All posts tagged: Attention

IndexCache, a new sparse attention optimizer, delivers 1.82x faster inference on long-context AI models

IndexCache, a new sparse attention optimizer, delivers 1.82x faster inference on long-context AI models

Processing 200,000 tokens through a large language model is expensive and slow: the longer the context, the faster the costs spiral. Researchers at Tsinghua University and Z.ai have built a technique called IndexCache that cuts up to 75% of the redundant computation in sparse attention models, delivering up to 1.82x faster time-to-first-token and 1.48x faster generation throughput at that context length. The technique applies to models using the DeepSeek Sparse Attention architecture, including the latest DeepSeek and GLM families. It can help enterprises provide faster user experiences for production-scale, long-context models, a capability already proven in preliminary tests on the 744-billion-parameter GLM-5 model. The DSA bottleneck Large language models rely on the self-attention mechanism, a process where the model computes the relationship between every token in its context and all the preceding ones to predict the next token. However, self-attention has a severe limitation. Its computational complexity scales quadratically with sequence length. For applications requiring extended context windows (e.g., large document processing, multi-step agentic workflows, or long chain-of-thought reasoning), this quadratic scaling leads to sluggish …

Tracy Kidder Knew How to Pay Attention

Tracy Kidder Knew How to Pay Attention

This is an edition of Time-Travel Thursdays, a journey through The Atlantic’s archives to contextualize the present. Sign up here. Tracy Kidder, the Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist who died this week at 80, devoted his career to immersion: embedding himself for months, sometimes years, with his subjects, and turning what he saw into stories that are hard to put down. His work traversed worlds—he followed a group of computer engineers racing to build a new machine, spent nine months in a fifth-grade classroom in Massachusetts, and traveled with the legendary physician and humanitarian Paul Farmer as he cared for people across continents—but his focus was remarkably consistent. He was interested in how people work: what they care about, what they struggle through, and what makes them keep going. Kidder brought that same sensibility to his Atlantic stories about technology, work, and everyday life. His writing was, as one reviewer put it, full of “genuine love, delight and celebration of the human condition.” He wrote his first article for this magazine in 1973, and then served as …

People with cannabis disorder do not seem to pay increased attention to pictures of cannabis

People with cannabis disorder do not seem to pay increased attention to pictures of cannabis

A study of individuals with cannabis use disorder in Australia did not find evidence that they pay more attention to pictures of cannabis compared to individuals not suffering from that disorder. The paper was published in Comprehensive Psychiatry. Cannabis use disorder is a mental health condition characterized by a problematic pattern of cannabis use that leads to significant impairment or distress. It occurs when a person continues using cannabis despite experiencing negative consequences in daily life. Individuals with this disorder may have difficulty controlling how often or how much cannabis they use. They may spend a lot of time obtaining, using, or recovering from the effects of cannabis. Another common feature is craving, which refers to a strong desire or urge to use the substance. People with cannabis use disorder tend to also develop tolerance, meaning they need larger amounts of cannabis to achieve the same effects. Some individuals experience withdrawal symptoms such as irritability, sleep problems, or reduced appetite when they stop using cannabis. The disorder can interfere with responsibilities at work, school, or …

Children with attention disorders struggle to process whole faces during social interactions

Children with attention disorders struggle to process whole faces during social interactions

Children with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder often struggle to automatically track where other people are looking. A recent study published in the Journal of Attention Disorders revealed that this difficulty stems from challenges in processing whole faces, rather than an inability to notice simple eye movements. These results help explain the social difficulties sometimes experienced by children with the disorder and point toward potential support strategies in classrooms. Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder is primarily known for symptoms like impulsivity, hyperactivity, and a general lack of focus. However, individuals with the condition also frequently experience atypical social interactions and struggle to read nonverbal cues. During everyday conversations, people naturally follow the gaze of others. This behavior helps individuals seamlessly understand what is catching a friend or teacher’s interest. Psychologists divide the human attention system into two separate categories. The first is endogenous attention, which is a deliberate, goal-oriented process driven by a person’s own expectations and prior knowledge. The second type is exogenous attention. This is an automatic, reflex-like reaction to something standing out in the environment, like a sudden …

Social Media and AI Want Your Attention at All Times. This New Documentary Says That’s Bad

Social Media and AI Want Your Attention at All Times. This New Documentary Says That’s Bad

“Do you remember the world before cellphones?” The question comes early in Your Attention Please, a documentary premiering this week at South by Southwest in Austin, Texas. And it hit me harder than I expected. As a 27-year-old tech reporter, I realized I don’t have too many clear memories of life before smartphones. My adolescence unfolded alongside the rise of smartphones, social media, push notifications and the routine of endless scrolling. Like many people my age, I’ve spent most of my life inside the attention economy — without ever really stepping outside it. That’s the uneasy territory the documentary explores.  CNET was given exclusive early access to the film’s trailer, embedded below. Exploring how tech shapes our behavior Director Sara Robin said she originally set out to make something smaller: a documentary about people trying to reclaim their attention by breaking unhealthy phone habits. In an interview with CNET, Robin described the idea as a personal story about focus and self-control in an age of constant distraction. As Robin interviewed researchers, technologists and families affected …

Sombr calls out Brixton Academy mid-performance after fan incident: ‘You guys need to pay attention’

Sombr calls out Brixton Academy mid-performance after fan incident: ‘You guys need to pay attention’

Get the inside track from Roisin O’Connor with our free weekly music newsletter Now Hear This Get our free music newsletter Now Hear This Get our free music newsletter Now Hear This Pop star Sombr called out Brixton Academy during his performance at the London venue after security apparently failed to notice a fan who had fainted in the crowd. The Grammy-nominated US singer, real name Shane Michael Boose, was performing his third and final show at the venue on Monday (9 March) when he stopped midway through a rendition of his hit song “Back to Friends”. “Guys, there’s someone passed out over here,” the 20-year-old told security, seen in footage that has circulated on social media. “This is the most poorly managed venue I’ve ever played at in my life. You guys need to pay attention. It’s insane. Safety comes first.” Sombr did not address the incident after the show, only posting to social media to say: “London night three. I love you so much. Thanks for an unforgettable past three nights. I’ll be …

15 Sunglasses Brands on Amazon Worth Your Attention

15 Sunglasses Brands on Amazon Worth Your Attention

Not too long ago, the only answer to “Amazon sunglasses?” would’ve been an emphatic: “They exist!” The ‘Zon has always been a haven for time-strapped shoppers looking to snag cheap-o sunnies before they jet off to Capri. To save you the time of sifting through the mega-retailer’s endless sunglasses assortment, we took a cheery, not-at-all-frazzling jaunt through the digital morass to unearth the waviest shades worth your dollars—and the brands we trust to provide ’em. From retro-leaning frames to gleaming polarized lenses, the best Amazon sunglasses have come a long way. 7 GQ-Approved Frames Available on Amazon The Downright Legendary Pick Ray-Ban RB2140 Original Wayfarer Sunglasses Read more The Eco-Friendly Pick Sunski Ventana Sunglasses Read more The “Houston, We Have No Problems” Pick American Optical Original Pilot Sunglasses Read more The Top Gun Pick Randolph Engineering Navigator Aviator II Sunglasses Read more The Ballpark-Ready Pick Oakley Radar EV Path Sunglasses Read more The Wayfarer-Like Weekend Pick Chimi 04 Sunglasses Read more The Old Hollywood Pick Oliver Peoples Gregory Peck Sunglasses Read more Ray-Ban Ray-Bans have …

Iris Murdoch’s Psychology of Haunting: Fantasy, Ethical Attention, and the Spectral Past

Iris Murdoch’s Psychology of Haunting: Fantasy, Ethical Attention, and the Spectral Past

Iris Murdoch’s fiction is filled with the uncanny and the weird: drowned bodies, vampiric presences, telekinetic objects, angelic visitations, prophetic dreams, and adolescent “feyness.” Yet these phenomena are rarely reducible to her gothic atmosphere or the supernatural. Instead, Murdoch develops a psychology of haunting: a moral-psychological and ethical structure in which the spectral registers the persistence of trauma, the distortions of egoistic fantasy, and the unresolved presence of the past. There has been a significant amount of attention given to Murdoch’s explicitly gothic novels— The Flight from the Enchanter, The Bell, The Unicorn, The Italian Girl, The Time of the Angels—yet the supernatural flows consistently throughout Murdoch’s fictional work, far beyond her early gothic phase. From Jake Donoghue’s perception of Sadie Quentin as a witch in Under the Net to the strange angelic residue of Jackson in Jackson’s Dilemma, haunting becomes an enduring feature of Murdoch’s fictional world. The question is not whether Murdoch “believes” in ghosts but what psychological and ethical work haunting performs. (Details for all of Murdoch’s fictional works can be found …

There’s No Secret Hack for Reclaiming Your Attention

There’s No Secret Hack for Reclaiming Your Attention

This content contains affiliate links. When you buy through these links, we may earn an affiliate commission. Welcome to Today in Books, our daily round-up of literary headlines at the intersection of politics, culture, media, and more. The Secret is There is No Secret The data and anecdata line up on this one: people are reading less and having a harder time focusing on books. The solution is simple but not easy: just do it. That’s the crux of this five-step plan for reclaiming your attention, and I appreciate that it begins with reminding yourself why you’re setting out to read deeply. There really is no secret, no hack, no shortcut. If you want to be a person who spends sustained periods of time reading books, you have to spend sustained periods of time reading books. One page counts. Want more tips? We’ve got you covered. It’s Complicated Mark Oppenheimer’s biography of Judy Blume was going to generate a lot of media heat anyway, but the news that Blume—who participated in interviews, provided Oppenheimer with …