CoreWeave has launched ARIA (AI Research & Iteration Agent), a new AI research assistant designed to help AI teams analyse experiments, identify patterns, and improve models faster. The company announced that ARIA is now available in public preview within Weights & Biases (W&B), its machine learning development platform.
Built using W&B Weave, CoreWeave’s agent development platform, ARIA is designed to automate one of the most time-consuming parts of AI research – analysing thousands of experiment runs and turning them into actionable insights.
According to CoreWeave, AI researchers often spend hours manually creating dashboards, analysing results and comparing experiments before deciding what to test next. ARIA aims to remove that bottleneck by automatically reading experimental data, generating reports, creating visualisations and recommending next steps.
“Researchers are making rapid progress in model development, but their management tools have not kept pace,” said Chen Goldberg, Executive Vice President of Product and Engineering at CoreWeave. She described ARIA as an “always-on research collaborator” that helps turn experimental data into continuous improvements.
The agent can analyse thousands of experiment runs and tens of thousands of metrics within minutes. It also creates live dashboards, including heat maps, parameter comparison charts, and reports that automatically update as new experiments are added.
Unlike traditional AI assistants, ARIA enters every conversation with the entire project already loaded. It can analyse experiments across multiple projects and identify patterns that researchers might otherwise miss.
The company said ARIA was developed using insights gained from supporting some of the world’s largest AI training workloads through nearly one billion experiment runs tracked on Weights & Biases.
The company believes the future of AI development will depend not only on faster computing power but also on faster experimentation and iteration. By automating experiment analysis and surfacing insights in real time, CoreWeave hopes ARIA will help research teams build better AI models and agents more efficiently.
ALSO READ: Alteryx Inspire 2026: Three Questions Every Data Leader Should Take to Orlando
