AIOct 11, 2023
Toward Understanding BERT-Like Pre-Training for DNA Foundation ModelsChaoqi Liang, Lifeng Qiao, Peng Ye et al.
With the success of large-scale pre-training in language tasks, there is an increasing trend of applying it to the domain of life sciences. In particular, pre-training methods based on DNA sequences have received increasing attention because of their potential to capture general information about genes. However, existing pre-training methods for DNA sequences largely rely on direct adoptions of BERT pre-training from NLP, lacking a comprehensive understanding and a specifically tailored approach. To address this research gap, we provide the first empirical study with three insightful observations. Based on the empirical study, we notice that overlapping tokenizer can benefit the fine-tuning of downstream tasks but leads to inadequate pre-training with fast convergence. To unleash the pre-training potential, we introduce a novel approach called RandomMask, which gradually increases the task difficulty of BERT-like pre-training by continuously expanding its mask boundary, forcing the model to learn more knowledge. RandomMask is simple but effective, achieving state-of-the-art performance across 6 downstream tasks. RandomMask achieves a staggering 68.16\% in Matthew's correlation coefficient for Epigenetic Mark Prediction, a groundbreaking increase of 19.85\% over the baseline and a remarkable 3.69\% improvement over the previous state-of-the-art result.
60.9LGMay 6
MOSAIC: Module Discovery via Sparse Additive Identifiable Causal Learning for Scientific Time SeriesShicheng Fan, Nour Elhendawy, Jianle Sun et al.
Causal representation learning (CRL) seeks to recover latent variables with identifiability guarantees, typically up to permutation and component-wise reparameterization under appropriate assumptions. However, identifiability does not imply interpretability: latent semantics are typically assigned post hoc by alignment with known ground-truth factors. This limitation is particularly acute in scientific time series, where underlying mechanisms are unknown and discovering interpretable structure is a primary goal. In contrast, scientific observations (such as residue-pair distances, climate indices, or process sensors) are inherently semantic, as they correspond to named physical quantities. This raises a key question: can the interpretability of observations be transferred to the identifiable latent space? We propose MOSAIC (Module discovery via Sparse Additive Identifiable Causal learning), a sparse temporal VAE that integrates temporal CRL identifiability with support recovery over observed variables. MOSAIC identifies latent variables via regime-conditioned temporal variation, and recovers for each latent a sparse set of associated observations through an additive decoder, yielding module-level interpretability. We show that ANOVA main-effect supports are identifiable under general smooth mixing functions, and provide finite-sample recovery guarantees for a tractable sparse-additive variant. Empirically, MOSAIC recovers domain-consistent variable groups across RNA molecular dynamics, solar wind, ENSO climate, the Tennessee Eastman process, and a synthetic tokamak benchmark, enabling interpretable discovery of latent mechanisms in scientific time series.
LGMar 10, 2025
When Selection Meets Intervention: Additional Complexities in Causal DiscoveryHaoyue Dai, Ignavier Ng, Jianle Sun et al. · stanford
We address the common yet often-overlooked selection bias in interventional studies, where subjects are selectively enrolled into experiments. For instance, participants in a drug trial are usually patients of the relevant disease; A/B tests on mobile applications target existing users only, and gene perturbation studies typically focus on specific cell types, such as cancer cells. Ignoring this bias leads to incorrect causal discovery results. Even when recognized, the existing paradigm for interventional causal discovery still fails to address it. This is because subtle differences in when and where interventions happen can lead to significantly different statistical patterns. We capture this dynamic by introducing a graphical model that explicitly accounts for both the observed world (where interventions are applied) and the counterfactual world (where selection occurs while interventions have not been applied). We characterize the Markov property of the model, and propose a provably sound algorithm to identify causal relations as well as selection mechanisms up to the equivalence class, from data with soft interventions and unknown targets. Through synthetic and real-world experiments, we demonstrate that our algorithm effectively identifies true causal relations despite the presence of selection bias.
QMOct 28, 2025
scMRDR: A scalable and flexible framework for unpaired single-cell multi-omics data integrationJianle Sun, Chaoqi Liang, Ran Wei et al.
Advances in single-cell sequencing have enabled high-resolution profiling of diverse molecular modalities, while integrating unpaired multi-omics single-cell data remains challenging. Existing approaches either rely on pair information or prior correspondences, or require computing a global pairwise coupling matrix, limiting their scalability and flexibility. In this paper, we introduce a scalable and flexible generative framework called single-cell Multi-omics Regularized Disentangled Representations (scMRDR) for unpaired multi-omics integration. Specifically, we disentangle each cell's latent representations into modality-shared and modality-specific components using a well-designed $β$-VAE architecture, which are augmented with isometric regularization to preserve intra-omics biological heterogeneity, adversarial objective to encourage cross-modal alignment, and masked reconstruction loss strategy to address the issue of missing features across modalities. Our method achieves excellent performance on benchmark datasets in terms of batch correction, modality alignment, and biological signal preservation. Crucially, it scales effectively to large-level datasets and supports integration of more than two omics, offering a powerful and flexible solution for large-scale multi-omics data integration and downstream biological discovery.