Researcher profile

Kosuke Akimoto

Kosuke Akimoto contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

2 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

cotomi Act: Learning to Automate Work by Watching You

What if a browser agent could learn your work simply by watching you do it? We present cotomi Act, a browser-based computer-using agent that combines reliable multi-step task execution with persistent organizational knowledge learned from user behavior. For execution, an agent scaffold with adaptive lazy observation, verbal-diff-based history compression, coarse-grained actions, and test-time scaling via best-of-N action selection achieves 80.4% on the 179-task WebArena human-evaluation subset, exceeding the reported 78.2% human baseline. For organizational knowledge, a behavior-to-knowledge pipeline passively observes the user's browsing and progressively abstracts it into artifacts (task boards, wiki) exposed through a shared workspace editable by both user and agent. A controlled proxy evaluation confirms that task success improves as behavior-derived knowledge accumulates. In our live demonstration, attendees interact with the system in a real browser, issuing tasks and observing end-to-end autonomous execution and shared knowledge management.

preprint2020arXiv

Learning Directly from Grammar Compressed Text

Neural networks using numerous text data have been successfully applied to a variety of tasks. While massive text data is usually compressed using techniques such as grammar compression, almost all of the previous machine learning methods assume already decompressed sequence data as their input. In this paper, we propose a method to directly apply neural sequence models to text data compressed with grammar compression algorithms without decompression. To encode the unique symbols that appear in compression rules, we introduce composer modules to incrementally encode the symbols into vector representations. Through experiments on real datasets, we empirically showed that the proposal model can achieve both memory and computational efficiency while maintaining moderate performance.