Ted Underwood

Machine learning and literary history

Uses machine learning to study literary imagination, and vice-versa. Likely to share news about AI & computational social science / Sozialwissenschaft / 社会科学 Information Sciences and English, UIUC. Distant Horizons (Chicago, 2019). tedunderwood.com

Articles & links

If everything reported here happens, and the US continues on current trajectory, we're looking at a bad timeline. But there's reason to be wary about both of those "if"s. National security priorities and commercial priorities will be at odds. Saber-rattling is an expected outc…

reuters.com
View on Bluesky · ♥ 39 ↻ 2 ↩ 4 · 9 from the directory shared this · 1d ago
Ted Underwood reposted
@richardjeanso.bsky.social

#Neurips 2026 call for creative AI papers looks genuinely cool - they're inviting both research papers + creative works. And the research papers can be speculative, critical, poetic & not just applied or empirical. I'm excited about this workshop - deadline is August 3 AOE neu…

Call For Creative AI 2026 neurips.cc View on Bluesky →
Ted Underwood reposted
@latte.bsky.plasmatrap.com

> Fable 5 will be available starting tomorrow, Wednesday, July 1, to users globally on the Claude Platform > Fable 5 will be included for up to 50% of weekly usage limits through July 7, after which it will be available via usage credits www.anthropic.com/news/redeplo...

Redeploying Claude Fable 5 anthropic.com View on Bluesky →
Ted Underwood reposted
Tim Kellogg @timkellogg.me

Self-Compacting language agents This feels like an incredibly obvious (in hindsight) improvement. Rather than compact arbitrarily every N=1M tokens, (1) let the model decide when and (2) how to compact arxiv.org/abs/2606.23525

Self-Compacting Language Model Agents arxiv.org
AI Weekly's analysis
  • SelfCompact lets language model agents autonomously decide when to summarize accumulated context, requiring no fine-tuning.
  • The method reduces per-question token usage by 30-70% across six benchmarks and seven models tested.
  • Performance gains reach up to 18.1 points on mathematical problems and 5-9 points on agentic search tasks.
Read full analysis →
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Ted Underwood reposted
Gus @gusthema.bsky.social

Gemma 4 12B is live! 🚀 An encoder-free multimodal model (text/img/audio) for local 16GB laptops. Elite reasoning nearing 26B MoE in half the size, fast, and open (Apache 2.0). This is the main reason I was not posting much!! Glad it is launched!! blog.google/innovation-a...

Introducing Gemma 4 12B: a unified, encoder-free multimodal model blog.google
AI Weekly's analysis
  • The 35M-parameter vision embedder replaces 27 vision transformer layers, keeping the full model inside 16GB with complete image and audio understanding.
  • Audio projects from raw 16 kHz waveforms in 40ms frames directly to the LLM backbone, bypassing any separate ASR encoder used in competing designs.
  • Single-pass LoRA fine-tuning updates vision, audio, and text weights simultaneously, eliminating the engineering overhead of co-tuning frozen encoders.
Read full analysis →
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Ted Underwood reposted
Jessica Hullman @jessicahullman.bsky.social

Thoughts on metascientific consequences of AI-generated slides & ideas diluting the impression that speakers are commited to what they present. Science runs on personal attachment more than we admit. If it were a cake mix, how wouldn we add back an egg? statmodeling.stat.colum…

statmodeling.stat.columbia.edu View on Bluesky →
Ted Underwood reposted
Marc Lanctot @sharky6000.bsky.social

GDM, @schmidtsciences.bsky.social, @coop-ai.bsky.social, @aria-research.bsky.social, and Google announce a $10M funding call for multi-agent saftey research! Amazing, such an important research area. 🤩 Check it out 👇 Deadline for applications: August 8th, 2026. deepmind.google…

Google DeepMind and partners announce multi-agent safety research funding call. — Google DeepMind deepmind.google
AI Weekly's analysis
  • Google DeepMind and four partners are offering up to $10 million for multi-agent AI safety research; applications close August 8, 2026.
  • The program targets four areas: realistic testbeds, emergent network behavior, cross-platform identity protocols, and oversight of deployed agent populations.
  • Current AI safety methods test models in isolation, leaving emergent behaviors across interacting agent networks a largely unstudied and underfunded problem.
Read full analysis →
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Ted Underwood reposted
Laura K. Nelson @lauraknelson.bsky.social

Genuine question: Do we think this linked framing holds up after the explosion of AI agents? "Like catalogs and the internet, large models are part of a long history of cultural and social technologies." Are LLMs (now) really in the same category as card catalogues? www.scienc…

science.org View on Bluesky →

Recent commentary

So, naive question about these campuses that pay OpenAI $13mil/yr. Why don’t they pour that money into a cluster running the strongest available open-weight model, with API and interactive options. And if the answer is “overhead,” why aren’t we collaborating?

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If the Feds’ move against Fable was an isolated thing, you might say “paranoid US regime.” But putting it together with Anthropic’s own efforts to nerf the model on ML research—and the long history of chip controls—it really feels like we’re entering an era where knowledge is behind lock & key. +

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Why does using LLMs for coding change your view of them? Bunch of things: 1. Yes, code can be verified, so they can check their work & iterate until they get it right. 2. But also: what makes coding hard is strain on short-term memory. Lots of moving parts. Long context & patience shine here. +

View on Bluesky · ♥ 123 ↻ 11 ↩ 12 · 12d ago

Is anything creepier than a language model flattering you using its knowledge of previous convos? ("As you know," or "this is where your prior work on Y will really pay off") A ghost who lives in your computer has been taking notes so it can chat you up. Stalker/yandere vibes. +

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Anthropic survey of social scientists tending to support my anecdotal impression: friends who see potential value in AI mostly use it for coding (or use it dialogically), and are wary-to-disapproving about asking it to draft documents or significant sections of them. +

View on Bluesky · ♥ 79 ↻ 14 ↩ 8 · 40d ago

Every academic I know who uses or studies AI is also deeply worried about the technology’s effect on universities. Concern is universal. What separates people is how they think we should respond: whether by pumping the brakes, backing up, or trying to steer through the hazard. +

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It is really necessary to publish drafts about AI instantly. If you let them sit for two months after getting readers' reports, they become historical documents and you have to revise them from scratch.

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People who see value in AI are explaining popular anxiety by saying "SV did a bad sales job." Possible. More plausible, for me, is @michellegoldberg.bsky.social: anxiety is highest in the US b/c low trust in leaders generally. But also, come on—why would we ever expect AI not to provoke anxiety?

View on Bluesky · ♥ 59 ↻ 5 ↩ 4 · 49d ago

This is the way inevitability discourse works: We all agree (individually) that AI is not inevitable. If anyone said it was inevitable, we'd go "dude! you're not the boss of me!" Also, no one has offered a policy proposal that would do anything to change the (collective) upward slope of adoption. +

View on Bluesky · ♥ 50 ↻ 2 ↩ 6 · 16d ago

I was just checking on the meaning of this German phrase, but AI overviews thought I was saying "see ya!" and responded in kind. I actually like this kind of diffuse, free-floating personification ...

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