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When Agents Agree Too Much: Emergent Bias in Multi‑Agent AI Systems

Opening — Why this matters now Multi‑agent AI systems are having a moment. Debate, reflection, consensus — all the cognitive theater we associate with human committees is now being reenacted by clusters of large language models. In finance, that sounds reassuring. Multiple agents, multiple perspectives, fewer blind spots. Or so the story goes. This paper politely ruins that assumption. ...

December 21, 2025 · 4 min · Zelina
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When Tensors Meet Telemedicine: Diagnosing Leukemia at the Edge

Opening — Why this matters now Healthcare AI has a credibility problem. Models boast benchmark-breaking accuracy, yet quietly fall apart when moved from lab notebooks to hospital workflows. Latency, human-in-the-loop bottlenecks, and fragile classifiers all conspire against real-world deployment. Leukemia diagnosis—especially Acute Lymphocytic Leukemia (ALL)—sits right in the crosshairs of this tension: early detection saves lives, but manual microscopy is slow, subjective, and error-prone. ...

December 21, 2025 · 4 min · Zelina
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Black Boxes, White Coats: AI Epidemiology and the Art of Governing Without Understanding

Opening — Why this matters now We keep insisting that powerful AI systems must be understood before they can be trusted. That demand feels intuitively correct—and practically paralysing. Large language models now operate in medicine, finance, law, and public administration. Yet interpretability tools—SHAP, LIME, mechanistic circuit tracing—remain brittle, expensive, and increasingly disconnected from real-world deployment. The gap between how models actually behave and how we attempt to explain them is widening, not closing. ...

December 20, 2025 · 4 min · Zelina
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Prompt-to-Parts: When Language Learns to Build

Opening — Why this matters now Text-to-image was a party trick. Text-to-3D became a demo. Text-to-something you can actually assemble is where the stakes quietly change. As generative AI spills into engineering, manufacturing, and robotics, the uncomfortable truth is this: most AI-generated objects are visually plausible but physically useless. They look right, but they don’t fit, don’t connect, and certainly don’t come with instructions a human can follow. ...

December 20, 2025 · 4 min · Zelina
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Stop or Strip? Teaching Disassembly When to Quit

Opening — Why this matters now Circular economy rhetoric is everywhere. Circular economy decision-making is not. Most end-of-life products still follow a depressingly simple rule: disassemble until it hurts, or stop when the operator gets tired. The idea that we might formally decide when to stop disassembling — based on value, cost, safety, and information — remains oddly underdeveloped. This gap is no longer academic. EV batteries, e‑waste, and regulated industrial equipment are forcing operators to choose between speed, safety, and sustainability under real constraints. ...

December 20, 2025 · 4 min · Zelina
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Adversaries, Slices, and the Art of Teaching LLMs to Think

Opening — Why this matters now Large language models can already talk their way through Olympiad math, but they still stumble in embarrassingly human ways: a missed parity condition, a silent algebra slip, or a confident leap over an unproven claim. The industry’s usual fix—reward the final answer and hope the reasoning improves—has reached diminishing returns. Accuracy nudges upward, but reliability remains brittle. ...

December 19, 2025 · 4 min · Zelina
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AGI by Committee: Why the First General Intelligence Won’t Arrive Alone

Opening — Why this matters now For years, AGI safety discussions have revolved around a single, looming figure: the model. One system. One alignment problem. One decisive moment. That mental model is tidy — and increasingly wrong. The paper “Distributional AGI Safety” argues that AGI is far more likely to emerge not as a monolith, but as a collective outcome: a dense web of specialized, sub‑AGI agents coordinating, trading capabilities, and assembling intelligence the way markets assemble value. AGI, in this framing, is not a product launch. It is a phase transition. ...

December 19, 2025 · 4 min · Zelina
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TOGGLE or Die Trying: Giving LLM Compression a Spine

Opening — Why this matters now LLM compression is having an identity crisis. On one side, we have brute-force pragmatists: quantize harder, prune deeper, pray nothing important breaks. On the other, we have theoreticians insisting that something essential is lost — coherence, memory, truthfulness — but offering little beyond hand-waving and validation benchmarks. As LLMs creep toward edge deployment — embedded systems, on-device assistants, energy‑capped inference — this tension becomes existential. You can’t just say “it seems fine.” You need guarantees. Or at least something better than vibes. ...

December 19, 2025 · 4 min · Zelina
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When Black Boxes Grow Teeth: Mapping What AI Can *Actually* Do

Opening — Why this matters now We are deploying black-box AI systems faster than we are understanding them. Large language models, vision–language agents, and robotic controllers are increasingly asked to do things, not just answer questions. And yet, when these systems fail, the failure is rarely spectacular—it is subtle, conditional, probabilistic, and deeply context-dependent. ...

December 19, 2025 · 3 min · Zelina
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Delegating to the Almost-Aligned: When Misaligned AI Is Still the Rational Choice

Opening — Why this matters now The AI alignment debate has a familiar rhythm: align the values first, deploy later. Sensible, reassuring—and increasingly detached from reality. In practice, we are already delegating consequential decisions to systems we do not fully understand, let alone perfectly align. Trading algorithms rebalance portfolios, recommendation engines steer attention, and autonomous agents negotiate, schedule, and filter on our behalf. The real question is no longer “Is the AI aligned?” but “Is it aligned enough to justify delegation, given what it can do better than us?” ...

December 18, 2025 · 4 min · Zelina