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DeepSeek-OCR Adapted for Molecular Recognition, Hits Sequence-Model Limits

Haocheng Tang, Xingyu Dang, Junmei WangRead original
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DeepSeek-OCR Adapted for Molecular Recognition, Hits Sequence-Model Limits

Researchers adapted DeepSeek-OCR-2 to recognize molecular structures in 2D chemical diagrams by framing the task as image-conditioned SMILES generation. The team developed a two-stage fine-tuning approach using LoRA followed by selective full-parameter tuning to stabilize training on a dataset combining synthetic PubChem renderings and real USPTO patent images. The resulting model, MolSeek-OCR, matches the best image-to-sequence baselines but underperforms state-of-the-art graph-based methods, and reinforcement learning and data curation failed to close the gap on strict sequence-level accuracy.

TL;DR

  • DeepSeek-OCR-2 adapted for optical chemical structure recognition (OCSR) by treating it as image-to-SMILES generation rather than direct diagram parsing
  • Two-stage fine-tuning strategy using LoRA then selective full-parameter tuning overcame training instabilities that plagued direct supervised fine-tuning
  • Model trained on hybrid dataset of synthetic PubChem molecules and realistic USPTO patent images to improve robustness and coverage
  • MolSeek-OCR achieves competitive image-to-sequence performance but remains below graph-based OCSR models, with RL and data curation unable to improve exact SMILES matching

Why it matters

Optical chemical structure recognition is a bottleneck in converting printed scientific literature into machine-readable molecular data, which is essential for drug discovery, materials science, and chemical informatics. Vision-language models show promise for this task but require careful adaptation and training strategies to handle the precision demands of molecular representation. This work demonstrates both the potential and current limitations of applying large multimodal models to specialized scientific domains.

Business relevance

Pharmaceutical companies, chemical databases, and research institutions spend significant resources manually digitizing molecular structures from patents and literature. A robust automated OCSR system could accelerate drug discovery pipelines and reduce data entry costs, though current approaches still require human validation for mission-critical applications. The gap between sequence-based and graph-based methods suggests the market opportunity remains open for better solutions.

Key implications

  • Vision-language models require domain-specific fine-tuning strategies and cannot be applied directly to specialized scientific tasks without careful architectural and training choices
  • Sequence-based approaches (SMILES generation) may be fundamentally limited compared to graph-based methods for molecular structure recognition, suggesting architectural choices matter as much as training data
  • Hybrid training datasets combining synthetic and real-world data improve robustness, but reinforcement learning and data curation alone cannot overcome fundamental model limitations on strict accuracy metrics

What to watch

Monitor whether graph-based vision-language models or hybrid sequence-graph approaches can close the performance gap on OCSR tasks. Watch for adoption of MolSeek-OCR or similar models in real pharmaceutical and chemical informatics workflows to understand practical accuracy thresholds. Track whether specialized fine-tuning techniques developed here transfer to other scientific diagram recognition tasks like protein structures or circuit diagrams.

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