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[ARTICLE · art-61444] src=arxiv.org ↗ pub= topic=large-language-models verified=true sentiment=↑ positive

Uncertainty-Aware Sequential Decision Rules for Event-Triggered LLM Invocation in Streaming Systems

Researchers formalize when to invoke large language models in streaming inference pipelines as a risk-based sequential stopping problem, proving optimality guarantees and sublinear regret bounds. On turbofan degradation data, their anomaly-score-driven trigger policies achieve 92.9% diagnostic quality and dominate alternatives by an order of magnitude on Pareto AUC.

read1 min views1 publishedJul 16, 2026

arXiv:2607.13048v1 Announce Type: new Abstract: Streaming inference pipelines increasingly pair lightweight fast models with Large Language Models (LLMs) that provide rich semantic understanding at substantial cost. The central question of when to invoke the LLM has received limited formal treatment. We cast this as a risk-based sequential stopping problem, where a trigger policy fires when a risk functional over the observation history exceeds a threshold. Within this framework, we prove six results: a minimum inter-event time bound excluding trigger chattering; optimality of threshold policies via smooth pasting; approximate SPRT guarantees under estimated parameters; O(sqrt(T log T)) regret for stationary streams, extending to O(sqrt((C_T + 1) T log T)) under C_T changepoints; O(1/sqrt(T)) convergence of online gradient descent for adaptive thresholds; and a calibration-to-miss-rate transfer inequality. Several classical trigger families, including event-triggered, optimal stopping, SPRT, CUSUM, and Bayesian triggers, can be expressed as special cases of this framework. On turbofan degradation data (CMAPSS) with real LLM calls, we empirically verify the theoretical assumptions, ablate the risk function design, compare against six baselines including a RouteLLM-style router and contextual bandits, and analyze cost sensitivity and LLM failure modes. The results confirm sublinear regret, with alpha < 1 for all principled triggers; high diagnostic quality, with 92.9 percent of 1600 LLM diagnoses reaching grounding score >= 0.75 under our rubric; and that anomaly-score-driven risk functions dominate alternatives by roughly an order of magnitude on the Pareto AUC.

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