Researcher profile

Anna Pavlenko

Anna Pavlenko contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

2 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

GraphMind: From Operational Traces to Self-Evolving Workflow Automation

Complex operational workflows coordinating personnel, tools, and information are central to enterprise operations, yet end-to-end automation remains challenging due to extensive requirements for human inputs and the inability to adapt over time. We present GraphMind, an end-to-end system that constructs, executes, and evolves action-centric workflow graphs without human effort. The system operates in three phases. First, a scalable offline pipeline extracts structured workflow graphs from large volumes of human resolution traces, capturing problems, actions, and their causal relationships. Second, an online multi-agent traversal engine navigates the graph to dynamically construct and execute workflows, combining graph-guided retrieval with LLM-driven reasoning at each step. Third, Adaptive Traversal Reinforcement (ATR) reinforces successful traversal paths and decays stale elements. This closed-loop mechanism enables the graph to self-optimize and adapt to shifting operational conditions. GraphMind has been deployed across four production cloud database services for incident investigation. Evaluated on production data, the system substantially outperforms a Trace-RAG baseline in mitigation reach, groundedness, and diagnostic throughput, scoring 4.95/5 in blind expert review. The ATR layer provides further gains across all metrics, demonstrating that workflow graphs can learn and improve from execution-derived feedback.

preprint2024arXiv

GEqO: ML-Accelerated Semantic Equivalence Detection

Large scale analytics engines have become a core dependency for modern data-driven enterprises to derive business insights and drive actions. These engines support a large number of analytic jobs processing huge volumes of data on a daily basis, and workloads are often inundated with overlapping computations across multiple jobs. Reusing common computation is crucial for efficient cluster resource utilization and reducing job execution time. Detecting common computation is the first and key step for reducing this computational redundancy. However, detecting equivalence on large-scale analytics engines requires efficient and scalable solutions that are fully automated. In addition, to maximize computation reuse, equivalence needs to be detected at the semantic level instead of just the syntactic level (i.e., the ability to detect semantic equivalence of seemingly different-looking queries). Unfortunately, existing solutions fall short of satisfying these requirements. In this paper, we take a major step towards filling this gap by proposing GEqO, a portable and lightweight machine-learning-based framework for efficiently identifying semantically equivalent computations at scale. GEqO introduces two machine-learning-based filters that quickly prune out nonequivalent subexpressions and employs a semi-supervised learning feedback loop to iteratively improve its model with an intelligent sampling mechanism. Further, with its novel database-agnostic featurization method, GEqO can transfer the learning from one workload and database to another. Our extensive empirical evaluation shows that, on TPC-DS-like queries, GEqO yields significant performance gains-up to 200x faster than automated verifiers-and finds up to 2x more equivalences than optimizer and signature-based equivalence detection approaches.