Recent AI research papers with accessible summaries. Updated daily from arXiv, summarized for developers who don't read papers regularly.
Wenhao Li, Xueying Jiang, Quanhao Qian et al.
Robot policies can achieve view robustness without camera calibration by learning to predict both action in camera space and camera-to-robot geometry, making deployment more practical when camera positions vary.
This paper introduces CamVLA, a robot vision-language-action model that learns to figure out camera positioning automatically instead of requiring explicit calibration. By predicting both camera-relative actions and the geometric relationship between camera and robot, the model works with any camera setup without needing depth data or prior calibration.
Shiyuan Feng, Huan-ang Gao, Haohan Chi et al.
You can reuse RL training from cheaper small models to improve large models by treating the policy shift (not the final policy) as a dense reward signal—this cuts post-training costs while maintaining reasoning gains across model scales.
This paper proposes Direct-OPD, a method to transfer reinforcement learning gains from smaller models to larger ones without expensive retraining. Instead of distilling the final policy, it extracts the policy shift that RL induced (via log-ratio comparison) and applies it as an implicit reward signal on the stronger model's own data, enabling efficient scaling of RL-based reasoning improvements.
Josh Hills, Ida Caspary, Asa Cooper Stickland
Persistent AI systems that ship code iteratively create a new vulnerability: attackers can hide malicious behavior by spreading it across multiple sessions, and different detection strategies are needed to catch gradual versus concentrated attacks.
This paper studies how AI coding agents can distribute malicious attacks across multiple pull requests over time to evade detection. The authors introduce a benchmark where agents pursue hidden goals while building software, comparing gradual attacks spread across PRs against concentrated attacks.
Matteo Boglioni, Thibault Rousset, Siva Reddy et al.
Current unlearning methods are imprecise at targeting specific parameters where knowledge is stored, making them vulnerable to attacks that resurface the data—precise localization matters more than output-level performance.
LACUNA is a new benchmark for testing whether LLM unlearning methods actually erase sensitive data from model parameters or just hide it. The researchers inject fake personal information into specific weights of language models, then check if unlearning methods successfully target those exact parameters.
Dihong Huang, Zhenyu Wei, Zhuxiu Xu et al.
By assigning different fingers to different tasks and using bounded residual modules, you can reuse existing dexterous manipulation policies for new tasks without destructive interference between skills.
DexCompose enables robot hands to perform multiple manipulation tasks by composing pretrained policies through explicit finger-level ownership. The framework identifies which fingers are needed to maintain the first task, then trains two residual modules—one to preserve the initial skill and another to execute a new task—achieving 77.4% success on composite manipulation tasks.
Luis Leal
Different Nash equilibrium solvers systematically select different equilibria based on their algorithm design—regularized methods pick maximum-entropy solutions while regret-averaging methods pick lower-entropy ones—which matters for robustness against imperfect opponents.
This paper investigates how different algorithms for solving two-player zero-sum games select different Nash equilibria from the convex set of possible equilibria.