arXiv:2602.15327v2 Announce Type: replace-cross
Abstract: Machine learning model performance improvements tend to arise from competition and application. For deployment, we consider prescriptive scaling laws: given a pre-training compute budget, what downstream accuracy is attainable with contemporary post-training practice, and how stable is that mapping as the field evolves? Using large-scale observational evaluations with 5k existing and 2k newly evaluated model checkpoints spanning 2022-2026 across six benchmarks, we estimate capability boundaries, high conditional quantiles of benchmark scores as a function of log pre-training FLOPs, via smoothed quantile regression with a monotone, saturating sigmoid parameterization. We validate temporal reliability by fitting on earlier model generations and evaluating on later releases: across four of six tasks, the out-of-distribution coverage error remains below 2%, while math reasoning exhibits a consistently advancing boundary over time. For instance, at a budget of 10^24 FLOPs, the estimated attainable accuracies are 0.83 on IFEval and 0.54 on MATH Lvl 5. We then extend our approach to analyze task-dependent saturation and to probe contamination-related shifts on math reasoning tasks. Finally, we introduce a balanced I-optimal sampling algorithm that recovers near-full-data frontiers using roughly 20% of the parameter-count-weighted evaluation budget, as low as 5% on some tasks, while maintaining comparable calibration. Together, our work releases Proteus-2k, the latest model performance evaluation dataset, and introduces a practical methodology for translating compute budgets into reliable performance expectations and for monitoring when capability boundaries shift across time.
Wavelet analysis of human recombination rates demonstrates divergence on fine scales
Background: Recombination rates can be estimated across the genome, underpinning genetic analyses such as identification of regions under selection. Accurate recombination mapping requires observing a



