@RobertTLange
I am really excited to share that our work on The AI Scientist has been published in Nature Automated Scientific Discovery has been something I only dreamt about at the start of my PhD. Today, we are making big leaps into a world in which autonomous agents support human researchers in tackling some of the most fundamental problems. In August 2024, The AI Scientist-v1 showed first sparks of LLM agents becoming capable of conducting research end-to-end. While the generated artifacts were still far from perfect, it was clear that automated discovery was about to change. We scaled the system and improved all ingredients of the pipeline. In April 2025, The AI Scientist-v2 had become capable of producing a paper that could pass the human peer review of an ICLR workshop. This is only the beginning. Systems like AlphaEvolve, ShinkaEvolve, AIDE, and Autoresearch will continue to shape the future of how research is conducted. Our METR-style scaling results indicate that model improvements have direct downstream impacts. Still, there are many challenges. Both technical and societal. I have a strong belief that we, as a collective, will find the answers and adapt. This has been an enormous amount of work by an outstanding set of human researchers @_chris_lu_ @cong_ml @_yutaroyamada @shengranhu @j_foerst @jeffclune @hardmaru @SakanaAILabs with many long nights of work. I am super grateful for the entire ride, learnings and the future to come. Thank you to everyone!