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mpmisko

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World Models for Planning Agents

mpmisko.github.io
2 points·by mpmisko·2 mesi fa·0 comments

Show HN: MediSearch Pro–most accurate medical question-answering system

medisearch.io
1 points·by mpmisko·2 anni fa·0 comments

Show HN: Verify medical claims in TikToks and YouTube Shorts

medisearch.io
1 points·by mpmisko·2 anni fa·1 comments

Fun times with energy-based models

mpmisko.github.io
82 points·by mpmisko·2 anni fa·14 comments

AI Fundamentals: Energy-Based Models

mpmisko.github.io
2 points·by mpmisko·2 anni fa·0 comments

Solving Death with AI? A Deep Dive into Energy-Based Models

mpmisko.github.io
1 points·by mpmisko·2 anni fa·0 comments

AI Fundamentals: Energy-Based Models

mpmisko.github.io
5 points·by mpmisko·2 anni fa·0 comments

What happened to blogs

mpmisko.github.io
70 points·by mpmisko·2 anni fa·61 comments

[untitled]

2 points·by mpmisko·2 anni fa·0 comments

Show HN: I put PubMed in a vector DB

pubmedisearch.com
97 points·by mpmisko·2 anni fa·27 comments

comments

mpmisko
·2 anni fa·discuss
EBMs show up all over the place, apparently even your classifier is an EBM :) (https://arxiv.org/abs/1912.03263).
mpmisko
·2 anni fa·discuss
GPT-based search engines usually use some sort of a database to retrieve context for the LLM to summarize first. This is what people refer to as RAG these days: https://blogs.nvidia.com/blog/what-is-retrieval-augmented-ge....

Some of these GPT engines maintain their own vector DB to do semantic search, others are directly hooked into Bing / Google. So pubmedisearch.com would be one component of a GPT-based engine. We actually have a GPT-based engine here: https://medisearch.io/.
mpmisko
·2 anni fa·discuss
Will definitely check pgvector, thanks for the pointer.
mpmisko
·2 anni fa·discuss
Lots of annoying edge cases as you can imagine, nothing particularly glamorous.
mpmisko
·2 anni fa·discuss
Done! Let me know if you have other feedback.
mpmisko
·2 anni fa·discuss
Thanks! Looks quite relevant
mpmisko
·2 anni fa·discuss
Training for multiple epochs is a bit like that :)
mpmisko
·2 anni fa·discuss
We use pinecone and it is not ideal, looking at https://turbopuffer.com/ now. They look quite promising :)
mpmisko
·2 anni fa·discuss
1. We cover all the articles on PMC. The exact cost is hard to estimate because we did a lot of iterations.

2. We do weight those ... it is a lot of trial and error and you have to have good & exhaustive benchmarks.
mpmisko
·2 anni fa·discuss
Yes
mpmisko
·2 anni fa·discuss
Glad you like it! I did this as a mini-project within our startup MediSearch (https://medisearch.io/) & the search pipeline is custom tuned for the problem.
mpmisko
·2 anni fa·discuss
Hi, it currently does not support search by PMID. But you can find the paper included in the results here (5th place):

https://pubmedisearch.com/share/Do%20some%20individuals%20wi...
mpmisko
·2 anni fa·discuss
Just looking at stuff like citations and impact factors of journals.
mpmisko
·2 anni fa·discuss
Thanks!

It uses a vector search approach. Your query is embedded in a vector space using a language model and we find the closest vector to the query from the PubMed papers. This is a good summary of the techniques: https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/search/vector-search.... There are a couple more tricks but this is the gist.

The nice part is that this approach allows you to find relevant papers to your question. E.g, you can ask "Can secondhand smoke cause AMD?" and the very first few papers are answering your question (https://pubmedisearch.com/share/Can%20secondhand%20smoke%20c...). The more specific question, the better. :)