Recent AI research papers with accessible summaries. Updated daily from arXiv, summarized for developers who don't read papers regularly.
Zhekai Chen, Chengqi Duan, Kaiyue Sun et al.
This benchmark separates what a language model can do from how well an agent framework uses those abilities—showing that both matter equally for real-world performance.
UniClawBench is a new benchmark for evaluating AI agents that work with real-world tools and applications. Unlike older benchmarks that use static simulations, it tests agents in live environments with 400 real tasks across five key capabilities: using tools, exploring options, understanding long documents, processing images/video, and coordinating across platforms.
Xinyan Chen, Ziyu Guo, Renrui Zhang et al.
Video generation can be a reasoning mechanism: training models on diverse temporal reasoning tasks and adding explicit reasoning tokens improves their ability to solve logical problems by generating step-by-step visual explanations.
OpenCoF introduces a dataset and fine-tuned video model designed to teach AI systems to reason through generating sequences of video frames. Unlike text-based reasoning, this 'Chain-of-Frame' approach lets models unfold logical steps visually across time. The work shows that video models trained on diverse reasoning tasks with special reasoning tokens perform better at solving complex problems.
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.