Researcher profile

Hangrui Bi

Hangrui Bi contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

2 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

DreamProver: Evolving Transferable Lemma Libraries via a Wake-Sleep Theorem-Proving Agent

We introduce DreamProver, an agentic framework that leverages a "wake-sleep" program induction paradigm to discover reusable lemmas for formal theorem proving. Existing approaches either rely on fixed lemma libraries, which limit adaptability, or synthesize highly specific intermediate lemmas tailored to individual theorems, thereby lacking generality. DreamProver addresses this gap through an iterative two-stage process. In the wake stage, DreamProver attempts to prove theorems from a training set using the current lemma library while proposing new candidate lemmas. In the "sleep" stage, it abstracts, refines, and consolidates these candidates to compress and optimize the library. Through this alternating cycle, DreamProver progressively evolves a compact set of high-level, transferable lemmas that can be effectively used to prove unseen theorems in related domains. Experimental results demonstrate that DreamProver substantially improves proof success rates across a diverse set of mathematical benchmarks, while also producing more concise proofs and reducing computational cost.

preprint2021arXiv

Non-autoregressive electron flow generation for reaction prediction

Reaction prediction is a fundamental problem in computational chemistry. Existing approaches typically generate a chemical reaction by sampling tokens or graph edits sequentially, conditioning on previously generated outputs. These autoregressive generating methods impose an arbitrary ordering of outputs and prevent parallel decoding during inference. We devise a novel decoder that avoids such sequential generating and predicts the reaction in a Non-Autoregressive manner. Inspired by physical-chemistry insights, we represent edge edits in a molecule graph as electron flows, which can then be predicted in parallel. To capture the uncertainty of reactions, we introduce latent variables to generate multi-modal outputs. Following previous works, we evaluate our model on USPTO MIT dataset. Our model achieves both an order of magnitude lower inference latency, with state-of-the-art top-1 accuracy and comparable performance on Top-K sampling.