arXiv:2604.03588v1 Announce Type: new
Abstract: AI agents operating over extended time horizons accumulate experiences that serve multiple concurrent goals, and must often maintain conflicting interpretations of the same events. A concession during a client negotiation encodes as a “trust-building investment” for one strategic goal and a “contractual liability” for another. Current memory architectures assume a single correct encoding, or at best support multiple views over unified storage. We propose Rashomon Memory: an architecture where parallel goal-conditioned agents encode experiences according to their priorities and negotiate at query time through argumentation. Each perspective maintains its own ontology and knowledge graph. At retrieval, perspectives propose interpretations, critique each other’s proposals using asymmetric domain knowledge, and Dung’s argumentation semantics determines which proposals survive. The resulting attack graph is itself an explanation: it records which interpretation was selected, which alternatives were considered, and on what grounds they were rejected. We present a proof-of-concept showing that retrieval modes (selection, composition, conflict surfacing) emerge from attack graph topology, and that the conflict surfacing mode, where the system reports genuine disagreement rather than forcing resolution, lets decision-makers see the underlying interpretive conflict directly.
TR-EduVSum: A Turkish-Focused Dataset and Consensus Framework for Educational Video Summarization
arXiv:2604.07553v1 Announce Type: cross Abstract: This study presents a framework for generating the gold-standard summary fully automatically and reproducibly based on multiple human summaries of

