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CALMem : Application-Layer Dual Memory for Conversational AI

Published 20 May 2026 in cs.IR | (2605.20724v1)

Abstract: LLMs operate within fixed context windows that fundamentally limit conversational continuity. When context fills, compaction discards history irreversibly; when sessions end, all memory resets to zero. Existing solutions-larger context windows, retrieval-augmented generation for knowledge bases, and memory-augmented architectures such as MemGPT-either require model modification, impose provider lock-in, or do not address the compaction continuity problem. We present CALMem (Conversational Application-Layer Memory), an application-layer dual memory architecture that gives LLM-based conversational assistants virtually unbounded effective context without any modification to the underlying model. CALMem combines two complementary memory subsystems: an episodic memory layer built on sliding-window vector embeddings of conversation history, and a semantic memory layer of agent-writable structured facts. A token-budget-adaptive injection mechanism, called the MOIM (Message of Injected Memory), automatically retrieves and injects relevant past context each turn, scaling injection depth inversely with context pressure. A key contribution is intra-session retrieval: compacted away turns from the current session remain searchable, closing a gap unaddressed by prior work. The system is implemented as a pure application layer in a production Rust codebase, is provider-agnostic, and degrades to original LLM behaviour with zero overhead when disabled. We describe the architecture, design decisions, and performance characteristics, and analyse the trade-offs that guided each implementation choice.

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