WING Members Present at NUS AI Seminar at the Computer Science Department


Date
19 Nov, 2025
Event
WING at NUS AI Seminar at the Computer Science Department
Location
NUS Computing Seminar Room 21
13 Computing Drive, Singapore, Singapore 117417

NUS AI Seminar at the Computer Science Department is a new initiative to bring together AI researchers to share their latest research findings and insights. There are eight speakers in the Fall 2025 semester, usually hosted on Wednesday afternoons at Seminar Room 21. WING members are excited to present their research alongside other presenters from NUS Computing, MIT, and UCLA. We appreciate Prof. Lee Wee Sun and PhD student Guoji Fu for hosting the seminar.

Yisong Miao gave a seminar presentation titled “Faithfulness and Interpretability for Discourse Understanding” on November 19th, 2025. This talk combines his work on Discursive Socratic Questioning (ACL 2024) and Discursive Circuits (EMNLP 2025). He explained how our team tackles the technical challenge of evaluating a model’s discourse faithfulness and formalizing a unique setup for transformer circuit discovery. The seminar ends with an audience discussion on the conceptual difference between truthfulness and faithfulness, as well as designing new methods using sparse circuits in future work.

Yajing Yang presented “From Data to Insights: LLMs for Financial Narration”, also on November 19th, 2025, highlighting her research on financial data narration. Drawing from DataTales: A Benchmark for Real-World Intelligent Data Narration (EMNLP 2024) and KAHAN: Knowledge-Augmented Hierarchical Analysis and Narration for Financial Data Narration (EMNLP 2025), she described our team’s efforts to build a realistic benchmark and improve generation quality through knowledge integration and hierarchical analysis. The talk sparked discussion on remaining challenges in financial report generation and how LLMs could be used to produce more actionable and informative insights.

On December 3rd, 2025, Xuan Long Do delivered a seminar titled “Toward Autonomous Self-Improving Foundation Models”. The presentation spanned multiple projects, including “What Makes a Good Natural Language Prompt?” (ACL 2025), Multi-Expert Prompting (EMNLP 2024), and VISTA, his 2025 Google internship project on a self-improving video generation agent. Beginning with an analysis of prompt and model fragility, he showed how multi-agent reasoning can help address these limitations before moving toward the broader vision of autonomous self-improving foundation models. The seminar concluded with an audience discussion on future research directions in this area.

Below is a gallery of the seminar photos, some of which are enhanced and regenerated via Google’s Nano Banana

Yisong Miao presenting his work on “Faithfulness and Interpretability for Discourse Understanding” at the AI Seminar on November 19th, 2025:

Yisong Miao presenting at AI Seminar

Yajing Yang presenting her work on “From Data to Insights: LLMs for Financial Narration” at the AI Seminar on November 19th, 2025:

Yajing Yang discussing financial report generation

Xuan Long Do presenting his work on “Toward Autonomous Self-Improving Foundation Models” at the AI Seminar on December 3rd, 2025:

Xuan Long Do presenting on foundation models

Yisong Miao
Yisong Miao
Doctoral Student (Jan ‘21)

PhD Candidate January 2021 Intake

Yajing Yang
Yajing Yang
IPP Doctoral Student (Aug ‘20)

PhD Candidate August 2020 Intake

Xuan Long Do
Xuan Long Do
A*STAR Doctoral Student (Aug ‘23)
Co-Supervised by Kenji Kawaguchi

PhD Candidate August 2023 Intake