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Kimi K2.5: Visual Agentic Intelligence

Mixed citation behavior. Most common role is background (68%).

132 Pith papers citing it
Background 68% of classified citations
abstract

We introduce Kimi K2.5, an open-source multimodal agentic model designed to advance general agentic intelligence. K2.5 emphasizes the joint optimization of text and vision so that two modalities enhance each other. This includes a series of techniques such as joint text-vision pre-training, zero-vision SFT, and joint text-vision reinforcement learning. Building on this multimodal foundation, K2.5 introduces Agent Swarm, a self-directed parallel agent orchestration framework that dynamically decomposes complex tasks into heterogeneous sub-problems and executes them concurrently. Extensive evaluations show that Kimi K2.5 achieves state-of-the-art results across various domains including coding, vision, reasoning, and agentic tasks. Agent Swarm also reduces latency by up to $4.5\times$ over single-agent baselines. We release the post-trained Kimi K2.5 model checkpoint to facilitate future research and real-world applications of agentic intelligence.

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  • abstract We introduce Kimi K2.5, an open-source multimodal agentic model designed to advance general agentic intelligence. K2.5 emphasizes the joint optimization of text and vision so that two modalities enhance each other. This includes a series of techniques such as joint text-vision pre-training, zero-vision SFT, and joint text-vision reinforcement learning. Building on this multimodal foundation, K2.5 introduces Agent Swarm, a self-directed parallel agent orchestration framework that dynamically decomposes complex tasks into heterogeneous sub-problems and executes them concurrently. Extensive evalu

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2026 132

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representative citing papers

ETCHR: Editing To Clarify and Harness Reasoning

cs.CV · 2026-05-22 · unverdicted · novelty 7.0

A decoupled question-conditioned image editor trained via supervised imitation then VLM-reward enhancement improves MLLM visual reasoning Pass@1 by 4.6-5.5 points across models and tasks.

Do Coding Agents Understand Least-Privilege Authorization?

cs.CR · 2026-05-14 · unverdicted · novelty 7.0

Coding agents struggle to infer least-privilege file permissions by omitting needed accesses while granting unused or sensitive ones, but Sufficiency-Tightness Decomposition improves sensitive-task success by up to 15.8% and reduces attacks.

ClawForge: Generating Executable Interactive Benchmarks for Command-Line Agents

cs.AI · 2026-05-13 · unverdicted · novelty 7.0 · 2 refs

ClawForge is a generator framework that creates reproducible executable benchmarks for command-line agents under state conflict, with ClawForge-Bench showing frontier models reach at most 45.3% strict accuracy and that state inspection drives most performance gaps.

Learning Agentic Policy from Action Guidance

cs.CL · 2026-05-12 · unverdicted · novelty 7.0

ActGuide-RL uses human action data as plan-style guidance in mixed-policy RL to overcome exploration barriers in LLM agents, matching SFT+RL performance on search benchmarks without cold-start training.

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Showing 2 of 2 citing papers after filters.

  • Evaluation of Agents under Simulated AI Marketplace Dynamics cs.IR · 2026-04-15 · unverdicted · none · ref 92 · internal anchor

    Marketplace Evaluation uses repeated-interaction simulations to assess information access systems with marketplace-level metrics such as retention and market share that complement traditional accuracy measures.

  • ClinQueryAgent: A Conversational Agent for Population Health Management cs.IR · 2026-04-13 · unverdicted · none · ref 30 · internal anchor

    The paper introduces ClinQueryAgent, a conversational agent that converts natural language queries into database queries for population health management while keeping patient data secure, and reports its use by 128 staff across 15 NHS practices covering 148,319 patients.