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ProtInvTree: Deliberate Protein Inverse Folding with Reward-guided Tree Search
Designing protein sequences that fold into a target 3D structure--known as protein inverse folding--is a fundamental challenge in protein engineering. While recent deep learning methods have achieved impressive performance by recovering native sequences, they often overlook the one-to-many nature of the problem: multiple diverse sequences can fold into the same structure.
The World Is Bigger! A Computationally-Embedded Perspective on the Big World Hypothesis
Alex Lewandowski, Aditya A. Ramesh, Edan Meyer, Dale Schuurmans, Marlos C. Machado
Continual learning is often motivated by the idea, known as the big world hypothesis, that "the world is bigger" than the agent. Recent problem formulations capture this idea by explicitly constraining an agent relative to the environment. These constraints lead to solutions in which the agent continually adapts to best use its limited capacity, rather than converging to a fixed solution. However, explicit constraints can be ad hoc, difficult to incorporate, and may limit the effectiveness of scaling up the agent's capacity. In this paper, we characterize a problem setting in which an agent, regardless of its capacity, is constrained by being embedded in the environment.
BridgePure: Limited Protection Leakage Can Break Black-Box Data Protection
Availability attacks, or unlearnable examples, are defensive techniques that allow data owners to modify their datasets in ways that prevent unauthorized machine learning models from learning effectively while maintaining the data's intended functionality. It has led to the release of popular black-box tools (e.g., APIs) for users to upload personal data and receive protected counterparts. In this work, we show that such black-box protections can be substantially compromised if a small set of unprotected in-distribution data is available. Specifically, we propose a novel threat model of protection leakage, where an adversary can (1) easily acquire (unprotected, protected) pairs by querying the blackbox protections with a small unprotected dataset; and (2) train a diffusion bridge model to build a mapping between unprotected and protected data. This mapping, termed BridgePure, can effectively remove the protection from any previously unseen data within the same distribution. BridgePure demonstrates superior purification performance on classification and style mimicry tasks, exposing critical vulnerabilities in black-box data protection. We suggest that practitioners implement multi-level countermeasures to mitigate such risks.
Primitive count AbsGSAbsGS 1700 K - AbsGS + DC4GS
We present a Directional Consistency (DC)-driven Adaptive Density Control (ADC) for 3DGaussian Splatting (DC4GS). Whereas the conventional ADC bases its primiti the DC ve of splitting the gradients on the magnitudes into ADC, and of positional realize it gradients, through the we angular further incorporate coherence of the gradients.
On the Existence and Complexity of Core-Stable Data Exchanges
The rapid growth of data-driven technologies and the emergence of various datasharing paradigms have underscored the need for efficient and stable data exchange protocols. In any such exchange, agents must carefully balance the benefit of acquiring valuable data against the cost of sharing their own. Ensuring stability in these exchanges is essential to prevent agents--or groups of agents--from departing and conducting local (and potentially more favorable) exchanges among themselves. To address this, we study a model where n agents participate in a data exchange. Each agent has an associated payoff for the data acquired from other agents and a cost incurred during sharing its own data.
Predictive Coding Enhances Meta-RLTo Achieve Interpretable Bayes-Optimal Belief Representation Under Partial Observability
Learning a compact representation of history is critical for planning and generalization in partially observable environments. While meta-reinforcement learning (RL) agents can attain near Bayes-optimal policies, they often fail to learn the compact, interpretable Bayes-optimal belief states. This representational inefficiency potentially limits the agent's adaptability and generalization capacity. Inspired by predictive coding in neuroscience--which suggests that the brain predicts sensory inputs as a neural implementation of Bayesian inference--and by auxiliary predictive objectives in deep RL, we investigate whether integrating self-supervised predictive coding modules into meta-RL can facilitate learning of Bayes-optimal representations. Through state machine simulation, we show that meta-RL with predictive modules consistently generates more interpretable representations that better approximate Bayes-optimal belief states compared to conventional meta-RL across a wide variety of tasks, even when both achieve optimal policies. In challenging tasks requiring active information seeking, only meta-RL with predictive modules successfully learns optimal representations and policies, whereas conventional meta-RL struggles with inadequate representation learning. Finally, we demonstrate that better representation learning leads to improved generalization. Our results strongly suggest the role of predictive learning as a guiding principle for effective representation learning in agents navigating partial observability.
Enhancing LLMWatermark Resilience Against Both Scrubbing and Spoofing Attacks
Watermarking is widely regarded as a promising defense against the misuse of large language models (LLMs); however, existing methods are fundamentally constrained by their vulnerability to scrubbing and spoofing attacks. This vulnerability stems from an inherent trade-off governed by watermark window size: smaller windows resist scrubbing better but are easier to reverse-engineer, enabling lowcost statistics-based spoofing attacks. This work expands the trade-off boundary by introducing a novel mechanism, equivalent texture keys, where multiple tokens within a watermark window can independently support the detection. Based on the redundancy, we propose a watermark scheme with Sub-vocabulary decomposed Equivalent tExture Key (SEEK). SEEK achieves a Pareto improvement, enhancing robustness to scrubbing attacks without sacrificing resistance to spoofing.
ADifference-of-Convex Functions Approach to Energy-Based Iterative Reasoning
While energy-based models have recently proven to be a powerful framework for learning to reason with neural networks, their practical application is still limited by computational cost. That is, existing methods for energy-based iterative reasoning suffer from computational bottlenecks by relying on expensive optimization routines during training and especially during inference.
Focus-Then-Reuse: Fast Adaptation in Visual Perturbation Environments
Visual reinforcement learning has shown promise in various real-world applications. However, deploying policies in complex real-world environments with visual perturbations remains a significant challenge. We notice that humans tend to filter information at the object level prior to decision-making, facilitating efficient skill transfer across different contexts. Inspired by this, we introduce Focus-ThenReuse (FTR), a method utilizing a novel object selection mechanism to focus on task-relevant objects, and directly reuse the simulation-trained policy on them.