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He Hu

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2 papers
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2

AAAI Conference 2026 Conference Paper

A Principle-Driven Adaptive Policy for Group Cognitive Stimulation Dialogue for Elderly with Cognitive Impairment

  • Jiyue Jiang
  • Yanyu Chen
  • Pengan CHEN
  • Kai Liu
  • Jingqi Zhou
  • Zheyong Zhu
  • He Hu
  • Fei Ma

Cognitive impairment is becoming a major public health challenge. Cognitive Stimulation Therapy (CST) is an effective intervention for cognitive impairment, but traditional methods are difficult to scale, and existing digital systems struggle with group dialogues and cognitive stimulation principles. While Large Language Models (LLMs) are powerful, their application in this context faces key challenges: cognitive stimulation dialogue paradigms, a lack of therapeutic reasoning, and static-only user modeling. To address these issues, we propose a principle-driven adaptive policy actualized through a Group Cognitive Stimulation Dialogue (GCSD) system. We first construct a dataset with over 500 hours of real-world CST conversations and 10,000+ simulated dialogues generated via our Principle-Guided Scenario Simulation strategy. Our GCSD system then integrates four core modules to overcome LLM limitations: (i) a multi-speaker context controller to resolve role confusion; (ii) dynamic participant cognitive state modeling for personalized interaction; (iii) a cognitive stimulation-focused attention loss to instill cognitive stimulation reasoning; and (iv) a multi-dimensional reward strategy to enhance response value. Experimental results demonstrate that GCSD significantly outperforms baseline models across various evaluation metrics. Future work will focus on long-term clinical validation to bridge the gap between computational performance and clinical efficacy.

AAAI Conference 2026 Conference Paper

Investigating Data Pruning for Pretraining Biological Foundation Models at Scale

  • Yifan Wu
  • Jiyue Jiang
  • Xichen Ye
  • Yiqi Wang
  • Chang Zhou
  • Yitao Xu
  • Jiayang Chen
  • He Hu

Biological foundation models (BioFMs), pretrained on large-scale biological sequences, have recently shown strong potential in providing meaningful representations for diverse downstream bioinformatics tasks. However, such models often rely on millions to billions of training sequences and billions of parameters, resulting in prohibitive computational costs and significant barriers to reproducibility and accessibility—particularly for academic labs. To address these challenges, we investigate the feasibility of data pruning for BioFM pretraining and propose a post-hoc influence-guided data pruning framework tailored to biological domains. Our approach first introduces a subset-based self-influence formulation that enables efficient estimation of sample importance at low computational cost. Built upon this, we propose two simple yet effective selection strategies: Top-k Influence (Top I) and Coverage-Centric Influence (CCI). Then, we empirically validate our method on two representative BioFMs: RNA-FM and ESM-C. For RNA, our framework consistently outperforms random selection baselines under an extreme pruning rate of over 99%, which displays our framework's effectiveness. Furthermore, we demonstrate the generalizability of our framework on protein-related tasks using ESM-C. Specifically, our coreset even outperforms random 10x subsets in both RNA and protein settings, revealing substantial redundancy in biological sequence datasets. These findings underscore the potential of influence-guided data pruning to substantially reduce the computational cost of BioFM pretraining, paving the way for more efficient, accessible, and sustainable biological AI research.