AINov 5, 2025
SnapStream: Efficient Long Sequence Decoding on Dataflow AcceleratorsJonathan Li, Nasim Farahini, Evgenii Iuliugin et al.
The proliferation of 100B+ parameter Large Language Models (LLMs) with 100k+ context length support have resulted in increasing demands for on-chip memory to support large KV caches. Techniques such as StreamingLLM and SnapKV demonstrate how to control KV cache size while maintaining model accuracy. Yet, these techniques are not commonly used within industrial deployments using frameworks like vLLM or SGLang. The reason is twofold: on one hand, the static graphs and continuous batching methodology employed by these frameworks make it difficult to admit modifications to the standard multi-head attention algorithm, while on the other hand, the accuracy implications of such techniques on modern instruction-following and reasoning models are not well understood, obfuscating the need for implementing these techniques. In this paper, we explore these accuracy implications on Llama-3.1-8B-Instruct and DeepSeek-R1, and develop SnapStream, a KV cache compression method that can be deployed at scale. We demonstrate the efficacy of SnapStream in a 16-way tensor-parallel deployment of DeepSeek-671B on SambaNova SN40L accelerators running at 128k context length and up to 1832 tokens per second in a real production setting. SnapStream enables $4\times$ improved on-chip memory usage and introduces minimal accuracy degradation on LongBench-v2, AIME24 and LiveCodeBench. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first implementation of sparse KV attention techniques deployed in a production inference system with static graphs and continuous batching.
87.8MTRL-SCIMay 4
From Knowledge to Action: Outcomes of the 2025 Large Language Model (LLM) Hackathon for Applications in Materials Science and ChemistryAritra Roy, Kevin Shen, Andrew MacBride et al.
Large language models (LLMs) are rapidly changing how researchers in materials science and chemistry discover, organize, and act on scientific knowledge. This paper analyzes a broad set of community-developed LLM applications in an effort to identify emerging patterns in how these systems can be used across the scientific research lifecycle. We organize the projects into two complementary categories: Knowledge Infrastructure, systems that structure, retrieve, synthesize, and validate scientific information; and Action Systems, systems that execute, coordinate, or automate scientific work across computational and experimental environments. The submissions reveal a shift from single-purpose LLM tools toward integrated, multi-agent workflows that combine retrieval, reasoning, tool use, and domain-specific validation. Prominent themes include retrieval-augmented generation as grounding infrastructure, persistent structured knowledge representations, multimodal and multilingual scientific inputs, and early progress toward laboratory-integrated closed-loop systems. Together, these results suggest that LLMs are evolving from general-purpose assistants into composable infrastructure for scientific reasoning and action. This work provides a community snapshot of that transition and a practical taxonomy for understanding emerging LLM-enabled workflows in materials science and chemistry.
IVDec 12, 2024
Computer-Aided Osteoporosis Diagnosis Using Transfer Learning with Enhanced Features from Stacked Deep Learning ModulesAyesha Siddiqua, Rakibul Hasan, Anichur Rahman et al.
Knee osteoporosis weakens the bone tissue in the knee joint, increasing fracture risk. Early detection through X-ray images enables timely intervention and improved patient outcomes. While some researchers have focused on diagnosing knee osteoporosis through manual radiology evaluation and traditional machine learning using hand-crafted features, these methods often struggle with performance and efficiency due to reliance on manual feature extraction and subjective interpretation. In this study, we propose a computer-aided diagnosis (CAD) system for knee osteoporosis, combining transfer learning with stacked feature enhancement deep learning blocks. Initially, knee X-ray images are preprocessed, and features are extracted using a pre-trained Convolutional Neural Network (CNN). These features are then enhanced through five sequential Conv-RELU-MaxPooling blocks. The Conv2D layers detect low-level features, while the ReLU activations introduce non-linearity, allowing the network to learn complex patterns. MaxPooling layers down-sample the features, retaining the most important spatial information. This sequential processing enables the model to capture complex, high-level features related to bone structure, joint deformation, and osteoporotic markers. The enhanced features are passed through a classification module to differentiate between healthy and osteoporotic knee conditions. Extensive experiments on three individual datasets and a combined dataset demonstrate that our model achieves 97.32%, 98.24%, 97.27%, and 98.00% accuracy for OKX Kaggle Binary, KXO-Mendeley Multi-Class, OKX Kaggle Multi-Class, and the combined dataset, respectively, showing an improvement of around 2% over existing methods.
LGNov 16, 2024
Enhancing PTSD Outcome Prediction with Ensemble Models in Disaster ContextsAyesha Siddiqua, Atib Mohammad Oni, Abu Saleh Musa Miah et al.
Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is a significant mental health challenge that affects individuals exposed to traumatic events. Early detection and effective intervention for PTSD are crucial, as it can lead to long-term psychological distress if untreated. Accurate detection of PTSD is essential for timely and targeted mental health interventions, especially in disaster-affected populations. Existing research has explored machine learning approaches for classifying PTSD, but many face limitations in terms of model performance and generalizability. To address these issues, we implemented a comprehensive preprocessing pipeline. This included data cleaning, missing value treatment using the SimpleImputer, label encoding of categorical variables, data augmentation using SMOTE to balance the dataset, and feature scaling with StandardScaler. The dataset was split into 80\% training and 20\% testing. We developed an ensemble model using a majority voting technique among several classifiers, including Logistic Regression, Support Vector Machines (SVM), Random Forest, XGBoost, LightGBM, and a customized Artificial Neural Network (ANN). The ensemble model achieved an accuracy of 96.76\% with a benchmark dataset, significantly outperforming individual models. The proposed method's advantages include improved robustness through the combination of multiple models, enhanced ability to generalize across diverse data points, and increased accuracy in detecting PTSD. Additionally, the use of SMOTE for data augmentation ensured better handling of imbalanced datasets, leading to more reliable predictions. The proposed approach offers valuable insights for policymakers and healthcare providers by leveraging predictive analytics to address mental health issues in vulnerable populations, particularly those affected by disasters.
CLOct 20, 2025
How News Feels: Understanding Affective Bias in Multilingual Headlines for Human-Centered Media DesignMohd Ruhul Ameen, Akif Islam, Abu Saleh Musa Miah et al.
News media often shape the public mood not only by what they report but by how they frame it. The same event can appear calm in one outlet and alarming in another, reflecting subtle emotional bias in reporting. Negative or emotionally charged headlines tend to attract more attention and spread faster, which in turn encourages outlets to frame stories in ways that provoke stronger reactions. This research explores that tendency through large-scale emotion analysis of Bengali news. Using zero-shot inference with Gemma-3 4B, we analyzed 300000 Bengali news headlines and their content to identify the dominant emotion and overall tone of each. The findings reveal a clear dominance of negative emotions, particularly anger, fear, and disappointment, and significant variation in how similar stories are emotionally portrayed across outlets. Based on these insights, we propose design ideas for a human-centered news aggregator that visualizes emotional cues and helps readers recognize hidden affective framing in daily news.
AIOct 12, 2025
Equity-Aware Geospatial AI for Forecasting Demand-Driven Hospital Locations in GermanyPiyush Pant, Marcellius William Suntoro, Ayesha Siddiqua et al.
This paper presents EA-GeoAI, an integrated framework for demand forecasting and equitable hospital planning in Germany through 2030. We combine district-level demographic shifts, aging population density, and infrastructure balances into a unified Equity Index. An interpretable Agentic AI optimizer then allocates beds and identifies new facility sites to minimize unmet need under budget and travel-time constraints. This approach bridges GeoAI, long-term forecasting, and equity measurement to deliver actionable recommendations for policymakers.