to evaluate state-space models on biologically realistic spatiotemporal point-process data with known ground truth. Using a controlled subset of these simulations, we evaluate state space models and find that performance degrades substantially as temporal discontinuity increases, revealing fundamental challenges in modeling heavy-tailed blinking dynamics. These results highlight the need for sequence models better suited to sparse, irregular temporal processes encountered in real-world scientific imaging data.