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Mellow: a small audio language model for reasoning
Multimodal Audio-Language Models (ALMs) can understand and reason over both audio and text. Typically, reasoning performance correlates with model size, with the best results achieved by models exceeding 8 billion parameters. However, no prior work has explored enabling small audio-language models to perform reasoning tasks, despite the potential applications for edge devices. To address this gap, we introduce Mellow, a small Audio-Language Model specifically designed for reasoning. Mellow achieves state-of-the-art performance among existing small audio-language models and surpasses several larger models in reasoning capabilities. For instance, Mellow scores 52.11 on MMAU, comparable to SoTAQwen2 Audio (which scores 52.5) while using 50 times fewer parameters and being trained on 60 times less data (audio hrs).
MAGNET: AMulti-agent Framework for Finding Audio-Visual Needles by Reasoning over Multi-Video Haystacks
Large multimodal models (LMMs) have shown remarkable progress in audiovisual understanding, yet they struggle with real-world scenarios that require complex reasoning across extensive video collections. Existing benchmarks for video question answering remain limited in scope, typically involving one clip per query, which falls short of representing the challenges of large-scale, audiovisual retrieval and reasoning encountered in practical applications. To bridge this gap, we introduce a novel task named AVHaystacksQA, where the goal is to identify salient segments across different videos in response to a query and link them together to generate the most informative answer. To this end, we present AVHaystacks, an audio-visual benchmark comprising 3100 annotated QA pairs designed to assess the capabilities of LMMs in multi-video retrieval and temporal grounding task. Additionally, we propose a model-agnostic, multi-agent framework MAGNET to address this challenge, achieving up to 89% and 65% relative improvements over baseline methods on BLEU@4 and GPT evaluation scores in QA task on our proposed AVHaystacks. To enable robust evaluation of multi-video retrieval and temporal grounding for optimal response generation, we introduce two new metrics, STEM, which captures alignment errors between a ground truth and a predicted step sequence and MTGS, to facilitate balanced and interpretable evaluation of segment-level grounding performance.
GyroSwin: 5DSurrogates for Gyrokinetic Plasma Turbulence Simulations
Nuclear fusion plays a pivotal role in the quest for reliable and sustainable energy production. A major roadblock to viable fusion power is understanding plasma turbulence, which significantly impairs plasma confinement, and is vital for nextgeneration reactor design. Plasma turbulence is governed by the nonlinear gyrokinetic equation, which evolves a 5D distribution function over time. Due to its high computational cost, reduced-order models are often employed in practice to approximate turbulent transport of energy. However, they omit nonlinear effects unique to the full 5D dynamics. To tackle this, we introduce GyroSwin, the first scalable 5D neural surrogate that can model 5D nonlinear gyrokinetic simulations, thereby capturing the physical phenomena neglected by reduced models, while providing accurate estimates of turbulent heat transport. GyroSwin (i) extends hierarchical Vision Transformers to 5D, (ii) introduces cross-attention and integration modules for latent 3D 5D interactions between electrostatic potential fields and the distribution function, and (iii) performs channelwise mode separation inspired by nonlinear physics. We demonstrate that GyroSwin outperforms widely used reduced numerics on heat flux prediction, captures the turbulent energy cascade, and reduces the cost of fully resolved nonlinear gyrokinetics by three orders of magnitude while remaining physically verifiable. GyroSwin shows promising scaling laws, tested up to one billion parameters, paving the way for scalable neural surrogates for gyrokinetic simulations of plasma turbulence.
Cadbury chocolate-owner Mondelez defends staying in Russia
The boss of Cadbury chocolate-maker Mondelez has defended its decision to continue doing business in Russia but admitted he is not pleased the firm's taxes are funding the war with Ukraine. Chief executive Dirk Van de Put said it was the right decision to stay after Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022, saying pulling out would risk thousands of jobs and leave Mondelez vulnerable to the Kremlin taking control of its local operations. Many Western companies such as McDonald's exited Russia after it launched a full-scale assault on its neighbour. Others remained but Mondelez said it had discontinued new investment in its Russian business and suspended spending on advertising. In an in-depth discussion as part of the BBC's Big Boss Interview series, Van de Put said: I think over time you try to be neutral in the whole conflict.
Breaking the Gradient Barrier: Unveiling Large Language Models for Strategic Classification
Strategic classification (SC) explores how individuals or entities modify their features strategically to achieve favorable classification outcomes. However, existing SC methods, which are largely based on linear models or shallow neural networks, face significant limitations in terms of scalability and capacity when applied to realworld datasets with significantly increasing scale, especially in financial services and the internet sector. In this paper, we investigate how to leverage large language models to design a more scalable and efficient SC framework, especially in the case of growing individuals engaged with decision-making processes. Specifically, we introduce GLIM, a gradient-free SC method grounded in in-context learning. During the feed-forward process of self-attention, GLIM implicitly simulates the typical bi-level optimization process of SC, including both the feature manipulation and decision rule optimization. Without fine-tuning the LLMs, our proposed GLIM enjoys the advantage of cost-effective adaptation in dynamic strategic environments. Theoretically, we prove GLIM can support pre-trained LLMs to adapt to a broad range of strategic manipulations. We validate our approach through experiments with a collection of pre-trained LLMs on real-world and synthetic datasets in financial and internet domains, demonstrating that our GLIM exhibits both robustness and efficiency, and offering an effective solution for large-scale SC tasks.
NopeRoomGS: Indoor 3DGaussian Splatting Optimization without Camera Pose Input
Recent advances in 3DGaussian Splatting (3DGS) have enabled real-time, highfidelity view synthesis, but remain critically dependent on camera poses estimated by Structure-from-Motion (SfM), which is notoriously unreliable in textureless indoor environments. To eliminate this dependency, recent pose-free variants have been proposed, yet they often fail under abrupt camera motion due to unstable initialization and purely photometric objectives. In this work, we introduce NopeRoomGS, an optimization framework with no need for camera pose inputs, which effectively addresses the textureless regions and abrupt camera motion in indoor room environments through a local-to-global optimization paradigm for 3DGS reconstruction. In the local stage, we propose a lightweight local neural geometric representation to bootstrap a set of reliable local 3DGaussians for separated short video clips, regularized by multi-frame tracking constraints and foundation model depth priors. This enables reliable initialization even in textureless regions or under abrupt camera motions. In the global stage, we fuse local 3DGaussians into a unified 3DGS representation through an alternating optimization strategy that jointly refines camera poses and Gaussian parameters, effectively mitigating gradient interference between them. Furthermore, we decompose camera pose optimization based on a piecewise planarity assumption, further enhancing robustness under abrupt camera motion.
OpenGU: AComprehensive Benchmark for Graph Unlearning
Graph Machine Learning is essential for understanding and analyzing relational data. However, privacy-sensitive applications demand the ability to efficiently remove sensitive information from trained graph neural networks (GNNs), avoiding the unnecessary time and space overhead caused by retraining models from scratch. To address this issue, Graph Unlearning (GU) has emerged as a critical solution to support dynamic graph updates while ensuring privacy compliance. Unlike machine unlearning in computer vision or other fields, GU faces unique difficulties due to the non-Euclidean nature of graph data and the recursive message-passing mechanism of GNNs. Additionally, the diversity of downstream tasks and the complexity of unlearning requests further amplify these challenges. Despite the proliferation of diverse GU strategies, the absence of a benchmark providing fair comparisons for GU, and the limited flexibility in combining downstream tasks and unlearning requests, have yielded inconsistencies in evaluations, hindering the development of this domain. To fill this gap, we present OpenGU, the first GU benchmark, where 16 SOTAGU algorithms and 37 multi-domain datasets are integrated, enabling various downstream tasks with 13 GNN backbones when responding to flexible unlearning requests. Through extensive experimentation, we have drawn 10crucial conclusions about existing GU methods, while also gaining valuable insights into their limitations, shedding light on potential avenues for future research.
LILO: Learning to Reason at the Frontier of Learnability
Reinforcement learning is a widely adopted component of large language model post-training, especially for reasoning-style tasks such as maths questions. However, as we show, most existing methods will provably fail to learn from questions that are too hard, where the model always fails, or too easy, where the model always succeeds. Much human effort is therefore spent producing datasets of questions of a suitable difficulty for state-of-the-art models. Given this, we consider how to algorithmically identify questions that allow for maximally efficient training. We introduce a method, LILO (Learnability Improves LLMs Optimally), that prioritises training on questions with high variance of success, known as learnability, and we provide theory which shows that LILO enables the expected improvement of the model to be large. We run a wide range of experiments over multiple base models, algorithms and reasoning datasets to demonstrate that LILO consistently reaches a higher final test accuracy, and can do so in 3 fewer training steps. We explore how questions with high learnability can be efficiently identified, and discuss how learnability can be scaled to produce LLM agents that autonomously and open-endedly expand the frontier of human knowledge.
Equilibrium Policy Generalization: AReinforcement Learning Framework for Cross-Graph Zero-Shot Generalization in Pursuit-Evasion Games
Equilibrium learning in adversarial games is an important topic widely examined in the fields of game theory and reinforcement learning (RL). Pursuit-evasion game (PEG), as an important class of real-world games from the fields of robotics and security, requires exponential time to be accurately solved. When the underlying graph structure varies, even the state-of-the-art RL methods require recomputation or at least fine-tuning, which can be time-consuming and impair real-time applicability. This paper proposes an Equilibrium Policy Generalization (EPG) framework to effectively learn a generalized policy with robust cross-graph zeroshot performance. In the context of PEGs, our framework is generally applicable to both pursuer and evader sides in both no-exit and multi-exit scenarios.