A good page to surface because it connects two otherwise separate maps: the open RWKV sequence-model line and the newer Polish-language model ecosystem around PLLuM.
Researcher Profile
Editor reviewedPrzemysław Kazienko
RWKV and efficient sequence modeling
Researcher at Wrocław University of Science and Technology working across RWKV and PLLuM
Important in the long tail because he is another contributor whose work spans both the RWKV sequence-model thread and the Polish PLLuM effort, which makes his page more informative than a generic single-paper profile.
Organizations
About This Page
This profile is meant to help you get oriented quickly: why this researcher matters, what to read first, and where to explore next.
Last reviewed
March 18, 2026
Official And External Links
Known For
The ideas, systems, and research directions that make this person worth knowing.
01
Repeated authorship on the early RWKV family
02
Polish large-language-model work through PLLuM
03
Institutional continuity across open model efforts
04
RWKV and efficient sequence modeling
05
RWKV: Reinventing RNNs for the Transformer Era
06
RWKV (project)
Start Here
Canonical papers, project pages, or repositories that anchor this profile.
Related Researchers
People worth exploring next because they share topics, labs, or source material with this profile.
A strong page to keep because he links the early RWKV work to the later Wrocław-centered PLLuM effort, which makes him one of the clearer continuity threads between open sequence models and Polish-language LLM development.
A useful RWKV page because he is present on the original paper, Eagle/Finch, and RWKV-7, making him part of the smaller set of contributors who stayed with the architecture as it evolved rather than only appearing at launch.
Useful because he connects an earlier line of conversational-AI work at Nextremer with later authorship on both the original RWKV paper and Eagle/Finch, which makes this page more than a stray coauthor stub.
Worth tracking because he is one of the contributors who stays with the RWKV line from the original paper through Eagle/Finch, GoldFinch, and into RWKV-7, which is exactly the kind of repeated authorship signal that makes these long-tail pages valuable.
A worthwhile long-tail page because he appears on both the original RWKV paper and Eagle/Finch and also has visible follow-on work from the same Wrocław group rather than disappearing after the first release.