Deep Papers
Deep Papers
Arize AI
Deep Papers is a podcast series featuring deep dives on today’s most important AI papers and research. Hosted by Arize AI founders and engineers, each episode profiles the people and techniques behind cutting-edge breakthroughs in machine learning. 
CUGA Agent: From Benchmarks to Business Impact of IBM's Generalist Agent
We dive into the latest paper from a team of researchers at IBM: "From Benchmarks to Business Impact: Deploying IBM Generalist Agent in Enterprise Production." We're excited to host several of the paper's authors, who walk us through the research and its implications. The paper reports IBM’s experience developing and piloting the Computer Using Generalist Agent (CUGA), which has been open-sourced for the community. CUGA adopts a hierarchical planner–executor architecture with strong analytica...
Feb 11
23 min
TUMIX: Multi-Agent Test-Time Scaling with Tool-Use Mixture
We dive into the latest paper from Google and a team of academic researchers: "TUMIX: Multi-Agent Test-Time Scaling with Tool-Use Mixture." Hear from one of the paper's authors — Yongchao Chen, Research Scientist — walks through the research and its implications. The paper proposes Tool-Use Mixture (TUMIX), an ensemble framework that runs multiple agents in parallel, each employing distinct tool-use strategies and answer paths. Agents in TUMIX iteratively share and refine responses ba...
Nov 24, 2025
23 min
Meta AI Researcher Explains ARE and Gaia2: Scaling Up Agent Environments and Evaluations
In our latest paper reading, we had the pleasure of hosting Grégoire Mialon — Research Scientist at Meta Superintelligence Labs — to walk us through Meta AI’s groundbreaking paper titled “ARE: scaling up agent environments and evaluations" and the new ARE and Gaia2 frameworks. Learn more about AI observability and evaluation, join the Arize AI Slack community or get the latest on LinkedIn and X.
Nov 10, 2025
22 min
Georgia Tech's Santosh Vempala Explains Why Language Models Hallucinate, His Research With OpenAI
Santosh Vempala, Frederick Storey II Chair of Computing and Distinguished Professor in the School of Computer Science at Georgia Tech, explains his paper co-authored by OpenAI's Adam Tauman Kalai, Ofir Nachum, and Edwin Zhang. Read the paper: Sign up for future AI research paper readings and author office hours. See LLM hallucination examples here for context. Learn more about AI observability and evaluation, join the Arize AI Slack community or get the latest on LinkedIn and X.
Oct 14, 2025
31 min
Atropos Health’s Arjun Mukerji, PhD, Explains RWESummary: A Framework and Test for Choosing LLMs to Summarize Real-World Evidence (RWE) Studies
Large language models are increasingly used to turn complex study output into plain-English summaries. But how do we know which models are safest and most reliable for healthcare? In this most recent community AI research paper reading, Arjun Mukerji, PhD – Staff Data Scientist at Atropos Health – walks us through RWESummary, a new benchmark designed to evaluate LLMs on summarizing real-world evidence from structured study output — an important but often under-tested scenario compared t...
Sep 22, 2025
26 min
Stan Miasnikov, Distinguished Engineer, AI/ML Architecture, Consumer Experience at Verizon Walks Us Through His New Paper
This episode dives into "Category-Theoretic Analysis of Inter-Agent Communication and Mutual Understanding Metric in Recursive Consciousness." The paper presents an extension of the Recursive Consciousness framework to analyze communication between agents and the inevitable loss of meaning in translation. We're thrilled to feature the paper's author, Stan Miasnikov, Distinguished Engineer, AI/ML Architecture, Consumer Experience at Verizon, to walk us through the research and its implications...
Sep 6, 2025
48 min
Small Language Models are the Future of Agentic AI
We had the privilege of hosting Peter Belcak – an AI Researcher working on the reliability and efficiency of agentic systems at NVIDIA – who walked us through his new paper making the rounds in AI circles titled “Small Language Models are the Future of Agentic AI.” The paper posits that small language models (SLMs) are sufficiently powerful, inherently more suitable, and necessarily more economical for many invocations in agentic systems, and are therefore the future of agentic AI. The autho...
Sep 5, 2025
31 min
Watermarking for LLMs and Image Models
In this AI research paper reading, we dive into "A Watermark for Large Language Models" with the paper's author John Kirchenbauer. This paper is a timely exploration of techniques for embedding invisible but detectable signals in AI-generated text. These watermarking strategies aim to help mitigate misuse of large language models by making machine-generated content distinguishable from human writing, without sacrificing text quality or requiring access to the model’s internals. Learn mo...
Jul 30, 2025
42 min
Self-Adapting Language Models: Paper Authors Discuss Implications
The authors of the new paper *Self-Adapting Language Models (SEAL)* shared a behind-the-scenes look at their work, motivations, results, and future directions. The paper introduces a novel method for enabling large language models (LLMs) to adapt their own weights using self-generated data and training directives — “self-edits.” Learn more about the Self-Adapting Language Models paper. Learn more about AI observability and evaluation, join the Arize AI Slack community or get the latest on Lin...
Jul 8, 2025
31 min
The Illusion of Thinking: What the Apple AI Paper Says About LLM Reasoning
This week we discuss The Illusion of Thinking, a new paper from researchers at Apple that challenges today’s evaluation methods and introduces a new benchmark: synthetic puzzles with controllable complexity and clean logic. Their findings? Large Reasoning Models (LRMs) show surprising failure modes, including a complete collapse on high-complexity tasks and a decline in reasoning effort as problems get harder. Dylan and Parth dive into the paper's findings as well as the debate around ...
Jun 20, 2025
30 min
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