AIMar 17, 2025
The Amazon Nova Family of Models: Technical Report and Model CardAmazon AGI, Aaron Langford, Aayush Shah et al. · amazon-science
We present Amazon Nova, a new generation of state-of-the-art foundation models that deliver frontier intelligence and industry-leading price performance. Amazon Nova Pro is a highly-capable multimodal model with the best combination of accuracy, speed, and cost for a wide range of tasks. Amazon Nova Lite is a low-cost multimodal model that is lightning fast for processing images, video, documents and text. Amazon Nova Micro is a text-only model that delivers our lowest-latency responses at very low cost. Amazon Nova Canvas is an image generation model that creates professional grade images with rich customization controls. Amazon Nova Reel is a video generation model offering high-quality outputs, customization, and motion control. Our models were built responsibly and with a commitment to customer trust, security, and reliability. We report benchmarking results for core capabilities, agentic performance, long context, functional adaptation, runtime performance, and human evaluation.
30.1LGMar 28
A Tight Expressivity Hierarchy for GNN-Based Entity Resolution in Master Data ManagementAshwin Ganesan
Entity resolution -- identifying database records that refer to the same real-world entity -- is naturally modelled on bipartite graphs connecting entity nodes to their attribute values. Applying a message-passing neural network (MPNN) with all available extensions (reverse message passing, port numbering, ego IDs) incurs unnecessary overhead, since different entity resolution tasks have fundamentally different complexity. For a given matching criterion, what is the cheapest MPNN architecture that provably works? We answer this with a four-theorem separation theory on typed entity-attribute graphs. We introduce co-reference predicates $\mathrm{Dup}_r$ (two same-type entities share at least $r$ attribute values) and the $\ell$-cycle predicate $\mathrm{Cyc}_\ell$ for settings with entity-entity edges. For each predicate we prove tight bounds -- constructing graph pairs provably indistinguishable by every MPNN lacking the required adaptation, and exhibiting explicit minimal-depth MPNNs that compute the predicate on all inputs. The central finding is a sharp complexity gap between detecting any shared attribute and detecting multiple shared attributes. The former is purely local, requiring only reverse message passing in two layers. The latter demands cross-attribute identity correlation -- verifying that the same entity appears at several attributes of the target -- a fundamentally non-local requirement needing ego IDs and four layers, even on acyclic bipartite graphs. A similar necessity holds for cycle detection. Together, these results yield a minimal-architecture principle: practitioners can select the cheapest sufficient adaptation set, with a guarantee that no simpler architecture works. Computational validation confirms every prediction.