MyArxiv
Computation and Language
☆ WorldCache: Content-Aware Caching for Accelerated Video World Models
Diffusion Transformers (DiTs) power high-fidelity video world models but remain computationally expensive due to sequential denoising and costly spatio-temporal attention. Training-free feature caching accelerates inference by reusing intermediate activations across denoising steps; however, existing methods largely rely on a Zero-Order Hold assumption i.e., reusing cached features as static snapshots when global drift is small. This often leads to ghosting artifacts, blur, and motion inconsistencies in dynamic scenes. We propose \textbf{WorldCache}, a Perception-Constrained Dynamical Caching framework that improves both when and how to reuse features. WorldCache introduces motion-adaptive thresholds, saliency-weighted drift estimation, optimal approximation via blending and warping, and phase-aware threshold scheduling across diffusion steps. Our cohesive approach enables adaptive, motion-consistent feature reuse without retraining. On Cosmos-Predict2.5-2B evaluated on PAI-Bench, WorldCache achieves \textbf{2.3$\times$} inference speedup while preserving \textbf{99.4\%} of baseline quality, substantially outperforming prior training-free caching approaches. Our code can be accessed on \href{https://umair1221.github.io/World-Cache/}{World-Cache}.
comment: 33 Pages
☆ ThinkJEPA: Empowering Latent World Models with Large Vision-Language Reasoning Model
Recent progress in latent world models (e.g., V-JEPA2) has shown promising capability in forecasting future world states from video observations. Nevertheless, dense prediction from a short observation window limits temporal context and can bias predictors toward local, low-level extrapolation, making it difficult to capture long-horizon semantics and reducing downstream utility. Vision--language models (VLMs), in contrast, provide strong semantic grounding and general knowledge by reasoning over uniformly sampled frames, but they are not ideal as standalone dense predictors due to compute-driven sparse sampling, a language-output bottleneck that compresses fine-grained interaction states into text-oriented representations, and a data-regime mismatch when adapting to small action-conditioned datasets. We propose a VLM-guided JEPA-style latent world modeling framework that combines dense-frame dynamics modeling with long-horizon semantic guidance via a dual-temporal pathway: a dense JEPA branch for fine-grained motion and interaction cues, and a uniformly sampled VLM \emph{thinker} branch with a larger temporal stride for knowledge-rich guidance. To transfer the VLM's progressive reasoning signals effectively, we introduce a hierarchical pyramid representation extraction module that aggregates multi-layer VLM representations into guidance features compatible with latent prediction. Experiments on hand-manipulation trajectory prediction show that our method outperforms both a strong VLM-only baseline and a JEPA-predictor baseline, and yields more robust long-horizon rollout behavior.
comment: 10 pages, 5 figures
☆ TiCo: Time-Controllable Training for Spoken Dialogue Models
We propose TiCo, a simple post-training method for enabling spoken dialogue models (SDMs) to follow time-constrained instructions and generate responses with controllable duration. This capability is valuable for real-world spoken language systems such as voice assistants and interactive agents, where controlling response duration can improve interaction quality. However, despite their strong ability to generate natural spoken responses, existing models lack time awareness and struggle to follow duration-related instructions (e.g., "Please generate a response lasting about 15 seconds"). Through an empirical evaluation of both open-source and commercial SDMs, we show that they frequently fail to satisfy such time-control requirements. TiCo addresses this limitation by enabling models to estimate elapsed speaking time during generation through Spoken Time Markers (STM) (e.g., <10.6 seconds>). These markers help the model maintain awareness of time and adjust the remaining content to meet the target duration. TiCo is simple and efficient: it requires only a small amount of data and no additional question-answer pairs, relying instead on self-generation and reinforcement learning. Experimental results show that TiCo significantly improves adherence to duration constraints while preserving response quality.
☆ Greater accessibility can amplify discrimination in generative AI
Hundreds of millions of people rely on large language models (LLMs) for education, work, and even healthcare. Yet these models are known to reproduce and amplify social biases present in their training data. Moreover, text-based interfaces remain a barrier for many, for example, users with limited literacy, motor impairments, or mobile-only devices. Voice interaction promises to expand accessibility, but unlike text, speech carries identity cues that users cannot easily mask, raising concerns about whether accessibility gains may come at the cost of equitable treatment. Here we show that audio-enabled LLMs exhibit systematic gender discrimination, shifting responses toward gender-stereotyped adjectives and occupations solely on the basis of speaker voice, and amplifying bias beyond that observed in text-based interaction. Thus, voice interfaces do not merely extend text models to a new modality but introduce distinct bias mechanisms tied to paralinguistic cues. Complementary survey evidence ($n=1,000$) shows that infrequent chatbot users are most hesitant to undisclosed attribute inference and most likely to disengage when such practices are revealed. To demonstrate a potential mitigation strategy, we show that pitch manipulation can systematically regulate gender-discriminatory outputs. Overall, our findings reveal a critical tension in AI development: efforts to expand accessibility through voice interfaces simultaneously create new pathways for discrimination, demanding that fairness and accessibility be addressed in tandem.
comment: Preprint
☆ MemDLM: Memory-Enhanced DLM Training
Diffusion Language Models (DLMs) offer attractive advantages over Auto-Regressive (AR) models, such as full-attention parallel decoding and flexible generation. However, they suffer from a notable train-inference mismatch: DLMs are trained with a static, single-step masked prediction objective, but deployed through a multi-step progressive denoising trajectory. We propose MemDLM (Memory-Enhanced DLM), which narrows this gap by embedding a simulated denoising process into training via Bi-level Optimization. An inner loop updates a set of fast weights, forming a Parametric Memory that captures the local trajectory experience of each sample, while an outer loop updates the base model conditioned on this memory. By offloading memorization pressure from token representations to parameters, MemDLM yields faster convergence and lower training loss. Moreover, the inner loop can be re-enabled at inference time as an adaptation step, yielding additional gains on long-context understanding. We find that, when activated at inference time, this Parametric Memory acts as an emergent in-weight retrieval mechanism, helping MemDLM further reduce token-level attention bottlenecks on challenging Needle-in-a-Haystack retrieval tasks. Code: https://github.com/JarvisPei/MemDLM.
☆ Dyadic: A Scalable Platform for Human-Human and Human-AI Conversation Research
Conversation is ubiquitous in social life, but the empirical study of this interactive process has been thwarted by tools that are insufficiently modular and unadaptive to researcher needs. To relieve many constraints in conversation research, the current tutorial presents an overview and introduction to a new tool, Dyadic (https://www.chatdyadic.com/), a web-based platform for studying human-human and human-AI conversations using text-based or voice-based chats. Dyadic is distinct from other platforms by offering studies with multiple modalities, AI suggestions (e.g., in human-human studies, AI can suggest responses to a participant), live monitoring (e.g., researchers can evaluate, in real time, chats between communicators), and survey deployment (e.g., Likert-type scales, feeling thermometers, and open-ended text boxes can be sent to humans for in situ evaluations of the interaction), among other consequential features. No coding is required to operate Dyadic directly, and integrations with existing survey platforms are offered.
☆ Adapting Self-Supervised Speech Representations for Cross-lingual Dysarthria Detection in Parkinson's Disease
The limited availability of dysarthric speech data makes cross-lingual detection an important but challenging problem. A key difficulty is that speech representations often encode language-dependent structure that can confound dysarthria detection. We propose a representation-level language shift (LS) that aligns source-language self-supervised speech representations with the target-language distribution using centroid-based vector adaptation estimated from healthy-control speech. We evaluate the approach on oral DDK recordings from Parkinson's disease speech datasets in Czech, German, and Spanish under both cross-lingual and multilingual settings. LS substantially improves sensitivity and F1 in cross-lingual settings, while yielding smaller but consistent gains in multilingual settings. Representation analysis further shows that LS reduces language identity in the embedding space, supporting the interpretation that LS removes language-dependent structure.
comment: Submitted to Interspeech 2026
☆ Gumbel Distillation for Parallel Text Generation ICLR 2026
The slow, sequential nature of autoregressive (AR) language models has driven the adoption of parallel decoding methods. However, these non-AR models often sacrifice generation quality as they struggle to model the complex joint distribution of token sequences. To narrow this performance gap, we introduce Gumbel Distillation, a novel distillation technique that enables parallel decoders to learn this distribution effectively. Our method leverages the Gumbel-Max trick to create a deterministic mapping from a latent Gumbel noise space to the output tokens of a high-performing AR teacher. As a model-agnostic technique, Gumbel Distillation seamlessly integrates with diverse parallel decoding architectures, including MDLM and BD3-LM. Experiments on LM1B and OpenWebText show that Gumbel Distillation substantially improves the generation quality of parallel language models, achieving a 30.0% improvement in MAUVE score and 10.5% in generative perplexity over MDLM trained on OpenWebText dataset. Code available at https://github.com/hxixixh/gumbel-distill.
comment: ICLR 2026
☆ SPA: A Simple but Tough-to-Beat Baseline for Knowledge Injection
While large language models (LLMs) are pretrained on massive amounts of data, their knowledge coverage remains incomplete in specialized, data-scarce domains, motivating extensive efforts to study synthetic data generation for knowledge injection. We propose SPA (Scaling Prompt-engineered Augmentation), a simple but tough-to-beat baseline that uses a small set of carefully designed prompts to generate large-scale synthetic data for knowledge injection. Through systematic comparisons, we find that SPA outperforms several strong baselines. Furthermore, we identify two key limitations of prior approaches: (1) while RL-based methods may improve the token efficiency of LLM-based data augmentation at small scale, they suffer from diversity collapse as data scales, leading to diminishing returns; and (2) while multi-stage prompting may outperform simple augmentation methods, their advantages can disappear after careful prompt tuning. Our results suggest that, for knowledge injection, careful prompt design combined with straightforward large-scale augmentation can be surprisingly effective, and we hope SPA can serve as a strong baseline for future studies in this area. Our code is available at https://github.com/Tangkexian/SPA.
☆ Enhancing Document-Level Machine Translation via Filtered Synthetic Corpora and Two-Stage LLM Adaptation ICASSP 2026
In Machine Translation, Large Language Models (LLMs) have generally underperformed compared to conventional encoder-decoder systems and thus see limited adoption. However, LLMs excel at modeling contextual information, making them a natural fit for document-level translation tasks where coherence across sentences is crucial. Despite this potential, document-level MT with LLMs faces two key challenges: (1) the scarcity of large-scale, high-quality document-level parallel data; and (2) the propensity of LLMs to introduce hallucinations and omissions during generation. To address these challenges, we propose a two-stage fine-tuning strategy leveraging LLM-augmented document-level data. First, we augment data by converting summarization data into document-level parallel data using a LLM, and then filter it using multiple metrics, leveraging sacreBLEU, COMET, and LaBSE-based cosine similarity-to improve data quality. Finally, we employ a two-stage fine-tuning strategy: first fine-tuning on the abundant sentence-level MT resources, and then on the filtered document-level corpus.
comment: Accepted to ICASSP 2026
☆ The Semantic Ladder: A Framework for Progressive Formalization of Natural Language Content for Knowledge Graphs and AI Systems
Semantic data and knowledge infrastructures must reconcile two fundamentally different forms of representation: natural language, in which most knowledge is created and communicated, and formal semantic models, which enable machine-actionable integration, interoperability, and reasoning. Bridging this gap remains a central challenge, particularly when full semantic formalization is required at the point of data entry. Here, we introduce the Semantic Ladder, an architectural framework that enables the progressive formalization of data and knowledge. Building on the concept of modular semantic units as identifiable carriers of meaning, the framework organizes representations across levels of increasing semantic explicitness, ranging from natural language text snippets to ontology-based and higher-order logical models. Transformations between levels support semantic enrichment, statement structuring, and logical modelling while preserving semantic continuity and traceability. This approach enables the incremental construction of semantic knowledge spaces, reduces the semantic parsing burden, and supports the integration of heterogeneous representations, including natural language, structured semantic models, and vector-based embeddings. The Semantic Ladder thereby provides a foundation for scalable, interoperable, and AI-ready data and knowledge infrastructures.
☆ Multiperspectivity as a Resource for Narrative Similarity Prediction
Predicting narrative similarity can be understood as an inherently interpretive task: different, equally valid readings of the same text can produce divergent interpretations and thus different similarity judgments, posing a fundamental challenge for semantic evaluation benchmarks that encode a single ground truth. Rather than treating this multiperspectivity as a challenge to overcome, we propose to incorporate it in the decision making process of predictive systems. To explore this strategy, we created an ensemble of 31 LLM personas. These range from practitioners following interpretive frameworks to more intuitive, lay-style characters. Our experiments were conducted on the SemEval-2026 Task 4 dataset, where the system achieved an accuracy score of 0.705. Accuracy improves with ensemble size, consistent with Condorcet Jury Theorem-like dynamics under weakened independence. Practitioner personas perform worse individually but produce less correlated errors, yielding larger ensemble gains under majority voting. Our error analysis reveals a consistent negative association between gender-focused interpretive vocabulary and accuracy across all persona categories, suggesting either attention to dimensions not relevant for the benchmark or valid interpretations absent from the ground truth. This finding underscores the need for evaluation frameworks that account for interpretive plurality.
☆ Autoregressive vs. Masked Diffusion Language Models: A Controlled Comparison
We present a controlled empirical comparison between autoregressive (AR) and masked diffusion (MDLM) language models. Both models are trained on identical data (50M tokens from TinyStories), identical compute budget (20,000 steps, batch size 32, sequence length 512), and identical hardware (NVIDIA H100 80GB), isolating the generation paradigm as the sole variable. We report three findings. First, both paradigms achieve comparable training throughput (~50K tokens/second), with MDLM requiring only 4.7% more wall-clock time. Second, AR converges faster and begins overfitting by step 14,000, while MDLM converges more slowly and is still improving at step 20,000, suggesting different compute-optimal training regimes. Third, quantitative diversity analysis over 1,000 generated samples reveals a structural diversity-fluency trade-off: AR produces fluent but repetitive outputs (99.8% begin with the same word), while MDLM generates more diverse narratives (93.4% unique 5-word openings, higher Distinct-n, lower Self-BLEU), at the cost of occasional grammatical inconsistencies. All code, trained checkpoints, and data pipelines are released for reproducibility.
comment: 10 pages, 2 figures, 4 tables. Code and checkpoints at https://github.com/caiovicentino/arche
☆ Dual-Space Knowledge Distillation with Key-Query Matching for Large Language Models with Vocabulary Mismatch ICASSP 2026
Large language models (LLMs) achieve state-of-the-art (SOTA) performance across language tasks, but are costly to deploy due to their size and resource demands. Knowledge Distillation (KD) addresses this by training smaller Student models to mimic larger Teacher models, improving efficiency without significant performance loss. Dual-Space Knowledge Distillation with Cross-Model Attention (DSKD-CMA) has emerged as a SOTA method for KD between LLMs with distinct tokenizers, yet its internal workings remain largely opaque. In this work, we systematically analyse the attention mechanism of DSKD-CMA through manual token alignment probing and heatmap visualisations, revealing both strengths and limitations. Building on this, we introduce a novel method, DSKD-CMA-GA, based on Generative Adversarial (GA) learning, to address the mismatched distributions between the keys and queries computed from distinct models. Experiments show modest but consistent ROUGE-L gains in text generation quality, particularly on out-of-distribution data (+0.37 on average), narrowing the gap between cross- and same-tokenizer KD.
comment: Accepted at ICASSP 2026
☆ ROM: Real-time Overthinking Mitigation via Streaming Detection and Intervention
Large Reasoning Models (LRMs) achieve strong accuracy on challenging tasks by generating long Chain-of-Thought traces, but suffer from overthinking. Even after reaching the correct answer, they continue generating redundant reasoning steps. This behavior increases latency and compute cost and can also lead to answer drift. Existing mitigation methods either require training-heavy backbone modification or rely on hand-crafted heuristics that do not truly capture overthinking patterns. We propose ROM, the first method that formulates overthinking mitigation as a streaming prediction-and-control problem. ROM attaches a lightweight detection head to the late-layer hidden states of a frozen large language model backbone. It monitors tokens in real time and triggers an early transition to the final answer once overthinking is detected. We also introduce token-level supervision based on solution correctness boundaries and a data augmentation strategy that reduces distilled-data bias. Across seven benchmarks, ROM achieves the highest accuracy (93.51%), the shortest responses (1,159 tokens), and the best response efficiency. Compared with the vanilla baseline, it reduces response length by 47.2% and improves efficiency by 121%. These results show that streaming detection is a promising approach to real-time overthinking mitigation.
comment: Code is available at https://github.com/SaFo-Lab/ROM
☆ Retrieving Climate Change Disinformation by Narrative
Detecting climate disinformation narratives typically relies on fixed taxonomies, which do not accommodate emerging narratives. Thus, we re-frame narrative detection as a retrieval task: given a narrative's core message as a query, rank texts from a corpus by alignment with that narrative. This formulation requires no predefined label set and can accommodate emerging narratives. We repurpose three climate disinformation datasets (CARDS, Climate Obstruction, climate change subset of PolyNarrative) for retrieval evaluation and propose SpecFi, a framework that generates hypothetical documents to bridge the gap between abstract narrative descriptions and their concrete textual instantiations. SpecFi uses community summaries from graph-based community detection as few-shot examples for generation, achieving a MAP of 0.505 on CARDS without access to narrative labels. We further introduce narrative variance, an embedding-based difficulty metric, and show via partial correlation analysis that standard retrieval degrades on high-variance narratives (BM25 loses 63.4% of MAP), while SpecFi-CS remains robust (32.7% loss). Our analysis also reveals that unsupervised community summaries converge on descriptions close to expert-crafted taxonomies, suggesting that graph-based methods can surface narrative structure from unlabeled text.
☆ On the Challenges and Opportunities of Learned Sparse Retrieval for Code
Retrieval over large codebases is a key component of modern LLM-based software engineering systems. Existing approaches predominantly rely on dense embedding models, while learned sparse retrieval (LSR) remains largely unexplored for code. However, applying sparse retrieval to code is challenging due to subword fragmentation, semantic gaps between natural-language queries and code, diversity of programming languages and sub-tasks, and the length of code documents, which can harm sparsity and latency. We introduce SPLADE-Code, the first large-scale family of learned sparse retrieval models specialized for code retrieval (600M-8B parameters). Despite a lightweight one-stage training pipeline, SPLADE-Code achieves state-of-the-art performance among retrievers under 1B parameters (75.4 on MTEB Code) and competitive results at larger scales (79.0 with 8B). We show that learned expansion tokens are critical to bridge lexical and semantic matching, and provide a latency analysis showing that LSR enables sub-millisecond retrieval on a 1M-passage collection with little effectiveness loss.
comment: 15 pages, 5 figures, 12 tables
☆ SecureBreak -- A dataset towards safe and secure models
Large language models are becoming pervasive core components in many real-world applications. As a consequence, security alignment represents a critical requirement for their safe deployment. Although previous related works focused primarily on model architectures and alignment methodologies, these approaches alone cannot ensure the complete elimination of harmful generations. This concern is reinforced by the growing body of scientific literature showing that attacks, such as jailbreaking and prompt injection, can bypass existing security alignment mechanisms. As a consequence, additional security strategies are needed both to provide qualitative feedback on the robustness of the obtained security alignment at the training stage, and to create an ``ultimate'' defense layer to block unsafe outputs possibly produced by deployed models. To provide a contribution in this scenario, this paper introduces SecureBreak, a safety-oriented dataset designed to support the development of AI-driven solutions for detecting harmful LLM outputs caused by residual weaknesses in security alignment. The dataset is highly reliable due to careful manual annotation, where labels are assigned conservatively to ensure safety. It performs well in detecting unsafe content across multiple risk categories. Tests with pre-trained LLMs show improved results after fine-tuning on SecureBreak. Overall, the dataset is useful both for post-generation safety filtering and for guiding further model alignment and security improvements.
☆ Demystifying Reinforcement Learning for Long-Horizon Tool-Using Agents: A Comprehensive Recipe
Reinforcement Learning (RL) is essential for evolving Large Language Models (LLMs) into autonomous agents capable of long-horizon planning, yet a practical recipe for scaling RL in complex, multi-turn environments remains elusive. This paper presents a systematic empirical study using TravelPlanner, a challenging testbed requiring tool orchestration to satisfy multifaceted constraints. We decompose the agentic RL design space along 5 axes: reward shaping, model scaling, data composition, algorithm selection, and environmental stability. Our controlled experiments yield 7 key takeaways, e.g., (1) reward and algorithm choices are scale-dependent as smaller models benefit from staged rewards and enhanced exploration, whereas larger models converge efficiently with simpler dense rewards, (2) ~ 1K training samples with a balanced difficulty mixture mark a sweet spot for both in-domain and out-of-domain performance, and (3) environmental stability is critical to prevent policy degradation. Based on our distilled recipe, our RL-trained models achieve state-of-the-art performance on TravelPlanner, significantly outperforming leading LLMs.
comment: Codes are available at https://github.com/WxxShirley/Agent-STAR
☆ Parameter-Efficient Fine-Tuning for Medical Text Summarization: A Comparative Study of Lora, Prompt Tuning, and Full Fine-Tuning
Fine-tuning large language models for domain-specific tasks such as medical text summarization demands substantial computational resources. Parameter-efficient fine-tuning (PEFT) methods offer promising alternatives by updating only a small fraction of parameters. This paper compares three adaptation approaches-Low-Rank Adaptation (LoRA), Prompt Tuning, and Full Fine-Tuning-across the Flan-T5 model family on the PubMed medical summarization dataset. Through experiments with multiple random seeds, we demonstrate that LoRA consistently outperforms full fine-tuning, achieving 43.52 +/- 0.18 ROUGE-1 on Flan-T5-Large with only 0.6% trainable parameters compared to 40.67 +/- 0.21 for full fine-tuning. Sensitivity analyses examine the impact of LoRA rank and prompt token count. Our findings suggest the low-rank constraint provides beneficial regularization, challenging assumptions about the necessity of full parameter updates. Code is available at https://github.com/eracoding/llm-medical-summarization
comment: 9 pages, 5 figures, presented at 6th International Conference on NLP & Text Mining (NLTM 2026), March 21-22, Sydney, Australia. Published in Computer Science & Information Technology (CS & IT), pp. 01-09, 2026
☆ BHDD: A Burmese Handwritten Digit Dataset
We introduce the Burmese Handwritten Digit Dataset (BHDD), a collection of 87,561 grayscale images of handwritten Burmese digits in ten classes. Each image is 28x28 pixels, following the MNIST format. The training set has 60,000 samples split evenly across classes; the test set has 27,561 samples with class frequencies as they arose during collection. Over 150 people of different ages and backgrounds contributed samples. We analyze the dataset's class distribution, pixel statistics, and morphological variation, and identify digit pairs that are easily confused due to the round shapes of the Myanmar script. Simple baselines (an MLP, a two-layer CNN, and an improved CNN with batch normalization and augmentation) reach 99.40%, 99.75%, and 99.83% test accuracy respectively. BHDD is available under CC BY-SA 4.0 at https://github.com/baseresearch/BHDD
comment: 4 pages, 9 figures, 1 table. Dataset available at https://github.com/baseresearch/BHDD
☆ SLURP-TN : Resource for Tunisian Dialect Spoken Language Understanding LREC 2026
Spoken Language Understanding (SLU) aims to extract the semantic information from the speech utterance of user queries. It is a core component in a task-oriented dialogue system. With the spectacular progress of deep neural network models and the evolution of pre-trained language models, SLU has obtained significant breakthroughs. However, only a few high-resource languages have taken advantage of this progress due to the absence of SLU resources. In this paper, we seek to mitigate this obstacle by introducing SLURP-TN. This dataset was created by recording 55 native speakers uttering sentences in Tunisian dialect, manually translated from six SLURP domains. The result is an SLU Tunisian dialect dataset that comprises 4165 sentences recorded into around 5 hours of acoustic material. We also develop a number of Automatic Speech Recognition and SLU models exploiting SLUTP-TN. The Dataset and baseline models are available at: https://huggingface.co/datasets/Elyadata/SLURP-TN.
comment: Accepted at LREC 2026
☆ Ara-Best-RQ: Multi Dialectal Arabic SSL ICASSP 2026
We present Ara-BEST-RQ, a family of self-supervised learning (SSL) models specifically designed for multi-dialectal Arabic speech processing. Leveraging 5,640 hours of crawled Creative Commons speech and combining it with publicly available datasets, we pre-train conformer-based BEST-RQ models up to 600M parameters. Our models are evaluated on dialect identification (DID) and automatic speech recognition (ASR) tasks, achieving state-of-the-art performance on the former while using fewer parameters than competing models. We demonstrate that family-targeted pre-training on Arabic dialects significantly improves downstream performance compared to multilingual or monolingual models trained on non-Arabic data. All models, code, and pre-processed datasets will be publicly released to support reproducibility and further research in Arabic speech technologies.
comment: Accepted at ICASSP 2026
☆ Disentangling Speaker Traits for Deepfake Source Verification via Chebyshev Polynomial and Riemannian Metric Learning
Speech deepfake source verification systems aims to determine whether two synthetic speech utterances originate from the same source generator, often assuming that the resulting source embeddings are independent of speaker traits. However, this assumption remains unverified. In this paper, we first investigate the impact of speaker factors on source verification. We propose a speaker-disentangled metric learning (SDML) framework incorporating two novel loss functions. The first leverages Chebyshev polynomial to mitigate gradient instability during disentanglement optimization. The second projects source and speaker embeddings into hyperbolic space, leveraging Riemannian metric distances to reduce speaker information and learn more discriminative source features. Experimental results on MLAAD benchmark, evaluated under four newly proposed protocols designed for source-speaker disentanglement scenarios, demonstrate the effectiveness of SDML framework. The code, evaluation protocols and demo website are available at https://github.com/xxuan-acoustics/RiemannSD-Net.
comment: Submitted to Interspeech 2026; The code, evaluation protocols and demo website are available at https://github.com/xxuan-acoustics/RiemannSD-Net
☆ Riding Brainwaves in LLM Space: Understanding Activation Patterns Using Individual Neural Signatures
Consumer-grade EEG is entering everyday devices, from earbuds to headbands, raising the question of whether language models can be adapted to individual neural responses. We test this by asking whether frozen LLM representations encode person-specific EEG signals, directions in activation space that predict one person's brain activity but not another's. Using word-level EEG from 30 participants reading naturalistic sentences (ZuCo corpus), we train a separate linear probe for each person, mapping hidden states from a frozen Qwen 2.5 7B to that individual's EEG power. Person-specific probes outperform a single population probe on every EEG feature tested; for high-gamma power, the person-specific probe achieves rho = 0.183, a ninefold improvement over the population probe (rho = 0.020, p < 10^-4). A negative control, fixation count, shows no person-specific advantage (p = 0.360); fixation count reflects word length and frequency rather than individual cognition. The individual directions are temporally stable (split-half cosine = 0.824), non-transferable across people (self rho = 0.369 vs. other rho = 0.143, p < 10^-19), and distinct from the shared population signal: person-specific probes retain predictive power after the population component is removed. The person-specific signal concentrates in the model's deep layers, rising consistently with depth and peaking at Layer 24 of 28. The results are consistent across architectures (LLaMA 3.1 8B) and survive word-level confound controls. Frozen language models contain stable, person-specific neural directions in their deep layers, providing a geometric foundation for EEG-driven personalization.
☆ Select, Label, Evaluate: Active Testing in NLP
Human annotation cost and time remain significant bottlenecks in Natural Language Processing (NLP), with test data annotation being particularly expensive due to the stringent requirement for low-error and high-quality labels necessary for reliable model evaluation. Traditional approaches require annotating entire test sets, leading to substantial resource requirements. Active Testing is a framework that selects the most informative test samples for annotation. Given a labeling budget, it aims to choose the subset that best estimates model performance while minimizing cost and human effort. In this work, we formalize Active Testing in NLP and we conduct an extensive benchmarking of existing approaches across 18 datasets and 4 embedding strategies spanning 4 different NLP tasks. The experiments show annotation reductions of up to 95%, with performance estimation accuracy difference from the full test set within 1%. Our analysis reveals variations in method effectiveness across different data characteristics and task types, with no single approach emerging as universally superior. Lastly, to address the limitation of requiring a predefined annotation budget in existing sample selection strategies, we introduce an adaptive stopping criterion that automatically determines the optimal number of samples.
comment: 27 pages, 6 figures
☆ Instruction Set and Language for Symbolic Regression
A fundamental but largely unaddressed obstacle in Symbolic regression (SR) is structural redundancy: every expression DAG with admits many distinct node-numbering schemes that all encode the same expression, each occupying a separate point in the search space and consuming fitness evaluations without adding diversity. We present IsalSR (Instruction Set and Language for Symbolic Regression), a representation framework that encodes expression DAGs as strings over a compact two-tier alphabet and computes a pruned canonical string -- a complete labeled-DAG isomorphism invariant -- that collapses all the equivalent representations into a single canonical form.
☆ Politics of Questions in News: A Mixed-Methods Study of Interrogative Stances as Markers of Voice and Power
Interrogatives in news discourse have been examined in linguistics and conversation analysis, but mostly in broadcast interviews and relatively small, often English-language corpora, while large-scale computational studies of news rarely distinguish interrogatives from declaratives or differentiate their functions. This paper brings these strands together through a mixed-methods study of the "Politics of Questions" in contemporary French-language digital news. Using over one million articles published between January 2023 and June 2024, we automatically detect interrogative stances, approximate their functional types, and locate textual answers when present, linking these quantitative measures to a qualitatively annotated subcorpus grounded in semantic and pragmatic theories of questions. Interrogatives are sparse but systematically patterned: they mainly introduce or organize issues, with most remaining cases being information-seeking or echo-like, while explicitly leading or tag questions are rare. Although their density and mix vary across outlets and topics, our heuristic suggests that questions are overwhelmingly taken up within the same article and usually linked to a subsequent answer-like span, most often in the journalist's narrative voice and less often through quoted speech. Interrogative contexts are densely populated with named individuals, organizations, and places, whereas publics and broad social groups are mentioned much less frequently, suggesting that interrogative discourse tends to foreground already prominent actors and places and thus exhibits strong personalization. We show how interrogative stance, textual uptake, and voice can be operationalized at corpus scale, and argue that combining computational methods with pragmatic and sociological perspectives can help account for how questioning practices structure contemporary news discourse.
comment: ICWSM 2026
☆ The Presupposition Problem in Representation Genesis
Large language models are the first systems to achieve high cognitive performance without clearly undergoing representation genesis: the transition from a non-representing physical system to one whose states guide behavior in a content-sensitive way. Prior cognitive systems had already made this transition before we could examine it, and philosophy of mind treated genesis as a background condition rather than an explanatory target. LLMs provide a case that does not clearly involve this transition, making the genesis question newly urgent: if genesis did not occur, which cognitive capacities are affected, and why? We currently lack the conceptual resources to answer this. The reason, this paper argues, is structural. Major frameworks in philosophy of mind, including the Language of Thought hypothesis, teleosemantics, predictive processing, enactivism, and genetic phenomenology, share a common feature when applied to the genesis question: at some explanatory step, each deploys concepts whose explanatory purchase depends on the system already being organized as a representer. This pattern, which we call the Representation Presupposition structure, generates systematic explanatory deferral. Attempts to explain the first acquisition of content-manipulable representation within the existing categorical vocabulary import resources from the representational side of the transition itself. We call this the Representation Regress. The paper offers a conceptual diagnosis rather than a new theory, establishing the structure of the problem and deriving two minimum adequacy conditions for any account that avoids this pattern. LLMs make the absence of such a theory consequential rather than merely theoretical.
☆ The Reasoning Error About Reasoning: Why Different Types of Reasoning Require Different Representational Structures
Different types of reasoning impose different structural demands on representational systems, yet no systematic account of these demands exists across psychology, AI, and philosophy of mind. I propose a framework identifying four structural properties of representational systems: operability, consistency, structural preservation, and compositionality. These properties are demanded to different degrees by different forms of reasoning, from induction through analogy and causal inference to deduction and formal logic. Each property excludes a distinct class of reasoning failure. The analysis reveals a principal structural boundary: reasoning types below it can operate on associative, probabilistic representations, while those above it require all four properties to be fully satisfied. Scaling statistical learning without structural reorganization is insufficient to cross this boundary, because the structural guarantees required by deductive reasoning cannot be approximated through probabilistic means. Converging evidence from AI evaluation, developmental psychology, and cognitive neuroscience supports the framework at different levels of directness. Three testable predictions are derived, including compounding degradation, selective vulnerability to targeted structural disruption, and irreducibility under scaling. The framework is a necessary-condition account, agnostic about representational format, that aims to reorganize existing debates rather than close them.
☆ EvoIdeator: Evolving Scientific Ideas through Checklist-Grounded Reinforcement Learning
Scientific idea generation is a cornerstone of autonomous knowledge discovery, yet the iterative evolution required to transform initial concepts into high-quality research proposals remains a formidable challenge for Large Language Models (LLMs). Existing Reinforcement Learning (RL) paradigms often rely on rubric-based scalar rewards that provide global quality scores but lack actionable granularity. Conversely, language-based refinement methods are typically confined to inference-time prompting, targeting models that are not explicitly optimized to internalize such critiques. To bridge this gap, we propose \textbf{EvoIdeator}, a framework that facilitates the evolution of scientific ideas by aligning the RL training objective with \textbf{checklist-grounded feedback}. EvoIdeator leverages a structured judge model to generate two synergistic signals: (1) \emph{lexicographic rewards} for multi-dimensional optimization, and (2) \emph{fine-grained language feedback} that offers span-level critiques regarding grounding, feasibility, and methodological rigor. By integrating these signals into the RL loop, we condition the policy to systematically utilize precise feedback during both optimization and inference. Extensive experiments demonstrate that EvoIdeator, built on Qwen3-4B, significantly outperforms much larger frontier models across key scientific metrics. Crucially, the learned policy exhibits strong generalization to diverse external feedback sources without further fine-tuning, offering a scalable and rigorous path toward self-refining autonomous ideation.
☆ SemEval-2026 Task 12: Abductive Event Reasoning: Towards Real-World Event Causal Inference for Large Language Models
Understanding why real-world events occur is important for both natural language processing and practical decision-making, yet direct-cause inference remains underexplored in evidence-rich settings. To address this gap, we organized SemEval-2026 Task 12: Abductive Event Reasoning (AER).\footnote{The task data is available at https://github.com/sooo66/semeval2026-task12-dataset.git} The task asks systems to identify the most plausible direct cause of a target event from supporting evidence. We formulate AER as an evidence-grounded multiple-choice benchmark that captures key challenges of real-world causal reasoning, including distributed evidence, indirect background factors, and semantically related but non-causal distractors. The shared task attracted 122 participants and received 518 submissions. This paper presents the task formulation, dataset construction pipeline, evaluation setup, and system results. AER provides a focused benchmark for abductive reasoning over real-world events and highlights challenges for future work on causal reasoning and multi-document understanding.
comment: 9 pages, 3 figures, semeval 2026 task 12 description paper
☆ Probing How Scalable Table Data Enhances General Long-Context Reasoning
As real-world tasks grow increasingly complex, long-context reasoning has become a core capability for Large Language Models (LLMs). However, few studies explore which data types are effective for long-context reasoning and why. We find that structured table data with periodic structures shows strong potential for long-context reasoning. Motivated by this observation, we mathematically analyze tabular dependency structures using mutual information, revealing periodic non-vanishing dependencies in table data. Furthermore, we systematically analyze the capabilities of structured table data, conduct relevant scaling experiments, and validate its underlying mechanisms for enhancing long-context reasoning, yielding several meaningful insights. Leveraging these insights, we propose a simple yet scalable pipeline(TableLong) for synthesizing high-quality, diverse, and verifiable structured table data to boost long-context reasoning via RL. Extensive experimental results demonstrate that table data significantly enhances the long-context reasoning capability of LLMs across multiple long-context benchmarks (+8.24\% on average), and even improves performance on out-of-domain benchmarks (+8.06\% on average). We hope that our insights provide practical guidance for effective post-training data to enhance long-context reasoning in LLMs.
☆ Thinking Deeper, Not Longer: Depth-Recurrent Transformers for Compositional Generalization
Standard Transformers have a fixed computational depth, fundamentally limiting their ability to generalize to tasks requiring variable-depth reasoning, such as multi-hop graph traversal or nested logic. We propose a depth-recurrent Transformer that decouples computational depth from parameter count by iteratively applying a shared-weight Transformer block in latent space -- enabling the model to trade recurrence steps for deeper reasoning at inference time. Our architecture incorporates three mechanisms to make deep recurrence (20+ steps) stable: (1) a silent thinking objective that supervises only the final output, forcing genuine multi-step reasoning rather than intermediate heuristic shortcuts; (2) LayerScale initialization to protect fragile reasoning states from untrained layer noise; and (3) an identity-biased recurrence that creates a gradient highway across many steps. We evaluate on three compositional reasoning domains with decreasing inductive biases: graph reachability (strict adjacency masking), nested boolean logic (relative positioning), and unstructured relational text (where sequence position provides no structural hints). Across all tasks, we observe a clear \emph{computational frontier} -- a boundary where performance transitions from chance to near-perfect as thinking steps scale with task complexity. Moreover, these tasks reveal qualitatively different generalization behaviors: precise but brittle (graph), approximate but robust (logic), and autonomous latent routing without structural hints (text). This progression illuminates how the interplay between a task-invariant recurrent reasoning core and task-specific perceptual interfaces shapes out-of-distribution (OOD) generalization, offering a mechanistic perspective on vertical chain-of-thought that complements the prevailing horizontal token-generation paradigm.
☆ Optimizing Multi-Agent Weather Captioning via Text Gradient Descent: A Training-Free Approach with Consensus-Aware Gradient Fusion
Generating interpretable natural language captions from weather time series data remains a significant challenge at the intersection of meteorological science and natural language processing. While recent advances in Large Language Models (LLMs) have demonstrated remarkable capabilities in time series forecasting and analysis, existing approaches either produce numerical predictions without human-accessible explanations or generate generic descriptions lacking domain-specific depth. We introduce WeatherTGD, a training-free multi-agent framework that reinterprets collaborative caption refinement through the lens of Text Gradient Descent (TGD). Our system deploys three specialized LLM agents including a Statistical Analyst, a Physics Interpreter, and a Meteorology Expert that generate domain-specific textual gradients from weather time series observations. These gradients are aggregated through a novel Consensus-Aware Gradient Fusion mechanism that extracts common signals while preserving unique domain perspectives. The fused gradients then guide an iterative refinement process analogous to gradient descent, where each LLM-generated feedback signal updates the caption toward an optimal solution. Experiments on real-world meteorological datasets demonstrate that WeatherTGD achieves significant improvements in both LLM-based evaluation and human expert evaluation, substantially outperforming existing multi-agent baselines while maintaining computational efficiency through parallel agent execution.
comment: Preprint and under consideration
☆ TAMTRL: Teacher-Aligned Reward Reshaping for Multi-Turn Reinforcement Learning in Long-Context Compression
The rapid progress of large language models (LLMs) has led to remarkable performance gains across a wide range of tasks. However, when handling long documents that exceed the model's context window limit, the entire context cannot be processed in a single pass, making chunk-wise processing necessary. This requires multiple turns to read different chunks and update memory. However, supervision is typically provided only by the final outcome, which makes it difficult to evaluate the quality of memory updates at each turn in the multi-turn training setting. This introduces a temporal credit assignment challenge. Existing approaches, such as LLM-as-a-judge or process reward models, incur substantial computational overhead and suffer from estimation noise. To better address the credit assignment problem in multi-turn memory training, we propose Teacher-Aligned Reward Reshaping for Multi-Turn Reinforcement Learning (TAMTRL). TAMTRL leverages relevant documents as teacher signals by aligning them with each turn of model input and assigns rewards through normalized probabilities in a self-supervised manner. This provides fine-grained learning signals for each memory update and improves long-context processing. Experiments with multiple models of varying scales across seven long-context benchmarks show that TAMTRL consistently outperforms strong baselines, demonstrating its effectiveness. Our code is available at https://anonymous.4open.science/r/TAMTRL-F1F8.
☆ A Comparative Analysis of LLM Memorization at Statistical and Internal Levels: Cross-Model Commonalities and Model-Specific Signatures
Memorization is a fundamental component of intelligence for both humans and LLMs. However, while LLM performance scales rapidly, our understanding of memorization lags. Due to limited access to the pre-training data of LLMs, most previous studies focus on a single model series, leading to isolated observations among series, making it unclear which findings are general or specific. In this study, we collect multiple model series (Pythia, OpenLLaMa, StarCoder, OLMo1/2/3) and analyze their shared or unique memorization behavior at both the statistical and internal levels, connecting individual observations while showing new findings. At the statistical level, we reveal that the memorization rate scales log-linearly with model size, and memorized sequences can be further compressed. Further analysis demonstrated a shared frequency and domain distribution pattern for memorized sequences. However, different models also show individual features under the above observations. At the internal level, we find that LLMs can remove certain injected perturbations, while memorized sequences are more sensitive. By decoding middle layers and attention head ablation, we revealed the general decoding process and shared important heads for memorization. However, the distribution of those important heads differs between families, showing a unique family-level feature. Through bridging various experiments and revealing new findings, this study paves the way for a universal and fundamental understanding of memorization in LLM.
comment: 8 pages of main content, in conference submission, other contents are references and extra appendix
☆ Silicon Bureaucracy and AI Test-Oriented Education: Contamination Sensitivity and Score Confidence in LLM Benchmarks
Public benchmarks increasingly govern how large language models (LLMs) are ranked, selected, and deployed. We frame this benchmark-centered regime as Silicon Bureaucracy and AI Test-Oriented Education, and argue that it rests on a fragile assumption: that benchmark scores directly reflect genuine generalization. In practice, however, such scores may conflate exam-oriented competence with principled capability, especially when contamination and semantic leakage are difficult to exclude from modern training pipelines. We therefore propose an audit framework for analyzing contamination sensitivity and score confidence in LLM benchmarks. Using a router-worker setup, we compare a clean-control condition with noisy conditions in which benchmark problems are systematically deleted, rewritten, and perturbed before being passed downstream. For a genuinely clean benchmark, noisy conditions should not consistently outperform the clean-control baseline. Yet across multiple models, we find widespread but heterogeneous above-baseline gains under noisy conditions, indicating that benchmark-related cues may be reassembled and can reactivate contamination-related memory. These results suggest that similar benchmark scores may carry substantially different levels of confidence. Rather than rejecting benchmarks altogether, we argue that benchmark-based evaluation should be supplemented with explicit audits of contamination sensitivity and score confidence.
comment: First update
☆ PRISM: Breaking the O(n) Memory Wall in Long-Context LLM Inference via O(1) Photonic Block Selection
Long-context LLM inference is bottlenecked not by compute but by the O(n) memory bandwidth cost of scanning the KV cache at every decode step -- a wall that no amount of arithmetic scaling can break. Recent photonic accelerators have demonstrated impressive throughput for dense attention computation; however, these approaches inherit the same O(n) memory scaling as electronic attention when applied to long contexts. We observe that the real leverage point is the coarse block-selection step: a memory-bound similarity search that determines which KV blocks to fetch. We identify, for the first time, that this task is structurally matched to the photonic broadcast-and-weight paradigm -- the query fans out to all candidates via passive splitting, signatures are quasi-static (matching electro-optic MRR programming), and only rank order matters (relaxing precision to 4-6 bits). Crucially, the photonic advantage grows with context length: as N increases, the electronic scan cost rises linearly while the photonic evaluation remains O(1). We instantiate this insight in PRISM (Photonic Ranking via Inner-product Similarity with Microring weights), a thin-film lithium niobate (TFLN) similarity engine. Hardware-impaired needle-in-a-haystack evaluation on Qwen2.5-7B confirms 100% accuracy from 4K through 64K tokens at k=32, with 16x traffic reduction at 64K context. PRISM achieves a four-order-of-magnitude energy advantage over GPU baselines at practical context lengths (n >= 4K).
comment: 28 pages, 27 figures, 15 tables, including supplementary material. Code available at https://github.com/hyoseokp/PRISM
☆ DATASHI: A Parallel English-Tashlhiyt Corpus for Orthography Normalization and Low-Resource Language Processing LREC 2026
DATASHI is a new parallel English-Tashlhiyt corpus that fills a critical gap in computational resources for Amazigh languages. It contains 5,000 sentence pairs, including a 1,500-sentence subset with expert-standardized and non-standard user-generated versions, enabling systematic study of orthographic diversity and normalization. This dual design supports text-based NLP tasks - such as tokenization, translation, and normalization - and also serves as a foundation for read-speech data collection and multimodal alignment. Comprehensive evaluations with state-of-the-art Large Language Models (GPT-5, Claude-Sonnet-4.5, Gemini-2.5-Pro, Mistral, Qwen3-Max) show clear improvements from zero-shot to few-shot prompting, with Gemini-2.5-Pro achieving the lowest word and character-level error rates and exhibiting robust cross-lingual generalization. A fine-grained analysis of edit operations - deletions, substitutions, and insertions - across phonological classes (geminates, emphatics, uvulars, and pharyngeals) further highlights model-specific sensitivities to marked Tashlhiyt features and provides new diagnostic insights for low-resource Amazigh orthography normalization.
comment: This paper has been accepted for presentation at LREC 2026
☆ SynSym: A Synthetic Data Generation Framework for Psychiatric Symptom Identification
Psychiatric symptom identification on social media aims to infer fine-grained mental health symptoms from user-generated posts, allowing a detailed understanding of users' mental states. However, the construction of large-scale symptom-level datasets remains challenging due to the resource-intensive nature of expert labeling and the lack of standardized annotation guidelines, which in turn limits the generalizability of models to identify diverse symptom expressions from user-generated text. To address these issues, we propose SynSym, a synthetic data generation framework for constructing generalizable datasets for symptom identification. Leveraging large language models (LLMs), SynSym constructs high-quality training samples by (1) expanding each symptom into sub-concepts to enhance the diversity of generated expressions, (2) producing synthetic expressions that reflect psychiatric symptoms in diverse linguistic styles, and (3) composing realistic multi-symptom expressions, informed by clinical co-occurrence patterns. We validate SynSym on three benchmark datasets covering different styles of depressive symptom expression. Experimental results demonstrate that models trained solely on the synthetic data generated by SynSym perform comparably to those trained on real data, and benefit further from additional fine-tuning with real data. These findings underscore the potential of synthetic data as an alternative resource to real-world annotations in psychiatric symptom modeling, and SynSym serves as a practical framework for generating clinically relevant and realistic symptom expressions.
☆ CatRAG: Functor-Guided Structural Debiasing with Retrieval Augmentation for Fair LLMs IJCNN 2026
Large Language Models (LLMs) are deployed in high-stakes settings but can show demographic, gender, and geographic biases that undermine fairness and trust. Prior debiasing methods, including embedding-space projections, prompt-based steering, and causal interventions, often act at a single stage of the pipeline, resulting in incomplete mitigation and brittle utility trade-offs under distribution shifts. We propose CatRAG Debiasing, a dual-pronged framework that integrates functor with Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG) guided structural debiasing. The functor component leverages category-theoretic structure to induce a principled, structure-preserving projection that suppresses bias-associated directions in the embedding space while retaining task-relevant semantics. On the Bias Benchmark for Question Answering (BBQ) across three open-source LLMs (Meta Llama-3, OpenAI GPT-OSS, and Google Gemma-3), CatRAG achieves state-of-the-art results, improving accuracy by up to 40% over the corresponding base models and by more than 10% over prior debiasing methods, while reducing bias scores to near zero (from 60% for the base models) across gender, nationality, race, and intersectional subgroups.
comment: 9 pages, 4 figures, and accepted in IJCNN 2026 (part of IEEE WCCI 2026)
☆ Generalizable Self-Evolving Memory for Automatic Prompt Optimization
Automatic prompt optimization is a promising approach for adapting large language models (LLMs) to downstream tasks, yet existing methods typically search for a specific prompt specialized to a fixed task. This paradigm limits generalization across heterogeneous queries and prevents models from accumulating reusable prompting knowledge over time. In this paper, we propose MemAPO, a memory-driven framework that reconceptualizes prompt optimization as generalizable and self-evolving experience accumulation. MemAPO maintains a dual-memory mechanism that distills successful reasoning trajectories into reusable strategy templates while organizing incorrect generations into structured error patterns that capture recurrent failure modes. Given a new prompt, the framework retrieves both relevant strategies and failure patterns to compose prompts that promote effective reasoning while discouraging known mistakes. Through iterative self-reflection and memory editing, MemAPO continuously updates its memory, enabling prompt optimization to improve over time rather than restarting from scratch for each task. Experiments on diverse benchmarks show that MemAPO consistently outperforms representative prompt optimization baselines while substantially reducing optimization cost.
☆ Triangulating Temporal Dynamics in Multilingual Swiss Online News
Analyzing news coverage in multilingual societies can offer valuable insights into the dynamics of public discourse and the development of collective narratives, yet comprehensive studies that account for linguistic and cultural diversity within national media ecosystems remain limited, particularly in complex contexts such as Switzerland. This paper studies temporal trends in Swiss digital media across the country's three main linguistic regions, French, German, and Italian, using a triangulated methodology that combines quantitative analyses with qualitative insights. We collected and processed over 1.7 million news articles, applying lexical metrics, named entity recognition and Wikidata-based linking, targeted sentiment analysis, and consensus-based change-point detection. To enable principled cross-language comparisons and to connect to theories of domestication and cultural proximity, we derive domestication profiles together with a proximity salience ratio. Our analysis spans thematic, recurrent, and singular events. By integrating quantitative data with qualitative interpretation, we provide new insights into the dynamics of Swiss digital media and demonstrate the usefulness of triangulation in media studies. The findings reveal distinct temporal patterns and highlight how linguistic and cultural contexts influence reporting. Our approach offers a framework applicable to other multilingual or culturally diverse media environments, contributing to a deeper understanding of how news is shaped by linguistic and cultural factors.
comment: ICWSM 2026
☆ Agentic Automation of BT-RADS Scoring: End-to-End Multi-Agent System for Standardized Brain Tumor Follow-up Assessment
The Brain Tumor Reporting and Data System (BT-RADS) standardizes post-treatment MRI response assessment in patients with diffuse gliomas but requires complex integration of imaging trends, medication effects, and radiation timing. This study evaluates an end-to-end multi-agent large language model (LLM) and convolutional neural network (CNN) system for automated BT-RADS classification. A multi-agent LLM system combined with automated CNN-based tumor segmentation was retrospectively evaluated on 509 consecutive post-treatment glioma MRI examinations from a single high-volume center. An extractor agent identified clinical variables (steroid status, bevacizumab status, radiation date) from unstructured clinical notes, while a scorer agent applied BT-RADS decision logic integrating extracted variables with volumetric measurements. Expert reference standard classifications were established by an independent board-certified neuroradiologist. Of 509 examinations, 492 met inclusion criteria. The system achieved 374/492 (76.0%; 95% CI, 72.1%-79.6%) accuracy versus 283/492 (57.5%; 95% CI, 53.1%-61.8%) for initial clinical assessments (+18.5 percentage points; P<.001). Context-dependent categories showed high sensitivity (BT-1b 100%, BT-1a 92.7%, BT-3a 87.5%), while threshold-dependent categories showed moderate sensitivity (BT-3c 74.8%, BT-2 69.2%, BT-4 69.3%, BT-3b 57.1%). For BT-4, positive predictive value was 92.9%. The multi-agent LLM system achieved higher BT-RADS classification agreement with expert reference standard compared to initial clinical scoring, with high accuracy for context-dependent scores and high positive predictive value for BT-4 detection.
comment: 17 pages, 5 figures, 4 tables, 2 supplementary figures, 3 supplementary tables
☆ Effective Strategies for Asynchronous Software Engineering Agents
AI agents have become increasingly capable at isolated software engineering (SWE) tasks such as resolving issues on Github. Yet long-horizon tasks involving multiple interdependent subtasks still pose challenges both with respect to accuracy, and with respect to timely completion. A natural approach to solving these long-horizon tasks in a timely manner is asynchronous multi-agent collaboration, where multiple agents work on different parts of the task at the same time. But effective application of multi-agent systems has proven surprisingly difficult: concurrent edits by multiple agents interfere with each other, dependencies are difficult to synchronize, and combining partial progress into a coherent whole is challenging. On the other hand, human developers have long relied on mature collaboration infrastructure to manage these challenges in large software projects. Inspired by these collaboration primitives, we introduce Centralized Asynchronous Isolated Delegation (CAID), a structured multi-agent coordination paradigm grounded in three core SWE primitives: centralized task delegation, asynchronous execution, and isolated workspaces. CAID constructs dependency-aware task plans through a central manager, executes subtasks concurrently in isolated workspaces, and consolidates progress via structured integration with executable test-based verification. In empirical evaluation, we find that CAID improves accuracy over single-agent baselines by 26.7% absolute on paper reproduction tasks (PaperBench) and 14.3% on Python library development tasks (Commit0). Through systematic analysis, we find that branch-and-merge is a central coordination mechanism for multi-agent collaboration, and that SWE primitives such as git worktree, git commit, and git merge enable it to be realized in a reliable and executable manner.
☆ TaigiSpeech: A Low-Resource Real-World Speech Intent Dataset and Preliminary Results with Scalable Data Mining In-the-Wild
Speech technologies have advanced rapidly and serve diverse populations worldwide. However, many languages remain underrepresented due to limited resources. In this paper, we introduce \textbf{TaigiSpeech}, a real-world speech intent dataset in Taiwanese Taigi (aka Taiwanese Hokkien/Southern Min), which is a low-resource and primarily spoken language. The dataset is collected from older adults, comprising 21 speakers with a total of 3k utterances. It is designed for practical intent detection scenarios, including healthcare and home assistant applications. To address the scarcity of labeled data, we explore two data mining strategies with two levels of supervision: keyword match data mining with LLM pseudo labeling via an intermediate language and an audio-visual framework that leverages multimodal cues with minimal textual supervision. This design enables scalable dataset construction for low-resource and unwritten spoken languages. TaigiSpeech will be released under the CC BY 4.0 license to facilitate broad adoption and research on low-resource and unwritten languages. The project website and the dataset can be found on https://kwchang.org/taigispeech.
comment: submitted to Interspeech 2026
☆ Beyond Correlation: Refutation-Validated Aspect-Based Sentiment Analysis for Explainable Energy Market Returns
This paper proposes a refutation-validated framework for aspect-based sentiment analysis in financial markets, addressing the limitations of correlational studies that cannot distinguish genuine associations from spurious ones. Using X data for the energy sector, we test whether aspect-level sentiment signals show robust, refutation-validated relationships with equity returns. Our pipeline combines net-ratio scoring with z-normalization, OLS with Newey West HAC errors, and refutation tests including placebo, random common cause, subset stability, and bootstrap. Across six energy tickers, only a few associations survive all checks, while renewables show aspect and horizon specific responses. While not establishing causality, the framework provides statistically robust, directionally interpretable signals, with limited sample size (six stocks, one quarter) constraining generalizability and framing this work as a methodological proof of concept.
comment: 13 pages, 6 figures, submitted to Expert Systems with Applications
☆ DRTriton: Large-Scale Synthetic Data Reinforcement Learning for Triton Kernel Generation
Developing efficient CUDA kernels is a fundamental yet challenging task in the generative AI industry. Recent researches leverage Large Language Models (LLMs) to automatically convert PyTorch reference implementations to CUDA kernels, significantly reducing the engineering efforts. State-of-the-art LLMs, such as GPT-5.2 and Claude-Sonnet-4.5, still struggle in this specific task. To address this challenge, we propose DRTriton, a scalable learning framework for training LLMs to convert PyTorch codes into highly optimized Triton kernels, which are then compiled to CUDA kernels at runtime. DRTriton consists of three key components: (i) a data synthetic algorithm CSP-DAG that guarantees full coverage and unbiased uniform sampling over the operator space with controlled difficulty; (ii) a curriculum reinforcement learning with decoupled reward efficiently optimizes conversion success rate and inference speed simultaneously; and (iii) a test-time search algorithm that further improves the inference speed of the generated Triton kernels. Notably, despite being trained exclusively on synthetic data, DRTriton generalizes effectively to real-world CUDA kernels that are challenging even for human experts. Experimental results show that DRTriton-7B achieves speedup on 92% of the KernelBench Level 2, compared to 23% for GPT-5.2 and 19% for Claude-Sonnet-4.5.
☆ DSPA: Dynamic SAE Steering for Data-Efficient Preference Alignment
Preference alignment is usually achieved by weight-updating training on preference data, which adds substantial alignment-stage compute and provides limited mechanistic visibility. We propose Dynamic SAE Steering for Preference Alignment (DSPA), an inference-time method that makes sparse autoencoder (SAE) steering prompt-conditional. From preference triples, DSPA computes a conditional-difference map linking prompt features to generation-control features; during decoding, it modifies only token-active latents, without base-model weight updates. Across Gemma-2-2B/9B and Qwen3-8B, DSPA improves MT-Bench and is competitive on AlpacaEval while preserving multiple-choice accuracy. Under restricted preference data, DSPA remains robust and can rival the two-stage RAHF-SCIT pipeline while requiring up to $4.47\times$ fewer alignment-stage FLOPs. Finally, we audit the SAE features DSPA modifies, finding that preference directions are dominated by discourse and stylistic signals, and provide theory clarifying the conditional-difference map estimate and when top-$k$ ablation is principled.
☆ Cross-Context Verification: Hierarchical Detection of Benchmark Contamination through Session-Isolated Analysis
LLM coding benchmarks face a credibility crisis: widespread solution leakage and test quality issues undermine SWE-bench Verified, while existing detection methods--paraphrase consistency, n-gram overlap, perplexity analysis--never directly observe whether a model reasons or recalls. Meanwhile, simply repeating verification degrades accuracy: multi-turn review generates false positives faster than it discovers true errors, suggesting that structural approaches are needed. We introduce Cross-Context Verification (CCV), a black-box method that solves the same benchmark problem in N independent sessions and measures solution diversity, combined with the Hierarchical Cross-Context Architecture (HCCA), a multi-agent analysis framework that prevents confirmation bias through intentional information restriction across specialized analytical roles. On 9 SWE-bench Verified problems (45 trials, Claude Opus 4.6, temperature 0), CCV achieves perfect separation between contaminated and genuine reasoning (Mann-Whitney U=0, p approx 0.012, r = 1.0). Key findings: (1) contamination is binary--models either recall perfectly or not at all; (2) reasoning absence is a perfect discriminator; (3) 33% of prior contamination labels are false positives; (4) HCCA's independent analysis structure discovers contamination-flaw composite cases that single-analyst approaches miss. A pilot experiment extending HCCA to multi-stage verification (Worker to Verifier to Director) yields a negative result--100% sycophantic confirmation--providing further evidence that information restriction, not structural complexity, is the key mechanism. We release all code and data.
comment: 11 pages, 3 figures, 4 tables
♻ ☆ Scalable Prompt Routing via Fine-Grained Latent Task Discovery
Prompt routing dynamically selects the most appropriate large language model from a pool of candidates for each query, optimizing performance while managing costs. As model pools scale to include dozens of frontier models with narrow performance gaps, existing approaches face significant challenges: manually defined task taxonomies cannot capture fine-grained capability distinctions, while monolithic routers struggle to differentiate subtle differences across diverse tasks. We propose a two-stage routing architecture that addresses these limitations through automated fine-grained task discovery and task-aware quality estimation. Our first stage employs graph-based clustering to discover latent task types and trains a classifier to assign prompts to discovered tasks. The second stage uses a mixture-of-experts architecture with task-specific prediction heads for specialized quality estimates. At inference, we aggregate predictions from both stages to balance task-level stability with prompt-specific adaptability. Evaluated on 10 benchmarks with 11 frontier models, our method consistently outperforms existing baselines and surpasses the strongest individual model while incurring less than half its cost.
♻ ☆ Measuring Iterative Temporal Reasoning with Time Puzzles
Tool use, such as web search, has become a standard capability even in freely available large language models (LLMs). However, existing benchmarks evaluate temporal reasoning mainly in static, non-tool-using settings, which poorly reflect how LLMs perform temporal reasoning in practice. We introduce Time Puzzles, a constraint-based date inference task for evaluating iterative temporal reasoning with tools. Each puzzle combines factual temporal anchors with (cross-cultural) calendar relations and may admit one or multiple valid dates. The puzzles are algorithmically generated, enabling controlled and continual evaluation. Across 13 LLMs, even the best model (GPT-5) achieves only 55.3% accuracy without tools, despite using easily searchable facts. While web search improves performance, models perform substantially better when constraints are rewritten with explicit dates, removing the need for factual lookup. These results reveal a gap in reliable tool use for iterative temporal reasoning.
comment: 11 pages, 4 tables, 3 figures
♻ ☆ Instructional Text Across Disciplines: A Survey of Representations, Downstream Tasks, and Open Challenges Toward Capable AI Agents
Recent advances in large language models have demonstrated promising capabilities in following simple instructions through instruction tuning. However, real-world tasks often involve complex, multi-step instructions that remain challenging for current NLP systems. Robust understanding of such instructions is essential for deploying LLMs as general-purpose agents that can be programmed in natural language to perform complex, real-world tasks across domains like robotics, business automation, and interactive systems. Despite growing interest in this area, there is a lack of a comprehensive survey that systematically analyzes the landscape of complex instruction understanding and processing. Through a systematic review of the literature, we analyze available resources, representation schemes, and downstream tasks related to instructional text. Our study examines 181 papers, identifying trends, challenges, and opportunities in this emerging field. We provide AI/NLP researchers with essential background knowledge and a unified view of various approaches to complex instruction understanding, bridging gaps between different research directions and highlighting future research opportunities.
comment: Pre-CoLI print. Accepted for publication in Computational Linguistics (MIT Press). Advance online publication. March 2026
♻ ☆ Must Read: A Comprehensive Survey of Computational Persuasion
Persuasion is a fundamental aspect of communication, influencing decision-making across diverse contexts, from everyday conversations to high-stakes scenarios such as politics, marketing, and law. The rise of conversational AI systems has significantly expanded the scope of persuasion, introducing both opportunities and risks. AI-driven persuasion can be leveraged for beneficial applications, but also poses threats through unethical influence. Moreover, AI systems are not only persuaders, but also susceptible to persuasion, making them vulnerable to adversarial attacks and bias reinforcement. Despite rapid advancements in AI-generated persuasive content, our understanding of what makes persuasion effective remains limited due to its inherently subjective and context-dependent nature. In this survey, we provide a comprehensive overview of persuasion, structured around three key perspectives: (1) AI as a Persuader, which explores AI-generated persuasive content and its applications; (2) AI as a Persuadee, which examines AI's susceptibility to influence and manipulation; and (3) AI as a Persuasion Judge, which analyzes AI's role in evaluating persuasive strategies, detecting manipulation, and ensuring ethical persuasion. We introduce a taxonomy for persuasion research and discuss key challenges for future research to enhance the safety, fairness, and effectiveness of AI-powered persuasion while addressing the risks posed by increasingly capable language models.
comment: Accepted to ACM Computing Surveys
♻ ☆ SciLaD: A Large-Scale, Transparent, Reproducible Dataset for Natural Scientific Language Processing
SciLaD is a novel, large-scale dataset of scientific language constructed entirely using open-source frameworks and publicly available data sources. It comprises a curated English split containing over 10 million scientific publications and a multilingual, unfiltered TEI XML split including more than 35 million publications. We also publish the extensible pipeline for generating SciLaD. The dataset construction and processing workflow demonstrates how open-source tools can enable large-scale, scientific data curation while maintaining high data quality. Finally, we pre-train a RoBERTa model on our dataset and evaluate it across a comprehensive set of benchmarks, achieving performance comparable to other scientific language models of similar size, validating the quality and utility of SciLaD. We publish the dataset and evaluation pipeline to promote reproducibility, transparency, and further research in natural scientific language processing and understanding, including scholarly document processing.
comment: 13 pages, 3 figures, 3 tables
♻ ☆ APEX-SWE
We introduce the AI Productivity Index for Software Engineering (APEX-SWE), a benchmark for assessing whether frontier AI models can execute economically valuable software engineering work. Unlike existing evaluations that focus on narrow, well-defined tasks, APEX-SWE assesses two novel task types that reflect real-world software engineering: (1) Integration tasks (n=100), which require constructing end-to-end systems across heterogeneous cloud primitives, business applications, and infrastructure-as-code services, and (2) Observability tasks (n=100), which require debugging production failures using telemetry signals such as logs and dashboards, as well as unstructured context. We evaluated eleven frontier models for the APEX-SWE leaderboard. Claude Opus 4.6 leads the APEX-SWE leaderboard with 40.5% Pass@1, followed by Claude Opus 4.5 at 38.7%. Our analysis shows that strong performance is primarily driven by epistemic discipline, defined as the capacity to distinguish between assumptions and verified facts. It is often combined with systematic verification prior to acting. We open-source the APEX-SWE evaluation harness and a dev set (n=50).
♻ ☆ C$^2$-Cite: Contextual-Aware Citation Generation for Attributed Large Language Models WSDM26
The attribution technique enhances the credibility of LLMs by adding citations to the generated sentences, enabling users to trace back to the original sources and verify the reliability of the output. However, existing instruction-tuned attributed LLMs often fail to properly interpret the contextual semantics of citation symbols (e.g., [i]) during text generation. This shortcoming arises from their insufficient awareness of the context information surrounding citation markers, which in turn leads to disjointed references and poor integration of retrieved knowledge into the generated content. To address this issue, we propose a novel \textbf{C}ontextual-aware \textbf{C}itation generation framework (\textbf{C$^2$}-\textbf{Cite}) that explicitly integrates the semantic relationships between citation markers and their referenced content. Specifically, a contextual citation alignment mechanism is adopted: it first encodes the retrieved document contexts into the symbol representation of citations, then aligns the marker numbers by decoding information from a citation router function. This mechanism enables the transformation of citation markers from generic placeholders into active knowledge pointers that link to the referenced source information. Experimental results on the ALCE benchmark across three datasets validate our framework C$^2$-Cite++: it outperforms the SOTA baseline by an average of 5.8\% in citation quality and 17.4\% in response correctness. The implementation is publicly available at https://github.com/BAI-LAB/c2cite
comment: WSDM26
♻ ☆ A Theory of Adaptive Scaffolding for LLM-Based Pedagogical Agents AAAI 2026
Large language models (LLMs) present new opportunities for creating pedagogical agents that engage in meaningful dialogue to support student learning. However, current LLM systems used in classrooms often lack the solid theoretical foundations found in earlier intelligent tutoring systems. To bridge this gap, we propose a framework that combines Evidence-Centered Design with Social Cognitive Theory and Zone of Proximal Development for adaptive scaffolding in LLM-based agents focused on STEM+C learning. We instantiate this framework with Inquizzitor, an LLM-based formative assessment agent that integrates human-AI hybrid intelligence and provides feedback grounded in cognitive science principles. Our findings show that Inquizzitor delivers high-quality assessment and interaction aligned with core learning theories, offering effective guidance that students value. This research demonstrates the potential for theory-driven LLM integration in education, highlighting the ability of these systems to provide adaptive and principled instruction.
comment: Published in the proceedings of AAAI 2026 (main technical track)
♻ ☆ MolLangBench: A Comprehensive Benchmark for Language-Prompted Molecular Structure Recognition, Editing, and Generation ICLR-2026
Precise recognition, editing, and generation of molecules are essential prerequisites for both chemists and AI systems tackling various chemical tasks. We present MolLangBench, a comprehensive benchmark designed to evaluate fundamental molecule-language interface tasks: language-prompted molecular structure recognition, editing, and generation. To ensure high-quality, unambiguous, and deterministic outputs, we construct the recognition tasks using automated cheminformatics tools, and curate editing and generation tasks through rigorous expert annotation and validation. MolLangBench supports the evaluation of models that interface language with different molecular representations, including linear strings, molecular images, and molecular graphs. Evaluations of state-of-the-art models reveal significant limitations: the strongest model (GPT-5) achieves $86.2\%$ and $85.5\%$ accuracy on recognition and editing tasks, which are intuitively simple for humans, and performs even worse on the generation task, reaching only $43.0\%$ accuracy. These results highlight the shortcomings of current AI systems in handling even preliminary molecular recognition and manipulation tasks. We hope MolLangBench will catalyze further research toward more effective and reliable AI systems for chemical applications.The dataset and code can be accessed at https://huggingface.co/datasets/ChemFM/MolLangBench and https://github.com/TheLuoFengLab/MolLangBench, respectively.
comment: ICLR-2026 Camera-Ready version
♻ ☆ Automatically Benchmarking LLM Code Agents through Agent-Driven Annotation and Evaluation AAMAS 2026
Recent advances in code agents have enabled automated software development at the project level, supported by large language models (LLMs). However, existing benchmarks for code agent evaluation face two major limitations. First, creating high-quality project-level evaluation datasets requires extensive domain expertise, leading to prohibitive annotation costs and limited diversity. Second, while recent Agent-as-a-Judge paradigms address the rigidity of traditional unit tests by enabling flexible metrics, their reliance on In-Context Learning (ICL) with general LLMs often results in inaccurate assessments that misalign with human standards. To address these challenges, we propose an agent-driven benchmark construction pipeline that leverages human supervision to efficiently generate diverse project-level tasks. Based on this, we introduce PRDBench, comprising 50 real-world Python projects across 20 domains, each with structured Product Requirement Documents (PRDs) and comprehensive criteria. Furthermore, to overcome the inaccuracy of general LLM judges, we propose a highly reliable evaluation framework powered by a specialized, fine-tuned model. Based on Qwen3-Coder-30B, our dedicated PRDJudge achieves over 90% human alignment in fixed-interface scenarios. Extensive experiments demonstrate that our suite provides a scalable, robust, and highly accurate framework for assessing state-of-the-art code agents.
comment: Accepted by AAMAS 2026
♻ ☆ Current LLMs still cannot 'talk much' about grammar modules: Evidence from syntax
We aim to examine the extent to which Large Language Models (LLMs) can 'talk much' about grammar modules, providing evidence from syntax core properties translated by ChatGPT into Arabic. We collected 44 terms from generative syntax previous works, including books and journal articles, as well as from our experience in the field. These terms were translated by humans, and then by ChatGPT-5. We then analyzed and compared both translations. We used an analytical and comparative approach in our analysis. Findings unveil that LLMs still cannot 'talk much' about the core syntax properties embedded in the terms under study involving several syntactic and semantic challenges: only 25% of ChatGPT translations were accurate, while 38.6% were inaccurate, and 36.4.% were partially correct, which we consider appropriate. Based on these findings, a set of actionable strategies were proposed, the most notable of which is a close collaboration between AI specialists and linguists to better LLMs' working mechanism for accurate or at least appropriate translation.
comment: 15 pages
♻ ☆ BERnaT: Basque Encoders for Representing Natural Textual Diversity
Language models depend on massive text corpora that are often filtered for quality, a process that can unintentionally exclude non-standard linguistic varieties, reduce model robustness and reinforce representational biases. In this paper, we argue that language models should aim to capture the full spectrum of language variation (dialectal, historical, informal, etc.) rather than relying solely on standardized text. Focusing on the Basque language, we construct new corpora combining standard, social media, and historical sources, and pre-train the BERnaT family of encoder-only models in three configurations: standard, diverse, and combined. We further propose an evaluation framework that separates Natural Language Understanding (NLU) tasks into standard and diverse subsets to assess linguistic generalization. Results show that models trained on both standard and diverse data consistently outperform those trained on standard corpora, improving performance across all task types without compromising standard benchmark accuracy. These findings highlight the importance of linguistic diversity in building inclusive, generalizable language models.
comment: Under review for the Journal Procesamiento de Lenguaje Natural 2026 // En revisión en la revista de Procesamiente de Lenguaje Natural 2026
♻ ☆ On-Policy Context Distillation for Language Models
Context distillation enables language models to internalize in-context knowledge into their parameters. In our work, we propose On-Policy Context Distillation (OPCD), a framework that bridges on-policy distillation with context distillation by training a student model on its own generated trajectories while minimizing reverse Kullback-Leibler divergence against a context-conditioned teacher. We demonstrate the effectiveness of OPCD on two important applications: experiential knowledge distillation, where models extract and consolidate transferable knowledge from their historical solution traces, and system prompt distillation, where models internalize beneficial behaviors encoded in optimized prompts. Across mathematical reasoning, text-based games, and domain-specific tasks, OPCD consistently outperforms baseline methods, achieving higher task accuracy while better preserving out-of-distribution capabilities. We further show that OPCD enables effective cross-size distillation, where smaller student models can internalize experiential knowledge from larger teachers.
♻ ☆ Automatic Analysis of Collaboration Through Human Conversational Data Resources: A Review
Collaboration is a task-oriented, high-level human behavior. In most cases, conversation serves as the primary medium for information exchange and coordination, making conversational data a valuable resource for the automatic analysis of collaborative processes. In this paper, we focus on verbal aspects of collaboration and conduct a review of collaboration analysis using task-oriented conversation resources, encompassing related theories, coding schemes, tasks, and modeling approaches. We aim to address the question of how to utilize task-oriented human-human conversational data for collaboration analysis. We hope our review will serve as a practical resource and illuminate unexplored areas for future collaboration analysis.
comment: 9 pages
♻ ☆ Putting on the Thinking Hats: A Survey on Chain of Thought Fine-tuning from the Perspective of Human Reasoning Mechanism
Chain of thought (CoT) fine-tuning aims to endow large language models (LLMs) with reasoning capabilities by training them on curated reasoning traces. It leverages both supervised and reinforced fine-tuning to cultivate human-like reasoning skills in LLMs, including detailed planning, divergent thinking, intuitive judgment, timely reflection, internal thinking, and fact perception, etc. As CoT fine-tuning has advanced, LLMs have demonstrated substantial improvements in tasks such as mathematical reasoning and code generation. However, existing surveys about CoT fine-tuning primarily focus on technical aspects and overlook a systematic analysis from the perspective of human reasoning mechanisms. Given that the ultimate goal of CoT fine-tuning is to enable LLMs to reason like humans, it is crucial to investigate this technique through the lens of human cognition. To fill this gap, we present the first comprehensive survey of CoT fine-tuning grounded in human reasoning theory. Specifically, inspired by the well-known Six Thinking Hats framework, which systematically characterizes common human thinking modes using six metaphorical hats, we classify and examine CoT fine-tuning methods through this lens. Furthermore, building upon this theory, we outline potential directions for future research in CoT fine-tuning. In addition, we compile a comprehensive overview of existing datasets and model performances, and a real-time GitHub repository \footnote{https://github.com/AI-Chen/Awesome-CoT-Finetuning} that continuously tracks recent advances in this area is maintained. We hope this survey will serve as a valuable resource to inspire innovation and foster progress in this rapidly evolving field.
♻ ☆ Emotionally Charged, Logically Blurred: AI-driven Emotional Framing Impairs Human Fallacy Detection EACL 2026
Logical fallacies are common in public communication and can mislead audiences; fallacious arguments may still appear convincing despite lacking soundness, because convincingness is inherently subjective. We present the first computational study of how emotional framing interacts with fallacies and convincingness, using large language models (LLMs) to systematically change emotional appeals in fallacious arguments. We benchmark eight LLMs on injecting emotional appeal into fallacious arguments while preserving their logical structures, then use the best models to generate stimuli for a human study. Our results show that LLM-driven emotional framing reduces human fallacy detection in F1 by 14.5% on average. Humans perform better in fallacy detection when perceiving enjoyment than fear or sadness, and these three emotions also correlate with significantly higher convincingness compared to neutral or other emotion states. Our work has implications for AI-driven emotional manipulation in the context of fallacious argumentation.
comment: EACL 2026 Main Camera-ready; Figure 4 and typo fixed
♻ ☆ Automatic Essay Scoring and Feedback Generation in Basque Language Learning LREC 2026
This paper introduces the first publicly available dataset for Automatic Essay Scoring (AES) and feedback generation in Basque, targeting the CEFR C1 proficiency level. The dataset comprises 3,200 essays from HABE, each annotated by expert evaluators with criterion specific scores covering correctness, richness, coherence, cohesion, and task alignment enriched with detailed feedback and error examples. We fine-tune open-source models, including RoBERTa-EusCrawl and Latxa 8B/70B, for both scoring and explanation generation. Our experiments show that encoder models remain highly reliable for AES, while supervised fine-tuning (SFT) of Latxa significantly enhances performance, surpassing state-of-the-art (SoTA) closed-source systems such as GPT-5 and Claude Sonnet 4.5 in scoring consistency and feedback quality. We also propose a novel evaluation methodology for assessing feedback generation, combining automatic consistency metrics with expert-based validation of extracted learner errors. Results demonstrate that the fine-tuned Latxa model produces criterion-aligned, pedagogically meaningful feedback and identifies a wider range of error types than proprietary models. This resource and benchmark establish a foundation for transparent, reproducible, and educationally grounded NLP research in low-resource languages such as Basque.
comment: Accepted to LREC 2026
♻ ☆ Human or LLM as Standardized Patients? A Comparative Study for Medical Education
Standardized patients (SPs) are indispensable for clinical skills training but remain expensive and difficult to scale. Although large language model (LLM)-based virtual standardized patients (VSPs) have been proposed as an alternative, their behavior remains unstable and lacks rigorous comparison with human standardized patients. We propose EasyMED, a multi-agent VSP framework that separates case-grounded information disclosure from response generation to support stable, inquiry-conditioned patient behavior. We also introduce SPBench, a human-grounded benchmark with eight expert-defined criteria for interaction-level evaluation. Experiments show that EasyMED more closely matches human SP behavior than existing VSPs, particularly in case consistency and controlled disclosure. A four-week controlled study further demonstrates learning outcomes comparable to human SP training, with stronger early gains for novice learners and improved flexibility, psychological safety, and cost efficiency.
comment: 24 pages, 13 figures, 10 table
♻ ☆ TRI-DEP: A Trimodal Comparative Study for Depression Detection Using Speech, Text, and EEG
Depression is a widespread mental health disorder, yet its automatic detection remains challenging. Prior work has explored unimodal and multimodal approaches, with multimodal systems showing promise by leveraging complementary signals. However, existing studies are limited in scope, lack systematic comparisons of features, and suffer from inconsistent evaluation protocols. We address these gaps by systematically exploring feature representations and modelling strategies across EEG, together with speech and text. We evaluate handcrafted features versus pre-trained embeddings, assess the effectiveness of different neural encoders, compare unimodal, bimodal, and trimodal configurations, and analyse fusion strategies with attention to the role of EEG. Consistent subject-independent splits are applied to ensure robust, reproducible benchmarking. Our results show that (i) the combination of EEG, speech and text modalities enhances multimodal detection, (ii) pretrained embeddings outperform handcrafted features, and (iii) carefully designed trimodal models achieve state-of-the-art performance. Our work lays the groundwork for future research in multimodal depression detection.
♻ ☆ Teaching Old Tokenizers New Words: Efficient Tokenizer Adaptation for Pre-trained Models EACL 2026
Tokenizer adaptation plays an important role in adapting pre-trained language models to new domains or languages. In this work, we address two complementary aspects of this process: vocabulary extension and pruning. The common approach to extension trains a new tokenizer on domain-specific text and appends the tokens that do not overlap with the existing vocabulary, which often results in many tokens that are unreachable or never used. We propose continued BPE training that extends a pre-trained tokenizer by continuing the BPE merge learning process on new data. Experiments across multiple languages and model families show that this approach improves tokenization efficiency and leads to better utilization of added vocabulary. We also introduce leaf-based vocabulary pruning, which removes redundant tokens while preserving model quality. Together, these methods provide practical tools for controlled vocabulary modification, which we release as an open-source toolkit.
comment: Accepted to Findings of EACL 2026
♻ ☆ Edu-Values: Towards Evaluating the Chinese Education Values of Large Language Models
In this paper, we present Edu-Values, the first Chinese education values evaluation benchmark that includes seven core values: professional philosophy, teachers' professional ethics, education laws and regulations, cultural literacy, educational knowledge and skills, basic competencies and subject knowledge. We meticulously design 1,418 questions, covering multiple-choice, multi-modal question answering, subjective analysis, adversarial prompts, and Chinese traditional culture (short answer) questions. We conduct human feedback based automatic evaluation over 21 state-of-the-art (SoTA) LLMs, and highlight three main findings: (1) due to differences in educational culture, Chinese LLMs outperform English LLMs, with Qwen 2 ranking the first with a score of 81.37; (2) LLMs often struggle with teachers' professional ethics and professional philosophy; (3) leveraging Edu-Values to build an external knowledge repository for RAG significantly improves LLMs' alignment. This demonstrates the effectiveness of the proposed benchmark.
comment: The authors are withdrawing this paper to make substantial revisions and improvements before future submission
♻ ☆ Masked Diffusion Models as Energy Minimization
We present a systematic theoretical framework that interprets masked diffusion models (MDMs) as solutions to energy minimization problems in discrete optimal transport. Specifically, we prove that three distinct energy formulations--kinetic, conditional kinetic, and geodesic energy--are mathematically equivalent under the structure of MDMs, and that MDMs minimize all three when the mask schedule satisfies a closed-form optimality condition. This unification not only clarifies the theoretical foundations of MDMs, but also motivates practical improvements in sampling. By parameterizing interpolation schedules via Beta distributions, we reduce the schedule design space to a tractable 2D search, enabling efficient post-training tuning without model modification. Experiments on synthetic and real-world benchmarks demonstrate that our energy-inspired schedules outperform hand-crafted baselines, particularly in low-step sampling settings.
♻ ☆ From Synthetic Scenes to Real Performance: Enhancing Spatial Reasoning in VLMs
Fine-tuning Vision-Language Models (VLMs) is a common strategy to improve performance following an ad-hoc data collection and annotation of real-world scenes. However, this process is often prone to biases, errors, and distribution imbalance, resulting in overfitting and imbalanced performance. Although a few studies have tried to address this problem by generating synthetic data, they lacked control over distribution bias and annotation quality. To address these challenges, we redesign the fine-tuning process in two ways. First, we control the generation of data and its annotations, ensuring it is free from bias, distribution imbalance, and annotation errors. We automatically construct the dataset by comprehensively sampling objects' attributes, including color, shape, size, and position within the scene. Secondly, using this annotated dataset, we fine-tune state-of-the-art VLMs and assess performance transferability to real-world data on the absolute position task. We conduct exhaustive evaluations on both synthetic and real-world benchmarks. Our experiments reveal two key findings: 1) fine-tuning on balanced synthetic data yields uniform performance across the visual scene and mitigates common biases; and 2) fine-tuning on synthetic stimuli improves performance by 13% on real-world data (COCO), outperforming models fine-tuned on the full COCO train set.
♻ ☆ Your Absorbing Discrete Diffusion Secretly Models the Conditional Distributions of Clean Data
Discrete diffusion models with absorbing processes have shown promise in language modeling. The key quantities to be estimated are the ratios between the marginal probabilities of two transitive states at all timesteps, called the concrete score. In this paper, we reveal that the concrete score in absorbing diffusion can be expressed as conditional probabilities of clean data, multiplied by a time-dependent scalar in an analytic form. Motivated by this finding, we propose reparameterized absorbing discrete diffusion (RADD), a dedicated diffusion model without time-condition that characterizes the time-independent conditional probabilities. Besides its simplicity, RADD can reduce the number of function evaluations (NFEs) by caching the output of the time-independent network when the noisy sample remains unchanged in a sampling interval, which enables sampling acceleration. Built upon the new perspective of conditional distributions, we further unify absorbing discrete diffusion and any-order autoregressive models (AO-ARMs), showing that the upper bound on the negative log-likelihood for the diffusion model can be interpreted as an expected negative log-likelihood for AO-ARMs. Further, our RADD models achieve SOTA performance among diffusion models on 5 zero-shot language modeling benchmarks (measured by perplexity) at the GPT-2 scale. Our code is available at https://github.com/ML-GSAI/RADD.
♻ ☆ DeepCompress: A Dual Reward Strategy for Dynamically Exploring and Compressing Reasoning Chains ICLR 2026
Large Reasoning Models (LRMs) have demonstrated impressive capabilities but suffer from cognitive inefficiencies like "overthinking" simple problems and "underthinking" complex ones. While existing methods that use supervised fine-tuning (SFT) or reinforcement learning (RL) with token-length rewards can improve efficiency, they often do so at the cost of accuracy. This paper introduces DeepCompress, a novel framework that simultaneously enhances both the accuracy and efficiency of LRMs. We challenge the prevailing approach of consistently favoring shorter reasoning paths, showing that longer responses can contain a broader range of correct solutions for difficult problems. DeepCompress employs an adaptive length reward mechanism that dynamically classifies problems as "Simple" or "Hard" in real-time based on the model's evolving capability. It encourages shorter, more efficient reasoning for "Simple" problems while promoting longer, more exploratory thought chains for "Hard" problems. This dual-reward strategy enables the model to autonomously adjust its Chain-of-Thought (CoT) length, compressing reasoning for well-mastered problems and extending it for those it finds challenging. Experimental results on challenging mathematical benchmarks show that DeepCompress consistently outperforms baseline methods, achieving superior accuracy while significantly improving token efficiency.
comment: ICLR 2026
♻ ☆ Multi-Task Instruction Tuning via Data Scheduling for Low-Resource Arabic AudioLLMs
Audio large language models (LLMs) enable unified speech understanding and generation, but adapting them to linguistically complex and dialect-rich settings such as Arabic-English remains challenging. We present a controlled study of multi-task instruction tuning for an Arabic-centric audio LLM across generative tasks including ASR and speech and text summarization, and discriminative tasks including dialect and emotion recognition, in a resource-constrained setting. To support end-to-end Arabic speech summarization, we introduce AraMega-SSum, a first speech summarization resource for training and benchmarking Arabic-centric Audio-LLMs. We compare four training strategies (i) Uniform Task Mixing, (ii) Task-Progressive Curriculum (TPC), (iiii) Aligner-Based Diverse Sampling (ADS) for training-time batch construction, and (iv) A two-stage TPC->ADS strategy. Our results show a clear efficiency-robustness trade-off. ADS speeds up early convergence and improves paralinguistic performance, however, it hurts other tasks. A two-stage TPC-> ADS strategy gives the most reliable overall balance across tasks, offering practical guidance for adapting omni audio LLMs to low-resource, dialect-rich environments. We will make AraMega-SSum and all experimental resources publicly available to the community.
comment: Foundation Models, Large Language Models, Native, Speech Models, Arabic
♻ ☆ Modality Matching Matters: Calibrating Language Distances for Cross-Lingual Transfer in URIEL+ EACL 2026
Existing linguistic knowledge bases such as URIEL+ provide valuable geographic, genetic and typological distances for cross-lingual transfer but suffer from two key limitations. First, their one-size-fits-all vector representations are ill-suited to the diverse structures of linguistic data. Second, they lack a principled method for aggregating these signals into a single, comprehensive score. In this paper, we address these gaps by introducing a framework for type-matched language distances. We propose novel, structure-aware representations for each distance type: speaker-weighted distributions for geography, hyperbolic embeddings for genealogy, and a latent variables model for typology. We unify these signals into a robust, task-agnostic composite distance. Across multiple zero-shot transfer benchmarks, we demonstrate that our representations significantly improve transfer performance when the distance type is relevant to the task, while our composite distance yields gains in most tasks.
comment: Accepted to EACL 2026 SRW
♻ ☆ AmbiSQL: Interactive Ambiguity Detection and Resolution for Text-to-SQL
Text-to-SQL systems translate natural language questions into SQL queries, providing substantial value for non-expert users. While large language models (LLMs) show promising results for this task, they remain error-prone. Query ambiguity has been recognized as a major obstacle in LLM-based Text-to-SQL systems, leading to misinterpretation of user intent and inaccurate SQL generation. To this end, we present AmbiSQL, an interactive system that automatically detects query ambiguities and guides users through intuitive multiple-choice questions to clarify their intent. It introduces a fine-grained ambiguity taxonomy for identifying ambiguities arising from both database elements and LLM reasoning, and subsequently incorporates user feedback to rewrite ambiguous questions. In this demonstration, AmbiSQL is integrated with XiYan-SQL, our commercial Text-to-SQL backend. We provide 40 ambiguous queries collected from two real-world benchmarks that SIGMOD'26 attendees can use to explore how disambiguation improves SQL generation quality. Participants can also apply the system to their own databases and natural language questions. The codebase and demo video are available at: https://github.com/JustinzjDing/AmbiSQL and https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rbB-0ZKwYkk.
♻ ☆ FACTUM: Mechanistic Detection of Citation Hallucination in Long-Form RAG ECIR 2026
Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG) models are critically undermined by citation hallucinations, a deceptive failure where a model cites a source that fails to support its claim. While existing work attributes hallucination to a simple over-reliance on parametric knowledge, we reframe this failure as an evolving, scale-dependent coordination failure between the Attention (reading) and Feed-Forward Network (recalling) pathways. We introduce FACTUM (Framework for Attesting Citation Trustworthiness via Underlying Mechanisms), a framework of four mechanistic scores: Contextual Alignment (CAS), Attention Sink Usage (BAS), Parametric Force (PFS), and Pathway Alignment (PAS). Our analysis reveals that correct citations are consistently marked by higher parametric force (PFS) and greater use of the attention sink (BAS) for information synthesis. Crucially, we find that "one-size-fits-all" theories are insufficient as the signature of correctness evolves with scale: while the 3B model relies on high pathway alignment (PAS), our best-performing 8B detector identifies a shift toward a specialized strategy where pathways provide distinct, orthogonal information. By capturing this complex interplay, FACTUM outperforms state-of-the-art baselines by up to 37.5% in AUC. Our results demonstrate that high parametric force is constructive when successfully coordinated with the Attention pathway, paving the way for more nuanced and reliable RAG systems.
comment: Accepted at ECIR 2026. 13 pages, 2 figures
♻ ☆ Mind the Gap: Pitfalls of LLM Alignment with Asian Public Opinion AAAI
Large Language Models (LLMs) are increasingly being deployed in multilingual, multicultural settings, yet their reliance on predominantly English-centric training data risks misalignment with the diverse cultural values of different societies. In this paper, we present a comprehensive, multilingual audit of the cultural alignment of contemporary LLMs including GPT-4o-Mini, Gemini-2.5-Flash, Llama 3.2, Mistral and Gemma 3 across India, East Asia and Southeast Asia. Our study specifically focuses on the sensitive domain of religion as the prism for broader alignment. To facilitate this, we conduct a multi-faceted analysis of every LLM's internal representations, using log-probs/logits, to compare the model's opinion distributions against ground-truth public attitudes. We find that while the popular models generally align with public opinion on broad social issues, they consistently fail to accurately represent religious viewpoints, especially those of minority groups, often amplifying negative stereotypes. Lightweight interventions, such as demographic priming and native language prompting, partially mitigate but do not eliminate these cultural gaps. We further show that downstream evaluations on bias benchmarks (such as CrowS-Pairs, IndiBias, ThaiCLI, KoBBQ) reveal persistent harms and under-representation in sensitive contexts. Our findings underscore the urgent need for systematic, regionally grounded audits to ensure equitable global deployment of LLMs.
comment: 13 pages, including AAAI Paper Checklist. Accepted in Proceedings of the 20th International AAAI Conference on Web and Social Media (ICWSM 2026)
♻ ☆ Pantagruel: Unified Self-Supervised Encoders for French Text and Speech LREC 2026
We release Pantagruel models, a new family of self-supervised encoder models for French text and speech. Instead of predicting modality-tailored targets such as textual tokens or speech units, Pantagruel learns contextualized target representations in the feature space, allowing modality-specific encoders to capture linguistic and acoustic regularities more effectively. Separate models are pre-trained on large-scale French corpora, including Wikipedia, OSCAR and CroissantLLM for text, together with MultilingualLibriSpeech, LeBenchmark, and INA-100k for speech. INA-100k is a newly introduced 100,000-hour corpus of French audio derived from the archives of the Institut National de l'Audiovisuel (INA), the national repository of French radio and television broadcasts, providing highly diverse audio data. We evaluate Pantagruel across a broad range of downstream tasks spanning both modalities, including those from the standard French benchmarks such as FLUE or LeBenchmark. Across these tasks, Pantagruel models show competitive or superior performance compared to strong French baselines such as CamemBERT, FlauBERT, and LeBenchmark2.0, while maintaining a shared architecture that can seamlessly handle either speech or text inputs. These results confirm the effectiveness of feature-space self-supervised objectives for French representation learning and highlight Pantagruel as a robust foundation for multimodal speech-text understanding.
comment: Accepted to LREC 2026
♻ ☆ WiFi-GEN: High-Resolution Indoor Imaging from WiFi Signals Using Generative AI
Indoor imaging is a critical task for robotics and internet-ofthings. WiFi as an omnipresent signal is a promising candidate for carrying out passive imaging and synchronizing the up-to-date information to all connected devices. This is the first research work to consider WiFi indoor imaging as a multi-modal image generation task that converts the measured WiFi power into a high-resolution indoor image. Our proposedWiFi-GEN network achieves a shape reconstruction accuracy that is 275% of that achieved by physical model-based inversion methods. Additionally, the Frechet Inception Distance score has been significantly reduced by 82%. To examine the effectiveness of models for this task, the first large-scale dataset is released containing 80,000 pairs of WiFi signal and imaging target. Our model absorbs challenges for the model-based methods including the nonlinearity, ill-posedness and non-certainty into massive parameters of our generative AI network. The network is also designed to best fit measured WiFi signals and the desired imaging output. Code: https://github.com/CNFightingSjy/WiFiGEN
♻ ☆ Difficulty-Controllable Multiple-Choice Question Generation Using Large Language Models and Direct Preference Optimization
Difficulty-controllable question generation for reading comprehension has gained significant attention in the field of education as a fundamental tool for adaptive learning support. Although several neural question generation methods have recently succeeded in controlling difficulty, conventional approaches still face two major limitations. First, they cannot directly generate multiple-choice questions, which are the most widely used question type in educational contexts. Second, they are not explicitly trained to optimize the accuracy of difficulty control, leaving room for further improvement in difficulty controllability. To address these limitations, this study proposes a novel difficulty-controllable multiple-choice question generation method for reading comprehension which leverages a large language model trained using a direct preference optimization technique to improve the accuracy of difficulty control.
comment: Accepted for publication in IEEE Access. Please refer to the published version for the final content. DOI: 10.1109/ACCESS.2026.3674595
♻ ☆ CoVerRL: Breaking the Consensus Trap in Label-Free Reasoning via Generator-Verifier Co-Evolution
Label-free reinforcement learning enables large language models to improve reasoning capabilities without ground-truth supervision, typically by treating majority-voted answers as pseudo-labels. However, we identify a critical failure mode: as training maximizes self-consistency, output diversity collapses, causing the model to confidently reinforce systematic errors that evade detection. We term this the consensus trap. To escape it, we propose CoVerRL, a framework where a single model alternates between generator and verifier roles, with each capability bootstrapping the other. Majority voting provides noisy but informative supervision for training the verifier, while the improving verifier progressively filters self-consistent errors from pseudo-labels. This co-evolution creates a virtuous cycle that maintains high reward accuracy throughout training. Experiments across Qwen and Llama model families demonstrate that CoVerRL outperforms label-free baselines by 4.7-5.9% on mathematical reasoning benchmarks. Moreover, self-verification accuracy improves from around 55% to over 85%, confirming that both capabilities genuinely co-evolve.
comment: Project Page: https://zju-real.github.io/CoVerRL Code: https://github.com/ZJU-REAL/CoVerRL
♻ ☆ AgentExpt: Automating AI Experiment Design with LLM-based Resource Retrieval Agent
Large language model agents are becoming increasingly capable at web-centric tasks such as information retrieval, complex reasoning. These emerging capabilities have given rise to surge research interests in developing LLM agent for facilitating scientific quest. One key application in AI research is to automate experiment design through agentic dataset and baseline retrieval. However, prior efforts suffer from limited data coverage, as recommendation datasets primarily harvest candidates from public portals and omit many datasets actually used in published papers, and from an overreliance on content similarity that biases model toward superficial similarity and overlooks experimental suitability. Harnessing collective perception embedded in the baseline and dataset citation network, we present a comprehensive framework for baseline and dataset recommendation. First, we design an automated data-collection pipeline that links roughly one hundred thousand accepted papers to the baselines and datasets they actually used. Second, we propose a collective perception enhanced retriever. To represent the position of each dataset or baseline within the scholarly network, it concatenates self-descriptions with aggregated citation contexts. To achieve efficient candidate recall, we finetune an embedding model on these representations. Finally, we develop a reasoning-augmented reranker that exact interaction chains to construct explicit reasoning chains and finetunes a large language model to produce interpretable justifications and refined rankings. The dataset we curated covers 85\% of the datasets and baselines used at top AI conferences over the past five years. On our dataset, the proposed method outperforms the strongest prior baseline with average gains of +5.85\% in Recall@20, +8.30\% in HitRate@5. Taken together, our results advance reliable, interpretable automation of experimental design.
comment: 10 pages
♻ ☆ Prompt-Induced Linguistic Fingerprints for LLM-Generated Fake News Detection WWW 2026
With the rapid development of large language models, the generation of fake news has become increasingly effortless, posing a growing societal threat and underscoring the urgent need for reliable detection methods. Early efforts to identify LLM-generated fake news have predominantly focused on the textual content itself; however, because much of that content may appear coherent and factually consistent, the subtle traces of falsification are often difficult to uncover. Through distributional divergence analysis, we uncover prompt-induced linguistic fingerprints: statistically distinct probability shifts between LLM-generated real and fake news when maliciously prompted. Based on this insight, we propose a novel method named Linguistic Fingerprints Extraction (LIFE). By reconstructing word-level probability distributions, LIFE can find discriminative patterns that facilitate the detection of LLM-generated fake news. To further amplify these fingerprint patterns, we also leverage key-fragment techniques that accentuate subtle linguistic differences, thereby improving detection reliability. Our experiments show that LIFE achieves state-of-the-art performance in LLM-generated fake news and maintains high performance in human-written fake news. The code and data are available at https://anonymous.4open.science/r/LIFE-E86A.
comment: published in WWW 2026
♻ ☆ Hybrid Architectures for Language Models: Systematic Analysis and Design Insights
Recent progress in large language models demonstrates that hybrid architectures--combining self-attention mechanisms with structured state space models like Mamba--can achieve a compelling balance between modeling quality and computational efficiency, particularly for long-context tasks. While these hybrid models show promising performance, systematic comparisons of hybridization strategies and analyses on the key factors behind their effectiveness have not been clearly shared to the community. In this work, we present a holistic evaluation of hybrid architectures based on inter-layer (sequential) or intra-layer (parallel) fusion. We comprehensively evaluate these designs across multiple dimensions: language modeling and downstream task performance, long-context capabilities, scaling analysis, and training and inference efficiency. By investigating the core characteristics of their computational primitive, we identify the most critical elements for each hybridization strategy and further propose optimal design recipes for hybrid models. Our comprehensive analysis provides practical guidance and valuable insights for developing hybrid language models, facilitating the optimization of architectural configurations.
comment: 41 pages, 8 figures, 22 tables;
♻ ☆ Unlocking Multimodal Document Intelligence: From Current Triumphs to Future Frontiers of Visual Document Retrieval
With the rapid proliferation of multimodal information, Visual Document Retrieval (VDR) has emerged as a critical frontier in bridging the gap between unstructured visually rich data and precise information acquisition. Unlike traditional natural image retrieval, visual documents exhibit unique characteristics defined by dense textual content, intricate layouts, and fine-grained semantic dependencies. This paper presents the first comprehensive survey of the VDR landscape, specifically through the lens of the Multimodal Large Language Model (MLLM) era. We begin by examining the benchmark landscape, and subsequently dive into the methodological evolution, categorizing approaches into three primary aspects: multimodal embedding models, multimodal reranker models, and the integration of Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG) and Agentic systems for complex document intelligence. Finally, we identify persistent challenges and outline promising future directions, aiming to provide a clear roadmap for future multimodal document intelligence.
comment: Under review. This version updates the relevant works released before 15 March, 2026
♻ ☆ VorTEX: Various overlap ratio for Target speech EXtraction
Target speech extraction (TSE) aims to recover a target speaker's voice from a mixture. While recent text-prompted approaches have shown promise, most approaches assume fully overlapped mixtures, limiting insight into behavior across realistic overlap ratios. We introduce VorTEX (Various overlap ratio for Target speech EXtraction), a text-prompted TSE architecture with a Decoupled Adaptive Multi-branch (DAM) Fusion block that separates primary extraction from auxiliary regularization pathways. To enable controlled analysis, we construct PORTE, a two-speaker dataset spanning overlap ratios from 0% to 100%. We further propose Suppression Ratio on Energy (SuRE), a diagnostic metric that detects suppression behavior not captured by conventional measures. Experiments show that existing models exhibit suppression or residual interference under overlap, whereas VorTEX achieves the highest separation fidelity across 20-100% overlap (e.g., 5.50 dB at 20% and 2.04 dB at 100%) while maintaining zero SuRE, indicating robust extraction without suppression-driven artifacts.
comment: Submitted to InterSpeech 2026 (under review)
♻ ☆ Learning to Reason without External Rewards ICLR 2026
Training large language models (LLMs) for complex reasoning via Reinforcement Learning with Verifiable Rewards (RLVR) is effective but limited by reliance on costly, domain-specific supervision. We explore Reinforcement Learning from Internal Feedback (RLIF), a framework that enables LLMs to learn from intrinsic signals without external rewards or labeled data. We propose Intuitor, an RLIF method that uses a model's own confidence-termed self-certainty-as its sole reward signal. Intuitor replaces external rewards in Group Relative Policy Optimization (GRPO) with self-certainty scores, enabling fully unsupervised learning. Experiments demonstrate that Intuitor matches GRPO's performance on mathematical benchmarks while achieving better generalization to out-of-domain tasks like code generation, without requiring gold solutions or test cases. Our findings show that intrinsic model signals can drive effective learning across domains, offering a scalable alternative to RLVR for autonomous AI systems where verifiable rewards are unavailable. Code is available at https://github.com/sunblaze-ucb/Intuitor
comment: ICLR 2026
♻ ☆ LexInstructEval: Lexical Instruction Following Evaluation for Large Language Models
The ability of Large Language Models (LLMs) to precisely follow complex and fine-grained lexical instructions is a cornerstone of their utility and controllability. However, evaluating this capability remains a significant challenge. Current methods either rely on subjective and costly human evaluation or on automated LLM-as-a-judge systems, which suffer from inherent biases and unreliability. Existing programmatic benchmarks, while objective, often lack the expressiveness to test intricate, compositional constraints at a granular level. To address these limitations, we introduce LexInstructEval, a new benchmark and evaluation framework for fine-grained lexical instruction following. Our framework is built upon a formal, rule-based grammar that deconstructs complex instructions into a canonical triplet. This grammar enables the systematic generation of a diverse dataset through a multi-stage, human-in-the-loop pipeline and facilitates objective verification via a transparent, programmatic engine. We release our dataset and open-source evaluation tools to facilitate further research into the controllability and reliability of LLMs.
♻ ☆ Pretraining with hierarchical memories: separating long-tail and common knowledge ICLR 2026
The impressive performance gains of modern language models currently rely on scaling parameters: larger models store more world knowledge and reason better. Yet compressing all world knowledge into parameters is unnecessary, as only a fraction is used per prompt, and impractical for edge devices with limited inference-time memory and compute. We address this shortcoming by a memory-augmented architecture and a pretraining strategy aligned with existing hardware paradigms. We introduce small language models that access large hierarchical parametric memory banks encoding world knowledge. During pretraining and inference, we fetch a small, context-dependent memory block and add it to the model. Our pretraining learns to store long-tail world knowledge in the memory parameters, while the small language model acts as an anchor capturing common knowledge and general reasoning abilities. Through trillion-token-scale experiments, we show significant gains: a 160M-parameters model augmented with an 18M-parameters memory fetched from a 4.6B memory bank obtains comparable performance to a regular model with more than 2x the parameters. Through extensive experiments, we study the optimal type and size of parametric memories in transformers, scaling them to over 21B parameters. We find that our proposed hierarchical feed-forward memories work robustly across transformer architectures, whether added during pretraining or post-hoc.
comment: ICLR 2026
♻ ☆ Knowledge Fusion via Bidirectional Information Aggregation
Knowledge graphs (KGs) are the cornerstone of the semantic web, offering up-to-date representations of real-world entities and relations. Yet large language models (LLMs) remain largely static after pre-training, causing their internal knowledge to become outdated and limiting their utility in time-sensitive web applications. To bridge this gap between dynamic knowledge and static models, a prevalent approach is to enhance LLMs with KGs. However, prevailing methods typically rely on parameter-invasive fine-tuning, which risks catastrophic forgetting and often degrades LLMs' general capabilities. Moreover, their static integration frameworks cannot keep pace with the continuous evolution of real-world KGs, hindering their deployment in dynamic web environments. To bridge this gap, we introduce KGA (\textit{\underline{K}nowledge \underline{G}raph-guided \underline{A}ttention}), a novel framework that dynamically integrates external KGs into LLMs exclusively at inference-time without any parameter modification. Inspired by research on neuroscience, we rewire the self-attention module by innovatively introducing two synergistic pathways: a \textit{bottom-up knowledge fusion} pathway and a \textit{top-down attention guidance} pathway. The \textit{bottom-up pathway} dynamically integrates external knowledge into input representations via input-driven KG fusion, which is akin to the \textit{stimulus-driven attention process} in the human brain. Complementarily, the \textit{top-down pathway} aims to assess the contextual relevance of each triple through a \textit{goal-directed verification process}, thereby suppressing task-irrelevant signals and amplifying knowledge-relevant patterns. By synergistically combining these two pathways, our method supports real-time knowledge fusion. Extensive experiments on four benchmarks verify KGA's strong fusion performance and efficiency.
♻ ☆ Auditing Google's AI Overviews and Featured Snippets: A Case Study on Baby Care and Pregnancy AAAI
Google Search increasingly surfaces AI-generated content through features like AI Overviews (AIO) and Featured Snippets (FS), which users frequently rely on despite having no control over their presentation. Through a systematic algorithm audit of 1,508 real baby care and pregnancy-related queries, we evaluate the quality and consistency of these information displays. Our robust evaluation framework assesses multiple quality dimensions, including answer consistency, relevance, presence of medical safeguards, source categories, and sentiment alignment. Our results reveal concerning gaps in information consistency, with information in AIO and FS displayed on the same search result page being inconsistent with each other in 33% of cases. Despite high relevance scores, both features critically lack medical safeguards (present in just 11% of AIO and 7% of FS responses). While health and wellness websites dominate source categories for both, AIO and FS, FS also often link to commercial sources. These findings have important implications for public health information access and demonstrate the need for stronger quality controls in AI-mediated health information. Our methodology provides a transferable framework for auditing AI systems across high-stakes domains where information quality directly impacts user well-being.
comment: 18 pages, 10 figures; to appear in AAAI ICWSM 2026
♻ ☆ Moneyball with LLMs: Analyzing Tabular Summarization in Sports Narratives
Large language model (LLM) approaches to tabular summarization rely on extensive prompt engineering, decomposition pipelines, or entity-level intermediate representations to achieve strong performance. While effective, these strategies are computationally expensive and offer limited insight into how well models maintain state over long, evolving narratives. We introduce SPORTABSET, a diagnostic benchmark for long-context tabular summarization across two complementary sports domains that require tracking multiple entities and aggregating statistics under domain-specific rules. Using SporTabSet, we systematically evaluate decomposition-based strategies across several long context LLMs. Results show that although decomposition substantially improves accuracy and numerical fidelity, gains stem mainly from dissecting multi-entity interference rather than improved local arithmetic. Robustness experiments further reveal high sensitivity to surface-level cues with structured failures, including hallucination, omission, and role confusion. Together, these findings identify consistent multientity memory as a key bottleneck in long context table generation, motivating diagnostic evaluation as a prerequisite for scalable, efficient and reliable tabular summarization models.
♻ ☆ Detecting AI-Generated Content in Academic Peer Reviews
The growing availability of large language models (LLMs) has raised questions about their role in academic peer review. This study examines the temporal emergence of AI-generated content in peer reviews by applying a detection model trained on historical reviews to later review cycles at International Conference on Learning Representations (ICLR) and Nature Communications (NC). We observe minimal detection of AI-generated content before 2022, followed by a substantial increase through 2025, with approximately 20% of ICLR reviews and 12% of Nature Communications reviews classified as AI-generated in 2025. The most pronounced growth of AI-generated reviews in NC occurs between the third and fourth quarter of 2024. Together, these findings provide suggestive evidence of a rapidly increasing presence of AI-assisted content in peer review and highlight the need for further study of its implications for scholarly evaluation.
Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition
☆ WorldCache: Content-Aware Caching for Accelerated Video World Models
Diffusion Transformers (DiTs) power high-fidelity video world models but remain computationally expensive due to sequential denoising and costly spatio-temporal attention. Training-free feature caching accelerates inference by reusing intermediate activations across denoising steps; however, existing methods largely rely on a Zero-Order Hold assumption i.e., reusing cached features as static snapshots when global drift is small. This often leads to ghosting artifacts, blur, and motion inconsistencies in dynamic scenes. We propose \textbf{WorldCache}, a Perception-Constrained Dynamical Caching framework that improves both when and how to reuse features. WorldCache introduces motion-adaptive thresholds, saliency-weighted drift estimation, optimal approximation via blending and warping, and phase-aware threshold scheduling across diffusion steps. Our cohesive approach enables adaptive, motion-consistent feature reuse without retraining. On Cosmos-Predict2.5-2B evaluated on PAI-Bench, WorldCache achieves \textbf{2.3$\times$} inference speedup while preserving \textbf{99.4\%} of baseline quality, substantially outperforming prior training-free caching approaches. Our code can be accessed on \href{https://umair1221.github.io/World-Cache/}{World-Cache}.
comment: 33 Pages
☆ VideoDetective: Clue Hunting via both Extrinsic Query and Intrinsic Relevance for Long Video Understanding
Long video understanding remains challenging for multimodal large language models (MLLMs) due to limited context windows, which necessitate identifying sparse query-relevant video segments. However, existing methods predominantly localize clues based solely on the query, overlooking the video's intrinsic structure and varying relevance across segments. To address this, we propose VideoDetective, a framework that integrates query-to-segment relevance and inter-segment affinity for effective clue hunting in long-video question answering. Specifically, we divide a video into various segments and represent them as a visual-temporal affinity graph built from visual similarity and temporal proximity. We then perform a Hypothesis-Verification-Refinement loop to estimate relevance scores of observed segments to the query and propagate them to unseen segments, yielding a global relevance distribution that guides the localization of the most critical segments for final answering with sparse observation. Experiments show our method consistently achieves substantial gains across a wide range of mainstream MLLMs on representative benchmarks, with accuracy improvements of up to 7.5% on VideoMME-long. Our code is available at https://videodetective.github.io/
☆ End-to-End Training for Unified Tokenization and Latent Denoising
Latent diffusion models (LDMs) enable high-fidelity synthesis by operating in learned latent spaces. However, training state-of-the-art LDMs requires complex staging: a tokenizer must be trained first, before the diffusion model can be trained in the frozen latent space. We propose UNITE - an autoencoder architecture for unified tokenization and latent diffusion. UNITE consists of a Generative Encoder that serves as both image tokenizer and latent generator via weight sharing. Our key insight is that tokenization and generation can be viewed as the same latent inference problem under different conditioning regimes: tokenization infers latents from fully observed images, whereas generation infers them from noise together with text or class conditioning. Motivated by this, we introduce a single-stage training procedure that jointly optimizes both tasks via two forward passes through the same Generative Encoder. The shared parameters enable gradients to jointly shape the latent space, encouraging a "common latent language". Across image and molecule modalities, UNITE achieves near state of the art performance without adversarial losses or pretrained encoders (e.g., DINO), reaching FID 2.12 and 1.73 for Base and Large models on ImageNet 256 x 256. We further analyze the Generative Encoder through the lenses of representation alignment and compression. These results show that single stage joint training of tokenization & generation from scratch is feasible.
comment: First two authors contributed equally. Project: https://xingjianbai.com/unite-tokenization-generation/ Code: https://github.com/ShivamDuggal4/UNITE-tokenization-generation
☆ UniMotion: A Unified Framework for Motion-Text-Vision Understanding and Generation
We present UniMotion, to our knowledge the first unified framework for simultaneous understanding and generation of human motion, natural language, and RGB images within a single architecture. Existing unified models handle only restricted modality subsets (e.g., Motion-Text or static Pose-Image) and predominantly rely on discrete tokenization, which introduces quantization errors and disrupts temporal continuity. UniMotion overcomes both limitations through a core principle: treating motion as a first-class continuous modality on equal footing with RGB. A novel Cross-Modal Aligned Motion VAE (CMA-VAE) and symmetric dual-path embedders construct parallel continuous pathways for Motion and RGB within a shared LLM backbone. To inject visual-semantic priors into motion representations without requiring images at inference, we propose Dual-Posterior KL Alignment (DPA), which distills a vision-fused encoder's richer posterior into the motion-only encoder. To address the cold-start problem -- where text supervision alone is too sparse to calibrate the newly introduced motion pathway -- we further propose Latent Reconstruction Alignment (LRA), a self-supervised pre-training strategy that uses dense motion latents as unambiguous conditions to co-calibrate the embedder, backbone, and flow head, establishing a stable motion-aware foundation for all downstream tasks. UniMotion achieves state-of-the-art performance across seven tasks spanning any-to-any understanding, generation, and editing among the three modalities, with especially strong advantages on cross-modal compositional tasks.
comment: 42 pages, 16 figures
☆ ThinkJEPA: Empowering Latent World Models with Large Vision-Language Reasoning Model
Recent progress in latent world models (e.g., V-JEPA2) has shown promising capability in forecasting future world states from video observations. Nevertheless, dense prediction from a short observation window limits temporal context and can bias predictors toward local, low-level extrapolation, making it difficult to capture long-horizon semantics and reducing downstream utility. Vision--language models (VLMs), in contrast, provide strong semantic grounding and general knowledge by reasoning over uniformly sampled frames, but they are not ideal as standalone dense predictors due to compute-driven sparse sampling, a language-output bottleneck that compresses fine-grained interaction states into text-oriented representations, and a data-regime mismatch when adapting to small action-conditioned datasets. We propose a VLM-guided JEPA-style latent world modeling framework that combines dense-frame dynamics modeling with long-horizon semantic guidance via a dual-temporal pathway: a dense JEPA branch for fine-grained motion and interaction cues, and a uniformly sampled VLM \emph{thinker} branch with a larger temporal stride for knowledge-rich guidance. To transfer the VLM's progressive reasoning signals effectively, we introduce a hierarchical pyramid representation extraction module that aggregates multi-layer VLM representations into guidance features compatible with latent prediction. Experiments on hand-manipulation trajectory prediction show that our method outperforms both a strong VLM-only baseline and a JEPA-predictor baseline, and yields more robust long-horizon rollout behavior.
comment: 10 pages, 5 figures
☆ DualCoT-VLA: Visual-Linguistic Chain of Thought via Parallel Reasoning for Vision-Language-Action Models
Vision-Language-Action (VLA) models map visual observations and language instructions directly to robotic actions. While effective for simple tasks, standard VLA models often struggle with complex, multi-step tasks requiring logical planning, as well as precise manipulations demanding fine-grained spatial perception. Recent efforts have incorporated Chain-of-Thought (CoT) reasoning to endow VLA models with a ``thinking before acting'' capability. However, current CoT-based VLA models face two critical limitations: 1) an inability to simultaneously capture low-level visual details and high-level logical planning due to their reliance on isolated, single-modal CoT; 2) high inference latency with compounding errors caused by step-by-step autoregressive decoding. To address these limitations, we propose DualCoT-VLA, a visual-linguistic CoT method for VLA models with a parallel reasoning mechanism. To achieve comprehensive multi-modal reasoning, our method integrates a visual CoT for low-level spatial understanding and a linguistic CoT for high-level task planning. Furthermore, to overcome the latency bottleneck, we introduce a parallel CoT mechanism that incorporates two sets of learnable query tokens, shifting autoregressive reasoning to single-step forward reasoning. Extensive experiments demonstrate that our DualCoT-VLA achieves state-of-the-art performance on the LIBERO and RoboCasa GR1 benchmarks, as well as in real-world platforms.
☆ 3D-Layout-R1: Structured Reasoning for Language-Instructed Spatial Editing
Large Language Models (LLMs) and Vision Language Models (VLMs) have shown impressive reasoning abilities, yet they struggle with spatial understanding and layout consistency when performing fine-grained visual editing. We introduce a Structured Reasoning framework that performs text-conditioned spatial layout editing via scene-graph reasoning. Given an input scene graph and a natural-language instruction, the model reasons over the graph to generate an updated scene graph that satisfies the text condition while maintaining spatial coherence. By explicitly guiding the reasoning process through structured relational representations, our approach improves both interpretability and control over spatial relationships. We evaluate our method on a new text-guided layout editing benchmark encompassing sorting, spatial alignment, and room-editing tasks. Our training paradigm yields an average 15% improvement in IoU and 25% reduction in center-distance error compared to Chain of Thought Fine-tuning (CoT-SFT) and vanilla GRPO baselines. Compared to SOTA zero-shot LLMs, our best models achieve up to 20% higher mIoU, demonstrating markedly improved spatial precision.
☆ The Dual Mechanisms of Spatial Reasoning in Vision-Language Models
Many multimodal tasks, such as image captioning and visual question answering, require vision-language models (VLMs) to associate objects with their properties and spatial relations. Yet it remains unclear where and how such associations are computed within VLMs. In this work, we show that VLMs rely on two concurrent mechanisms to represent such associations. In the language model backbone, intermediate layers represent content-independent spatial relations on top of visual tokens corresponding to objects. However, this mechanism plays only a secondary role in shaping model predictions. Instead, the dominant source of spatial information originates in the vision encoder, whose representations encode the layout of objects and are directly exploited by the language model backbone. Notably, this spatial signal is distributed globally across visual tokens, extending beyond object regions into surrounding background areas. We show that enhancing these vision-derived spatial representations globally across all image tokens improves spatial reasoning performance on naturalistic images. Together, our results clarify how spatial association is computed within VLMs and highlight the central role of vision encoders in enabling spatial reasoning.
comment: 26 pages, 35 figures
☆ Repurposing Geometric Foundation Models for Multi-view Diffusion
While recent advances in generative latent spaces have driven substantial progress in single-image generation, the optimal latent space for novel view synthesis (NVS) remains largely unexplored. In particular, NVS requires geometrically consistent generation across viewpoints, but existing approaches typically operate in a view-independent VAE latent space. In this paper, we propose Geometric Latent Diffusion (GLD), a framework that repurposes the geometrically consistent feature space of geometric foundation models as the latent space for multi-view diffusion. We show that these features not only support high-fidelity RGB reconstruction but also encode strong cross-view geometric correspondences, providing a well-suited latent space for NVS. Our experiments demonstrate that GLD outperforms both VAE and RAE on 2D image quality and 3D consistency metrics, while accelerating training by more than 4.4x compared to the VAE latent space. Notably, GLD remains competitive with state-of-the-art methods that leverage large-scale text-to-image pretraining, despite training its diffusion model from scratch without such generative pretraining.
comment: project website: https://cvlab-kaist.github.io/GLD/
☆ DUO-VSR: Dual-Stream Distillation for One-Step Video Super-Resolution CVPR 2026
Diffusion-based video super-resolution (VSR) has recently achieved remarkable fidelity but still suffers from prohibitive sampling costs. While distribution matching distillation (DMD) can accelerate diffusion models toward one-step generation, directly applying it to VSR often results in training instability alongside degraded and insufficient supervision. To address these issues, we propose DUO-VSR, a three-stage framework built upon a Dual-Stream Distillation strategy that unifies distribution matching and adversarial supervision for one-step VSR. Firstly, a Progressive Guided Distillation Initialization is employed to stabilize subsequent training through trajectory-preserving distillation. Next, the Dual-Stream Distillation jointly optimizes the DMD and Real-Fake Score Feature GAN (RFS-GAN) streams, with the latter providing complementary adversarial supervision leveraging discriminative features from both real and fake score models. Finally, a Preference-Guided Refinement stage further aligns the student with perceptual quality preferences. Extensive experiments demonstrate that DUO-VSR achieves superior visual quality and efficiency over previous one-step VSR approaches.
comment: Accepted to CVPR 2026
☆ GenOpticalFlow: A Generative Approach to Unsupervised Optical Flow Learning
Optical flow estimation is a fundamental problem in computer vision, yet the reliance on expensive ground-truth annotations limits the scalability of supervised approaches. Although unsupervised and semi-supervised methods alleviate this issue, they often suffer from unreliable supervision signals based on brightness constancy and smoothness assumptions, leading to inaccurate motion estimation in complex real-world scenarios. To overcome these limitations, we introduce \textbf{\modelname}, a novel framework that synthesizes large-scale, perfectly aligned frame--flow data pairs for supervised optical flow training without human annotations. Specifically, our method leverages a pre-trained depth estimation network to generate pseudo optical flows, which serve as conditioning inputs for a next-frame generation model trained to produce high-fidelity, pixel-aligned subsequent frames. This process enables the creation of abundant, high-quality synthetic data with precise motion correspondence. Furthermore, we propose an \textit{inconsistent pixel filtering} strategy that identifies and removes unreliable pixels in generated frames, effectively enhancing fine-tuning performance on real-world datasets. Extensive experiments on KITTI2012, KITTI2015, and Sintel demonstrate that \textbf{\modelname} achieves competitive or superior results compared to existing unsupervised and semi-supervised approaches, highlighting its potential as a scalable and annotation-free solution for optical flow learning. We will release our code upon acceptance.
☆ EgoGroups: A Benchmark For Detecting Social Groups of People in the Wild
Social group detection, or the identification of humans involved in reciprocal interpersonal interactions (e.g., family members, friends, and customers and merchants), is a crucial component of social intelligence needed for agents transacting in the world. The few existing benchmarks for social group detection are limited by low scene diversity and reliance on third-person camera sources (e.g., surveillance footage). Consequently, these benchmarks generally lack real-world evaluation on how groups form and evolve in diverse cultural contexts and unconstrained settings. To address this gap, we introduce EgoGroups, a first-person view dataset that captures social dynamics in cities around the world. EgoGroups spans 65 countries covering low, medium, and high-crowd settings under four weather/time-of-day conditions. We include dense human annotations for person and social groups, along with rich geographic and scene metadata. Using this dataset, we performed an extensive evaluation of state-of-the-art VLM/LLMs and supervised models on their group detection capabilities. We found several interesting findings, including VLMs and LLMs can outperform supervised baselines in a zero-shot setting, while crowd density and cultural regions clearly influence model performance.
comment: Project Page: https://lab-spell.github.io/EgoGroups/
☆ Riverine Land Cover Mapping through Semantic Segmentation of Multispectral Point Clouds
Accurate land cover mapping in riverine environments is essential for effective river management, ecological understanding, and geomorphic change monitoring. This study explores the use of Point Transformer v2 (PTv2), an advanced deep neural network architecture designed for point cloud data, for land cover mapping through semantic segmentation of multispectral LiDAR data in real-world riverine environments. We utilize the geometric and spectral information from the 3-channel LiDAR point cloud to map land cover classes, including sand, gravel, low vegetation, high vegetation, forest floor, and water. The PTv2 model was trained and evaluated on point cloud data from the Oulanka river in northern Finland using both geometry and spectral features. To improve the model's generalization in new riverine environments, we additionally investigate multi-dataset training that adds sparsely annotated data from an additional river dataset. Results demonstrated that using the full-feature configuration resulted in performance with a mean Intersection over Union (mIoU) of 0.950, significantly outperforming the geometry baseline. Other ablation studies revealed that intensity and reflectance features were the key for accurate land cover mapping. The multi-dataset training experiment showed improved generalization performance, suggesting potential for developing more robust models despite limited high-quality annotated data. Our work demonstrates the potential of applying transformer-based architectures to multispectral point clouds in riverine environments. The approach offers new capabilities for monitoring sediment transport and other river management applications.
☆ Benchmarking Deep Learning Models for Aerial LiDAR Point Cloud Semantic Segmentation under Real Acquisition Conditions: A Case Study in Navarre
Recent advances in deep learning have significantly improved 3D semantic segmentation, but most models focus on indoor or terrestrial datasets. Their behavior under real aerial acquisition conditions remains insufficiently explored, and although a few studies have addressed similar scenarios, they differ in dataset design, acquisition conditions, and model selection. To address this gap, we conduct an experimental benchmark evaluating several state-of-the-art architectures on a large-scale aerial LiDAR dataset acquired under operational flight conditions in Navarre, Spain, covering heterogeneous urban, rural, and industrial landscapes. This study compares four representative deep learning models, including KPConv, RandLA-Net, Superpoint Transformer, and Point Transformer V3, across five semantic classes commonly found in airborne surveys, such as ground, vegetation, buildings, and vehicles, highlighting the inherent challenges of class imbalance and geometric variability in aerial data. Results show that all tested models achieve high overall accuracy exceeding 93%, with KPConv attaining the highest mean IoU (78.51%) through consistent performance across classes, particularly on challenging and underrepresented categories. Point Transformer V3 demonstrates superior performance on the underrepresented vehicle class (75.11% IoU), while Superpoint Transformer and RandLA-Net trade off segmentation robustness for computational efficiency.
comment: 6 pages, 2 figures
☆ SpatialReward: Verifiable Spatial Reward Modeling for Fine-Grained Spatial Consistency in Text-to-Image Generation
Recent advances in text-to-image (T2I) generation via reinforcement learning (RL) have benefited from reward models that assess semantic alignment and visual quality. However, most existing reward models pay limited attention to fine-grained spatial relationships, often producing images that appear plausible overall yet contain inaccuracies in object positioning. In this work, we present \textbf{SpatialReward}, a verifiable reward model explicitly designed to evaluate spatial layouts in generated images. SpatialReward adopts a multi-stage pipeline: a \emph{Prompt Decomposer} extracts entities, attributes, and spatial metadata from free-form prompts; expert detectors provide accurate visual grounding of object positions and attributes; and a vision-language model applies chain-of-thought reasoning over grounded observations to assess complex spatial relations that are challenging for rule-based methods. To more comprehensively evaluate spatial relationships in generated images, we introduce \textbf{SpatRelBench}, a benchmark covering object attributes, orientation, inter-object relations, and rendered text placement. Experiments on Stable Diffusion and FLUX show that incorporating SpatialReward into RL training consistently improves spatial consistency and overall generation quality, with results aligned more closely to human judgments. These findings indicate that verifiable reward models hold considerable potential for enabling more accurate and controllable optimization in text-to-image generation models.
☆ Omni-WorldBench: Towards a Comprehensive Interaction-Centric Evaluation for World Models
Video--based world models have emerged along two dominant paradigms: video generation and 3D reconstruction. However, existing evaluation benchmarks either focus narrowly on visual fidelity and text--video alignment for generative models, or rely on static 3D reconstruction metrics that fundamentally neglect temporal dynamics. We argue that the future of world modeling lies in 4D generation, which jointly models spatial structure and temporal evolution. In this paradigm, the core capability is interactive response: the ability to faithfully reflect how interaction actions drive state transitions across space and time. Yet no existing benchmark systematically evaluates this critical dimension. To address this gap, we propose Omni--WorldBench, a comprehensive benchmark specifically designed to evaluate the interactive response capabilities of world models in 4D settings. Omni--WorldBench comprises two key components: Omni--WorldSuite, a systematic prompt suite spanning diverse interaction levels and scene types; and Omni--Metrics, an agent-based evaluation framework that quantifies world modeling capabilities by measuring the causal impact of interaction actions on both final outcomes and intermediate state evolution trajectories. We conduct extensive evaluations of 18 representative world models across multiple paradigms. Our analysis reveals critical limitations of current world models in interactive response, providing actionable insights for future research. Omni-WorldBench will be publicly released to foster progress in interactive 4D world modeling.
☆ Mixture of Mini Experts: Overcoming the Linear Layer Bottleneck in Multiple Instance Learning ICLR 2026
Multiple Instance Learning (MIL) is the predominant framework for classifying gigapixel whole-slide images in computational pathology. MIL follows a sequence of 1) extracting patch features, 2) applying a linear layer to obtain task-specific patch features, and 3) aggregating the patches into a slide feature for classification. While substantial efforts have been devoted to optimizing patch feature extraction and aggregation, none have yet addressed the second point, the critical layer which transforms general-purpose features into task-specific features. We hypothesize that this layer constitutes an overlooked performance bottleneck and that stronger representations can be achieved with a low-rank transformation tailored to each patch's phenotype, yielding synergistic effects with any of the existing MIL approaches. To this end, we introduce MAMMOTH, a parameter-efficient, multi-head mixture of experts module designed to improve the performance of any MIL model with minimal alterations to the total number of parameters. Across eight MIL methods and 19 different classification tasks, we find that such task-specific transformation has a larger effect on performance than the choice of aggregation method. For instance, when equipped with MAMMOTH, even simple methods such as max or mean pooling attain higher average performance than any method with the standard linear layer. Overall, MAMMOTH improves performance in 130 of the 152 examined configurations, with an average $+3.8\%$ change in performance. Code is available at https://github.com/mahmoodlab/mammoth.
comment: Published in ICLR 2026 (37 pages, 16 figures)
☆ PAM: A Pose-Appearance-Motion Engine for Sim-to-Real HOI Video Generation CVPR 2026
Hand-object interaction (HOI) reconstruction and synthesis are becoming central to embodied AI and AR/VR. Yet, despite rapid progress, existing HOI generation research remains fragmented across three disjoint tracks: (1) pose-only synthesis that predicts MANO trajectories without producing pixels; (2) single-image HOI generation that hallucinates appearance from masks or 2D cues but lacks dynamics; and (3) video generation methods that require both the entire pose sequence and the ground-truth first frame as inputs, preventing true sim-to-real deployment. Inspired by the philosophy of Joo et al. (2018), we think that HOI generation requires a unified engine that brings together pose, appearance, and motion within one coherent framework. Thus we introduce PAM: a Pose-Appearance-Motion Engine for controllable HOI video generation. The performance of our engine is validated by: (1) On DexYCB, we obtain an FVD of 29.13 (vs. 38.83 for InterDyn), and MPJPE of 19.37 mm (vs. 30.05 mm for CosHand), while generating higher-resolution 480x720 videos compared to 256x256 and 256x384 baselines. (2) On OAKINK2, our full multi-condition model improves FVD from 68.76 to 46.31. (3) An ablation over input conditions on DexYCB shows that combining depth, segmentation, and keypoints consistently yields the best results. (4) For a downstream hand pose estimation task using SimpleHand, augmenting training with 3,400 synthetic videos (207k frames) allows a model trained on only 50% of the real data plus our synthetic data to match the 100% real baseline.
comment: Accepted to CVPR 2026 Code: https://github.com/GasaiYU/PAM
☆ A Backbone Benchmarking Study on Self-supervised Learning as a Auxiliary Task with Texture-based Local Descriptors for Face Analysis
In this work, we benchmark with different backbones and study their impact for self-supervised learning (SSL) as an auxiliary task to blend texture-based local descriptors into feature modelling for efficient face analysis. It is established in previous work that combining a primary task and a self-supervised auxiliary task enables more robust and discriminative representation learning. We employed different shallow to deep backbones for the SSL task of Masked Auto-Encoder (MAE) as an auxiliary objective to reconstruct texture features such as local patterns alongside the primary task in local pattern SSAT (L-SSAT), ensuring robust and unbiased face analysis. To expand the benchmark, we conducted a comprehensive comparative analysis across multiple model configurations within the proposed framework. To this end, we address the three research questions: "What is the role of the backbone in performance L-SSAT?", "What type of backbone is effective for different face analysis tasks?", and "Is there any generalized backbone for effective face analysis with L-SSAT?". Towards answering these questions, we provide a detailed study and experiments. The performance evaluation demonstrates that the backbone for the proposed method is highly dependent on the downstream task, achieving average accuracies of 0.94 on FaceForensics++, 0.87 on CelebA, and 0.88 on AffectNet. For consistency of feature representation quality and generalisation capability across various face analysis paradigms, including face attribute prediction, emotion classification, and deepfake detection, there is no unified backbone.
comment: Accepted for publication in SN Computer Science
☆ Seeing is Improving: Visual Feedback for Iterative Text Layout Refinement CVPR 2026
Recent advances in Multimodal Large Language Models (MLLMs) have enabled automated generation of structured layouts from natural language descriptions. Existing methods typically follow a code-only paradigm that generates code to represent layouts, which are then rendered by graphic engines to produce final images. However, they are blind to the rendered visual outcome, making it difficult to guarantee readability and aesthetics. In this paper, we identify visual feedback as a critical factor in layout generation and propose Visual Feedback Layout Model (VFLM), a self-improving framework that leverages visual feedback iterative refinement. VFLM is capable of performing adaptive reflective generation, which leverages visual information to reflect on previous issues and iteratively generates outputs until satisfactory quality is achieved. It is achieved through reinforcement learning with a visually grounded reward model that incorporates OCR accuracy. By rewarding only the final generated outcome, we can effectively stimulate the model's iterative and reflective generative capabilities. Experiments across multiple benchmarks show that VFLM consistently outperforms advanced MLLMs, existing layout models, and code-only baselines, establishing visual feedback as critical for design-oriented MLLMs. Our code and data are available at https://github.com/FolSpark/VFLM.
comment: Accepted by CVPR 2026
☆ ACPO: Counteracting Likelihood Displacement in Vision-Language Alignment with Asymmetric Constraints
While Direct Preference Optimization (DPO) has become the de facto approach for aligning Large Vision-Language Models (LVLMs), it suffers from Likelihood Displacement, where the probability of both chosen and rejected responses collapses. This optimization flaw is especially detrimental in multimodal settings: the erosion of chosen likelihoods -- a failure we term Visual Anchor Collapse -- causes models to abandon visual evidence for strong language priors, precipitating significant hallucinations. To address this, we propose Asymmetric Constrained Preference Optimization (ACPO), a modality-agnostic alignment mechanism that applies dynamic, target-oriented scaling to preference optimization. ACPO derives a complexity-aware scaling coefficient applied exclusively to the rejected reward, asymmetrically suppressing the gradient flow on the rejected term while preserving the chosen distribution as a gradient-stable reference. While fundamentally a general-purpose objective, breaking this gradient symmetry is crucial for multimodal tasks, as it mitigates the suppression of visual tokens by language priors. Experiments on InternVL models demonstrate that ACPO effectively reverses the chosen-reward degradation of standard DPO. By halting Visual Anchor Collapse, ACPO generally outperforms baselines on hallucination benchmarks (HallusionBench, MM-IFEval) and general leaderboards (MMBench, MMStar, OCRBenchV2) while driving concurrent improvements in general capabilities.
☆ dynActivation: A Trainable Activation Family for Adaptive Nonlinearity
This paper proposes $\mathrm{dynActivation}$, a per-layer trainable activation defined as $f_i(x) = \mathrm{BaseAct}(x)(α_i - β_i) + β_i x$, where $α_i$ and $β_i$ are lightweight learned scalars that interpolate between the base nonlinearity and a linear path and $\mathrm{BaseAct}(x)$ resembles any ReLU-like function. The static and dynamic ReLU-like variants are then compared across multiple vision tasks, language modeling tasks, and ablation studies. The results suggest that dynActivation variants tend to linearize deep layers while maintaining high performance, which can improve training efficiency by up to $+54\%$ over ReLU. On CIFAR-10, dynActivation(Mish) improves over static Mish by up to $+14.02\%$ on AttentionCNN with an average improvment by $+6.00\%$, with a $24\%$ convergence-AUC reduction relative to Mish (2120 vs. 2785). In a 1-to-75-layer MNIST depth-scaling study, dynActivation never drops below $95\%$ test accuracy ($95.3$--$99.3\%$), while ReLU collapses below $80\%$ at 25 layers. Under FGSM at $\varepsilon{=}0.08$, dynActivation(Mish) incurs a $55.39\%$ accuracy drop versus $62.79\%$ for ReLU ($7.40\%$ advantage). Transferred to language modeling, a new proposed dynActGLU-variant achieves a $10.3\%$ relative perplexity reduction over SwiGLU at 5620 steps (4.047 vs. 4.514), though the gap vanishes at 34300 steps.
comment: 22 pages, 15 figures
☆ Beyond Matching to Tiles: Bridging Unaligned Aerial and Satellite Views for Vision-Only UAV Navigation CVPR2026
Recent advances in cross-view geo-localization (CVGL) methods have shown strong potential for supporting unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) navigation in GNSS-denied environments. However, existing work predominantly focuses on matching UAV views to onboard map tiles, which introduces an inherent trade-off between accuracy and storage overhead, and overlooks the importance of the UAV's heading during navigation. Moreover, the substantial discrepancies and varying overlaps in cross-view scenarios have been insufficiently considered, limiting their generalization to real-world scenarios. In this paper, we present Bearing-UAV, a purely vision-driven cross-view navigation method that jointly predicts UAV absolute location and heading from neighboring features, enabling accurate, lightweight, and robust navigation in the wild. Our method leverages global and local structural features and explicitly encodes relative spatial relationships, making it robust to cross-view variations, misalignment, and feature-sparse conditions. We also present Bearing-UAV-90k, a multi-city benchmark for evaluating cross-view localization and navigation. Extensive experiments show encouraging results that Bearing-UAV yields lower localization error than previous matching/retrieval paradigm across diverse terrains. Our code and dataset will be made publicly available.
comment: Accepted as a conference paper by CVPR2026
☆ OpenEarth-Agent: From Tool Calling to Tool Creation for Open-Environment Earth Observation
Earth Observation (EO) is essential for perceiving dynamic land surface changes, yet deploying autonomous EO in open environments is hindered by the immense diversity of multi-source data and heterogeneous tasks. While remote sensing agents have emerged to streamline EO workflows, existing tool-calling agents are confined to closed environments. They rely on pre-defined tools and are restricted to narrow scope, limiting their generalization to the diverse data and tasks. To overcome these limitations, we introduce OpenEarth-Agent, the first tool-creation agent framework tailored for open-environment EO. Rather than calling predefined tools, OpenEarth-Agent employs adaptive workflow planning and tool creation to generalize to unseen data and tasks. This adaptability is bolstered by an open-ended integration of multi-stage tools and cross-domain knowledge bases, enabling robust execution in the entire EO pipeline across multiple application domains. To comprehensively evaluate EO agents in open environments, we propose OpenEarth-Bench, a novel benchmark comprising 596 real-world, full-pipeline cases across seven application domains, explicitly designed to assess agents' adaptive planning and tool creation capabilities. Only essential pre-trained model tools are provided in this benchmark, devoid of any other predefined task-specific tools. Extensive experiments demonstrate that OpenEarth-Agent successfully masters full-pipeline EO across multiple domains in the open environment. Notably, on the cross-benchmark Earth-Bench, our tool-creating agent equipped with 6 essential pre-trained models achieves performance comparable to tool-calling agents relying on 104 specialized tools, and significantly outperforms them when provided with the complete toolset. In several cases, the created tools exhibit superior robustness to data anomalies compared to human-engineered counterparts.
comment: 15 pages, 4 figures
☆ DA-VAE: Plug-in Latent Compression for Diffusion via Detail Alignment CVPR 2026
Reducing token count is crucial for efficient training and inference of latent diffusion models, especially at high resolution. A common strategy is to build high-compression image tokenizers with more channels per token. However, when trained only for reconstruction, high-dimensional latent spaces often lose meaningful structure, making diffusion training harder. Existing methods address this with extra objectives such as semantic alignment or selective dropout, but usually require costly diffusion retraining. Pretrained diffusion models, however, already exhibit a structured, lower-dimensional latent space; thus, a simpler idea is to expand the latent dimensionality while preserving this structure. We therefore propose \textbf{D}etail-\textbf{A}ligned VAE, which increases the compression ratio of a pretrained VAE with only lightweight adaptation of the pretrained diffusion backbone. DA-VAE uses an explicit latent layout: the first $C$ channels come directly from the pretrained VAE at a base resolution, while an additional $D$ channels encode higher-resolution details. A simple detail-alignment mechanism encourages the expanded latent space to retain the structure of the original one. With a warm-start fine-tuning strategy, our method enables $1024 \times 1024$ image generation with Stable Diffusion 3.5 using only $32 \times 32$ tokens, $4\times$ fewer than the original model, within 5 H100-days. It further unlocks $2048 \times 2048$ generation with SD3.5, achieving a $6\times$ speedup while preserving image quality. We also validate the method and its design choices quantitatively on ImageNet.
comment: CVPR 2026
☆ Biophysics-Enhanced Neural Representations for Patient-Specific Respiratory Motion Modeling
A precise spatial delivery of the radiation dose is crucial for the treatment success in radiotherapy. In the lung and upper abdominal region, respiratory motion introduces significant treatment uncertainties, requiring special motion management techniques. To address this, respiratory motion models are commonly used to infer the patient-specific respiratory motion and target the dose more efficiently. In this work, we investigate the possibility of using implicit neural representations (INR) for surrogate-based motion modeling. Therefore, we propose physics-regularized implicit surrogate-based modeling for respiratory motion (PRISM-RM). Our new integrated respiratory motion model is free of a fixed reference breathing state. Unlike conventional pairwise registration techniques, our approach provides a trajectory-aware spatio-temporally continuous and diffeomorphic motion representation, improving generalization to extrapolation scenarios. We introduce biophysical constraints, ensuring physiologically plausible motion estimation across time beyond the training data. Our results show that our trajectory-aware approach performs on par in interpolation and improves the extrapolation ability compared to our initially proposed INR-based approach. Compared to sequential registration-based approaches both our approaches perform equally well in interpolation, but underperform in extrapolation scenarios. However, the methodical features of INRs make them particularly effective for respiratory motion modeling, and with their performance steadily improving, they demonstrate strong potential for advancing this field.
comment: Accepted for publication at the Journal of Machine Learning for Biomedical Imaging (MELBA) https://melba-journal.org/2026:008
☆ Mamba-VMR: Multimodal Query Augmentation via Generated Videos for Precise Temporal Grounding CVPR-2026
Text-driven video moment retrieval (VMR) remains challenging due to limited capture of hidden temporal dynamics in untrimmed videos, leading to imprecise grounding in long sequences. Traditional methods rely on natural language queries (NLQs) or static image augmentations, overlooking motion sequences and suffering from high computational costs in Transformer-based architectures. Existing approaches fail to integrate subtitle contexts and generated temporal priors effectively, we therefore propose a novel two-stage framework for enhanced temporal grounding. In the first stage, LLM-guided subtitle matching identifies relevant textual cues from video subtitles, fused with the query to generate auxiliary short videos via text-to-video models, capturing implicit motion information as temporal priors. In the second stage, augmented queries are processed through a multi-modal controlled Mamba network, extending text-controlled selection with video-guided gating for efficient fusion of generated priors and long sequences while filtering noise. Our framework is agnostic to base retrieval models and widely applicable for multimodal VMR. Experimental evaluations on the TVR benchmark demonstrate significant improvements over state-of-the-art methods, including reduced computational overhead and higher recall in long-sequence grounding.
comment: The paper is accepted by CVPR-2026
☆ StreamingClaw Technical Report
Applications such as embodied intelligence rely on a real-time perception-decision-action closed loop, posing stringent challenges for streaming video understanding. However, current agents suffer from fragmented capabilities, such as supporting only offline video understanding, lacking long-term multimodal memory mechanisms, or struggling to achieve real-time reasoning and proactive interaction under streaming inputs. These shortcomings have become a key bottleneck for preventing them from sustaining perception, making real-time decisions, and executing actions in real-world environments. To alleviate these issues, we propose StreamingClaw, a unified agent framework for streaming video understanding and embodied intelligence. It is also an OpenClaw-compatible framework that supports real-time, multimodal streaming interaction. StreamingClaw integrates five core capabilities: (1) It supports real-time streaming reasoning. (2) It supports reasoning about future events and proactive interaction under the online evolution of interaction objectives. (3) It supports multimodal long-term storage, hierarchical evolution, and efficient retrieval of shared memory across multiple agents. (4) It supports a closed-loop of perception-decision-action. In addition to conventional tools and skills, it also provides streaming tools and action-centric skills tailored for real-world physical environments. (5) It is compatible with the OpenClaw framework, allowing it to fully leverage the resources and support of the open-source community. With these designs, StreamingClaw integrates online real-time reasoning, multimodal long-term memory, and proactive interaction within a unified framework. Moreover, by translating decisions into executable actions, it enables direct control of the physical world, supporting practical deployment of embodied interaction.
comment: Under Progress
☆ FreeArtGS: Articulated Gaussian Splatting Under Free-moving Scenario CVPR 2026
The increasing demand for augmented reality and robotics is driving the need for articulated object reconstruction with high scalability. However, existing settings for reconstructing from discrete articulation states or casual monocular videos require non-trivial axis alignment or suffer from insufficient coverage, limiting their applicability. In this paper, we introduce FreeArtGS, a novel method for reconstructing articulated objects under free-moving scenario, a new setting with a simple setup and high scalability. FreeArtGS combines free-moving part segmentation with joint estimation and end-to-end optimization, taking only a monocular RGB-D video as input. By optimizing with the priors from off-the-shelf point-tracking and feature models, the free-moving part segmentation module identifies rigid parts from relative motion under unconstrained capture. The joint estimation module calibrates the unified object-to-camera poses and recovers joint type and axis robustly from part segmentation. Finally, 3DGS-based end-to-end optimization is implemented to jointly reconstruct visual textures, geometry, and joint angles of the articulated object. We conduct experiments on two benchmarks and real-world free-moving articulated objects. Experimental results demonstrate that FreeArtGS consistently excels in reconstructing free-moving articulated objects and remains highly competitive in previous reconstruction settings, proving itself a practical and effective solution for realistic asset generation. The project page is available at: https://freeartgs.github.io/
comment: Accepted to CVPR 2026
☆ Principled Steering via Null-space Projection for Jailbreak Defense in Vision-Language Models CVPR 2026
As vision-language models (VLMs) are increasingly deployed in open-world scenarios, they can be easily induced by visual jailbreak attacks to generate harmful content, posing serious risks to model safety and trustworthy usage. Recent activation steering methods inject directional vectors into model activations during inference to induce refusal behaviors and have demonstrated effectiveness. However, a steering vector may both enhance refusal ability and cause over-refusal, thereby degrading model performance on benign inputs. Moreover, due to the lack of theoretical interpretability, these methods still suffer from limited robustness and effectiveness. To better balance safety and utility, we propose NullSteer, a null-space projected activation defense framework. Our method constructs refusal directions within model activations through a linear transformation: it maintains zero perturbation within the benign subspace while dynamically inducing refusal along potentially harmful directions, thereby theoretically achieving safety enhancement without impairing the model's general capabilities. Extensive experiments show that NullSteer significantly reduces harmful outputs under various jailbreak attacks (average ASR reduction over 15 percent on MiniGPT-4) while maintaining comparable performance to the original model on general benchmarks.
comment: CVPR 2026
☆ P-Flow: Prompting Visual Effects Generation
Recent advancements in video generation models have significantly improved their ability to follow text prompts. However, the customization of dynamic visual effects, defined as temporally evolving and appearance-driven visual phenomena like object crushing or explosion, remains underexplored. Prior works on motion customization or control mainly focus on low-level motions of the subject or camera, which can be guided using explicit control signals such as motion trajectories. In contrast, dynamic visual effects involve higher-level semantics that are more naturally suited for control via text prompts. However, it is hard and time-consuming for humans to craft a single prompt that accurately specifies these effects, as they require complex temporal reasoning and iterative refinement over time. To address this challenge, we propose P-Flow, a novel training-free framework for customizing dynamic visual effects in video generation without modifying the underlying model. By leveraging the semantic and temporal reasoning capabilities of vision-language models, P-Flow performs test-time prompt optimization, refining prompts based on the discrepancy between the visual effects of the reference video and the generated output. Through iterative refinement, the prompts evolve to better induce the desired dynamic effect in novel scenes. Experiments demonstrate that P-Flow achieves high-fidelity and diverse visual effect customization and outperforms other models on both text-to-video and image-to-video generation tasks. Code is available at https://github.com/showlab/P-Flow.
☆ Adapting Point Cloud Analysis via Multimodal Bayesian Distribution Learning CVPR 2026
Multimodal 3D vision-language models show strong generalization across diverse 3D tasks, but their performance still degrades notably under domain shifts. This has motivated recent studies on test-time adaptation (TTA), which enables models to adapt online using test-time data. Among existing TTA methods, cache-based mechanisms are widely adopted for leveraging previously observed samples in online prediction refinement. However, they store only limited historical information, leading to progressive information loss as the test stream evolves. In addition, their prediction logits are fused heuristically, making adaptation unstable. To address these limitations, we propose BayesMM, a Multimodal Bayesian Distribution Learning framework for test-time point cloud analysis. BayesMM models textual priors and streaming visual features of each class as Gaussian distributions: textual parameters are derived from semantic prompts, while visual parameters are updated online with arriving samples. The two modalities are fused via Bayesian model averaging, which automatically adjusts their contributions based on posterior evidence, yielding a unified prediction that adapts continually to evolving test-time data without training. Extensive experiments on multiple point cloud benchmarks demonstrate that BayesMM maintains robustness under distributional shifts, yielding over 4% average improvement.
comment: CVPR 2026
☆ SpatialBoost: Enhancing Visual Representation through Language-Guided Reasoning
Despite the remarkable success of large-scale pre-trained image representation models (i.e., vision encoders) across various vision tasks, they are predominantly trained on 2D image data and therefore often fail to capture 3D spatial relationships between objects and backgrounds in the real world, constraining their effectiveness in many downstream applications. To address this, we propose SpatialBoost, a scalable framework that enhances the spatial awareness of existing pre-trained vision encoders by injecting 3D spatial knowledge expressed in linguistic descriptions. The core idea involves converting dense 3D spatial information from 2D images into linguistic expressions, which is then used to inject such spatial knowledge into vision encoders through a Large Language Model (LLM). To this end, we adopt a multi-turn Chain-of-Thought (CoT) reasoning process that progressively incorporates dense spatial knowledge and builds hierarchical spatial understanding. To validate effectiveness, we adapt SpatialBoost to state-of-the-art vision encoders such as DINOv3, and evaluate its performance gains on a wide range of benchmarks requiring both 3D perception and general vision abilities. For instance, SpatialBoost improves DINOv3 performance from 55.9 to 59.7 mIoU on ADE20K, achieving state-of-the-art performance with 3.8% gain over the pre-trained DINOv3.
comment: 35 pages; 7 figures
☆ FontCrafter: High-Fidelity Element-Driven Artistic Font Creation with Visual In-Context Generation CVPR 2026
Artistic font generation aims to synthesize stylized glyphs based on a reference style. However, existing approaches suffer from limited style diversity and coarse control. In this work, we explore the potential of element-driven artistic font generation. Elements are the fundamental visual units of a font, serving as reference images for the desired style. Conceptually, we categorize elements into object elements (e.g., flowers or stones) with distinct structures and amorphous elements (e.g., flames or clouds) with unstructured textures. We introduce FontCrafter, an element-driven framework for font creation, and construct a large-scale dataset, ElementFont, which contains diverse element types and high-quality glyph images. However, achieving high-fidelity reconstruction of both texture and structure of reference elements remains challenging. To address this, we propose an in-context generation strategy that treats element images as visual context and uses an inpainting model to transfer element styles into glyph regions at the pixel level. To further control glyph shapes, we design a lightweight Context-aware Mask Adapter (CMA) that injects shape information. Moreover, a training-free attention redirection mechanism enables region-aware style control and suppresses stroke hallucination. In addition, edge repainting is applied to make boundaries more natural. Extensive experiments demonstrate that FontCrafter achieves strong zero-shot generation performance, particularly in preserving structural and textural fidelity, while also supporting flexible controls such as style mixture.
comment: To appear in CVPR 2026
☆ Uncertainty-guided Compositional Alignment with Part-to-Whole Semantic Representativeness in Hyperbolic Vision-Language Models
While Vision-Language Models (VLMs) have achieved remarkable performance, their Euclidean embeddings remain limited in capturing hierarchical relationships such as part-to-whole or parent-child structures, and often face challenges in multi-object compositional scenarios. Hyperbolic VLMs mitigate this issue by better preserving hierarchical structures and modeling part-whole relations (i.e., whole scene and its part images) through entailment. However, existing approaches do not model that each part has a different level of semantic representativeness to the whole. We propose UNcertainty-guided Compositional Hyperbolic Alignment (UNCHA) for enhancing hyperbolic VLMs. UNCHA models part-to-whole semantic representativeness with hyperbolic uncertainty, by assigning lower uncertainty to more representative parts and higher uncertainty to less representative ones for the whole scene. This representativeness is then incorporated into the contrastive objective with uncertainty-guided weights. Finally, the uncertainty is further calibrated with an entailment loss regularized by entropy-based term. With the proposed losses, UNCHA learns hyperbolic embeddings with more accurate part-whole ordering, capturing the underlying compositional structure in an image and improving its understanding of complex multi-object scenes. UNCHA achieves state-of-the-art performance on zero-shot classification, retrieval, and multi-label classification benchmarks. Our code and models are available at: https://github.com/jeeit17/UNCHA.git.
☆ DTVI: Dual-Stage Textual and Visual Intervention for Safe Text-to-Image Generation
Text-to-Image (T2I) diffusion models have demonstrated strong generation ability, but their potential to generate unsafe content raises significant safety concerns. Existing inference-time defense methods typically perform category-agnostic token-level intervention in the text embedding space, which fails to capture malicious semantics distributed across the full token sequence and remains vulnerable to adversarial prompts. In this paper, we propose DTVI, a dual-stage inference-time defense framework for safe T2I generation. Unlike existing methods that intervene on specific token embeddings, our method introduces category-aware sequence-level intervention on the full prompt embedding to better capture distributed malicious semantics, and further attenuates the remaining unsafe influences during the visual generation stage. Experimental results on real-world unsafe prompts, adversarial prompts, and multiple harmful categories show that our method achieves effective and robust defense while preserving reasonable generation quality on benign prompts, obtaining an average Defense Success Rate (DSR) of 94.43% across sexual-category benchmarks and 88.56 across seven unsafe categories, while maintaining generation quality on benign prompts.
☆ GTSR: Subsurface Scattering Awared 3D Gaussians for Translucent Surface Reconstruction
Reconstructing translucent objects from multi-view images is a difficult problem. Previously, researchers have used differentiable path tracing and the neural implicit field, which require relatively large computational costs. Recently, many works have achieved good reconstruction results for opaque objects based on a 3DGS pipeline with much higher efficiency. However, such methods have difficulty dealing with translucent objects, because they do not consider the optical properties of translucent objects. In this paper, we propose a novel 3DGS-based pipeline (GTSR) to reconstruct the surface geometry of translucent objects. GTSR combines two sets of Gaussians, surface and interior Gaussians, which are used to model the surface and scattering color when lights pass translucent objects. To render the appearance of translucent objects, we introduce a method that uses the Fresnel term to blend two sets of Gaussians. Furthermore, to improve the reconstructed details of non-contour areas, we introduce the Disney BSDF model with deferred rendering to enhance constraints of the normal and depth. Experimental results demonstrate that our method outperforms baseline reconstruction methods on the NeuralTO Syn dataset while showing great real-time rendering performance. We also extend the dataset with new translucent objects of varying material properties and demonstrate our method can adapt to different translucent materials.
☆ Tuning Real-World Image Restoration at Inference: A Test-Time Scaling Paradigm for Flow Matching Models
Although diffusion-based real-world image restoration (Real-IR) has achieved remarkable progress, efficiently leveraging ultra-large-scale pre-trained text-to-image (T2I) models and fully exploiting their potential remain significant challenges. To address this issue, we propose ResFlow-Tuner, an image restoration framework based on the state-of-the-art flow matching model, FLUX.1-dev, which integrates unified multi-modal fusion (UMMF) with test-time scaling (TTS) to achieve unprecedented restoration performance. Our approach fully leverages the advantages of the Multi-Modal Diffusion Transformer (MM-DiT) architecture by encoding multi-modal conditions into a unified sequence that guides the synthesis of high-quality images. Furthermore, we introduce a training-free test-time scaling paradigm tailored for image restoration. During inference, this technique dynamically steers the denoising direction through feedback from a reward model (RM), thereby achieving significant performance gains with controllable computational overhead. Extensive experiments demonstrate that our method achieves state-of-the-art performance across multiple standard benchmarks. This work not only validates the powerful capabilities of the flow matching model in low-level vision tasks but, more importantly, proposes a novel and efficient inference-time scaling paradigm suitable for large pre-trained models.
comment: 27 pages, 10 figures
☆ 6D Robotic OCT Scanning of Curved Tissue Surfaces
Optical coherence tomography (OCT) is a non-invasive volumetric imaging modality with high spatial and temporal resolution. For imaging larger tissue structures, OCT probes need to be moved to scan the respective area. For handheld scanning, stitching of the acquired OCT volumes requires overlap to register the images. For robotic scanning and stitching, a typical approach is to restrict the motion to translations, as this avoids a full hand-eye calibration, which is complicated by the small field of view of most OCT probes. However, stitching by registration or by translational scanning are limited when curved tissue surfaces need to be scanned. We propose a marker for full six-dimensional hand-eye calibration of a robot mounted OCT probe. We show that the calibration results in highly repeatable estimates of the transformation. Moreover, we evaluate robotic scanning of two phantom surfaces to demonstrate that the proposed calibration allows for consistent scanning of large, curved tissue surfaces. As the proposed approach is not relying on image registration, it does not suffer from a potential accumulation of errors along a scan path. We also illustrate the improvement compared to conventional 3D-translational robotic scanning.
comment: Accepted at IEEE ISBI 2026
☆ SegMaFormer: A Hybrid State-Space and Transformer Model for Efficient Segmentation
The advent of Transformer and Mamba-based architectures has significantly advanced 3D medical image segmentation by enabling global contextual modeling, a capability traditionally limited in Convolutional Neural Networks (CNNs). However, state-of-the-art Transformer models often entail substantial computational complexity and parameter counts, which is particularly prohibitive for volumetric data and further exacerbated by the limited availability of annotated medical imaging datasets. To address these limitations, this work introduces SegMaFormer, a lightweight hybrid architecture that synergizes Mamba and Transformer modules within a hierarchical volumetric encoder for efficient long-range dependency modeling. The model strategically employs Mamba-based layers in early, high-resolution stages to reduce computational overhead while capturing essential spatial context, and reserves self-attention mechanisms for later, lower-resolution stages to refine feature representation. This design is augmented with generalized rotary position embeddings to enhance spatial awareness. Despite its compact structure, SegMaFormer achieves competitive performance on three public benchmarks (Synapse, BraTS, and ACDC), matching the Dice coefficient of significantly larger models. Empirically, our approach reduces parameters by up to 75x and substantially decreases FLOPs compared to current state-of-the-art models, establishing an efficient and high-performing solution for 3D medical image segmentation.
☆ STENet: Superpixel Token Enhancing Network for RGB-D Salient Object Detection
Transformer-based methods for RGB-D Salient Object Detection (SOD) have gained significant interest, owing to the transformer's exceptional capacity to capture long-range pixel dependencies. Nevertheless, current RGB-D SOD methods face challenges, such as the quadratic complexity of the attention mechanism and the limited local detail extraction. To overcome these limitations, we propose a novel Superpixel Token Enhancing Network (STENet), which introduces superpixels into cross-modal interaction. STENet follows the two-stream encoder-decoder structure. Its cores are two tailored superpixel-driven cross-modal interaction modules, responsible for global and local feature enhancement. Specifically, we update the superpixel generation method by expanding the neighborhood range of each superpixel, allowing for flexible transformation between pixels and superpixels. With the updated superpixel generation method, we first propose the Superpixel Attention Global Enhancing Module to model the global pixel-to-superpixel relationship rather than the traditional global pixel-to-pixel relationship, which can capture region-level information and reduce computational complexity. We also propose the Superpixel Attention Local Refining Module, which leverages pixel similarity within superpixels to filter out a subset of pixels (i.e., local pixels) and then performs feature enhancement on these local pixels, thereby capturing concerned local details. Furthermore, we fuse the globally and locally enhanced features along with the cross-scale features to achieve comprehensive feature representation. Experiments on seven RGB-D SOD datasets reveal that our STENet achieves competitive performance compared to state-of-the-art methods. The code and results of our method are available at https://github.com/Mark9010/STENet.
comment: 12 pages, 8 figures, accepted by IEEE TMM
☆ LRC-WeatherNet: LiDAR, RADAR, and Camera Fusion Network for Real-time Weather-type Classification in Autonomous Driving
Autonomous vehicles face major perception and navigation challenges in adverse weather such as rain, fog, and snow, which degrade the performance of LiDAR, RADAR, and RGB camera sensors. While each sensor type offers unique strengths, such as RADAR robustness in poor visibility and LiDAR precision in clear conditions, they also suffer distinct limitations when exposed to environmental obstructions. This study proposes LRC-WeatherNet, a novel multi-sensor fusion framework that integrates LiDAR, RADAR, and camera data for real-time classification of weather conditions. By employing both early fusion using a unified Bird's Eye View representation and mid-level gated fusion of modality-specific feature maps, our approach adapts to the varying reliability of each sensor under changing weather. Evaluated on the extensive MSU-4S dataset covering nine weather types, LRC-WeatherNet achieves superior classification performance and computational efficiency, significantly outperforming unimodal baselines in adverse conditions. This work is the first to combine all three modalities for robust, real-time weather classification in autonomous driving. We release our trained models and source code in https://github.com/nouralhudaalbashir/LRC-WeatherNet.
comment: Accepted for publication at IEEE Intelligent Vehicles Symposium - IVS 2026
☆ Speed by Simplicity: A Single-Stream Architecture for Fast Audio-Video Generative Foundation Model
We present daVinci-MagiHuman, an open-source audio-video generative foundation model for human-centric generation. daVinci-MagiHuman jointly generates synchronized video and audio using a single-stream Transformer that processes text, video, and audio within a unified token sequence via self-attention only. This single-stream design avoids the complexity of multi-stream or cross-attention architectures while remaining easy to optimize with standard training and inference infrastructure. The model is particularly strong in human-centric scenarios, producing expressive facial performance, natural speech-expression coordination, realistic body motion, and precise audio-video synchronization. It supports multilingual spoken generation across Chinese (Mandarin and Cantonese), English, Japanese, Korean, German, and French. For efficient inference, we combine the single-stream backbone with model distillation, latent-space super-resolution, and a Turbo VAE decoder, enabling generation of a 5-second 256p video in 2 seconds on a single H100 GPU. In automatic evaluation, daVinci-MagiHuman achieves the highest visual quality and text alignment among leading open models, along with the lowest word error rate (14.60%) for speech intelligibility. In pairwise human evaluation, it achieves win rates of 80.0% against Ovi 1.1 and 60.9% against LTX 2.3 over 2000 comparisons. We open-source the complete model stack, including the base model, the distilled model, the super-resolution model, and the inference codebase.
☆ GeoFusion-CAD: Structure-Aware Diffusion with Geometric State Space for Parametric 3D Design CVPR 2026
Parametric Computer-Aided Design (CAD) is fundamental to modern 3D modeling, yet existing methods struggle to generate long command sequences, especially under complex geometric and topological dependencies. Transformer-based architectures dominate CAD sequence generation due to their strong dependency modeling, but their quadratic attention cost and limited context windowing hinder scalability to long programs. We propose GeoFusion-CAD, an end-to-end diffusion framework for scalable and structure-aware generation. Our proposal encodes CAD programs as hierarchical trees, jointly capturing geometry and topology within a state-space diffusion process. Specifically, a lightweight C-Mamba block models long-range structural dependencies through selective state transitions, enabling coherent generation across extended command sequences. To support long-sequence evaluation, we introduce DeepCAD-240, an extended benchmark that increases the sequence length ranging from 40 to 240 while preserving sketch-extrusion semantics from the ABC dataset. Extensive experiments demonstrate that GeoFusion-CAD achieves superior performance on both short and long command ranges, maintaining high geometric fidelity and topological consistency where Transformer-based models degrade. Our approach sets new state-of-the-art scores for long-sequence parametric CAD generation, establishing a scalable foundation for next-generation CAD modeling systems. Code and datasets are available at GitHub.
comment: Accepted to CVPR 2026 (Findings). Includes supplementary material
☆ BHDD: A Burmese Handwritten Digit Dataset
We introduce the Burmese Handwritten Digit Dataset (BHDD), a collection of 87,561 grayscale images of handwritten Burmese digits in ten classes. Each image is 28x28 pixels, following the MNIST format. The training set has 60,000 samples split evenly across classes; the test set has 27,561 samples with class frequencies as they arose during collection. Over 150 people of different ages and backgrounds contributed samples. We analyze the dataset's class distribution, pixel statistics, and morphological variation, and identify digit pairs that are easily confused due to the round shapes of the Myanmar script. Simple baselines (an MLP, a two-layer CNN, and an improved CNN with batch normalization and augmentation) reach 99.40%, 99.75%, and 99.83% test accuracy respectively. BHDD is available under CC BY-SA 4.0 at https://github.com/baseresearch/BHDD
comment: 4 pages, 9 figures, 1 table. Dataset available at https://github.com/baseresearch/BHDD
☆ Unified Spatiotemporal Token Compression for Video-LLMs at Ultra-Low Retention CVPR 2026
Video large language models (Video-LLMs) face high computational costs due to large volumes of visual tokens. Existing token compression methods typically adopt a two-stage spatiotemporal compression strategy, relying on stage-specific metrics and an implicit assumption of spatiotemporal separability. Under extremely low retention ratios, however, such approaches often result in unbalanced allocation and loss of visual evidence essential for question answering. We reformulate token compression as a spatiotemporal allocation task within a global token retention pool. We propose a unified selection mechanism that integrates attention weights and semantic similarity to globally select tokens with high contribution and low redundancy. Unselected tokens are merged via clustering and refilled, preserving information integrity. Inside the LLM, we further introduce text-aware merging to perform secondary compression based on query relevance. Without requiring retraining, our method serves as a plug-and-play module compatible with existing Video-LLMs. Experiments show that retaining only about 2% of visual tokens preserves 90.1% of baseline performance across multiple benchmarks, while reducing FLOPs to roughly 2.6%. These benefits generalize across diverse backbones, decreasing end-to-end inference latency and memory consumption. Our unified spatiotemporal token compression strategy establishes the state-of-the-art in video understanding under ultra-low token retention.
comment: Accepted by CVPR 2026
☆ Group3D: MLLM-Driven Semantic Grouping for Open-Vocabulary 3D Object Detection
Open-vocabulary 3D object detection aims to localize and recognize objects beyond a fixed training taxonomy. In multi-view RGB settings, recent approaches often decouple geometry-based instance construction from semantic labeling, generating class-agnostic fragments and assigning open-vocabulary categories post hoc. While flexible, such decoupling leaves instance construction governed primarily by geometric consistency, without semantic constraints during merging. When geometric evidence is view-dependent and incomplete, this geometry-only merging can lead to irreversible association errors, including over-merging of distinct objects or fragmentation of a single instance. We propose Group3D, a multi-view open-vocabulary 3D detection framework that integrates semantic constraints directly into the instance construction process. Group3D maintains a scene-adaptive vocabulary derived from a multimodal large language model (MLLM) and organizes it into semantic compatibility groups that encode plausible cross-view category equivalence. These groups act as merge-time constraints: 3D fragments are associated only when they satisfy both semantic compatibility and geometric consistency. This semantically gated merging mitigates geometry-driven over-merging while absorbing multi-view category variability. Group3D supports both pose-known and pose-free settings, relying only on RGB observations. Experiments on ScanNet and ARKitScenes demonstrate that Group3D achieves state-of-the-art performance in multi-view open-vocabulary 3D detection, while exhibiting strong generalization in zero-shot scenarios. The project page is available at https://ubin108.github.io/Group3D/.
comment: 24 pages, 7 figures, Project page: https://ubin108.github.io/Group3D/
☆ GeoFlow: Real-Time Fine-Grained Cross-View Geolocalization via Iterative Flow Prediction CVPR 2026
Accurate and fast localization is vital for safe autonomous navigation in GPS-denied areas. Fine-Grained Cross-View Geolocalization (FG-CVG) aims to estimate the precise 2-Degree-of-Freedom (2-DoF) location of a ground image relative to a satellite image. However, current methods force a difficult trade-off, with high-accuracy models being slow for real-time use. In this paper, we introduce GeoFlow, a new approach that offers a lightweight and highly efficient framework that breaks this accuracy-speed trade-off. Our technique learns a direct probabilistic mapping, predicting the displacement (in distance and direction) required to correct any given location hypothesis. This is complemented by our novel inference algorithm, Iterative Refinement Sampling (IRS). Instead of trusting a single prediction, IRS refines a population of hypotheses, allowing them to iteratively 'flow' from random starting points to a robust, converged consensus. Even its iterative nature, this approach offers flexible inference-time scaling, allowing a direct trade-off between performance and computation without any re-training. Experiments on the KITTI and VIGOR datasets show that GeoFlow achieves state-of-the-art efficiency, running at real-time speeds of 29 FPS while maintaining competitive localization accuracy. This work opens a new path for the development of practical real-time geolocalization systems.
comment: Accepted at the IEEE/CVF Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition (CVPR 2026)
☆ FeatDistill: A Feature Distillation Enhanced Multi-Expert Ensemble Framework for Robust AI-generated Image Detection
The rapid iteration and widespread dissemination of deepfake technology have posed severe challenges to information security, making robust and generalizable detection of AI-generated forged images increasingly important. In this paper, we propose FeatDistill, an AI-generated image detection framework that integrates feature distillation with a multi-expert ensemble, developed for the NTIRE Challenge on Robust AI-Generated Image Detection in the Wild. The framework explicitly targets three practical bottlenecks in real-world forensics: degradation interference, insufficient feature representation, and limited generalization. Concretely, we build a four-backbone Vision Transformer (ViT) ensemble composed of CLIP and SigLIP variants to capture complementary forensic cues. To improve data coverage, we expand the training set and introduce comprehensive degradation modeling, which exposes the detector to diverse quality variations and synthesis artifacts commonly encountered in unconstrained scenarios. We further adopt a two-stage training paradigm: the model is first optimized with a standard binary classification objective, then refined by dense feature-level self-distillation for representation alignment. This design effectively mitigates overfitting and enhances semantic consistency of learned features. At inference time, the final prediction is obtained by averaging the probabilities from four independently trained experts, yielding stable and reliable decisions across unseen generators and complex degradations. Despite the ensemble design, the framework remains efficient, requiring only about 10 GB peak GPU memory. Extensive evaluations in the NTIRE challenge setting demonstrate that FeatDistill achieves strong robustness and generalization under diverse ``in-the-wild'' conditions, offering an effective and practical solution for real-world deepfake image detection.
comment: 6th place (6/507) technical report at the NTIRE 2026: Robust AI-Generated Image Detection in the Wild Challenge
☆ MultiBind: A Benchmark for Attribute Misbinding in Multi-Subject Generation
Subject-driven image generation is increasingly expected to support fine-grained control over multiple entities within a single image. In multi-reference workflows, users may provide several subject images, a background reference, and long, entity-indexed prompts to control multiple people within one scene. In this setting, a key failure mode is cross-subject attribute misbinding: attributes are preserved, edited, or transferred to the wrong subject. Existing benchmarks and metrics largely emphasize holistic fidelity or per-subject self-similarity, making such failures hard to diagnose. We introduce MultiBind, a benchmark built from real multi-person photographs. Each instance provides slot-ordered subject crops with masks and bounding boxes, canonicalized subject references, an inpainted background reference, and a dense entity-indexed prompt derived from structured annotations. We also propose a dimension-wise confusion evaluation protocol that matches generated subjects to ground-truth slots and measures slot-to-slot similarity using specialists for face identity, appearance, pose, and expression. By subtracting the corresponding ground-truth similarity matrices, our method separates self-degradation from true cross-subject interference and exposes interpretable failure patterns such as drift, swap, dominance, and blending. Experiments on modern multi-reference generators show that MultiBind reveals binding failures that conventional reconstruction metrics miss.
☆ Cross-Instance Gaussian Splatting Registration via Geometry-Aware Feature-Guided Alignment CVPR 2026
We present Gaussian Splatting Alignment (GSA), a novel method for aligning two independent 3D Gaussian Splatting (3DGS) models via a similarity transformation (rotation, translation, and scale), even when they are of different objects in the same category (e.g., different cars). In contrast, existing methods can only align 3DGS models of the same object (e.g., the same car) and often must be given true scale as input, while we estimate it successfully. GSA leverages viewpoint-guided spherical map features to obtain robust correspondences and introduces a two-step optimization framework that aligns 3DGS models while keeping them fixed. First, we apply an iterative feature-guided absolute orientation solver as our coarse registration, which is robust to poor initialization (e.g., 180 degrees misalignment or a 10x scale gap). Next, we use a fine registration step that enforces multi-view feature consistency, inspired by inverse radiance-field formulations. The first step already achieves state-of-the-art performance, and the second further improves results. In the same-object case, GSA outperforms prior works, often by a large margin, even when the other methods are given the true scale. In the harder case of different objects in the same category, GSA vastly surpasses them, providing the first effective solution for category-level 3DGS registration and unlocking new applications. Project webpage: https://bgu-cs-vil.github.io/GSA-project/
comment: Accepted to CVPR 2026
☆ Chronological Contrastive Learning: Few-Shot Progression Assessment in Irreversible Diseases
Quantitative disease severity scoring in medical imaging is costly, time-consuming, and subject to inter-reader variability. At the same time, clinical archives contain far more longitudinal imaging data than expert-annotated severity scores. Existing self-supervised methods typically ignore this chronological structure. We introduce ChronoCon, a contrastive learning approach that replaces label-based ranking losses with rankings derived solely from the visitation order of a patient's longitudinal scans. Under the clinically plausible assumption of monotonic progression in irreversible diseases, the method learns disease-relevant representations without using any expert labels. This generalizes the idea of Rank-N-Contrast from label distances to temporal ordering. Evaluated on rheumatoid arthritis radiographs for severity assessment, the learned representations substantially improve label efficiency. In low-label settings, ChronoCon significantly outperforms a fully supervised baseline initialized from ImageNet weights. In a few-shot learning experiment, fine-tuning ChronoCon on expert scores from only five patients yields an intraclass correlation coefficient of 86% for severity score prediction. These results demonstrate the potential of chronological contrastive learning to exploit routinely available imaging metadata to reduce annotation requirements in the irreversible disease domain. Code is available at https://github.com/cirmuw/ChronoCon.
comment: Accepted for MIDL 2026; Reviews available at https://openreview.net/forum?id=c1UkGC3MVq
☆ Camera-Agnostic Pruning of 3D Gaussian Splats via Descriptor-Based Beta Evidence
The pruning of 3D Gaussian splats is essential for reducing their complexity to enable efficient storage, transmission, and downstream processing. However, most of the existing pruning strategies depend on camera parameters, rendered images, or view-dependent measures. This dependency becomes a hindrance in emerging camera-agnostic exchange settings, where splats are shared directly as point-based representations (e.g., .ply). In this paper, we propose a camera-agnostic, one-shot, post-training pruning method for 3D Gaussian splats that relies solely on attribute-derived neighbourhood descriptors. As our primary contribution, we introduce a hybrid descriptor framework that captures structural and appearance consistency directly from the splat representation. Building on these descriptors, we formulate pruning as a statistical evidence estimation problem and introduce a Beta evidence model that quantifies per-splat reliability through a probabilistic confidence score. Experiments conducted on standardized test sequences defined by the ISO/IEC MPEG Common Test Conditions (CTC) demonstrate that our approach achieves substantial pruning while preserving reconstruction quality, establishing a practical and generalizable alternative to existing camera-dependent pruning strategies.
comment: 14 pages, 3 figures, 2 tables
☆ SatGeo-NeRF: Geometrically Regularized NeRF for Satellite Imagery SP
We present SatGeo-NeRF, a geometrically regularized NeRF for satellite imagery that mitigates overfitting-induced geometric artifacts observed in current state-of-the-art models using three model-agnostic regularizers. Gravity-Aligned Planarity Regularization aligns depth-inferred, approximated surface normals with the gravity axis to promote local planarity, coupling adjacent rays via a corresponding surface approximation to facilitate cross-ray gradient flow. Granularity Regularization enforces a coarse-to-fine geometry-learning scheme, and Depth-Supervised Regularization stabilizes early training for improved geometric accuracy. On the DFC2019 satellite reconstruction benchmark, SatGeo-NeRF improves the Mean Altitude Error by 13.9% and 11.7% relative to state-of-the-art baselines such as EO-NeRF and EO-GS.
comment: Accepted at the ISPRS Congress 2026
☆ The Golden Subspace: Where Efficiency Meets Generalization in Continual Test-Time Adaptation CVPR 2026
Continual Test-Time Adaptation (CTTA) aims to enable models to adapt online to unlabeled data streams under distribution shift without accessing source data. Existing CTTA methods face an efficiency-generalization trade-off: updating more parameters improves adaptation but severely reduces online inference efficiency. An ideal solution is to achieve comparable adaptation with minimal feature updates; we call this minimal subspace the golden subspace. We prove its existence in a single-step adaptation setting and show that it coincides with the row space of the pretrained classifier. To enable online maintenance of this subspace, we introduce the sample-wise Average Gradient Outer Product (AGOP) as an efficient proxy for estimating the classifier weights without retraining. Building on these insights, we propose Guided Online Low-rank Directional adaptation (GOLD), which uses a lightweight adapter to project features onto the golden subspace and learns a compact scaling vector while the subspace is dynamically updated via AGOP. Extensive experiments on classification and segmentation benchmarks, including autonomous-driving scenarios, demonstrate that GOLD attains superior efficiency, stability, and overall performance. Our code is available at https://github.com/AIGNLAI/GOLD.
comment: Accepted to CVPR 2026
☆ A Latent Representation Learning Framework for Hyperspectral Image Emulation in Remote Sensing
Synthetic hyperspectral image (HSI) generation is essential for large-scale simulation, algorithm development, and mission design, yet traditional radiative transfer models remain computationally expensive and often limited to spectrum-level outputs. In this work, we propose a latent representation-based framework for hyperspectral emulation that learns a latent generative representation of hyperspectral data. The proposed approach supports both spectrum-level and spatial-spectral emulation and can be trained either in a direct one-step formulation or in a two-step strategy that couples variational autoencoder (VAE) pretraining with parameter-to-latent interpolation. Experiments on PROSAIL-simulated vegetation data and Sentinel-3 OLCI imagery demonstrate that the method outperforms classical regression-based emulators in reconstruction accuracy, spectral fidelity, and robustness to real-world spatial variability. We further show that emulated HSIs preserve performance in downstream biophysical parameter retrieval, highlighting the practical relevance of emulated data for remote sensing applications.
☆ SHAPE: Structure-aware Hierarchical Unsupervised Domain Adaptation with Plausibility Evaluation for Medical Image Segmentation
Unsupervised Domain Adaptation (UDA) is essential for deploying medical segmentation models across diverse clinical environments. Existing methods are fundamentally limited, suffering from semantically unaware feature alignment that results in poor distributional fidelity and from pseudo-label validation that disregards global anatomical constraints, thus failing to prevent the formation of globally implausible structures. To address these issues, we propose SHAPE (Structure-aware Hierarchical Unsupervised Domain Adaptation with Plausibility Evaluation), a framework that reframes adaptation towards global anatomical plausibility. Built on a DINOv3 foundation, its Hierarchical Feature Modulation (HFM) module first generates features with both high fidelity and class-awareness. This shifts the core challenge to robustly validating pseudo-labels. To augment conventional pixel-level validation, we introduce Hypergraph Plausibility Estimation (HPE), which leverages hypergraphs to assess the global anatomical plausibility that standard graphs cannot capture. This is complemented by Structural Anomaly Pruning (SAP) to purge remaining artifacts via cross-view stability. SHAPE significantly outperforms prior methods on cardiac and abdominal cross-modality benchmarks, achieving state-of-the-art average Dice scores of 90.08% (MRI->CT) and 78.51% (CT->MRI) on cardiac data, and 87.48% (MRI->CT) and 86.89% (CT->MRI) on abdominal data. The code is available at https://github.com/BioMedIA-repo/SHAPE.
☆ CLEAR: Context-Aware Learning with End-to-End Mask-Free Inference for Adaptive Video Subtitle Removal
Video subtitle removal aims to distinguish text overlays from background content while preserving temporal coherence. Existing diffusion-based methods necessitate explicit mask sequences during both training and inference phases, which restricts their practical deployment. In this paper, we present CLEAR (Context-aware Learning for End-to-end Adaptive Video Subtitle Removal), a mask-free framework that achieves truly end-to-end inference through context-aware adaptive learning. Our two-stage design decouples prior extraction from generative refinement: Stage I learns disentangled subtitle representations via self-supervised orthogonality constraints on dual encoders, while Stage II employs LoRA-based adaptation with generation feedback for dynamic context adjustment. Notably, our method only requires 0.77% of the parameters of the base diffusion model for training. On Chinese subtitle benchmarks, CLEAR outperforms mask-dependent baselines by + 6.77dB PSNR and -74.7% VFID, while demonstrating superior zero-shot generalization across six languages (English, Korean, French, Japanese, Russian, German), a performance enabled by our generation-driven feedback mechanism that ensures robust subtitle removal without ground-truth masks during inference.
☆ HMS-VesselNet: Hierarchical Multi-Scale Attention Network with Topology-Preserving Loss for Retinal Vessel Segmentation
Retinal vessel segmentation methods based on standard overlap losses tend to miss thin peripheral vessels because these structures occupy very few pixels and have low contrast against the background. We propose HMS-VesselNet, a hierarchical multi-scale network that processes fundus images across four parallel branches at different resolutions and combines their outputs using learned fusion weights. The training loss combines Dice, binary cross-entropy, and centerline Dice to jointly optimize area overlap and vessel continuity. Hard example mining is applied from epoch 20 onward to concentrate gradient updates on the most difficult training images. Tested on 68 images from DRIVE, STARE, and CHASE_DB1 using 5-fold cross-validation, the model achieves a mean Dice of 88.72 +/- 0.67%, Sensitivity of 90.78 +/- 1.42%, and AUC of 98.25 +/- 0.21%. In leave-one-dataset-out experiments, AUC remains above 95% on each unseen dataset. The largest improvement is in the recall of thin peripheral vessels, which are the structures most frequently missed by standard methods and most critical for early detection of diabetic retinopathy.
comment: 19 pages, 14 figures, 8 tables
☆ ADaFuSE: Adaptive Diffusion-generated Image and Text Fusion for Interactive Text-to-Image Retrieval
Recent advances in interactive text-to-image retrieval (I-TIR) use diffusion models to bridge the modality gap between the textual information need and the images to be searched, resulting in increased effectiveness. However, existing frameworks fuse multi-modal views of user feedback by simple embedding addition. In this work, we show that this static and undifferentiated fusion indiscriminately incorporates generative noise produced by the diffusion model, leading to performance degradation for up to 55.62% samples. We further propose ADaFuSE (Adaptive Diffusion-Text Fusion with Semantic-aware Experts), a lightweight fusion model designed to align and calibrate multi-modal views for diffusion-augmented I-TIR, which can be plugged into existing frameworks without modifying the backbone encoder. Specifically, we introduce a dual-branch fusion mechanism that employs an adaptive gating branch to dynamically balance modality reliability, alongside a semantic-aware mixture-of-experts branch to capture fine-grained cross-modal nuances. Via thorough evaluation over four standard I-TIR benchmarks, ADaFuSE achieves state-of-the-art performance, surpassing DAR by up to 3.49% in Hits@10 with only a 5.29% parameter increase, while exhibiting stronger robustness to noisy and longer interactive queries. These results show that generative augmentation coupled with principled fusion provides a simple, generalizable alternative to fine-tuning for interactive retrieval.
☆ Not All Layers Are Created Equal: Adaptive LoRA Ranks for Personalized Image Generation
Low Rank Adaptation (LoRA) is the de facto fine-tuning strategy to generate personalized images from pre-trained diffusion models. Choosing a good rank is extremely critical, since it trades off performance and memory consumption, but today the decision is often left to the community's consensus, regardless of the personalized subject's complexity. The reason is evident: the cost of selecting a good rank for each LoRA component is combinatorial, so we opt for practical shortcuts such as fixing the same rank for all components. In this paper, we take a first step to overcome this challenge. Inspired by variational methods that learn an adaptive width of neural networks, we let the ranks of each layer freely adapt during fine-tuning on a subject. We achieve it by imposing an ordering of importance on the rank's positions, effectively encouraging the creation of higher ranks when strictly needed. Qualitatively and quantitatively, our approach, LoRA$^2$, achieves a competitive trade-off between DINO, CLIP-I, and CLIP-T across 29 subjects while requiring much less memory and lower rank than high rank LoRA versions. Code: https://github.com/donaldssh/NotAllLayersAreCreatedEqual.
comment: Project page: https://donaldssh.github.io/NotAllLayersAreCreatedEqual/
☆ Deep S2P: Integrating Learning Based Stereo Matching Into the Satellite Stereo Pipeline
Digital Surface Model generation from satellite imagery is a core task in Earth observation and is commonly addressed using classical stereoscopic matching algorithms in satellite pipelines as in the Satellite Stereo Pipeline (S2P). While recent learning-based stereo matchers achieve state-of-the-art performance on standard benchmarks, their integration into operational satellite pipelines remains challenging due to differences in viewing geometry and disparity assumptions. In this work, we integrate several modern learning-based stereo matchers, including StereoAnywhere, MonSter, Foundation Stereo, and a satellite fine-tuned variant of MonSter, into the Satellite Stereo Pipeline, adapting the rectification stage to enforce compatible disparity polarity and range. We release the corresponding code to enable reproducible use of these methods in large-scale Earth observation workflows. Experiments on satellite imagery show consistent improvements over classical cost-volume-based approaches in terms of Digital Surface Model accuracy, although commonly used metrics such as mean absolute error exhibit saturation effects. Qualitative results reveal substantially improved geometric detail and sharper structures, highlighting the need for evaluation strategies that better reflect perceptual and structural fidelity. At the same time, performance over challenging surface types such as vegetation remains limited across all evaluated models, indicating open challenges for learning-based stereo in natural environments.
comment: Accepted at IGARSS 2026
☆ Thermal Topology Collapse: Universal Physical Patch Attacks on Infrared Vision Systems
Although infrared pedestrian detectors have been widely deployed in visual perception tasks, their vulnerability to physical adversarial attacks is becoming increasingly apparent. Existing physical attack methods predominantly rely on instance-specific online optimization and rigid pattern design, leading to high deployment costs and insufficient physical robustness. To address these limitations, this work proposes the Universal Physical Patch Attack (UPPA), the first universal physical attack method in the infrared domain. This method employs geometrically constrained parameterized Bezier blocks to model perturbations and utilizes the Particle Swarm Optimization (PSO) algorithm to perform unified optimization across the global data distribution, thus maintaining topological stability under dynamic deformations. In the physical deployment phase, we materialize the optimized digital perturbations into physical cold patches, achieving a continuous and smooth low-temperature distribution that naturally aligns with the thermal radiation characteristics of infrared imaging. Extensive experiments demonstrate that UPPA achieves an outstanding physical attack success rate without any online computational overhead, while also exhibiting strong cross-domain generalization and reliable black-box transferability.
☆ Manifold-Aware Exploration for Reinforcement Learning in Video Generation
Group Relative Policy Optimization (GRPO) methods for video generation like FlowGRPO remain far less reliable than their counterparts for language models and images. This gap arises because video generation has a complex solution space, and the ODE-to-SDE conversion used for exploration can inject excess noise, lowering rollout quality and making reward estimates less reliable, which destabilizes post-training alignment. To address this problem, we view the pre-trained model as defining a valid video data manifold and formulate the core problem as constraining exploration within the vicinity of this manifold, ensuring that rollout quality is preserved and reward estimates remain reliable. We propose SAGE-GRPO (Stable Alignment via Exploration), which applies constraints at both micro and macro levels. At the micro level, we derive a precise manifold-aware SDE with a logarithmic curvature correction and introduce a gradient norm equalizer to stabilize sampling and updates across timesteps. At the macro level, we use a dual trust region with a periodic moving anchor and stepwise constraints so that the trust region tracks checkpoints that are closer to the manifold and limits long-horizon drift. We evaluate SAGE-GRPO on HunyuanVideo1.5 using the original VideoAlign as the reward model and observe consistent gains over previous methods in VQ, MQ, TA, and visual metrics (CLIPScore, PickScore), demonstrating superior performance in both reward maximization and overall video quality. The code and visual gallery are available at https://dungeonmassster.github.io/SAGE-GRPO-Page/.
comment: 17 pages, 12 figures
☆ Adversarial Camouflage
While the rapid development of facial recognition algorithms has enabled numerous beneficial applications, their widespread deployment has raised significant concerns about the risks of mass surveillance and threats to individual privacy. In this paper, we introduce \textit{Adversarial Camouflage} as a novel solution for protecting users' privacy. This approach is designed to be efficient and simple to reproduce for users in the physical world. The algorithm starts by defining a low-dimensional pattern space parameterized by color, shape, and angle. Optimized patterns, once found, are projected onto semantically valid facial regions for evaluation. Our method maximizes recognition error across multiple architectures, ensuring high cross-model transferability even against black-box systems. It significantly degrades the performance of all tested state-of-the-art face recognition models during simulations and demonstrates promising results in real-world human experiments, while revealing differences in model robustness and evidence of attack transferability across architectures.
comment: 18 pages, 4 figures, 5 tables
☆ Adaptive Video Distillation: Mitigating Oversaturation and Temporal Collapse in Few-Step Generation
Video generation has recently emerged as a central task in the field of generative AI. However, the substantial computational cost inherent in video synthesis makes model distillation a critical technique for efficient deployment. Despite its significance, there is a scarcity of methods specifically designed for video diffusion models. Prevailing approaches often directly adapt image distillation techniques, which frequently lead to artifacts such as oversaturation, temporal inconsistency, and mode collapse. To address these challenges, we propose a novel distillation framework tailored specifically for video diffusion models. Its core innovations include: (1) an adaptive regression loss that dynamically adjusts spatial supervision weights to prevent artifacts arising from excessive distribution shifts; (2) a temporal regularization loss to counteract temporal collapse, promoting smooth and physically plausible sampling trajectories; and (3) an inference-time frame interpolation strategy that reduces sampling overhead while preserving perceptual quality. Extensive experiments and ablation studies on the VBench and VBench2 benchmarks demonstrate that our method achieves stable few-step video synthesis, significantly enhancing perceptual fidelity and motion realism. It consistently outperforms existing distillation baselines across multiple metrics.
☆ Climate Prompting: Generating the Madden-Julian Oscillation using Video Diffusion and Low-Dimensional Conditioning
Generative Deep Learning is a powerful tool for modeling of the Madden-Julian oscillation (MJO) in the tropics, yet its relationship to traditional theoretical frameworks remains poorly understood. Here we propose a video diffusion model, trained on atmospheric reanalysis, to synthetize long MJO sequences conditioned on key low-dimensional metrics. The generated MJOs capture key features including composites, power spectra and multiscale structures including convectively coupled waves, despite some bias. We then prompt the model to generate more tractable MJOs based on intentionally idealized low-dimensional conditionings, for example a perpetual MJO, an isolated modulation by seasons and/or the El Nino-Southern Oscillation, and so on. This enables deconstructing the underlying processes and identifying physical drivers. The present approach provides a practical framework for bridging the gap between low-dimensional MJO theory and high-resolution atmospheric complexity and will help tropical atmosphere prediction.
☆ Multi-View Deformable Convolution Meets Visual Mamba for Coronary Artery Segmentation
Accurate segmentation of coronary arteries from computed tomography angiography (CTA) images is of paramount clinical importance for the diagnosis and treatment planning of cardiovascular diseases. However, coronary artery segmentation remains challenging due to the inherent multi-branching and slender tubular morphology of the vasculature, compounded by severe class imbalance between foreground vessels and background tissue. Conventional convolutional neural network (CNN)-based approaches struggle to capture long-range dependencies among spatially distant vascular structures, while Vision Transformer (ViT)-based methods incur prohibitive computational overhead that hinders deployment in resource-constrained clinical settings. Motivated by the recent success of state space models (SSMs) in efficiently modeling long-range sequential dependencies with linear complexity, we propose MDSVM-UNet, a novel two-stage coronary artery segmentation framework that synergistically integrates multidirectional snake convolution (MDSConv) with residual visual Mamba (RVM). In the encoding stage, we introduce MDSConv, a deformable convolution module that learns adaptive offsets along three orthogonal anatomical planes -- sagittal, coronal, and axial -- thereby enabling comprehensive multi-view feature fusion that faithfully captures the elongated and tortuous geometry of coronary vessels. In the decoding stage, we design an RVM-based upsampling decoder block that leverages selective state space mechanisms to model inter-slice long-range dependencies while preserving linear computational complexity. Furthermore, we propose a progressive two-stage segmentation strategy: the first stage performs coarse whole-image segmentation to guide intelligent block extraction, while the second stage conducts fine-grained block-level segmentation to recover vascular details and suppress false positives..
☆ SteelDefectX: A Coarse-to-Fine Vision-Language Dataset and Benchmark for Generalizable Steel Surface Defect Detection CVPR 2026
Steel surface defect detection is essential for ensuring product quality and reliability in modern manufacturing. Current methods often rely on basic image classification models trained on label-only datasets, which limits their interpretability and generalization. To address these challenges, we introduce SteelDefectX, a vision-language dataset containing 7,778 images across 25 defect categories, annotated with coarse-to-fine textual descriptions. At the coarse-grained level, the dataset provides class-level information, including defect categories, representative visual attributes, and associated industrial causes. At the fine-grained level, it captures sample-specific attributes, such as shape, size, depth, position, and contrast, enabling models to learn richer and more detailed defect representations. We further establish a benchmark comprising four tasks, vision-only classification, vision-language classification, few/zero-shot recognition, and zero-shot transfer, to evaluate model performance and generalization. Experiments with several baseline models demonstrate that coarse-to-fine textual annotations significantly improve interpretability, generalization, and transferability. We hope that SteelDefectX will serve as a valuable resource for advancing research on explainable, generalizable steel surface defect detection. The data will be publicly available on https://github.com/Zhaosxian/SteelDefectX.
comment: This paper was submitted to CVPR 2026. A revised version will be updated soon
☆ Beyond Strict Pairing: Arbitrarily Paired Training for High-Performance Infrared and Visible Image Fusion CVPR2026
Infrared and visible image fusion(IVIF) combines complementary modalities while preserving natural textures and salient thermal signatures. Existing solutions predominantly rely on extensive sets of rigidly aligned image pairs for training. However, acquiring such data is often impractical due to the costly and labour-intensive alignment process. Besides, maintaining a rigid pairing setting during training restricts the volume of cross-modal relationships, thereby limiting generalisation performance. To this end, this work challenges the necessity of Strictly Paired Training Paradigm (SPTP) by systematically investigating UnPaired and Arbitrarily Paired Training Paradigms (UPTP and APTP) for high-performance IVIF. We establish a theoretical objective of APTP, reflecting the complementary nature between UPTP and SPTP. More importantly, we develop a practical framework capable of significantly enriching cross-modal relationships even with severely limited and unaligned training data. To validate our propositions, three end-to-end lightweight baselines, alongside a set of innovative loss functions, are designed to cover three classic frameworks (CNN, Transformer, GAN). Comprehensive experiments demonstrate that the proposed APTP and UPTP are feasible and capable of training models on a severely limited and content-inconsistent infrared and visible dataset, achieving performance comparable to that of a dataset 100$\times$ larger in SPTP. This finding fundamentally alleviates the cost and difficulty of data collection while enhancing model robustness from the data perspective, delivering a feasible solution for IVIF studies. The code is available at \href{https://github.com/yanglinDeng/IVIF_unpair}{\textcolor{blue}{https://github.com/yanglinDeng/IVIF\_unpair}}.
comment: Accepted by CVPR2026
☆ Ctrl-A: Control-Driven Online Data Augmentation
We introduce ControlAugment (Ctrl-A), an automated data augmentation algorithm for image-vision tasks, which incorporates principles from control theory for online adjustment of augmentation strength distributions during model training. Ctrl-A eliminates the need for initialization of individual augmentation strengths. Instead, augmentation strength distributions are dynamically, and individually, adapted during training based on a control-loop architecture and what we define as relative operation response curves. Using an operation-dependent update procedure provides Ctrl-A with the potential to suppress augmentation styles that negatively impact model performance, alleviating the need for manually engineering augmentation policies for new image-vision tasks. Experiments on the CIFAR-10, CIFAR-100, and SVHN-core benchmark datasets using the common WideResNet-28-10 architecture demonstrate that Ctrl-A is highly competitive with existing state-of-the-art data augmentation strategies.
comment: 17 pages (11 pages main manuscript), 8 figures (5 in main manuscript)
☆ Clinical Graph-Mediated Distillation for Unpaired MRI-to-CFI Hypertension Prediction MICCAI 2026
Retinal fundus imaging enables low-cost and scalable hypertension (HTN) screening, but HTN-related retinal cues are subtle, yielding high-variance predictions. Brain MRI provides stronger vascular and small-vessel-disease markers of HTN, yet it is expensive and rarely acquired alongside fundus images, resulting in modality-siloed datasets with disjoint MRI and fundus cohorts. We study this unpaired MRI-fundus regime and introduce Clinical Graph-Mediated Distillation (CGMD), a framework that transfers MRI-derived HTN knowledge to a fundus model without paired multimodal data. CGMD leverages shared structured biomarkers as a bridge by constructing a clinical similarity kNN graph spanning both cohorts. We train an MRI teacher, propagate its representations over the graph, and impute brain-informed representation targets for fundus patients. A fundus student is then trained with a joint objective combining HTN supervision, target distillation, and relational distillation. Experiments on our newly collected unpaired MRI-fundus-biomarker dataset show that CGMD consistently improves fundus-based HTN prediction over standard distillation and non-graph imputation baselines, with ablations confirming the importance of clinically grounded graph connectivity. Code is available at https://github.com/DillanImans/CGMD-unpaired-distillation.
comment: 10 pages, 2 figures, 2 tables. Under review at MICCAI 2026
☆ Cascade-Free Mandarin Visual Speech Recognition via Semantic-Guided Cross-Representation Alignment
Chinese mandarin visual speech recognition (VSR) is a task that has advanced in recent years, yet still lags behind the performance on non-tonal languages such as English. One primary challenge arises from the tonal nature of Mandarin, which limits the effectiveness of conventional sequence-to-sequence modeling approaches. To alleviate this issue, existing Chinese VSR systems commonly incorporate intermediate representations, most notably pinyin, within cascade architectures to enhance recognition accuracy. While beneficial, in these cascaded designs, the subsequent stage during inference depends on the output of the preceding stage, leading to error accumulation and increased inference latency. To address these limitations, we propose a cascade-free architecture based on multitask learning that jointly integrates multiple intermediate representations, including phoneme and viseme, to better exploit contextual information. The proposed semantic-guided local contrastive loss temporally aligns the features, enabling on-demand activation during inference, thereby providing a trade-off between inference efficiency and performance while mitigating error accumulation caused by projection and re-embedding. Experiments conducted on publicly available datasets demonstrate that our method achieves superior recognition performance.
☆ Anatomical Token Uncertainty for Transformer-Guided Active MRI Acquisition
Full data acquisition in MRI is inherently slow, which limits clinical throughput and increases patient discomfort. Compressed Sensing MRI (CS-MRI) seeks to accelerate acquisition by reconstructing images from under-sampled k-space data, requiring both an optimal sampling trajectory and a high-fidelity reconstruction model. In this work, we propose a novel active sampling framework that leverages the inherent discrete structure of a pretrained medical image tokenizer and a latent transformer. By representing anatomy through a dictionary of quantized visual tokens, the model provides a well-defined probability distribution over the latent space. We utilize this distribution to derive a principled uncertainty measure via token entropy, which guides the active sampling process. We introduce two strategies to exploit this latent uncertainty: (1) Latent Entropy Selection (LES), projecting patch-wise token entropy into the $k$-space domain to identify informative sampling lines, and (2) Gradient-based Entropy Optimization (GEO), which identifies regions of maximum uncertainty reduction via the $k$-space gradient of a total latent entropy loss. We evaluate our framework on the fastMRI singlecoil Knee and Brain datasets at $\times 8$ and $\times 16$ acceleration. Our results demonstrate that our active policies outperform state-of-the-art baselines in perceptual metrics, and feature-based distances. Our code is available at https://github.com/levayz/TRUST-MRI.
☆ Timing In stand-up Comedy: Text, Audio, Laughter, Kinesics (TIC-TALK): Pipeline and Database for the Multimodal Study of Comedic Timing
Stand-up comedy, and humor in general, are often studied through their verbal content. Yet live performance relies just as much on embodied presence and audience feedback. We introduce TIC-TALK, a multimodal resource with 5,400+ temporally aligned topic segments capturing language, gesture, and audience response across 90 professionally filmed stand-up comedy specials (2015-2024). The pipeline combines BERTopic for 60 s thematic segmentation with dense sentence embeddings, Whisper-AT for 0.8 s laughter detection, a fine-tuned YOLOv8-cls shot classifier, and YOLOv8s-pose for raw keypoint extraction at 1 fps. Raw 17-joint skeletal coordinates are retained without prior clustering, enabling the computation of continuous kinematic signals-arm spread, kinetic energy, and trunk lean-that serve as proxies for performance dynamics. All streams are aligned by hierarchical temporal containment without resampling, and each topic segment stores its sentence-BERT embedding for downstream similarity and clustering tasks. As a concrete use case, we study laughter dynamics across 24 thematic topics: kinetic energy negatively predicts audience laughter rate (r = -0.75, N = 24), consistent with a stillness-before-punchline pattern; personal and bodily content elicits more laughter than geopolitical themes; and shot close-up proportion correlates positively with laughter (r = +0.28), consistent with reactive montage.
☆ Benchmarking Recurrent Event-Based Object Detection for Industrial Multi-Class Recognition on MTEvent
Event cameras are attractive for industrial robotics because they provide high temporal resolution, high dynamic range, and reduced motion blur. However, most event-based object detection studies focus on outdoor driving scenarios or limited class settings. In this work, we benchmark recurrent ReYOLOv8s on MTEvent for industrial multi-class recognition and use a non-recurrent YOLOv8s variant as a baseline to analyze the effect of temporal memory. On the MTEvent validation split, the best scratch recurrent model (C21) reaches 0.285 mAP50, corresponding to a 9.6% relative improvement over the nonrecurrent YOLOv8s baseline (0.260). Event-domain pretraining has a stronger effect: GEN1-initialized fine-tuning yields the best overall result of 0.329 mAP50 at clip length 21, and unlike scratch training, GEN1-pretrained models improve consistently with clip length. PEDRo initialization drops to 0.251, indicating that mismatched source-domain pretraining can be less effective than training from scratch. Persistent failure modes are dominated by class imbalance and human-object interaction. Overall, we position this work as a focused benchmarking and analysis study of recurrent event-based detection in industrial environments.
☆ The Universal Normal Embedding CVPR 2026
Generative models and vision encoders have largely advanced on separate tracks, optimized for different goals and grounded in different mathematical principles. Yet, they share a fundamental property: latent space Gaussianity. Generative models map Gaussian noise to images, while encoders map images to semantic embeddings whose coordinates empirically behave as Gaussian. We hypothesize that both are views of a shared latent source, the Universal Normal Embedding (UNE): an approximately Gaussian latent space from which encoder embeddings and DDIM-inverted noise arise as noisy linear projections. To test our hypothesis, we introduce NoiseZoo, a dataset of per-image latents comprising DDIM-inverted diffusion noise and matching encoder representations (CLIP, DINO). On CelebA, linear probes in both spaces yield strong, aligned attribute predictions, indicating that generative noise encodes meaningful semantics along linear directions. These directions further enable faithful, controllable edits (e.g., smile, gender, age) without architectural changes, where simple orthogonalization mitigates spurious entanglements. Taken together, our results provide empirical support for the UNE hypothesis and reveal a shared Gaussian-like latent geometry that concretely links encoding and generation. Code and data are available https://rbetser.github.io/UNE/
comment: Accepted to CVPR 2026
☆ Image-Conditioned Adaptive Parameter Tuning for Visual Odometry Frontends
Resource-constrained autonomous robots rely on sparse direct and semi-direct visual-(inertial)-odometry (VO) pipelines, as they provide a favorable tradeoff between accuracy, robustness, and computational cost. However, the performance of most systems depends critically on hand-tuned hyperparameters governing feature detection, tracking, and outlier rejection. These parameters are typically fixed during deployment, even though their optimal values vary with scene characteristics such as texture density, illumination, motion blur, and sensor noise, leading to brittle performance in real-world environments. We propose the first image-conditioned reinforcement learning framework for online tuning of VO frontend parameters, effectively embedding the expert into the system. Our key idea is to formulate the frontend configuration as a sequential decision-making problem and learn a policy that directly maps visual input to feature detection and tracking parameters. The policy uses a lightweight texture-aware CNN encoder and a privileged critic during training. Unlike prior RL-based approaches that rely solely on internal VO statistics, our method observes the image content and proactively adapts parameters before tracking degrades. Experiments on TartanAirV2 and TUM RGB-D show 3x longer feature tracks and 3x lower computational cost, despite training entirely in simulation.
☆ Dynamic Exposure Burst Image Restoration
Burst image restoration aims to reconstruct a high-quality image from burst images, which are typically captured using manually designed exposure settings. Although these exposure settings significantly influence the final restoration performance, the problem of finding optimal exposure settings has been overlooked. In this paper, we present Dynamic Exposure Burst Image Restoration (DEBIR), a novel burst image restoration pipeline that enhances restoration quality by dynamically predicting exposure times tailored to the shooting environment. In our pipeline, Burst Auto-Exposure Network (BAENet) estimates the optimal exposure time for each burst image based on a preview image, as well as motion magnitude and gain. Subsequently, a burst image restoration network reconstructs a high-quality image from burst images captured using these optimal exposure times. For training, we introduce a differentiable burst simulator and a three-stage training strategy. Our experiments demonstrate that our pipeline achieves state-of-the-art restoration quality. Furthermore, we validate the effectiveness of our approach on a real-world camera system, demonstrating its practicality.
☆ SHARP: Spectrum-aware Highly-dynamic Adaptation for Resolution Promotion in Remote Sensing Synthesis
Text-to-image generation powered by Diffusion Transformers (DiTs) has made remarkable strides, yet remote sensing (RS) synthesis lags behind due to two barriers: the absence of a domain-specialized DiT prior and the prohibitive cost of training at the large resolutions that RS applications demand. Training-free resolution promotion via Rotary Position Embedding (RoPE) rescaling offers a practical remedy, but every existing method applies a static positional scaling rule throughout the denoising process. This uniform compression is particularly harmful for RS imagery, whose substantially denser medium- and high-frequency energy encodes the fine structures critical for aerial-scene realism, such as vehicles, building contours, and road markings. Addressing both challenges requires a domain-specialized generative prior coupled with a denoising-aware positional adaptation strategy. To this end, we fine-tune FLUX on over 100,000 curated RS images to build a strong domain prior (RS-FLUX), and propose Spectrum-aware Highly-dynamic Adaptation for Resolution Promotion (SHARP), a training-free method that introduces a rational fractional time schedule k_rs(t) into RoPE. SHARP applies strong positional promotion during the early layout-formation stage and progressively relaxes it during detail recovery, aligning extrapolation strength with the frequency-progressive nature of diffusion denoising. Its resolution-agnostic formulation further enables robust multi-scale generation from a single set of hyperparameters. Extensive experiments across six square and rectangular resolutions show that SHARP consistently outperforms all training-free baselines on CLIP Score, Aesthetic Score, and HPSv2, with widening margins at more aggressive extrapolation factors and negligible computational overhead. Code and weights are available at https://github.com/bxuanz/SHARP.
☆ Cycle Inverse-Consistent TransMorph: A Balanced Deep Learning Framework for Brain MRI Registration
Deformable image registration plays a fundamental role in medical image analysis by enabling spatial alignment of anatomical structures across subjects. While recent deep learning-based approaches have significantly improved computational efficiency, many existing methods remain limited in capturing long-range anatomical correspondence and maintaining deformation consistency. In this work, we present a cycle inverse-consistent transformer-based framework for deformable brain MRI registration. The model integrates a Swin-UNet architecture with bidirectional consistency constraints, enabling the joint estimation of forward and backward deformation fields. This design allows the framework to capture both local anatomical details and global spatial relationships while improving deformation stability. We conduct a comprehensive evaluation of the proposed framework on a large multi-center dataset consisting of 2851 T1-weighted brain MRI scans aggregated from 13 public datasets. Experimental results demonstrate that the proposed framework achieves strong and balanced performance across multiple quantitative evaluation metrics while maintaining stable and physically plausible deformation fields. Detailed quantitative comparisons with baseline methods, including ANTs, ICNet, and VoxelMorph, are provided in the appendix. Experimental results demonstrate that CICTM achieves consistently strong performance across multiple evaluation criteria while maintaining stable and physically plausible deformation fields. These properties make the proposed framework suitable for large-scale neuroimaging datasets where both accuracy and deformation stability are critical.
☆ Let's Think with Images Efficiently! An Interleaved-Modal Chain-of-Thought Reasoning Framework with Dynamic and Precise Visual Thoughts AAAI 2026
Recently, Interleaved-modal Chain-of-Thought (ICoT) reasoning has achieved remarkable success by leveraging both multimodal inputs and outputs, attracting increasing attention. While achieving promising performance, current ICoT methods still suffer from two major limitations: (1) Static Visual Thought Positioning, which statically inserts visual information at fixed steps, resulting in inefficient and inflexible reasoning; and (2) Broken Visual Thought Representation, which involves discontinuous and semantically incoherent visual tokens. To address these limitations, we introduce Interleaved-modal Chain-of-Thought reasoning with Dynamic and Precise Visual Thoughts (DaP-ICoT), which incorporates two key components: (1) Dynamic Visual Thought Integration adaptively introduces visual inputs based on reasoning needs, reducing redundancy and improving efficiency. (2) Precise Visual Thought Guidance ensures visual semantically coherent and contextually aligned representations. Experiments across multiple benchmarks and models demonstrate that DaP-ICoT achieves state-of-the-art performance. In addition, DaP-ICoT significantly reduces the number of inserted images, leading to a 72.6% decrease in token consumption, enabling more efficient ICoT reasoning.
comment: Accepted by AAAI 2026
☆ Getting to the Point: Why Pointing Improves LVLMs
Pointing increases the accuracy and explainability of Large Vision-Language Models (LVLMs) by modeling grounding and reasoning as explicit sequential steps. The model grounds the objects mentioned in the natural-language query by predicting their coordinates, and then generates an answer conditioned on these points. While pointing has been shown to increase LVLMs' accuracy, it is unclear which mechanism supports these gains and its relevance in cognitive tasks. In addition, the reliability of the intermediate points remains understudied, limiting their use as visual explanations. In this work, we study the role of pointing in a cognitive task: zero-shot counting from a visual scene. We fine-tune state-of-the-art LVLMs following two approaches: Direct Counting, where models only predict the total number of objects, and Point-then-Count, where LVLMs generate the target objects' coordinates followed by their count. The results show that Point-then-Count achieves higher out-of-distribution generalization, suggesting that coordinates help LVLMs learn skills rather than overfitting on narrow tasks. Although predicted points are accurately grounded in the image in over 89\% of cases (as measured by F1), performance varies across image regions, revealing spatial biases. Finally, mechanistic analyses show that gains in counting arise from the spatial information encoded in the coordinates.
☆ When Exploration Comes for Free with Mixture-Greedy: Do we need UCB in Diversity-Aware Multi-Armed Bandits?
Efficient selection among multiple generative models is increasingly important in modern generative AI, where sampling from suboptimal models is costly. This problem can be formulated as a multi-armed bandit task. Under diversity-aware evaluation metrics, a non-degenerate mixture of generators can outperform any individual model, distinguishing this setting from classical best-arm identification. Prior approaches therefore incorporate an Upper Confidence Bound (UCB) exploration bonus into the mixture objective. However, across multiple datasets and evaluation metrics, we observe that the UCB term consistently slows convergence and often reduces sample efficiency. In contrast, a simple \emph{Mixture-Greedy} strategy without explicit UCB-type optimism converges faster and achieves even better performance, particularly for widely used metrics such as FID and Vendi where tight confidence bounds are difficult to construct. We provide theoretical insight explaining this behavior: under transparent structural conditions, diversity-aware objectives induce implicit exploration by favoring interior mixtures, leading to linear sampling of all arms and sublinear regret guarantees for entropy-based, kernel-based, and FID-type objectives. These results suggest that in diversity-aware multi-armed bandits for generative model selection, exploration can arise intrinsically from the objective geometry, questioning the necessity of explicit confidence bonuses.
☆ Compensating Visual Insufficiency with Stratified Language Guidance for Long-Tail Class Incremental Learning
Long-tail class incremental learning (LT CIL) remains highly challenging because the scarcity of samples in tail classes not only hampers their learning but also exacerbates catastrophic forgetting under continuously evolving and imbalanced data distributions. To tackle these issues, we exploit the informativeness and scalability of language knowledge. Specifically, we analyze the LT CIL data distribution to guide large language models (LLMs) in generating a stratified language tree that hierarchically organizes semantic information from coarse to fine grained granularity. Building upon this structure, we introduce stratified adaptive language guidance, which leverages learnable weights to merge multi-scale semantic representations, thereby enabling dynamic supervisory adjustment for tail classes and alleviating the impact of data imbalance. Furthermore, we introduce stratified alignment language guidance, which exploits the structural stability of the language tree to constrain optimization and reinforce semantic visual alignment, thereby alleviating catastrophic forgetting. Extensive experiments on multiple benchmarks demonstrate that our method achieves state of the art performance.
☆ Rethinking Token Reduction for Large Vision-Language Models
Large Vision-Language Models (LVLMs) excel in visual understanding and reasoning, but the excessive visual tokens lead to high inference costs. Although recent token reduction methods mitigate this issue, they mainly target single-turn Visual Question Answering (VQA), leaving the more practical multi-turn VQA (MT-VQA) scenario largely unexplored. MT-VQA introduces additional challenges, as subsequent questions are unknown beforehand and may refer to arbitrary image regions, making existing reduction strategies ineffective. Specifically, current approaches fall into two categories: prompt-dependent methods, which bias toward the initial text prompt and discard information useful for subsequent turns; prompt-agnostic ones, which, though technically applicable to multi-turn settings, rely on heuristic reduction metrics such as attention scores, leading to suboptimal performance. In this paper, we propose a learning-based prompt-agnostic method, termed MetaCompress, overcoming the limitations of heuristic designs. We begin by formulating token reduction as a learnable compression mapping, unifying existing formats such as pruning and merging into a single learning objective. Upon this formulation, we introduce a data-efficient training paradigm capable of learning optimal compression mappings with limited computational costs. Extensive experiments on MT-VQA benchmarks and across multiple LVLM architectures demonstrate that MetaCompress achieves superior efficiency-accuracy trade-offs while maintaining strong generalization across dialogue turns. Our code is available at https://github.com/MArSha1147/MetaCompress.
☆ PPGL-Swarm: Integrated Multimodal Risk Stratification and Hereditary Syndrome Detection in Pheochromocytoma and Paraganglioma
Pheochromocytomas and paragangliomas (PPGLs) are rare neuroendocrine tumors, of which 15-25% develop metastatic disease with 5-year survival rates reported as low as 34%. PPGL may indicate hereditary syndromes requiring stricter, syndrome-specific treatment and surveillance, but clinicians often fail to recognize these associations in routine care. Clinical practice uses GAPP score for PPGL grading, but several limitations remain for PPGL diagnosis: (1) GAPP scoring demands a high workload for clinician because it requires the manual evaluation of six independent components; (2) key components such as cellularity and Ki-67 are often evaluated with subjective criteria; (3) several clinically relevant metastatic risk factors are not captured by GAPP, such as SDHB mutations, which have been associated with reported metastatic rates of 35-75%. Agent-driven diagnostic systems appear promising, but most lack traceable reasoning for decision-making and do not incorporate domain-specific knowledge such as PPGL genotype information. To address these limitations, we present PPGL-Swarm, an agentic PPGL diagnostic system that generates a comprehensive report, including automated GAPP scoring (with quantified cellularity and Ki-67), genotype risk alerts, and multimodal report with integrated evidence. The system provides an auditable reasoning trail by decomposing diagnosis into micro-tasks, each assigned to a specialized agent. The gene and table agents use knowledge enhancement to better interpret genotype and laboratory findings, and during training we use reinforcement learning to refine tool selection and task assignment.
☆ RefracGS: Novel View Synthesis Through Refractive Water Surfaces with 3D Gaussian Ray Tracing
Novel view synthesis (NVS) through non-planar refractive surfaces presents fundamental challenges due to severe, spatially varying optical distortions. While recent representations like NeRF and 3D Gaussian Splatting (3DGS) excel at NVS, their assumption of straight-line ray propagation fails under these conditions, leading to significant artifacts. To overcome this limitation, we introduce RefracGS, a framework that jointly reconstructs the refractive water surface and the scene beneath the interface. Our key insight is to explicitly decouple the refractive boundary from the target objects: the refractive surface is modeled via a neural height field, capturing wave geometry, while the underlying scene is represented as a 3D Gaussian field. We formulate a refraction-aware Gaussian ray tracing approach that accurately computes non-linear ray trajectories using Snell's law and efficiently renders the underlying Gaussian field while backpropagating the loss gradients to the parameterized refractive surface. Through end-to-end joint optimization of both representations, our method ensures high-fidelity NVS and view-consistent surface recovery. Experiments on both synthetic and real-world scenes with complex waves demonstrate that RefracGS outperforms prior refractive methods in visual quality, while achieving 15x faster training and real-time rendering at 200 FPS. The project page for RefracGS is available at https://yimgshao.github.io/refracgs/.
☆ PRM-as-a-Judge: A Dense Evaluation Paradigm for Fine-Grained Robotic Auditing
Current robotic evaluation is still largely dominated by binary success rates, which collapse rich execution processes into a single outcome and obscure critical qualities such as progress, efficiency, and stability. To address this limitation, we propose PRM-as-a-Judge, a dense evaluation paradigm that leverages Process Reward Models (PRMs) to audit policy execution directly from trajectory videos by estimating task progress from observation sequences. Central to this paradigm is the OPD (Outcome-Process-Diagnosis) metric system, which explicitly formalizes execution quality via a task-aligned progress potential. We characterize dense robotic evaluation through two axiomatic properties: macro-consistency, which requires additive and path-consistent aggregation, and micro-resolution, which requires sensitivity to fine-grained physical evolution. Under this formulation, potential-based PRM judges provide a natural instantiation of dense evaluation, with macro-consistency following directly from the induced scalar potential. We empirically validate the micro-resolution property using RoboPulse, a diagnostic benchmark specifically designed for probing micro-scale progress discrimination, where several trajectory-trained PRM judges outperform discriminative similarity-based methods and general-purpose foundation-model judges. Finally, leveraging PRM-as-a-Judge and the OPD metric system, we conduct a structured audit of mainstream policy paradigms across long-horizon tasks, revealing behavioral signatures and failure modes that are invisible to outcome-only metrics.
☆ HumanOmni-Speaker: Identifying Who said What and When
While Omni-modal Large Language Models have made strides in joint sensory processing, they fundamentally struggle with a cornerstone of human interaction: deciphering complex, multi-person conversational dynamics to accurately answer ``Who said what and when.'' Current models suffer from an ``illusion of competence'' -- they exploit visual biases in conventional benchmarks to bypass genuine cross-modal alignment, while relying on sparse, low-frame-rate visual sampling that destroys crucial high-frequency dynamics like lip movements. To shatter this illusion, we introduce Visual-Registered Speaker Diarization and Recognition (VR-SDR) and the HumanOmni-Speaker Benchmark. By strictly eliminating visual shortcuts, this rigorous paradigm demands true end-to-end spatio-temporal identity binding using only natural language queries. To overcome the underlying architectural perception gap, we propose HumanOmni-Speaker, powered by a Visual Delta Encoder. By sampling raw video at 25 fps and explicitly compressing inter-frame motion residuals into just 6 tokens per frame, it captures fine-grained visemes and speaker trajectories without triggering a catastrophic token explosion. Ultimately, HumanOmni-Speaker demonstrates strong multimodal synergy, natively enabling end-to-end lip-reading and high-precision spatial localization without intrusive cropping, and achieving superior performance across a wide spectrum of speaker-centric tasks.
☆ Cross-Scenario Deraining Adaptation with Unpaired Data: Superpixel Structural Priors and Multi-Stage Pseudo-Rain Synthesis
Image deraining plays a pivotal role in low-level computer vision, serving as a prerequisite for robust outdoor surveillance and autonomous driving systems. While deep learning paradigms have achieved remarkable success in firmly aligned settings, they often suffer from severe performance degradation when generalized to unseen Out-of-Distribution (OOD) scenarios. This failure stems primarily from the significant domain discrepancy between synthetic training datasets and the complex physical dynamics of real-world rain. To address these challenges, this paper proposes a pioneering cross-scenario deraining adaptation framework. Diverging from conventional approaches, our method obviates the requirements for paired rainy observations in the target domain, leveraging exclusively rain-free background images. We design a Superpixel Generation (Sup-Gen) module to extract stable structural priors from the source domain using Simple Linear Iterative Clustering. Subsequently, a Resolution-adaptive Fusion strategy is introduced to align these source structures with target backgrounds through texture similarity, ensuring the synthesis of diverse and realistic pseudo-data. Finally, we implement a pseudo-label re-Synthesize mechanism that employs multi-stage noise generation to simulate realistic rain streaks. This framework functions as a versatile plug-and-play module capable of seamless integration into arbitrary deraining architectures. Extensive experiments on state-of-the-art models demonstrate that our approach yields remarkable PSNR gains of up to 32% to 59% in OOD domains while significantly accelerating training convergence.
comment: We aim at addressing the cross-scenario (i.e., O.O.D) de-rain challenge, which has been neglected for a long period
☆ OmniFM: Toward Modality-Robust and Task-Agnostic Federated Learning for Heterogeneous Medical Imaging CVPR 2026
Federated learning (FL) has become a promising paradigm for collaborative medical image analysis, yet existing frameworks remain tightly coupled to task-specific backbones and are fragile under heterogeneous imaging modalities. Such constraints hinder real-world deployment, where institutions vary widely in modality distributions and must support diverse downstream tasks. To address this limitation, we propose OmniFM, a modality- and task-agnostic FL framework that unifies training across classification, segmentation, super-resolution, visual question answering, and multimodal fusion without re-engineering the optimization pipeline. OmniFM builds on a key frequency-domain insight: low-frequency spectral components exhibit strong cross-modality consistency and encode modality-invariant anatomical structures. Accordingly, OmniFM integrates (i) Global Spectral Knowledge Retrieval to inject global frequency priors, (ii) Embedding-wise Cross-Attention Fusion to align representations, and (iii) Prefix-Suffix Spectral Prompting to jointly condition global and personalized cues, together regularized by a Spectral-Proximal Alignment objective that stabilizes aggregation. Experiments on real-world datasets show that OmniFM consistently surpasses state-of-the-art FL baselines across intra- and cross-modality heterogeneity, achieving superior results under both fine-tuning and training-from-scratch setups.
comment: Accepted by CVPR 2026 (Main)
☆ FedCVU: Federated Learning for Cross-View Video Understanding
Federated learning (FL) has emerged as a promising paradigm for privacy-preserving multi-camera video understanding. However, applying FL to cross-view scenarios faces three major challenges: (i) heterogeneous viewpoints and backgrounds lead to highly non-IID client distributions and overfitting to view-specific patterns, (ii) local distribution biases cause misaligned representations that hinder consistent cross-view semantics, and (iii) large video architectures incur prohibitive communication overhead. To address these issues, we propose FedCVU, a federated framework with three components: VS-Norm, which preserves normalization parameters to handle view-specific statistics; CV-Align, a lightweight contrastive regularization module to improve cross-view representation alignment; and SLA, a selective layer aggregation strategy that reduces communication without sacrificing accuracy. Extensive experiments on action understanding and person re-identification tasks under a cross-view protocol demonstrate that FedCVU consistently boosts unseen-view accuracy while maintaining strong seen-view performance, outperforming state-of-the-art FL baselines and showing robustness to domain heterogeneity and communication constraints.
☆ No Dense Tensors Needed: Fully Sparse Object Detection on Event-Camera Voxel Grids
Event cameras produce asynchronous, high-dynamic-range streams well suited for detecting small, fast-moving drones, yet most event-based detectors convert the sparse event stream into dense tensors, discarding the representational efficiency of neuromorphic sensing. We propose SparseVoxelDet, to our knowledge the first fully sparse object detector for event cameras, in which backbone feature extraction, feature pyramid fusion, and the detection head all operate exclusively on occupied voxel positions through 3D sparse convolutions; no dense feature tensor is instantiated at any stage of the pipeline. On the FRED benchmark (629,832 annotated frames), SparseVoxelDet achieves 83.38% mAP at 50 while processing only 14,900 active voxels per frame (0.23% of the T.H.W grid), compared to 409,600 pixels for the dense YOLOv11 baseline (87.68% mAP at 50). Relaxing the IoU threshold from 0.50 to 0.40 recovers mAP to 89.26%, indicating that the remaining accuracy gap is dominated by box regression precision rather than detection capability. The sparse representation yields 858 times GPU memory compression and 3,670 times storage reduction relative to the equivalent dense 3D voxel tensor, with data-structure size that scales with scene dynamics rather than sensor resolution. Error forensics across 119,459 test frames confirms that 71 percent of failures are localization near-misses rather than missed targets. These results demonstrate that native sparse processing is a viable paradigm for event-camera object detection, exploiting the structural sparsity of neuromorphic sensor data without requiring neuromorphic computing hardware, and providing a framework whose representation cost is governed by scene activity rather than pixel count, a property that becomes increasingly valuable as event cameras scale to higher resolutions.
comment: 29 Pages, 9 Figures, 5 Tables
☆ Dual-level Adaptation for Multi-Object Tracking: Building Test-Time Calibration from Experience and Intuition CVPR2026
Multiple Object Tracking (MOT) has long been a fundamental task in computer vision, with broad applications in various real-world scenarios. However, due to distribution shifts in appearance, motion pattern, and catagory between the training and testing data, model performance degrades considerably during online inference in MOT. Test-Time Adaptation (TTA) has emerged as a promising paradigm to alleviate such distribution shifts. However, existing TTA methods often fail to deliver satisfactory results in MOT, as they primarily focus solely on frame-level adaptation while neglecting temporal consistency and identity association across frames and videos. Inspired by human decision-making process, this paper propose a Test-time Calibration from Experience and Intuition (TCEI) framework. In this framework, the Intuitive system utilizes transient memory to recall recently observed objects for rapid predictions, while the Experiential system leverages the accumulated experience from prior test videos to reassess and calibrate these intuitive predictions. Furthermore, both confident and uncertain objects during online testing are exploited as historical priors and reflective cases, respectively, enabling the model to adapt to the testing environment and alleviate performance degradation. Extensive experiments demonstrate that the proposed TCEI framework consistently achieves superior performance across multiple benchmark datasets and significantly enhances the model's adaptability under distribution shifts. The code will be released at https://github.com/1941Zpf/TCEI.
comment: Accepted by CVPR2026
☆ PGR-Net: Prior-Guided ROI Reasoning Network for Brain Tumor MRI Segmentation CVPR 2026
Brain tumor MRI segmentation is essential for clinical diagnosis and treatment planning, enabling accurate lesion detection and radiotherapy target delineation. However, tumor lesions occupy only a small fraction of the volumetric space, resulting in severe spatial sparsity, while existing segmentation networks often overlook clinically observed spatial priors of tumor occurrence, leading to redundant feature computation over extensive background regions. To address this issue, we propose PGR-Net (Prior-Guided ROI Reasoning Network) - an explicit ROI-aware framework that incorporates a data-driven spatial prior set to capture the distribution and scale characteristics of tumor lesions, providing global guidance for more stable segmentation. Leveraging these priors, PGR-Net introduces a hierarchical Top-K ROI decision mechanism that progressively selects the most confident lesion candidate regions across encoder layers to improve localization precision. We further develop the WinGS-ROI (Windowed Gaussian-Spatial Decay ROI) module, which uses multi-window Gaussian templates with a spatial decay function to produce center-enhanced guidance maps, thus directing feature learning throughout the network. With these ROI features, a windowed RetNet backbone is adopted to enhance localization reliability. Experiments on BraTS-2019/2023 and MSD Task01 show that PGR-Net consistently outperforms existing approaches while using only 8.64M Params, achieving Dice scores of 89.02%, 91.82%, and 89.67% on the Whole Tumor region. Code is available at https://github.com/CNU-MedAI-Lab/PGR-Net.
comment: This paper has been accepted to the main conference of CVPR 2026
☆ Efficient Zero-Shot AI-Generated Image Detection
The rapid progress of text-to-image models has made AI-generated images increasingly realistic, posing significant challenges for accurate detection of generated content. While training-based detectors often suffer from limited generalization to unseen images, training-free approaches offer better robustness, yet struggle to capture subtle discrepancies between real and synthetic images. In this work, we propose a training-free AI-generated image detection method that measures representation sensitivity to structured frequency perturbations, enabling detection of minute manipulations. The proposed method is computationally lightweight, as perturbation generation requires only a single Fourier transform for an input image. As a result, it achieves one to two orders of magnitude faster inference than most training-free detectors.Extensive experiments on challenging benchmarks demonstrate the efficacy of our method over state-of-the-art (SoTA). In particular, on OpenFake benchmark, our method improves AUC by nearly $10\%$ compared to SoTA, while maintaining substantially lower computational cost.
☆ 4DGS360: 360° Gaussian Reconstruction of Dynamic Objects from a Single Video
We introduce 4DGS360, a diffusion-free framework for 360$^{\circ}$ dynamic object reconstruction from casual monocular video. Existing methods often fail to reconstruct consistent 360$^{\circ}$ geometry, as their heavy reliance on 2D-native priors causes initial points to overfit to visible surface in each training view. 4DGS360 addresses this challenge through a advanced 3D-native initialization that mitigates the geometric ambiguity of occluded regions. Our proposed 3D tracker, AnchorTAP3D, produces reinforced 3D point trajectories by leveraging confident 2D track points as anchors, suppressing drift and providing reliable initialization that preserves geometry in occluded regions. This initialization, combined with optimization, yields coherent 360$^{\circ}$ 4D reconstructions. We further present iPhone360, a new benchmark where test cameras are placed up to 135$^{\circ}$ apart from training views, enabling 360$^{\circ}$ evaluation that existing datasets cannot provide. Experiments show that 4DGS360 achieves state-of-the-art performance on the iPhone360, iPhone, and DAVIS datasets, both qualitatively and quantitatively.
♻ ☆ ELVIS: Enhance Low-Light for Video Instance Segmentation in the Dark CVPR 2026
Video instance segmentation (VIS) for low-light content remains highly challenging for both humans and machines alike, due to noise, blur and other adverse conditions. The lack of large-scale annotated datasets and the limitations of current synthetic pipelines, particularly in modeling temporal degradations, further hinder progress. Moreover, existing VIS methods are not robust to the degradations found in low-light videos and, consequently, perform poorly even after finetuning. In this paper, we introduce \textbf{ELVIS} (\textbf{E}nhance \textbf{L}ow-Light for \textbf{V}ideo \textbf{I}nstance \textbf{S}egmentation), a framework that enables domain adaptation of state-of-the-art VIS models to low-light scenarios. ELVIS is comprised of an unsupervised synthetic low-light video pipeline that models both spatial and temporal degradations, a calibration-free degradation profile estimation network (VDP-Net) and an enhancement decoder head that disentangles degradations from content features. ELVIS improves performances by up to \textbf{+3.7AP} on the synthetic low-light YouTube-VIS 2019 dataset and beats two-stage baselines by at least \textbf{+2.8AP} on real low-light videos. Code and dataset available at: \href{https://joannelin168.github.io/research/ELVIS}{https://joannelin168.github.io/research/ELVIS}
comment: Accepted to CVPR 2026
♻ ☆ VL-Nav: A Neuro-Symbolic Approach for Reasoning-based Vision-Language Navigation
Navigating unseen, large-scale environments based on complex and abstract human instructions remains a formidable challenge for autonomous mobile robots. Addressing this requires robots to infer implicit semantics and efficiently explore large-scale task spaces. However, existing methods, ranging from end-to-end learning to foundation model-based modular architectures, often lack the capability to decompose complex tasks or employ efficient exploration strategies, leading to robot aimless wandering or target recognition failures. To address these limitations, we propose VL-Nav, a neuro-symbolic (NeSy) vision-language navigation system. The proposed system intertwines neural reasoning with symbolic guidance through two core components: (1) a NeSy task planner that leverages a symbolic 3D scene graph and image memory system to enhance the vision language models' (VLMs) neural reasoning capabilities for task decomposition and replanning; and (2) a NeSy exploration system that couples neural semantic cues with the symbolic heuristic function to efficiently gather the task-related information while minimizing unnecessary repeat travel during exploration. Validated on the DARPA TIAMAT Challenge navigation tasks, our system achieved an 83.4% success rate (SR) in indoor environments and 75% in outdoor scenarios. VL-Nav achieved an 86.3% SR in real-world experiments, including a challenging 483-meter run. Finally, we validate the system with complex instructions in a 3D multi-floor scenario.
♻ ☆ DisPatch: Disarming Adversarial Patches in Object Detection with Diffusion Models
Object detection is fundamental to various real-world applications, such as security monitoring and surveillance video analysis. Despite their advancements, state-of-the-art object detectors are still vulnerable to adversarial patch attacks, which can be easily applied to real-world objects to either conceal actual items or create non-existent ones, leading to severe consequences. In this work, we introduce DisPatch, the first diffusion-based defense framework for object detection. Unlike previous works that aim to "detect and remove" adversarial patches, DisPatch adopts a "regenerate and rectify" strategy, leveraging generative models to disarm attack effects while preserving the integrity of the input image. Specifically, we utilize the in-distribution generative power of diffusion models to regenerate the entire image, aligning it with benign data. A rectification process is then employed to identify and replace adversarial regions with their regenerated benign counterparts. DisPatch is attack-agnostic and requires no prior knowledge of the existing patches. Extensive experiments across multiple detectors demonstrate that DisPatch consistently outperforms state-of-the-art defenses on both hiding attacks and creating attacks, achieving the best overall mAP@0.5 score of 89.3% on hiding attacks, and lowering the attack success rate to 24.8% on untargeted creating attacks. Moreover, it strikes the balance between effectiveness and efficiency, and maintains strong robustness against adaptive attacks, making it a practical and reliable defense method.
♻ ☆ Foundation Models for Trajectory Planning in Autonomous Driving: A Review of Progress and Open Challenges
The emergence of multi-modal foundation models has markedly transformed the technology for autonomous driving, shifting away from conventional and mostly hand-crafted design choices towards unified, foundation-model-based approaches, capable of directly inferring motion trajectories from raw sensory inputs. This new class of methods can also incorporate natural language as an additional modality, with Vision-Language-Action (VLA) models serving as a representative example. In this review, we provide a comprehensive examination of such methods through a unifying taxonomy to critically evaluate their architectural design choices, methodological strengths, and their inherent capabilities and limitations. Our survey covers 37 recently proposed approaches that span the landscape of trajectory planning with foundation models. Furthermore, we assess these approaches with respect to the openness of their source code and datasets, offering valuable information to practitioners and researchers. We provide an accompanying webpage that catalogues the methods based on our taxonomy, available at: https://github.com/fiveai/FMs-for-driving-trajectories
comment: Accepted to TMLR (Survey Certification)
♻ ☆ First Frame Is the Place to Go for Video Content Customization CVPR 2026
What role does the first frame play in video generation models? Traditionally, it's viewed as the spatial-temporal starting point of a video, merely a seed for subsequent animation. In this work, we reveal a fundamentally different perspective: video models implicitly treat the first frame as a conceptual memory buffer that stores visual entities for later reuse during generation. Leveraging this insight, we show that it's possible to achieve robust and generalized video content customization in diverse scenarios, using only 20-50 training examples without architectural changes or large-scale finetuning. This unveils a powerful, overlooked capability of video generation models for reference-based video customization.
comment: Accepted to CVPR 2026
♻ ☆ Bridging the Perception Gap in Image Super-Resolution Evaluation CVPR 2026
As super-resolution (SR) techniques advance, we observe a growing distrust of evaluation metrics in recent SR research. An inconsistency often emerges between certain evaluation criteria and human perceptual preference. Although current SR research employs varying metrics to evaluate SR performance, it remains underexplored how robust and reliable these metrics actually are. To bridge this gap, we conduct a comprehensive analysis of widely used image quality metrics, examining their consistency with human perception when evaluating state-of-the-art SR models. We show that some metrics exhibit only limited-or even negative-correlation with human preferences. We further identify several intrinsic challenges in SR evaluation that compromise the effectiveness of both full-reference (FR) and no-reference (NR) image quality assessment (IQA) frameworks. To address these issues, we propose a simple yet effective Relative Quality Index (RQI) framework, which assesses the relative quality discrepancy between image pairs. Our framework enables easy integration and notable improvements for existing IQA metrics in SR evaluation. Moreover, it can be utilized as a valuable training guide for SR models, enabling the generation of images with more realistic details while maintaining structural fidelity.
comment: Accepted to CVPR 2026
♻ ☆ From Explanations to Architecture: Explainability-Driven CNN Refinement for Brain Tumor Classification in MRI
Recent brain tumor classification methods often report high accuracy but rely on deep, over-parameterized architectures with limited interpretability, making it difficult to determine whether predictions are driven by tumor-relevant evidence or by spurious cues such as background artifacts or normal tissue. We propose an explainable convolutional neural network (CNN) framework that enhances model transparency without sacrificing classification accuracy. This approach supports more trustworthy AI in healthcare and contributes to SDG 3: Good Health and Well-being by enabling more dependable MRI-based brain tumor diagnosis and earlier detection. Rather than using explainable AI solely for post hoc visualization, we employ Grad-CAM to quantify layer-wise relevance and guide the removal of low-contribution layers, reducing unnecessary depth and parameters while encouraging attention to discriminative tumor regions. We further validate the model's decision rationale using complementary explainability methods, combining Grad-CAM for spatial localization with SHAP and LIME for attribution-based verification. Experiments on multi-class brain MRI datasets show that the proposed model achieves 98.21% accuracy on the primary dataset and 95.74% accuracy on an unseen dataset, indicating strong cross-dataset generalization. Overall, the proposed approach balances simplicity, transparency, and accuracy, supporting more trustworthy and clinically applicable brain tumor classification for improved health outcomes and non-invasive disease detection.
comment: This is the preprint version of the manuscript. It is currently being prepared for submission to an academic conference
♻ ☆ KeySG: Hierarchical Keyframe-Based 3D Scene Graphs
In recent years, 3D scene graphs have emerged as a powerful world representation, offering both geometric accuracy and semantic richness. Combining 3D scene graphs with large language models enables robots to reason, plan, and navigate in complex human-centered environments. However, current approaches for constructing 3D scene graphs are semantically limited to a predefined set of relationships, and their serialization in large environments can easily exceed an LLM's context window. We introduce KeySG, a framework that represents 3D scenes as a hierarchical graph consisting of floors, rooms, objects, and functional elements, where nodes are augmented with multi-modal information extracted from keyframes selected to optimize geometric and visual coverage. The keyframes allow us to efficiently leverage VLMs to extract scene information, alleviating the need to explicitly model relationship edges between objects, enabling more general, task-agnostic reasoning and planning. Our approach can process complex and ambiguous queries while mitigating the scalability issues associated with large scene graphs by utilizing a hierarchical multi-modal retrieval-augmented generation (RAG) pipeline to extract relevant context from the graph. Evaluated across three distinct benchmarks, 3D object semantic segmentation, functional element segmentation, and complex query retrieval, KeySG outperforms prior approaches on most metrics, demonstrating its superior semantic richness and efficiency.
comment: Code and video are available at https://keysg-lab.github.io/
♻ ☆ Training-Free Layout-to-Image Generation with Marginal Attention Constraints
Recently, many text-to-image diffusion models have excelled at generating high-resolution images from text but struggle with precise control over spatial composition and object counting. To address these challenges, prior works have developed layout-to-image (L2I) approaches that incorporate layout instructions into text-to-image models. However, existing L2I methods typically require fine-tuning of pre-trained parameters or training additional control modules for diffusion models. In this work, we propose a training-free L2I approach, MAC (Marginal Attention Constrained Generation), which eliminates the need for additional modules or fine-tuning. Specifically, we use text-visual cross-attention feature maps to quantify inconsistencies between the layout of the generated images and the provided instructions, and then compute loss functions to optimize latent features during the diffusion reverse process. To enhance spatial controllability and mitigate semantic failures under complex layout instructions, we leverage pixel-to-pixel correlations in self-attention feature maps to align cross-attention maps and combine three loss functions constrained by boundary attention to update latent features. Comprehensive experimental results on both L2I and non-L2I pretrained diffusion models demonstrate that our method outperforms existing training-free L2I techniques, both quantitatively and qualitatively, in terms of image composition on the DrawBench and HRS benchmarks.
♻ ☆ CIGPose: Causal Intervention Graph Neural Network for Whole-Body Pose Estimation CVPR 2026
State-of-the-art whole-body pose estimators often lack robustness, producing anatomically implausible predictions in challenging scenes. We posit this failure stems from spurious correlations learned from visual context, a problem we formalize using a Structural Causal Model (SCM). The SCM identifies visual context as a confounder that creates a non-causal backdoor path, corrupting the model's reasoning. We introduce the Causal Intervention Graph Pose (CIGPose) framework to address this by approximating the true causal effect between visual evidence and pose. The core of CIGPose is a novel Causal Intervention Module: it first identifies confounded keypoint representations via predictive uncertainty and then replaces them with learned, context-invariant canonical embeddings. These deconfounded embeddings are processed by a hierarchical graph neural network that reasons over the human skeleton at both local and global semantic levels to enforce anatomical plausibility. Extensive experiments show CIGPose achieves a new state-of-the-art on COCO-WholeBody. Notably, our CIGPose-x model achieves 67.0\% AP, surpassing prior methods that rely on extra training data. With the additional UBody dataset, CIGPose-x is further boosted to 67.5\% AP, demonstrating superior robustness and data efficiency. The codes and models are publicly available at https://github.com/53mins/CIGPose.
comment: The paper is accepted by CVPR 2026
♻ ☆ DepthFocus: Controllable Depth Estimation for See-Through Scenes
Depth in the real world is rarely singular. Transmissive materials create layered ambiguities that confound conventional perception systems. Existing models remain passive; conventional approaches typically estimate static depth maps anchored to the nearest surface, and even recent multi-head extensions suffer from a representational bottleneck due to fixed feature representations. This stands in contrast to human vision, which actively shifts focus to perceive a desired depth. We introduce \textbf{DepthFocus}, a steerable Vision Transformer that redefines stereo depth estimation as condition-aware control. Instead of extracting fixed features, our model dynamically modulates its computation based on a physical reference depth, integrating dual conditional mechanisms to selectively perceive geometry aligned with the desired focus. Leveraging a newly curated large-scale synthetic dataset, \textbf{DepthFocus} achieves state-of-the-art results across all evaluated benchmarks, including both standard single-layer and complex multi-layered scenarios. While maintaining high precision in opaque regions, our approach effectively resolves depth ambiguities in transparent and reflective scenes by selectively reconstructing geometry at a target distance. This capability enables robust, intent-driven perception that significantly outperforms existing multi-layer methods, marking a substantial step toward active 3D perception. \noindent \textbf{Project page}: \href{https://junhong-3dv.github.io/depthfocus-project/}{\textbf{this https URL}}.
comment: 8pages, 5 figures, 5 tables
♻ ☆ PAUL: Uncertainty-Guided Partition and Augmentation for Robust Cross-View Geo-Localization under Noisy Correspondence
Cross-view geo-localization is a critical task for UAV navigation, event detection, and aerial surveying, as it enables matching between drone-captured and satellite imagery. Most existing approaches embed multi-modal data into a joint feature space to maximize the similarity of paired images. However, these methods typically assume perfect alignment of image pairs during training, which rarely holds true in real-world scenarios. In practice, factors such as urban canyon effects, electromagnetic interference, and adverse weather frequently induce GPS drift, resulting in systematic alignment shifts where only partial correspondences exist between pairs. Despite its prevalence, this source of noisy correspondence has received limited attention in current research. In this paper, we formally introduce and address the Noisy Correspondence on Cross-View Geo-Localization (NC-CVGL) problem, aiming to bridge the gap between idealized benchmarks and practical applications. To this end, we propose PAUL (Partition and Augmentation by Uncertainty Learning), a novel framework that partitions and augments training data based on estimated data uncertainty through uncertainty-aware co-augmentation and evidential co-training. Specifically, PAUL selectively augments regions with high correspondence confidence and utilizes uncertainty estimation to refine feature learning, effectively suppressing noise from misaligned pairs. Distinct from traditional filtering or label correction, PAUL leverages both data uncertainty and loss discrepancy for targeted partitioning and augmentation, thus providing robust supervision for noisy samples. Comprehensive experiments validate the effectiveness of individual components in PAUL,which consistently achieves superior performance over other competitive noisy-correspondence-driven methods in various noise ratios.
comment: 10 pages
♻ ☆ Unleashing Video Language Models for Fine-grained HRCT Report Generation
Generating precise diagnostic reports from High-Resolution Computed Tomography (HRCT) is critical for clinical workflow, yet it remains a formidable challenge due to the high pathological diversity and spatial sparsity within 3D volumes. While Video Language Models (VideoLMs) have demonstrated remarkable spatio-temporal reasoning in general domains, their adaptability to domain-specific, high-volume medical interpretation remains underexplored. In this work, we present AbSteering, an abnormality-centric framework that steers VideoLMs toward precise HRCT report generation. Specifically, AbSteering introduces: (i) an abnormality-centric Chain-of-Thought scheme that enforces abnormality reasoning, and (ii) a Direct Preference Optimization objective that utilizes clinically confusable abnormalities as hard negatives to enhance fine-grained discrimination. Our results demonstrate that general-purpose VideoLMs possess strong transferability to high-volume medical imaging when guided by this paradigm. Notably, AbSteering outperforms state-of-the-art domain-specific CT foundation models, which are pretrained with large-scale CTs, achieving superior detection sensitivity while simultaneously mitigating hallucinations.
♻ ☆ Memory-V2V: Memory-Augmented Video-to-Video Diffusion for Consistent Multi-Turn Editing
Video-to-video diffusion models achieve impressive single-turn editing performance, but practical editing workflows are inherently iterative. When edits are applied sequentially, existing models treat each turn independently, often causing previously generated regions to drift or be overwritten. We identify this failure mode as the problem of cross-turn consistency in multi-turn video editing. We introduce Memory-V2V, a memory-augmented framework that treats prior edits as structured constraints for subsequent generations. Memory-V2V maintains an external memory of previous outputs, retrieves task-relevant edits, and integrates them through relevance-aware tokenization and adaptive compression. These technical ingredients enable scalable conditioning without linear growth in computation. We demonstrate Memory-V2V on iterative video novel view synthesis and text-guided long video editing. Memory-V2V substantially enhances cross-turn consistency while maintaining visual quality, outperforming strong baselines with modest overhead.
comment: Project page: https://dohunlee1.github.io/MemoryV2V
♻ ☆ GAS: Improving Discretization of Diffusion ODEs via Generalized Adversarial Solver ICLR 2026
While diffusion models achieve state-of-the-art generation quality, they still suffer from computationally expensive sampling. Recent works address this issue with gradient-based optimization methods that distill a few-step ODE diffusion solver from the full sampling process, reducing the number of function evaluations from dozens to just a few. However, these approaches often rely on intricate training techniques and do not explicitly focus on preserving fine-grained details. In this paper, we introduce the Generalized Solver: a simple parameterization of the ODE sampler that does not require additional training tricks and improves quality over existing approaches. We further combine the original distillation loss with adversarial training, which mitigates artifacts and enhances detail fidelity. We call the resulting method the Generalized Adversarial Solver and demonstrate its superior performance compared to existing solver training methods under similar resource constraints. Code is available at https://github.com/3145tttt/GAS.
comment: Accepted to ICLR 2026. Camera ready version
♻ ☆ Goal Force: Teaching Video Models To Accomplish Physics-Conditioned Goals CVPR 2026
Recent advancements in video generation have enabled the development of ``world models'' capable of simulating potential futures for robotics and planning. However, specifying precise goals for these models remains a challenge; text instructions are often too abstract to capture physical nuances, while target images are frequently infeasible to specify for dynamic tasks. To address this, we introduce Goal Force, a novel framework that allows users to define goals via explicit force vectors and intermediate dynamics, mirroring how humans conceptualize physical tasks. We train a video generation model on a curated dataset of synthetic causal primitives-such as elastic collisions and falling dominos-teaching it to propagate forces through time and space. Despite being trained on simple physics data, our model exhibits remarkable zero-shot generalization to complex, real-world scenarios, including tool manipulation and multi-object causal chains. Our results suggest that by grounding video generation in fundamental physical interactions, models can emerge as implicit neural physics simulators, enabling precise, physics-aware planning without reliance on external engines. We release all datasets, code, model weights, and interactive video demos at our project page.
comment: Camera ready version (CVPR 2026). Code and interactive demos at https://goal-force.github.io/
♻ ☆ MatSegNet: a New Boundary-aware Deep Learning Model for Accurate Carbide Precipitate Analysis in High-Strength Steels
Lower Bainite (LB) and Tempered Martensite (TM) are two common microstructures in modern high-strength steels. LB and TM can render similar mechanical properties for steels, yet LB is often considered superior to TM in resistance to hydrogen embrittlement. Such performance difference has conventionally been attributed to their distinction in certain microstructural features, particularly carbides. The present study developed, MatSegNet, a new contour-aware deep learning (DL) architecture. It is tailored for comprehensive segmentation and quantitative characterization of carbide precipitates with complex contours in high-strength steels, shown to outperform existing state-of-the-art DL architectures. Based on MatSegNet, a high-throughput DL pipeline has been established for precise comparative carbide analysis in LB and TM. The results showed that statistically the two microstructures exhibit similarity in key carbide characteristics with marginal difference, cautioning against the conventional use of carbide orientation as a reliable means to differentiate LB and TM in practice. Through MatSegNet, this work demonstrated the potential of DL to play a critical role in enabling accurate and quantitative microstructure characterization to facilitate development of structure-property relationships for accelerating materials innovation.
♻ ☆ DifAttack++: Query-Efficient Black-Box Adversarial Attack via Hierarchical Disentangled Feature Space in Cross-Domain AAAI24
This work investigates efficient score-based black-box adversarial attacks with a high Attack Success Rate (\textbf{ASR}) and good generalizability. We design a novel attack method based on a hierarchical DIsentangled Feature space, called \textbf{DifAttack++}, which differs significantly from the existing ones operating over the entire feature space. Specifically, DifAttack++ firstly disentangles an image's latent feature into an Adversarial Feature (\textbf{AF}) and a Visual Feature (\textbf{VF}) via an autoencoder equipped with our specially designed Hierarchical Decouple-Fusion (\textbf{HDF}) module, where the AF dominates the adversarial capability of an image, while the VF largely determines its visual appearance. We train such two autoencoders for the clean and adversarial image domains (i.e., cross-domain) respectively to achieve image reconstructions and feature disentanglement, by using pairs of clean images and their Adversarial Examples (\textbf{AE}s) generated from available surrogate models via white-box attack methods. Eventually, in the black-box attack stage, DifAttack++ iteratively optimizes the AF according to the query feedback from the victim model until a successful AE is generated, while keeping the VF unaltered. Extensive experimental results demonstrate that our DifAttack++ leads to superior ASR and query efficiency than state-of-the-art methods, meanwhile exhibiting much better visual quality of AEs. The code is available at https://github.com/csjunjun/DifAttack.git.
comment: arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:2309.14585 An extension of the AAAI24 paper "DifAttack: Query-Efficient Black-Box Attack via Disentangled Feature Space."
♻ ☆ TPCL: Task Progressive Curriculum Learning for Robust Visual Question Answering
Visual Question Answering (VQA) systems are notoriously brittle under distribution shifts and data scarcity. While previous solutions-such as ensemble methods and data augmentation-can improve performance in isolation, they fail to generalise well across in-distribution (IID), out-of-distribution (OOD), and low-data settings simultaneously. We argue that this limitation stems from the suboptimal training strategies employed. Specifically, treating all training samples uniformly-without accounting for question difficulty or semantic structure-leaves the models vulnerable to dataset biases. Thus, they struggle to generalise beyond the training distribution. To address this issue, we introduce Task-Progressive Curriculum Learning (TPCL)-a simple, model-agnostic framework that progressively trains VQA models using a curriculum built by jointly considering question type and difficulty. Specifically, TPCL first groups questions based on their semantic type (e.g., yes/no, counting) and then orders them using a novel Optimal Transport-based difficulty measure. Without relying on data augmentation or explicit debiasing, TPCL improves generalisation across IID, OOD, and low-data regimes and achieves state-of-the-art performance on VQA-CP v2, VQA-CP v1, and VQA v2. It outperforms the most competitive robust VQA baselines by over 5% and 7% on VQA-CP v2 and v1, respectively, and boosts backbone performance by up to 28.5%.
comment: Our source code is available at https://github.com/AhmedAAkl/tpcl
♻ ☆ What "Not" to Detect: Negation-Aware VLMs via Structured Reasoning and Token Merging
State-of-the-art vision-language models (VLMs) suffer from a critical failure in understanding negation, often referred to as affirmative bias. This limitation is particularly severe in described object detection (DOD) tasks. To address this, we propose two primary contributions: (1) a new dataset pipeline and (2) a novel, lightweight adaptation recipe. First, we introduce CoVAND, a dataset constructed with a systematic chain-of-thought (CoT) and VQA-based pipeline to generate high-quality, instance-grounded negation data. Second, we propose NegToMe, a novel text token merging module that directly tackles the architectural cause of affirmative bias. NegToMe fundamentally addresses the structural loss of negation cues in tokenization, grouping them with attributes into coherent semantic phrases. It maintains correct polarity at the input level, enabling robust negation understanding even with limited data. For instance, to prevent a model from treating the fragmented tokens "not" and "girl" as simply "girl", NegToMe binds them into a single token whose meaning is correctly distinguished from that of "girl" alone. This module is integrated with a parameter-efficient and strategic LoRA fine-tuning approach. Our method significantly improves performance on challenging negation benchmarks with a lowered false positive rate, boosting NMS-AP by up to +10.8 points on OVDEval and demonstrating generalization to SoTA VLMs. This work marks a crucial step forward in addressing negation understanding for real-world detection applications.
comment: 56 pages
♻ ☆ 3DSceneEditor: Controllable 3D Scene Editing with Gaussian Splatting WACV 2026
The creation of 3D scenes has traditionally been both labor-intensive and costly, requiring designers to meticulously configure 3D assets and environments. Recent advancements in generative AI, including text-to-3D and image-to-3D methods, have dramatically reduced the complexity and cost of this process. However, current techniques for editing complex 3D scenes continue to rely on generally interactive multi-step, 2D-to-3D projection methods and diffusion-based techniques, which often lack precision in control and hamper interactive-rate performance. In this work, we propose ***3DSceneEditor***, a fully 3D-based paradigm for interactive-rate, precise editing of intricate 3D scenes using Gaussian Splatting. Unlike conventional methods, 3DSceneEditor operates through a streamlined 3D pipeline, enabling direct Gaussian-based manipulation for efficient, high-quality edits based on input prompts. The proposed framework (i) integrates a pre-trained instance segmentation model for semantic labeling; (ii) employs a zero-shot grounding approach with CLIP to align target objects with user prompts; and (iii) applies scene modifications, such as object addition, repositioning, recoloring, replacing, and removal--directly on Gaussians. Extensive experimental results show that 3DSceneEditor surpasses existing state-of-the-art techniques in terms of both editing precision and efficiency, establishing a new benchmark for efficient and interactive 3D scene customization.
comment: Accepted by WACV 2026, Project Page: https://ziyangyan.github.io/3DSceneEditor
♻ ☆ Gen3R: 3D Scene Generation Meets Feed-Forward Reconstruction
We present Gen3R, a method that bridges the strong priors of foundational reconstruction models and video diffusion models for scene-level 3D generation. We repurpose the VGGT reconstruction model to produce geometric latents by training an adapter on its tokens, which are regularized to align with the appearance latents of pre-trained video diffusion models. By jointly generating these disentangled yet aligned latents, Gen3R produces both RGB videos and corresponding 3D geometry, including camera poses, depth maps, and global point clouds. Experiments demonstrate that our approach achieves state-of-the-art results in single- and multi-image conditioned 3D scene generation. Additionally, our method can enhance the robustness of reconstruction by leveraging generative priors, demonstrating the mutual benefit of tightly coupling reconstruction and generative models.
comment: Project page: https://xdimlab.github.io/Gen3R/
♻ ☆ Real-Time Long Horizon Air Quality Forecasting via Group-Relative Policy Optimization
Accurate long horizon forecasting of particulate matter (PM) concentration fields is essential for operational public health decisions. However, achieving reliable forecasts remains challenging in regions with complex terrain and strong atmospheric dynamics such as East Asia. While foundation models such as Aurora offer global generality, they often miss region-specific dynamics and rely on non-real-time inputs, limiting their practical utility for localized warning systems. To address this gap, we construct and release the real-world observations and high-resolution CMAQ-OBS dataset for East Asia, reducing regional error by 59.5% and enabling real-time 48-120 hour forecasts critical for public health alerts. However, standard point-wise objectives cannot reflect asymmetric operational costs, where false alarms deteriorate public trust while missed severe events endanger populations. This cost mismatch causes SFT models to over-predict and yield high False Alarm Rates. We introduce Group-Relative Policy Optimization (GRPO) with class-wise rewards and curriculum rollout to align predictions with operational priorities. Experimental results demonstrate that our framework significantly improves the reliability of the forecast. Compared to the SFT-only baseline, our model reduces the False Alarm Rate by 47.3% while achieving a competitive F1-score, proving its effectiveness for practical, real-world air quality forecasting systems on long lead time scenarios. Code and dataset are publicly available at https://github.com/kaist-cvml/FAKER-Air.
comment: 31 pages
♻ ☆ Reasoning-Aligned Perception Decoupling for Scalable Multi-modal Reasoning ICLR 2026
Recent breakthroughs in reasoning language models have significantly advanced text-based reasoning. On the other hand, Multi-modal Large Language Models (MLLMs) still lag behind, hindered by their outdated internal LLMs. Upgrading these LLMs is often prohibitively expensive, as it requires costly vision-language alignment retraining. To address this issue, we introduce Perception-Reasoning Decoupling, which modularizes the MLLM's reasoning component and makes it easily replaceable. This approach redefines the MLLM's role to convert multi-modal inputs into detailed textual outputs that can be processed by any powerful, external, text-only LLM reasoners. To align the MLLM's perceptual output with the final reasoning task, we propose a novel reinforcement learning algorithm called Visual Perception Optimization (VPO). VPO rewards the MLLM based on the correctness of answers generated by the external reasoner to produce faithful and query-relevant captions. Together, this decoupling pipeline and VPO form our Reasoning-Aligned PerceptIon Decoupling (RAPID) approach. Empirical results show that RAPID achieves significant performance gains on multi-modal reasoning benchmarks. Crucially, RAPID enables a novel inference-time scaling paradigm: Once trained with VPO, the MLLM can be paired with any state-of-the-art LLM reasoner for consistent performance improvement without retraining.
comment: ICLR 2026
♻ ☆ SCAIL: Towards Studio-Grade Character Animation via In-Context Learning of 3D-Consistent Pose Representations
Achieving controllable character animation that meets studio-grade standards remains challenging despite recent progress. Existing approaches can transfer motion from a driving video to a reference image, but often fail to preserve structural fidelity and temporal consistency in wild scenarios involving complex motion and cross-identity animations. In this work, we present \textbf{SCAIL} (a framework toward \textbf{S}tudio-grade \textbf{C}haracter \textbf{A}nimation via \textbf{I}n-context \textbf{L}earning), which is designed to address these challenges from two key innovations. First, we propose a novel 3D pose representation, providing a robust and flexible motion signal. Second, we introduce a full-context pose injection mechanism within a diffusion-transformer, enabling effective spatio-temporal reasoning over full motion sequences. To align with studio-grade requirements, we develop a curated data pipeline ensuring both diversity and quality, and establish a comprehensive benchmark for systematic evaluation. Experiments show that \textbf{SCAIL} achieves state-of-the-art performance and advances character animation toward studio-grade controlling. Code and model are available at \href{https://github.com/zai-org/SCAIL}{zai-org/SCAIL}.
♻ ☆ UAVLight: A Benchmark for Illumination-Robust 3D Reconstruction in Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (UAV) Scenes
Illumination inconsistency is a fundamental challenge in multi-view 3D reconstruction. Variations in sunlight direction, cloud cover, and shadows break the constant-lighting assumption underlying both classical multi-view stereo (MVS) and structure from motion (SfM) pipelines and recent neural rendering methods, leading to geometry drift, color inconsistency, and shadow imprinting. This issue is especially critical in UAV-based reconstruction, where long flight durations and outdoor environments make lighting changes unavoidable. However, existing datasets either restrict capture to short time windows, thus lacking meaningful illumination diversity, or span months and seasons, where geometric and semantic changes confound the isolated study of lighting robustness. We introduce UAVLight, a controlled-yet-real benchmark for illumination-robust 3D reconstruction. Each scene is captured along repeatable, geo-referenced flight paths at multiple fixed times of day, producing natural lighting variation under consistent geometry, calibration, and viewpoints. With standardized evaluation protocols across lighting conditions, UAVLight provides a reliable foundation for developing and benchmarking reconstruction methods that are consistent, faithful, and relightable in real outdoor environments.
comment: 10 pages, 6 figures
♻ ☆ Understanding Temporal Logic Consistency in Video-Language Models through Cross-Modal Attention Discriminability CVPR 2026
Large language models (LLMs) often generate self-contradictory outputs, which severely impacts their reliability and hinders their adoption in practical applications. In video-language models (Video-LLMs), this phenomenon recently draws the attention of researchers. Specifically, these models fail to provide logically consistent responses to rephrased questions based on their grounding outputs. However, the underlying causes of this phenomenon remain underexplored. In this work, we adopt an interpretability-driven approach to analyze, statistically summarize, and intervention the potential factors of the phenomenon. We find that one of the primary reasons for the inconsistency in responses lies in the inability of cross-modal attention heads to effectively distinguish video tokens across different timestamps. To address this, we propose an attention enhancement method called Temporally Conditioned Attention Sharpening (TCAS), which constructs an enhancement objective based on attention distinctions to enhance the model's temporal resolution capability, thereby improving its temporal understanding logic consistency. Experimental results demonstrate that our method significantly enhances the temporal logic consistency of Video-LLMs. Further analyses reveal that our method indeed improves the temporal discriminability of attention heads, validating our conclusions. Additionally, our method even achieves performance improvements in general video temporal grounding tasks, suggesting that temporal logic consistency is an important factor in temporal understanding.
comment: Accepted by CVPR 2026
♻ ☆ SelfMOTR: Revisiting MOTR with Self-Generating Detection Priors
End-to-end transformer architectures have driven significant progress in multi-object tracking by unifying detection and association into a single, heuristic-free framework. Despite these benefits, poor detection performance and the inherent conflict between detection and association in a joint architecture remain critical concerns. Recent approaches aim to mitigate these issues by employing advanced denoising or label assignment strategies, or by incorporating detection priors from external object detectors. In this paper, we propose SelfMOTR, a simple yet highly effective detector-free alternative that decouples proposal discovery from association using self-generated internal detection priors. Through extensive analysis and ablation studies, we show that end-to-end transformer trackers with joint detection-association decoding retain substantial hidden detection capacity, and we provide a practical detector-free mechanism for leveraging it. To shed light on these joint decoding dynamics, we draw inspiration from attention sink analyses in large language models, leveraging Track Attention Mass to show that standard generic queries exhibit unbalanced attention, frequently struggling to weigh track context against novel object discovery. SelfMOTR achieves highly competitive performance in complex, dynamic environments, yielding 69.2 HOTA on DanceTrack and leading with 71.1 HOTA on the Bird Flock Tracking (BFT) dataset. Project page: https://medem23.github.io/SM
comment: 18 pages, 7 figures, 7 tables
♻ ☆ Thalia: A Global, Multi-Modal Dataset for Volcanic Activity Monitoring
Monitoring volcanic activity is of paramount importance to safeguarding lives, infrastructure, and ecosystems. However, only a small fraction of known volcanoes are continuously monitored. Satellite-based Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar (InSAR) enables systematic, global-scale deformation monitoring. However, its complex data challenge traditional remote sensing methods. Deep learning offers a powerful means to automate and enhance InSAR interpretation, advancing volcanology and geohazard assessment. Despite its promise, progress has been limited by the scarcity of well-curated datasets. In this work, we build on the existing Hephaestus dataset and introduce Thalia, addressing crucial limitations and enriching its scope with higher-resolution, multi-source, and multi-temporal data. Thalia is a global collection of 38 spatiotemporal datacubes covering 7 years and integrating InSAR products, topographic data, as well as atmospheric variables, known to introduce signal delays that can mimic ground deformation in InSAR imagery. Each sample includes expert annotations detailing the type, intensity, and extent of deformation, accompanied by descriptive text. To enable fair and consistent evaluation, we provide a comprehensive benchmark using state-of-the-art models for classification and segmentation. This work fosters collaboration between machine learning and Earth science, advancing volcanic monitoring and promoting data-driven approaches in geoscience. See https://github.com/Orion-AI-Lab/Thalia
♻ ☆ SAGE: Shape-Adapting Gated Experts for Adaptive Histopathology Image Segmentation
The significant variability in cell size and shape continues to pose a major obstacle in computer-assisted cancer detection on gigapixel Whole Slide Images (WSIs), due to cellular heterogeneity. Current CNN-Transformer hybrids use static computation graphs with fixed routing. This leads to extra computation and makes it harder to adapt to changes in input. We propose Shape-Adapting Gated Experts (SAGE), an input-adaptive framework that enables dynamic expert routing in heterogeneous visual networks. SAGE reconfigures static backbones into dynamically routed expert architectures via a dual-path design with hierarchical gating and a Shape-Adapting Hub (SA-Hub) that harmonizes feature representations across convolutional and transformer modules. Embodied as SAGE with ConvNeXt and Vision Transformer UNet (SAGE-ConvNeXt+ViT-UNet), our model achieves a Dice score of 95.23\% on EBHI, 92.78\%/91.42\% DSC on GlaS Test A/Test B, and 91.26\% DSC at the WSI level on DigestPath, while exhibiting robust generalization under distribution shifts by adaptively balancing local refinement and global context. SAGE establishes a scalable foundation for dynamic expert routing in visual networks, thereby facilitating flexible visual reasoning.
♻ ☆ Tiny Neural Networks for Multi-Object Tracking in a Modular Kalman Framework
We present a modular, production-ready approach that integrates compact Neural Network (NN) into a Kalmanfilter-based Multi-Object Tracking (MOT) pipeline. We design three tiny task-specific networks to retain modularity, interpretability and eal-time suitability for embedded Automotive Driver Assistance Systems: (i) SPENT (Single-Prediction Network) - predicts per-track states and replaces heuristic motion models used by the Kalman Filter (KF). (ii) SANT (Single-Association Network) - assigns a single incoming sensor object to existing tracks, without relying on heuristic distance and association metrics. (iii) MANTa (Multi-Association Network) - jointly associates multiple sensor objects to multiple tracks in a single step. Each module has less than 50k trainable parameters. Furthermore, all three can be operated in real-time, are trained from tracking data, and expose modular interfaces so they can be integrated with standard Kalman-filter state updates and track management. This makes them drop-in compatible with many existing trackers. Modularity is ensured, as each network can be trained and evaluated independently of the others. Our evaluation on the KITTI tracking benchmark shows that SPENT reduces prediction RMSE by more than 50% compared to a standard Kalman filter, while SANT and MANTa achieve up to 95% assignment accuracy. These results demonstrate that small, task-specific neural modules can substantially improve tracking accuracy and robustness without sacrificing modularity, interpretability, or the real-time constraints required for automotive deployment.
♻ ☆ EZ-SP: Fast and Lightweight Superpoint-Based 3D Segmentation ICRA 2026
Superpoint-based pipelines provide an efficient alternative to point- or voxel-based 3D semantic segmentation, but are often bottlenecked by their CPU-bound partition step. We propose a learnable, fully GPU partitioning algorithm that generates geometrically and semantically coherent superpoints 13$\times$ faster than prior methods. Our module is compact (under 60k parameters), trains in under 20 minutes with a differentiable surrogate loss, and requires no handcrafted features. Combine with a lightweight superpoint classifier, the full pipeline fits in $<$2 MB of VRAM, scales to multi-million-point scenes, and supports real-time inference. With 72$\times$ faster inference and 120$\times$ fewer parameters, EZ-SP matches the accuracy of point-based SOTA models across three domains: indoor scans (S3DIS), autonomous driving (KITTI-360), and aerial LiDAR (DALES). Code and pretrained models are accessible at github.com/drprojects/superpoint_transformer.
comment: Accepted at ICRA 2026. Camera-ready version with Appendix
♻ ☆ LEO-VL: Efficient Scene Representation for Scalable 3D Vision-Language Learning
Developing vision-language models (VLMs) capable of understanding 3D scenes has been a longstanding research goal. Despite recent progress, 3D VLMs still struggle with spatial reasoning and robustness. We identify three key obstacles hindering their progress: (1) scene representation is constrained by a capacity-efficiency trade-off, which impedes scalable learning; (2) training data lacks a comprehensive scheme, with limited diversity across tasks and scene domains; and (3) models exhibit robustness deficiencies and lack effective post-training. To address these challenges, we first propose condensed feature grid (CFG), an efficient scene representation that significantly reduces token overhead while preserving strong perceptual capacity. Building on CFG, we introduce LEO-VL, a 3D VLM trained on over 700k 3D vision-language (3D-VL) data spanning four real-world indoor domains and five tasks such as captioning and dialogue. To further improve robustness, we propose SceneDPO, a novel post-training objective that incorporates contrastive signals across both answers and scenes. LEO-VL achieves state-of-the-art performance on various 3D-VL benchmarks, such as SQA3D, Beacon3D, and Scan2Cap. Extensive analyses highlight the efficiency of CFG and provide key insights such as the importance of task and scene diversity, the priority of data quality for effective scaling, and the advantages of SceneDPO.
comment: Project page: https://leo-vl.github.io
♻ ☆ IDSplat: Instance-Decomposed 3D Gaussian Splatting for Driving Scenes
Reconstructing dynamic driving scenes is essential for developing autonomous systems through sensor-realistic simulation. Although recent methods achieve high-fidelity reconstructions, they either rely on costly human annotations for object trajectories or use time-varying representations without explicit object-level decomposition, leading to intertwined static and dynamic elements that hinder scene separation. We present IDSplat, a self-supervised 3D Gaussian Splatting framework that reconstructs dynamic scenes with explicit instance decomposition and learnable motion trajectories, without requiring human annotations. Our key insight is to model dynamic objects as coherent instances undergoing rigid transformations, rather than unstructured time-varying primitives. For instance decomposition, we employ zero-shot, language-grounded video tracking anchored to 3D using lidar, and estimate consistent poses via feature correspondences. We introduce a coordinated-turn smoothing scheme to obtain temporally and physically consistent motion trajectories, mitigating pose misalignments and tracking failures, followed by joint optimization of object poses and Gaussian parameters. Experiments on the Waymo Open Dataset demonstrate that our method achieves competitive reconstruction quality while maintaining instance-level decomposition and generalizes across diverse sequences and view densities without retraining, making it practical for large-scale autonomous driving applications. Code will be released.
♻ ☆ From Synthetic Scenes to Real Performance: Enhancing Spatial Reasoning in VLMs
Fine-tuning Vision-Language Models (VLMs) is a common strategy to improve performance following an ad-hoc data collection and annotation of real-world scenes. However, this process is often prone to biases, errors, and distribution imbalance, resulting in overfitting and imbalanced performance. Although a few studies have tried to address this problem by generating synthetic data, they lacked control over distribution bias and annotation quality. To address these challenges, we redesign the fine-tuning process in two ways. First, we control the generation of data and its annotations, ensuring it is free from bias, distribution imbalance, and annotation errors. We automatically construct the dataset by comprehensively sampling objects' attributes, including color, shape, size, and position within the scene. Secondly, using this annotated dataset, we fine-tune state-of-the-art VLMs and assess performance transferability to real-world data on the absolute position task. We conduct exhaustive evaluations on both synthetic and real-world benchmarks. Our experiments reveal two key findings: 1) fine-tuning on balanced synthetic data yields uniform performance across the visual scene and mitigates common biases; and 2) fine-tuning on synthetic stimuli improves performance by 13% on real-world data (COCO), outperforming models fine-tuned on the full COCO train set.
♻ ☆ Interpretable Deep Learning Framework for Improved Disease Classification in Medical Imaging
Deep learning models have gained increasing adoption in medical image analysis. However, these models often produce overconfident predictions, which can compromise clinical accuracy and reliability. Bridging the gap between high-performance and awareness of uncertainty remains a crucial challenge in biomedical imaging applications. This study focuses on developing a unified deep learning framework for enhancing feature integration, interpretability, and reliability in prediction. We introduced a cross-guided channel spatial attention architecture that fuses feature representations extracted from EfficientNetB4 and ResNet34. Bidirectional attention approach enables the exchange of information across networks with differing receptive fields, enhancing discriminative and contextual feature learning. For quantitative predictive uncertainty assessment, Monte Carlo (MC)-Dropout is integrated with conformal prediction. This provides statistically valid prediction sets with entropy-based uncertainty visualization. The framework is evaluated on four medical imaging benchmark datasets: chest X-rays of COVID-19, Tuberculosis, Pneumonia, and retinal Optical Coherence Tomography (OCT) images. The proposed framework achieved strong classification performance with an AUC of 99.75% for COVID-19, 100% for Tuberculosis, 99.3% for Pneumonia chest X-rays, and 98.69% for retinal OCT images. Uncertainty-aware inference yields calibrated prediction sets with interpretable examples of uncertainty, showing transparency. The results demonstrate that bidirectional cross-attention with uncertainty quantification can improve performance and transparency in medical image classification.
comment: 18 pages, 8 figures, 5 tables
♻ ☆ GenAI-DrawIO-Creator: A Framework for Automated Diagram Generation
Diagrams are crucial for communicating complex information, yet creating and modifying them remains a labor-intensive task. We present GenAI-DrawIO-Creator, a novel framework that leverages Large Language Models (LLMs) to automate diagram generation and manipulation in the structured XML format used by draw.io. Our system integrates Claude 3.7 to reason about structured visual data and produce valid diagram representations. Key contributions include a high-level system design enabling real-time diagram updates, specialized prompt engineering and error-checking to ensure well-formed XML outputs. We demonstrate a working prototype capable of generating accurate diagrams (such as network architectures and flowcharts) from natural language or code, and even replicating diagrams from images. Simulated evaluations show that our approach significantly reduces diagram creation time and produces outputs with high structural fidelity. Our results highlight the promise of Claude 3.7 in handling structured visual reasoning tasks and lay the groundwork for future research in AI-assisted diagramming applications.
♻ ☆ Leveraging Multispectral Sensors for Color Correction in Mobile Cameras CVPR 2026
Recent advances in snapshot multispectral (MS) imaging have enabled compact, low-cost spectral sensors for consumer and mobile devices. By capturing richer spectral information than conventional RGB sensors, these systems can enhance key imaging tasks, including color correction. However, most existing methods treat the color correction pipeline in separate stages, often discarding MS data early in the process. We propose a unified, learning-based framework that performs end-to-end color correction and jointly leverages data from a high-resolution RGB sensor and an auxiliary low-resolution MS sensor. Our approach integrates the full pipeline within a single model, producing coherent and color-accurate outputs. We demonstrate the flexibility and generality of our framework by refactoring two different state-of-the-art image-to-image architectures. To support training and evaluation, we construct a dedicated dataset by aggregating and repurposing publicly available spectral datasets, rendering under multiple RGB camera sensitivities. Extensive experiments show that our approach improves color accuracy and stability, reducing error by up to 50% compared to RGB-only and MS-driven baselines. Code, models and dataset available at: https://lucacogo.github.io/Mobile-Spectral-CC/.
comment: Accepted to CVPR 2026. Camera-ready version
♻ ☆ Feature Recalibration Based Olfactory-Visual Multimodal Model for Enhanced Rice Deterioration Detection
Multimodal methods are widely used in rice deterioration detection, but they exhibit limited capability in representing and extracting fine-grained abnormal features. Moreover, these methods rely on devices such as hyperspectral cameras and mass spectrometers, which increase detection costs and prolong data acquisition time. To address these issues, we propose a feature recalibration based olfactory-visual multimodal model for enhanced rice deterioration detection. A fine-grained deterioration embedding constructor (FDEC) is proposed to reconstruct the labeled multimodal embedded feature dataset, thereby enhancing sample representation. A fine-grained deterioration recalibration attention network (FDRA-Net) is proposed to emphasize signal variations and improve sensitivity to fine-grained deterioration on the rice surface. Compared with SS-Net, the proposed method improves classification accuracy by 8.67%, with an average improvement of 11.51% over other traditional baseline models, while simultaneously simplifying the detection procedure. Furthermore, field detection results demonstrate advantages in both accuracy and operational simplicity. The proposed method can also be extended to other agrifood applications in agriculture and the food industry.
♻ ☆ Denoise to Track: Harnessing Video Diffusion Priors for Robust Correspondence
In this work, we introduce HeFT (Head-Frequency Tracker), a zero-shot point tracking framework that leverages the visual priors of pretrained video diffusion models. To better understand how they encode spatiotemporal information, we analyze the internal representations of Video Diffusion Transformer (VDiT). Our analysis reveals that attention heads act as minimal functional units with distinct specializations for matching, semantic understanding, and positional encoding. Additionally, we find that the low-frequency components in VDiT features are crucial for establishing correspondences, whereas the high-frequency components tend to introduce noise. Building on these insights, we propose a head- and frequency-aware feature selection strategy that jointly selects the most informative attention head and low-frequency components to enhance tracking performance. Specifically, our method extracts discriminative features through single-step denoising, applies feature selection, and employs soft-argmax localization with forward-backward consistency checks for correspondence estimation. Extensive experiments on TAP-Vid benchmarks demonstrate that HeFT achieves state-of-the-art zero-shot tracking performance, approaching the accuracy of supervised methods while eliminating the need for annotated training data. Our work further underscores the promise of video diffusion models as powerful foundation models for a wide range of downstream tasks, paving the way toward unified visual foundation models.
♻ ☆ Audio-sync Video Instance Editing with Granularity-Aware Mask Refiner
Recent advancements in video generation highlight that realistic audio-visual synchronization is crucial for engaging content creation. However, existing video editing methods largely overlook audio-visual synchronization and lack the fine-grained spatial and temporal controllability required for precise instance-level edits. In this paper, we propose AVI-Edit, a framework for audio-sync video instance editing. We propose a granularity-aware mask refiner that iteratively refines coarse user-provided masks into precise instance-level regions. We further design a self-feedback audio agent to curate high-quality audio guidance, providing fine-grained temporal control. To facilitate this task, we additionally construct a large-scale dataset with instance-centric correspondence and comprehensive annotations. Extensive experiments demonstrate that AVI-Edit outperforms state-of-the-art methods in visual quality, condition following, and audio-visual synchronization. Project page: https://hjzheng.net/projects/AVI-Edit/.
♻ ☆ PoseMaster: A Unified 3D Native Framework for Stylized Pose Generation CVPR 2026
Pose stylization, which aims to synthesize stylized content aligning with target poses, serves as a fundamental task across 2D, 3D, and video domains. In the 3D realm, prevailing approaches typically rely on a cascade pipeline: first manipulating the image pose via 2D foundation models and subsequently lifting it into 3D representations. However, this paradigm limits the precision and diversity of the 3d pose stylization. To this end, we propose a novel paradigm for 3D pose stylization that unifies pose stylization and 3D generation within a cohesive framework. This integration minimizes the risk of cumulative errors and enhances the model's efficiency and effectiveness. In addition, diverging from previous works that typically utilize 2D skeleton images as guidance, we directly utilize the 3D skeleton because it can provide a more accurate representation of 3D spatial and topological relationships, which significantly enhances the model's capacity to achieve richer and more precise pose stylization. Moreover, we develop a scalable data engine to construct a large-scale dataset of ''Image-Skeleton-Mesh'' triplets, enabling the model to jointly learn identity preservation and geometric alignment. Extensive experiments demonstrate that PoseMaster significantly outperforms state-of-the-art methods in both qualitative and quantitative metrics. Owing to the strict spatial alignment between the generated 3D meshes and the conditioning skeletons, PoseMaster enables the direct creation of animatable assets when coupled with automated skinning models, highlighting its compelling potential for automated character rigging.
comment: Accepted by CVPR 2026
♻ ☆ Nuanced Emotion Recognition Based on a Segment-based MLLM Framework Leveraging Qwen3-Omni for AH Detection
Emotion recognition in videos is a pivotal task in affective computing, where identifying subtle psychological states such as Ambivalence and Hesitancy holds significant value for behavioral intervention and digital health. Ambivalence and Hesitancy states often manifest through cross-modal inconsistencies such as discrepancies between facial expressions, vocal tones, and textual semantics, posing a substantial challenge for automated recognition. This paper proposes a recognition framework that integrates temporal segment modeling with Multimodal Large Language Models. To address computational efficiency and token constraints in long video processing, we employ a segment-based strategy, partitioning videos into short clips with a maximum duration of 5 seconds. We leverage the Qwen3-Omni-30B-A3B model, fine-tuned on the BAH dataset using LoRA and full-parameter strategies via the MS-Swift framework, enabling the model to synergistically analyze visual and auditory signals. Experimental results demonstrate that the proposed method achieves an accuracy of 85.1% on the test set, significantly outperforming existing benchmarks and validating the superior capability of Multimodal Large Language Models in capturing complex and nuanced emotional conflicts. The code is released at https://github.com/dlnn123/A-H-Detection-with-Qwen-Omni.git.
comment: 5 pages, 1 figures
♻ ☆ 2K Retrofit: Entropy-Guided Efficient Sparse Refinement for High-Resolution 3D Geometry Prediction
High-resolution geometric prediction is essential for robust perception in autonomous driving, robotics, and AR/MR, but current foundation models are fundamentally limited by their scalability to real-world, high-resolution scenarios. Direct inference on 2K images with these models incurs prohibitive computational and memory demands, making practical deployment challenging. To tackle the issue, we present 2K Retrofit, a novel framework that enables efficient 2K-resolution inference for any geometric foundation model, without modifying or retraining the backbone. Our approach leverages fast coarse predictions and an entropy-based sparse refinement to selectively enhance high-uncertainty regions, achieving precise and high-fidelity 2K outputs with minimal overhead. Extensive experiments on widely used benchmark demonstrate that 2K Retrofit consistently achieves state-of-the-art accuracy and speed, bridging the gap between research advances and scalable deployment in high-resolution 3D vision applications. Code will be released upon acceptance.
comment: 15pages
♻ ☆ UniDrive-WM: Unified Understanding, Planning and Generation World Model For Autonomous Driving
World models have become central to autonomous driving, where accurate scene understanding and future prediction are crucial for safe control. Recent work has explored using vision-language models (VLMs) for planning, yet existing approaches typically treat perception, prediction, and planning as separate modules. We propose UniDrive-WM, a unified VLM-based world model that jointly performs driving-scene understanding, trajectory planning, and trajectory-conditioned future image generation within a single architecture. UniDrive-WM's trajectory planner predicts a future trajectory, which conditions a VLM-based image generator to produce plausible future frames. These predictions provide additional supervisory signals that enhance scene understanding and iteratively refine trajectory generation. We further compare discrete and continuous output representations for future image prediction, analyzing their influence on downstream driving performance. Experiments on the challenging Bench2Drive benchmark show that UniDrive-WM produces high-fidelity future images and improves planning performance by 7.3% in L2 trajectory error and 10.4% in collision rate over the previous best method. These results demonstrate the advantages of tightly integrating VLM-driven reasoning, planning, and generative world modeling for autonomous driving. The project page is available at https://unidrive-wm.github.io/UniDrive-WM.
comment: Project Page: https://unidrive-wm.github.io/UniDrive-WM
♻ ☆ Scene Prior Filtering for Depth Super-Resolution
Multi-modal fusion serves as a cornerstone for successful depth map super-resolution. However, commonly used fusion strategies, such as addition and concatenation, fall short of effectively bridging the modal gap. As a result, guided image filtering methods have been introduced to mitigate this issue. Nevertheless, it is observed that their filter kernels usually encounter significant texture interference and edge inaccuracy. To tackle these two challenges, we introduce a Scene Prior Filtering network, SPFNet, which utilizes the priors' surface normal and semantic map from large-scale models. Specifically, we propose an All-in-one Prior Propagation that computes similarity between multi-modal scene priors, i.e., RGB, normal, semantic, and depth, to reduce the texture interference. Besides, we design a One-to-one Prior Embedding that continuously embeds every single modal prior into depth using Mutual Guided Filtering, further alleviating texture interference while enhancing edge representations. Our SPFNet has been extensively evaluated on both real-world and synthetic datasets, achieving state-of-the-art performance.
comment: Accepted to IJCV 2026
♻ ☆ Backpropagation-Free Test-Time Adaptation via Probabilistic Gaussian Alignment
Test-time adaptation (TTA) enhances the zero-shot robustness under distribution shifts by leveraging unlabeled test data during inference. Despite notable advances, several challenges still limit its broader applicability. First, most methods rely on backpropagation or iterative optimization, which limits scalability and hinders real-time deployment. Second, they lack explicit modeling of class-conditional feature distributions. This modeling is crucial for producing reliable decision boundaries and calibrated predictions, but it remains underexplored due to the lack of both source data and supervision at test time. In this paper, we propose ADAPT, an Advanced Distribution-Aware and backPropagation-free Test-time adaptation method. We reframe TTA as a Gaussian probabilistic inference task by modeling class-conditional likelihoods using gradually updated class means and a shared covariance matrix. This enables closed-form, training-free inference. To correct potential likelihood bias, we introduce lightweight regularization guided by CLIP priors and a historical knowledge bank. ADAPT requires no source data, no gradient updates, and no full access to target data, supporting both online and transductive settings. Extensive experiments across diverse benchmarks demonstrate that our method achieves state-of-the-art performance under a wide range of distribution shifts with superior scalability and robustness.
♻ ☆ WiFi-GEN: High-Resolution Indoor Imaging from WiFi Signals Using Generative AI
Indoor imaging is a critical task for robotics and internet-ofthings. WiFi as an omnipresent signal is a promising candidate for carrying out passive imaging and synchronizing the up-to-date information to all connected devices. This is the first research work to consider WiFi indoor imaging as a multi-modal image generation task that converts the measured WiFi power into a high-resolution indoor image. Our proposedWiFi-GEN network achieves a shape reconstruction accuracy that is 275% of that achieved by physical model-based inversion methods. Additionally, the Frechet Inception Distance score has been significantly reduced by 82%. To examine the effectiveness of models for this task, the first large-scale dataset is released containing 80,000 pairs of WiFi signal and imaging target. Our model absorbs challenges for the model-based methods including the nonlinearity, ill-posedness and non-certainty into massive parameters of our generative AI network. The network is also designed to best fit measured WiFi signals and the desired imaging output. Code: https://github.com/CNFightingSjy/WiFiGEN
♻ ☆ LoGoColor: Local-Global 3D Colorization for 360° Scenes
Single-channel 3D reconstruction is widely used in fields such as robotics and medical imaging. While these methods are good at reconstructing 3D geometry, their outputs are typically uncolored 3D models, making 3D colorization necessary for visualization. Recent 3D colorization studies address this problem by distilling 2D image colorization models. However, these approaches suffer from an inherent inconsistency of 2D image models. This results in colors being averaged during training, leading to monotonous and oversimplified results, particularly in complex 360° scenes. In contrast, we aim to preserve color diversity by generating a new set of consistently colorized training views, thereby suppressing the averaging process. Nevertheless, mitigating the averaging process introduces a new challenge: ensuring strict multi-view consistency across these colorized views. To achieve this, we propose \ourmethod, a pipeline designed to preserve color diversity by eliminating this guidance-averaging process with a `Local-Global' approach: we partition the scene into subscenes and explicitly tackle both inter-subscene and intra-subscene consistency using a fine-tuned multi-view diffusion model. We demonstrate our method achieves quantitatively and qualitatively more consistent and plausible 3D colorization on complex 360° scenes than existing methods.
comment: Project page is available at: https://yeonjin-chang.github.io/LoGoColor/
♻ ☆ Unleashing the Potential of All Test Samples: Mean-Shift Guided Test-Time Adaptation
Visual-language models (VLMs) like CLIP exhibit strong generalization but struggle with distribution shifts at test time. Existing training-free test-time adaptation (TTA) methods operate strictly within CLIP's original feature space, relying on high-confidence samples while overlooking the potential of low-confidence ones. We propose MS-TTA, a training-free approach that enhances feature representations beyond CLIP's space using a single-step k-nearest neighbors (kNN) Mean-Shift. By refining all test samples, MS-TTA improves feature compactness and class separability, leading to more stable adaptation. Additionally, a cache of refined embeddings further enhances inference by providing Mean Shift enhanced logits. Extensive evaluations on OOD and cross-dataset benchmarks demonstrate that MS-TTA consistently outperforms state-of-the-art training-free TTA methods, achieving robust adaptation without requiring additional training.
comment: Accepted by IEEE TCSVT. This is the author's version which has not been fully edited and content may change prior to final publication
♻ ☆ No Need For Real Anomaly: MLLM Empowered Zero-Shot Video Anomaly Detection CVPR 2026
The collection and detection of video anomaly data has long been a challenging problem due to its rare occurrence and spatio-temporal scarcity. Existing video anomaly detection (VAD) methods under perform in open-world scenarios. Key contributing factors include limited dataset diversity, and inadequate understanding of context-dependent anomalous semantics. To address these issues, i) we propose LAVIDA, an end-to-end zero-shot video anomaly detection framework. ii) LAVIDA employs an Anomaly Exposure Sampler that transforms segmented objects into pseudo-anomalies to enhance model adaptability to unseen anomaly categories. It further integrates a Multimodal Large Language Model (MLLM) to bolster semantic comprehension capabilities. Additionally, iii) we design a token compression approach based on reverse attention to handle the spatio-temporal scarcity of anomalous patterns and decrease computational cost. The training process is conducted solely on pseudo anomalies without any VAD data. Evaluations across four benchmark VAD datasets demonstrate that LAVIDA achieves SOTA performance in both frame-level and pixel-level anomaly detection under the zero-shot setting. Our code is available in https://github.com/VitaminCreed/LAVIDA.
comment: Accepted by CVPR 2026
♻ ☆ Can You Learn to See Without Images? Procedural Warm-Up for Vision Transformers
Transformers are remarkably versatile, suggesting the existence of generic inductive biases beneficial across modalities. In this work, we explore a new way to instil such biases in vision transformers (ViTs) through pretraining on procedurally generated data devoid of visual or semantic content. We generate this data with simple algorithms such as formal grammars, so the results bear no relationship to either natural or synthetic images. We use this procedurally generated data to pretrain ViTs in a warm-up phase that bypasses their visual patch embedding mechanisms, thus encouraging the models to internalise abstract computational priors. When followed by standard image-based training, this warm-up significantly improves data efficiency, convergence speed, and downstream performance. On ImageNet-1K, for example, allocating just 1% of the training budget to procedural data improves final accuracy by over 1.7%. In terms of its effect on performance, 1% procedurally generated data is thus equivalent to 28% of the ImageNet-1K data. These findings suggest a promising path toward new data-efficient and domain-agnostic pretraining strategies.
comment: Camera-ready version
Information Retrieval
☆ One Model, Two Markets: Bid-Aware Generative Recommendation
Generative Recommender Systems using semantic ids, such as TIGER (Rajput et al., 2023), have emerged as a widely adopted competitive paradigm in sequential recommendation. However, existing architectures are designed solely for semantic retrieval and do not address concerns such as monetization via ad revenue and incorporation of bids for commercial retrieval. We propose GEM-Rec, a unified framework that integrates commercial relevance and monetization objectives directly into the generative sequence. We introduce control tokens to decouple the decision of whether to show an ad from which item to show. This allows the model to learn valid placement patterns directly from interaction logs, which inherently reflect past successful ad placements. Complementing this, we devise a Bid-Aware Decoding mechanism that handles real-time pricing, injecting bids directly into the inference process to steer the generation toward high-value items. We prove that this approach guarantees allocation monotonicity, ensuring that higher bids weakly increase an ad's likelihood of being shown without requiring model retraining. Experiments demonstrate that GEM-Rec allows platforms to dynamically optimize for semantic relevance and platform revenue.
☆ PreferRec: Learning and Transferring Pareto Preferences for Multi-objective Re-ranking
Multi-objective re-ranking has become a critical component of modern multi-stage recommender systems, as it tasked to balance multiple conflicting objectives such as accuracy, diversity, and fairness. Existing multi-objective re-ranking methods typically optimize aggregate objectives at the item level using static or handcrafted preference weights. This design overlooks that users inherently exhibit Pareto-optimal preferences at the intent level, reflecting personalized trade-offs among objectives rather than fixed weight combinations. Moreover, most approaches treat re-ranking task for each user as an isolated problem, and repeatedly learn the preferences from scratch. Such a paradigm not only incurs high computational cost, but also ignores the fact that users often share similar preference trade-off structures across objectives. Inspired by the existence of homogeneous multi-objective optimization spaces where Pareto-optimal patterns are transferable, we propose PreferRec, a novel framework that explicitly models and transfers Pareto preferences across users. Specifically, PreferRec is built upon three tightly coupled components: Preference-Aware Pareto Learning aims to capture user intrinsic trade-offs among multiple conflicting objectives at the intent level. By learning Pareto preference representations from re-ranking populations, this component explicitly models how users prioritize different objectives under diverse contexts. Knowledge-Guided Transfer facilitates efficient cross-user knowledge transfer by distilling shared optimization patterns across homogeneous optimization spaces. The transferred knowledge is then used to guide solution selection and personalized re-ranking, biasing the optimization process toward high-quality regions of the Pareto front while preserving user-specific preference characteristics.
☆ On the Challenges and Opportunities of Learned Sparse Retrieval for Code
Retrieval over large codebases is a key component of modern LLM-based software engineering systems. Existing approaches predominantly rely on dense embedding models, while learned sparse retrieval (LSR) remains largely unexplored for code. However, applying sparse retrieval to code is challenging due to subword fragmentation, semantic gaps between natural-language queries and code, diversity of programming languages and sub-tasks, and the length of code documents, which can harm sparsity and latency. We introduce SPLADE-Code, the first large-scale family of learned sparse retrieval models specialized for code retrieval (600M-8B parameters). Despite a lightweight one-stage training pipeline, SPLADE-Code achieves state-of-the-art performance among retrievers under 1B parameters (75.4 on MTEB Code) and competitive results at larger scales (79.0 with 8B). We show that learned expansion tokens are critical to bridge lexical and semantic matching, and provide a latency analysis showing that LSR enables sub-millisecond retrieval on a 1M-passage collection with little effectiveness loss.
comment: 15 pages, 5 figures, 12 tables
☆ ADaFuSE: Adaptive Diffusion-generated Image and Text Fusion for Interactive Text-to-Image Retrieval
Recent advances in interactive text-to-image retrieval (I-TIR) use diffusion models to bridge the modality gap between the textual information need and the images to be searched, resulting in increased effectiveness. However, existing frameworks fuse multi-modal views of user feedback by simple embedding addition. In this work, we show that this static and undifferentiated fusion indiscriminately incorporates generative noise produced by the diffusion model, leading to performance degradation for up to 55.62% samples. We further propose ADaFuSE (Adaptive Diffusion-Text Fusion with Semantic-aware Experts), a lightweight fusion model designed to align and calibrate multi-modal views for diffusion-augmented I-TIR, which can be plugged into existing frameworks without modifying the backbone encoder. Specifically, we introduce a dual-branch fusion mechanism that employs an adaptive gating branch to dynamically balance modality reliability, alongside a semantic-aware mixture-of-experts branch to capture fine-grained cross-modal nuances. Via thorough evaluation over four standard I-TIR benchmarks, ADaFuSE achieves state-of-the-art performance, surpassing DAR by up to 3.49% in Hits@10 with only a 5.29% parameter increase, while exhibiting stronger robustness to noisy and longer interactive queries. These results show that generative augmentation coupled with principled fusion provides a simple, generalizable alternative to fine-tuning for interactive retrieval.
☆ GoogleTrendArchive: A Year-Long Archive of Real-Time Web Search Trends Worldwide AAAI
GoogleTrendArchive is a comprehensive archive of Google Trending Now data spanning over one year (from November 28, 2024 to January 3, 2026) across 125 countries and 1,358 locations. Unlike Google Trends, which requires specifying search terms in advance, Trending Now captures search queries experiencing real-time surges, offering a way to inductively discover trending patterns across regions for studying collective attention dynamics. However, Google does not provide historical access to this data beyond seven days. Our dataset addresses this gap by presenting an archive of Trending Now data. The dataset contains over 7.6 million trend episodes. Each record includes the trend identifier, search volume bucket, precise timestamps, duration, geographic location, and related query clusters. This dataset, among other, enables systematic studies of information diffusion patterns, cross-cultural attention dynamics, crisis responses, and the temporal evolution of collective information-seeking at a global scale. The comprehensive geographic coverage facilitates fine-grained cross-country or cross-regional comparative analyses.
comment: Accepted at the International AAAI Conference on Web and Social Media (ICWSM 2026)
☆ AgenticRec: End-to-End Tool-Integrated Policy Optimization for Ranking-Oriented Recommender Agents
Recommender agents built on Large Language Models offer a promising paradigm for recommendation. However, existing recommender agents typically suffer from a disconnect between intermediate reasoning and final ranking feedback, and are unable to capture fine-grained preferences. To address this, we present AgenticRec, a ranking-oriented agentic recommendation framework that optimizes the entire decision-making trajectory (including intermediate reasoning, tool invocation, and final ranking list generation) under sparse implicit feedback. Our approach makes three key contributions. First, we design a suite of recommendation-specific tools integrated into a ReAct loop to support evidence-grounded reasoning. Second, we propose theoretically unbiased List-Wise Group Relative Policy Optimization (list-wise GRPO) to maximize ranking utility, ensuring accurate credit assignment for complex tool-use trajectories. Third, we introduce Progressive Preference Refinement (PPR) to resolve fine-grained preference ambiguities. By mining hard negatives from ranking violations and applying bidirectional preference alignment, PPR minimizes the convex upper bound of pairwise ranking errors. Experiments on benchmarks confirm that AgenticRec significantly outperforms baselines, validating the necessity of unifying reasoning, tool use, and ranking optimization.
Overview of TREC 2025 Biomedical Generative Retrieval (BioGen) Track
Recent advances in large language models (LLMs) have made significant progress across multiple biomedical tasks, including biomedical question answering, lay-language summarization of the biomedical literature, and clinical note summarization. These models have demonstrated strong capabilities in processing and synthesizing complex biomedical information and in generating fluent, human-like responses. Despite these advancements, hallucinations or confabulations remain key challenges when using LLMs in biomedical and other high-stakes domains. Inaccuracies may be particularly harmful in high-risk situations, such as medical question answering, making clinical decisions, or appraising biomedical research. Studies on the evaluation of the LLMs' abilities to ground generated statements in verifiable sources have shown that models perform significantly
☆ Toward a Theory of Hierarchical Memory for Language Agents
Many recent long-context and agentic systems address context-length limitations by adding hierarchical memory: they extract atomic units from raw data, build multi-level representatives by grouping and compression, and traverse this structure to retrieve content under a token budget. Despite recurring implementations, there is no shared formalism for comparing design choices. We propose a unifying theory in terms of three operators. Extraction ($α$) maps raw data to atomic information units; coarsening ($C = (π, ρ)$) partitions units and assigns a representative to each group; and traversal ($τ$) selects which units to include in context given a query and budget. We identify a self-sufficiency spectrum for the representative function $ρ$ and show how it constrains viable retrieval strategies (a coarsening-traversal coupling). Finally, we instantiate the decomposition on eleven existing systems spanning document hierarchies, conversational memory, and agent execution traces, showcasing its generality.
☆ TagLLM: A Fine-Grained Tag Generation Approach for Note Recommendation
Large Language Models (LLMs) have shown promising potential in E-commerce community recommendation. While LLMs and Multimodal LLMs (MLLMs) are widely used to encode notes into implicit embeddings, leveraging their generative capabilities to represent notes with interpretable tags remains unexplored. In the field of tag generation, traditional close-ended methods heavily rely on the design of tag pools, while existing open-ended methods applied directly to note recommendations face two limitations: (1) MLLMs lack guidance during generation, resulting in redundant tags that fail to capture user interests; (2) The generated tags are often coarse and lack fine-grained representation of notes, interfering with downstream recommendations. To address these limitations, we propose TagLLM, a fine-grained tag generation method for note recommendation. TagLLM captures user interests across note categories through a User Interest Handbook and constructs fine-grained tag data using multimodal CoT Extraction. A Tag Knowledge Distillation method is developed to equip small models with competitive generation capabilities, enhancing inference efficiency. In online A/B test, TagLLM increases average view duration per user by 0.31%, average interactions per user by 0.96%, and page view click-through rate in cold-start scenario by 32.37%, demonstrating its effectiveness.
☆ When Documents Disagree: Measuring Institutional Variation in Transplant Guidance with Retrieval-Augmented Language Models
Patient education materials for solid-organ transplantation vary substantially across U.S. centers, yet no systematic method exists to quantify this heterogeneity at scale. We introduce a framework that grounds the same patient questions in different centers' handbooks using retrieval-augmented language models and compares the resulting answers using a five-label consistency taxonomy. Applied to 102 handbooks from 23 centers and 1,115 benchmark questions, the framework quantifies heterogeneity across four dimensions: question, topic, organ, and center. We find that 20.8% of non-absent pairwise comparisons exhibit clinically meaningful divergence, concentrated in condition monitoring and lifestyle topics. Coverage gaps are even more prominent: 96.2% of question-handbook pairs miss relevant content, with reproductive health at 95.1% absence. Center-level divergence profiles are stable and interpretable, where heterogeneity reflects systematic institutional differences, likely due to patient diversity. These findings expose an information gap in transplant patient education materials, with document-grounded medical question answering highlighting opportunities for content improvement.
♻ ☆ C$^2$-Cite: Contextual-Aware Citation Generation for Attributed Large Language Models WSDM26
The attribution technique enhances the credibility of LLMs by adding citations to the generated sentences, enabling users to trace back to the original sources and verify the reliability of the output. However, existing instruction-tuned attributed LLMs often fail to properly interpret the contextual semantics of citation symbols (e.g., [i]) during text generation. This shortcoming arises from their insufficient awareness of the context information surrounding citation markers, which in turn leads to disjointed references and poor integration of retrieved knowledge into the generated content. To address this issue, we propose a novel \textbf{C}ontextual-aware \textbf{C}itation generation framework (\textbf{C$^2$}-\textbf{Cite}) that explicitly integrates the semantic relationships between citation markers and their referenced content. Specifically, a contextual citation alignment mechanism is adopted: it first encodes the retrieved document contexts into the symbol representation of citations, then aligns the marker numbers by decoding information from a citation router function. This mechanism enables the transformation of citation markers from generic placeholders into active knowledge pointers that link to the referenced source information. Experimental results on the ALCE benchmark across three datasets validate our framework C$^2$-Cite++: it outperforms the SOTA baseline by an average of 5.8\% in citation quality and 17.4\% in response correctness. The implementation is publicly available at https://github.com/BAI-LAB/c2cite
comment: WSDM26
♻ ☆ A Systematic Comparison and Evaluation of Building Ontologies for Deploying Data-Driven Analytics in Smart Buildings
Ontologies play a critical role in data exchange, information integration, and knowledge sharing across diverse smart building applications. Yet, semantic differences between the prevailing building ontologies hamper their purpose of bringing data interoperability and restrict the ability to reuse building ontologies in real-world applications. In this paper, we propose and adopt a framework to conduct a systematic comparison and evaluation of four popular building ontologies (Brick Schema, RealEstateCore, Project Haystack and Google's Digital Buildings) from both axiomatic design and assertions in a use case, namely the Terminological Box (TBox) evaluation and the Assertion Box (ABox) evaluation. In the TBox evaluation, we use the SQuaRE-based Ontology Quality Evaluation (OQuaRE) Framework and concede that Project Haystack and Brick Schema are more compact with respect to the ontology axiomatic design. In the ABox evaluation, we apply an empirical study with sample building data that suggests that Brick Schema and RealEstateCore have greater completeness and expressiveness in capturing the main concepts and relations within the building domain. The results implicitly indicate that there is no universal building ontology for integrating Linked Building Data (LBD). We also discuss ontology compatibility and investigate building ontology design patterns (ODPs) to support ontology matching, alignment, and harmonisation.
comment: 32 pages
♻ ☆ Gated Rotary-Enhanced Linear Attention with Rank Modulation for Long-term Sequential Recommendation
In Sequential Recommendation Systems (SRSs), Transformer models have demonstrated remarkable performance but face computational and memory cost challenges, especially when modeling long-term user behavior sequences. Due to its quadratic complexity, the dot-product attention mechanism in Transformers becomes expensive for processing long sequences. By approximating the dot-product attention using elaborate mapping functions, linear attention provides a more efficient option with linear complexity. However, existing linear attention methods face three limitations: 1) they often use learnable position encodings, which incur extra computational costs in long-term sequence scenarios, 2) limited by the low-rank deficiency, they may not sufficiently account for user's fine-grained local preferences (short-lived burst of interest), and 3) they try to capture some temporary activities, but often confuse these with stable and long-term interests. This can result in unclear or less effective recommendations. To remedy these drawbacks, we propose a long-term sequential Recommendation model with Gated Rotary Enhanced Linear Attention (RecGRELA). Specifically, we first propose a Rotary-Enhanced Linear Attention (RELA) module to efficiently model long-range dependency within the user's historical information using rotary position encodings. Then, to address the low-rank deficiency of linear attention, we introduce an Adaptive Rank Modulator. It incorporates a rank augmentation branch to explicitly inject local token mixing and a Gated Rank Selector to dynamically balance stable long-term preferences and transient short-term interests. Experimental results on four public benchmark datasets show that our RecGRELA achieves state-of-the-art performance compared with existing SRSs based on Recurrent Neural Networks, Transformer, and Mamba while keeping low memory overhead.
comment: 14 pages,8 figures
♻ ☆ Unlocking Multimodal Document Intelligence: From Current Triumphs to Future Frontiers of Visual Document Retrieval
With the rapid proliferation of multimodal information, Visual Document Retrieval (VDR) has emerged as a critical frontier in bridging the gap between unstructured visually rich data and precise information acquisition. Unlike traditional natural image retrieval, visual documents exhibit unique characteristics defined by dense textual content, intricate layouts, and fine-grained semantic dependencies. This paper presents the first comprehensive survey of the VDR landscape, specifically through the lens of the Multimodal Large Language Model (MLLM) era. We begin by examining the benchmark landscape, and subsequently dive into the methodological evolution, categorizing approaches into three primary aspects: multimodal embedding models, multimodal reranker models, and the integration of Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG) and Agentic systems for complex document intelligence. Finally, we identify persistent challenges and outline promising future directions, aiming to provide a clear roadmap for future multimodal document intelligence.
comment: Under review. This version updates the relevant works released before 15 March, 2026
♻ ☆ Auditing Google's AI Overviews and Featured Snippets: A Case Study on Baby Care and Pregnancy AAAI
Google Search increasingly surfaces AI-generated content through features like AI Overviews (AIO) and Featured Snippets (FS), which users frequently rely on despite having no control over their presentation. Through a systematic algorithm audit of 1,508 real baby care and pregnancy-related queries, we evaluate the quality and consistency of these information displays. Our robust evaluation framework assesses multiple quality dimensions, including answer consistency, relevance, presence of medical safeguards, source categories, and sentiment alignment. Our results reveal concerning gaps in information consistency, with information in AIO and FS displayed on the same search result page being inconsistent with each other in 33% of cases. Despite high relevance scores, both features critically lack medical safeguards (present in just 11% of AIO and 7% of FS responses). While health and wellness websites dominate source categories for both, AIO and FS, FS also often link to commercial sources. These findings have important implications for public health information access and demonstrate the need for stronger quality controls in AI-mediated health information. Our methodology provides a transferable framework for auditing AI systems across high-stakes domains where information quality directly impacts user well-being.
comment: 18 pages, 10 figures; to appear in AAAI ICWSM 2026
Machine Learning
☆ WorldCache: Content-Aware Caching for Accelerated Video World Models
Diffusion Transformers (DiTs) power high-fidelity video world models but remain computationally expensive due to sequential denoising and costly spatio-temporal attention. Training-free feature caching accelerates inference by reusing intermediate activations across denoising steps; however, existing methods largely rely on a Zero-Order Hold assumption i.e., reusing cached features as static snapshots when global drift is small. This often leads to ghosting artifacts, blur, and motion inconsistencies in dynamic scenes. We propose \textbf{WorldCache}, a Perception-Constrained Dynamical Caching framework that improves both when and how to reuse features. WorldCache introduces motion-adaptive thresholds, saliency-weighted drift estimation, optimal approximation via blending and warping, and phase-aware threshold scheduling across diffusion steps. Our cohesive approach enables adaptive, motion-consistent feature reuse without retraining. On Cosmos-Predict2.5-2B evaluated on PAI-Bench, WorldCache achieves \textbf{2.3$\times$} inference speedup while preserving \textbf{99.4\%} of baseline quality, substantially outperforming prior training-free caching approaches. Our code can be accessed on \href{https://umair1221.github.io/World-Cache/}{World-Cache}.
comment: 33 Pages
☆ End-to-End Training for Unified Tokenization and Latent Denoising
Latent diffusion models (LDMs) enable high-fidelity synthesis by operating in learned latent spaces. However, training state-of-the-art LDMs requires complex staging: a tokenizer must be trained first, before the diffusion model can be trained in the frozen latent space. We propose UNITE - an autoencoder architecture for unified tokenization and latent diffusion. UNITE consists of a Generative Encoder that serves as both image tokenizer and latent generator via weight sharing. Our key insight is that tokenization and generation can be viewed as the same latent inference problem under different conditioning regimes: tokenization infers latents from fully observed images, whereas generation infers them from noise together with text or class conditioning. Motivated by this, we introduce a single-stage training procedure that jointly optimizes both tasks via two forward passes through the same Generative Encoder. The shared parameters enable gradients to jointly shape the latent space, encouraging a "common latent language". Across image and molecule modalities, UNITE achieves near state of the art performance without adversarial losses or pretrained encoders (e.g., DINO), reaching FID 2.12 and 1.73 for Base and Large models on ImageNet 256 x 256. We further analyze the Generative Encoder through the lenses of representation alignment and compression. These results show that single stage joint training of tokenization & generation from scratch is feasible.
comment: First two authors contributed equally. Project: https://xingjianbai.com/unite-tokenization-generation/ Code: https://github.com/ShivamDuggal4/UNITE-tokenization-generation
☆ ThinkJEPA: Empowering Latent World Models with Large Vision-Language Reasoning Model
Recent progress in latent world models (e.g., V-JEPA2) has shown promising capability in forecasting future world states from video observations. Nevertheless, dense prediction from a short observation window limits temporal context and can bias predictors toward local, low-level extrapolation, making it difficult to capture long-horizon semantics and reducing downstream utility. Vision--language models (VLMs), in contrast, provide strong semantic grounding and general knowledge by reasoning over uniformly sampled frames, but they are not ideal as standalone dense predictors due to compute-driven sparse sampling, a language-output bottleneck that compresses fine-grained interaction states into text-oriented representations, and a data-regime mismatch when adapting to small action-conditioned datasets. We propose a VLM-guided JEPA-style latent world modeling framework that combines dense-frame dynamics modeling with long-horizon semantic guidance via a dual-temporal pathway: a dense JEPA branch for fine-grained motion and interaction cues, and a uniformly sampled VLM \emph{thinker} branch with a larger temporal stride for knowledge-rich guidance. To transfer the VLM's progressive reasoning signals effectively, we introduce a hierarchical pyramid representation extraction module that aggregates multi-layer VLM representations into guidance features compatible with latent prediction. Experiments on hand-manipulation trajectory prediction show that our method outperforms both a strong VLM-only baseline and a JEPA-predictor baseline, and yields more robust long-horizon rollout behavior.
comment: 10 pages, 5 figures
☆ The Dual Mechanisms of Spatial Reasoning in Vision-Language Models
Many multimodal tasks, such as image captioning and visual question answering, require vision-language models (VLMs) to associate objects with their properties and spatial relations. Yet it remains unclear where and how such associations are computed within VLMs. In this work, we show that VLMs rely on two concurrent mechanisms to represent such associations. In the language model backbone, intermediate layers represent content-independent spatial relations on top of visual tokens corresponding to objects. However, this mechanism plays only a secondary role in shaping model predictions. Instead, the dominant source of spatial information originates in the vision encoder, whose representations encode the layout of objects and are directly exploited by the language model backbone. Notably, this spatial signal is distributed globally across visual tokens, extending beyond object regions into surrounding background areas. We show that enhancing these vision-derived spatial representations globally across all image tokens improves spatial reasoning performance on naturalistic images. Together, our results clarify how spatial association is computed within VLMs and highlight the central role of vision encoders in enabling spatial reasoning.
comment: 26 pages, 35 figures
☆ Scaling DoRA: High-Rank Adaptation via Factored Norms and Fused Kernels
Weight-Decomposed Low-Rank Adaptation (DoRA) extends LoRA by decoupling weight magnitude from direction, but its forward pass requires the row-wise norm of W + sBA, a computation that every major framework we surveyed implements by materializing the dense [d_out, d_in] product BA. At d_in = 8192 and rank r = 384, a single module's norm requires about 512 MB of transient working memory in bf16, making high-rank DoRA costly and often infeasible on common single-GPU setups once hundreds of adapted modules and checkpointing are involved. We present two systems contributions. A factored norm decomposes the squared norm into base, cross, and Gram terms computable through O(d_out r + r^2) intermediates, eliminating the dense product. Fused Triton kernels collapse the four-kernel DoRA composition into a single pass, reducing memory traffic by about 4x and using a numerically stable form that avoids catastrophic cancellation in the near-unity rescaling regime where magnitude scales concentrate in practice. Across six 8-32B vision-language models (VLMs) on three NVIDIA GPUs (RTX 6000 PRO, H200, B200) at r = 384 in bf16, the fused implementation is 1.5-2.0x faster than Hugging Face PEFT's DoRA implementation for inference and 1.5-1.9x faster for gradient computation (optimizer step excluded), with up to 7 GB lower peak VRAM. Microbenchmarks on six GPUs spanning four architecture generations (L40S, A100, RTX 6000 PRO, H200, B200, B300) confirm 1.5-2.7x compose-kernel speedup. Final-logit cosine similarity exceeds 0.9999 across all model/GPU pairs, and multi-seed training curves match within 7.1 x 10^-4 mean per-step loss delta over 2000 steps.
comment: 30 pages, 15 figures, 15 tables, including appendices. Code and data at https://github.com/sockeye44/dorafactors
☆ Decoupling Exploration and Policy Optimization: Uncertainty Guided Tree Search for Hard Exploration
The process of discovery requires active exploration -- the act of collecting new and informative data. However, efficient autonomous exploration remains a major unsolved problem. The dominant paradigm addresses this challenge by using Reinforcement Learning (RL) to train agents with intrinsic motivation, maximizing a composite objective of extrinsic and intrinsic rewards. We suggest that this approach incurs unnecessary overhead: while policy optimization is necessary for precise task execution, employing such machinery solely to expand state coverage may be inefficient. In this paper, we propose a new paradigm that explicitly separates exploration from exploitation and bypasses RL during the exploration phase. Our method uses a tree-search strategy inspired by the Go-With-The-Winner algorithm, paired with a measure of epistemic uncertainty to systematically drive exploration. By removing the overhead of policy optimization, our approach explores an order of magnitude more efficiently than standard intrinsic motivation baselines on hard Atari benchmarks. Further, we demonstrate that the discovered trajectories can be distilled into deployable policies using existing supervised backward learning algorithms, achieving state-of-the-art scores by a wide margin on Montezuma's Revenge, Pitfall!, and Venture without relying on domain-specific knowledge. Finally, we demonstrate the generality of our framework in high-dimensional continuous action spaces by solving the MuJoCo Adroit dexterous manipulation and AntMaze tasks in a sparse-reward setting, directly from image observations and without expert demonstrations or offline datasets. To the best of our knowledge, this has not been achieved before.
☆ Characterizing High-Capacity Janus Aminobenzene-Graphene Anode for Sodium-Ion Batteries with Machine Learning
Sodium-ion batteries require anodes that combine high capacity, low operating voltage, fast Na-ion transport, and mechanical stability, which conventional anodes struggle to deliver. Here, we use the SpookyNet machine-learning force field (MLFF) together with all-electron density-functional theory calculations to characterize Na storage in aminobenzene-functionalized Janus graphene (Na$_x$AB) at room-temperature. Simulations across state of charge reveal a three-stage storage mechanism-site-specific adsorption at aminobenzene groups and Na$_n$@AB$_m$ structure formation, followed by interlayer gallery filling-contrasting the multi-stage pore-, graphite-interlayer-, and defect-controlled behavior in hard carbon. This leads to an OCV profile with an extended low-voltage plateau of 0.15 V vs. Na/Na$^{+}$, an estimated gravimetric capacity of $\sim$400 mAh g$^{-1}$, negligible volume change, and Na diffusivities of $\sim10^{-6}$ cm$^{2}$ s$^{-1}$, two to three orders of magnitude higher than in hard carbon. Our results establish Janus aminobenzene-graphene as a promising, structurally defined high-capacity Na-ion anode and illustrate the power of MLFF-based simulations for characterizing electrode materials.
comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, research article
☆ Confidence-Based Decoding is Provably Efficient for Diffusion Language Models
Diffusion language models (DLMs) have emerged as a promising alternative to autoregressive (AR) models for language modeling, allowing flexible generation order and parallel generation of multiple tokens. However, this flexibility introduces a challenge absent in AR models: the \emph{decoding strategy} -- which determines the order and number of tokens generated at each iteration -- critically affects sampling efficiency. Among decoding strategies explored in practice, confidence-based methods, which adaptively select which and how many tokens to unmask based on prediction confidence, have shown strong empirical performance. Despite this success, our theoretical understanding of confidence-based decoding remains limited. In this work, we develop the first theoretical analysis framework for confidence-based decoding in DLMs. We focus on an entropy sum-based strategy that continues unmasking tokens within each iteration until the cumulative entropy exceeds a threshold, and show that it achieves $\varepsilon$-accurate sampling in KL divergence with an expected number of iterations $\widetilde O(H(X_0)/\varepsilon)$, where $H(X_0)$ denotes the entropy of the target data distribution. Notably, this strategy yields substantial sampling acceleration when the data distribution has low entropy relative to the sequence length, while automatically adapting to the intrinsic complexity of data without requiring prior knowledge or hyperparameter tuning. Overall, our results provide a theoretical foundation for confidence-based decoding and may inform the design of more efficient decoding strategies for DLMs.
☆ ShapDBM: Exploring Decision Boundary Maps in Shapley Space
Decision Boundary Maps (DBMs) are an effective tool for visualising machine learning classification boundaries. Yet, DBM quality strongly depends on the dimensionality reduction (DR) technique and high dimensional space used for the data points. For complex ML datasets, DR can create many mixed classes which, in turn, yield DBMs that are hard to use. We propose a new technique to compute DBMs by transforming data space into Shapley space and computing DR on it. Compared to standard DBMs computed directly from data, our maps have similar or higher quality metric values and visibly more compact, easier to explore, decision zones.
comment: 7 pages and 4 figures
☆ One Model, Two Markets: Bid-Aware Generative Recommendation
Generative Recommender Systems using semantic ids, such as TIGER (Rajput et al., 2023), have emerged as a widely adopted competitive paradigm in sequential recommendation. However, existing architectures are designed solely for semantic retrieval and do not address concerns such as monetization via ad revenue and incorporation of bids for commercial retrieval. We propose GEM-Rec, a unified framework that integrates commercial relevance and monetization objectives directly into the generative sequence. We introduce control tokens to decouple the decision of whether to show an ad from which item to show. This allows the model to learn valid placement patterns directly from interaction logs, which inherently reflect past successful ad placements. Complementing this, we devise a Bid-Aware Decoding mechanism that handles real-time pricing, injecting bids directly into the inference process to steer the generation toward high-value items. We prove that this approach guarantees allocation monotonicity, ensuring that higher bids weakly increase an ad's likelihood of being shown without requiring model retraining. Experiments demonstrate that GEM-Rec allows platforms to dynamically optimize for semantic relevance and platform revenue.
☆ Noise Titration: Exact Distributional Benchmarking for Probabilistic Time Series Forecasting
Modern time series forecasting is evaluated almost entirely through passive observation of single historical trajectories, rendering claims about a model's robustness to non-stationarity fundamentally unfalsifiable. We propose a paradigm shift toward interventionist, exact-statistical benchmarking. By systematically titrating calibrated Gaussian observation noise into known chaotic and stochastic dynamical systems, we transform forecasting from a black-box sequence matching game into an exact distributional inference task. Because the underlying data-generating process and noise variance are mathematically explicit, evaluation can rely on exact negative log-likelihoods and calibrated distributional tests rather than heuristic approximations. To fully leverage this framework, we extend the Fern architecture into a probabilistic generative model that natively parameterizes the Symmetric Positive Definite (SPD) cone, outputting calibrated joint covariance structures without the computational bottleneck of generic Jacobian modeling. Under this rigorous evaluation, we find that state-of-the-art zero-shot foundation models behave consistently with the context-parroting mechanism, failing systematically under non-stationary regime shifts and elevated noise. In contrast, Fern explicitly captures the invariant measure and multivariate geometry of the underlying dynamics, maintaining structural fidelity and statistically sharp calibration precisely where massive sequence-matching models collapse.
☆ Gumbel Distillation for Parallel Text Generation ICLR 2026
The slow, sequential nature of autoregressive (AR) language models has driven the adoption of parallel decoding methods. However, these non-AR models often sacrifice generation quality as they struggle to model the complex joint distribution of token sequences. To narrow this performance gap, we introduce Gumbel Distillation, a novel distillation technique that enables parallel decoders to learn this distribution effectively. Our method leverages the Gumbel-Max trick to create a deterministic mapping from a latent Gumbel noise space to the output tokens of a high-performing AR teacher. As a model-agnostic technique, Gumbel Distillation seamlessly integrates with diverse parallel decoding architectures, including MDLM and BD3-LM. Experiments on LM1B and OpenWebText show that Gumbel Distillation substantially improves the generation quality of parallel language models, achieving a 30.0% improvement in MAUVE score and 10.5% in generative perplexity over MDLM trained on OpenWebText dataset. Code available at https://github.com/hxixixh/gumbel-distill.
comment: ICLR 2026
☆ Evaluating the Reliability and Fidelity of Automated Judgment Systems of Large Language Models
A Large Language Model (LLM) as judge evaluates the quality of victim Machine Learning (ML) models, specifically LLMs, by analyzing their outputs. An LLM as judge is the combination of one model and one specifically engineered judge prompt that contains the criteria for the analysis. The resulting automation of the analysis scales up the complex evaluation of the victim models' free-form text outputs by faster and more consistent judgments compared to human reviewers. Thus, quality and security assessments of LLMs can cover a wide range of the victim models' use cases. Being a comparably new technique, LLMs as judges lack a thorough investigation for their reliability and agreement to human judgment. Our work evaluates the applicability of LLMs as automated quality assessors of victim LLMs. We test the efficacy of 37 differently sized conversational LLMs in combination with 5 different judge prompts, the concept of a second-level judge, and 5 models fine-tuned for the task as assessors. As assessment objective, we curate datasets for eight different categories of judgment tasks and the corresponding ground-truth labels based on human assessments. Our empirical results show a high correlation of LLMs as judges with human assessments, when combined with a suitable prompt, in particular for GPT-4o, several open-source models with $\geqslant$ 32B parameters, and a few smaller models like Qwen2.5 14B.
☆ SPA: A Simple but Tough-to-Beat Baseline for Knowledge Injection
While large language models (LLMs) are pretrained on massive amounts of data, their knowledge coverage remains incomplete in specialized, data-scarce domains, motivating extensive efforts to study synthetic data generation for knowledge injection. We propose SPA (Scaling Prompt-engineered Augmentation), a simple but tough-to-beat baseline that uses a small set of carefully designed prompts to generate large-scale synthetic data for knowledge injection. Through systematic comparisons, we find that SPA outperforms several strong baselines. Furthermore, we identify two key limitations of prior approaches: (1) while RL-based methods may improve the token efficiency of LLM-based data augmentation at small scale, they suffer from diversity collapse as data scales, leading to diminishing returns; and (2) while multi-stage prompting may outperform simple augmentation methods, their advantages can disappear after careful prompt tuning. Our results suggest that, for knowledge injection, careful prompt design combined with straightforward large-scale augmentation can be surprisingly effective, and we hope SPA can serve as a strong baseline for future studies in this area. Our code is available at https://github.com/Tangkexian/SPA.
☆ Chimera: Latency- and Performance-Aware Multi-agent Serving for Heterogeneous LLMs
Multi-agent applications often execute complex tasks as multi-stage workflows, where each stage is an LLM call whose output becomes part of context for subsequent steps. Existing LLM serving systems largely assume homogeneous clusters with identical model replicas. This design overlooks the potential of heterogeneous deployments, where models of different sizes and capabilities enable finer trade-offs between latency and performance. However, heterogeneity introduces new challenges in scheduling across models with diverse throughput and performance. We present Chimera, a predictive scheduling system for multi-agent workflow serving on heterogeneous LLM clusters that jointly improves end-to-end latency and task performance. Chimera applies semantic routing to estimate per-model confidence scores for each request, predicts the total remaining output length of the workflow, and estimates per-model congestion using in-flight predicted token volumes for load balancing. We evaluate Chimera on representative agentic workflows for code generation and math reasoning using multiple heterogeneous LLM configurations. Across comparable settings, Chimera traces the best latency-performance frontier, reducing end-to-end latency by 1.2--2.4$\times$ and improving task performance by 8.0-9.5 percentage points on average over competitive baselines including vLLM.
☆ CayleyPy-4: AI-Holography. Towards analogs of holographic string dualities for AI tasks
This is the fourth paper in the CayleyPy project, which applies AI methods to the exploration of large graphs. In this work, we suggest the existence of a new discrete version of holographic string dualities for this setup, and discuss their relevance to AI systems and mathematics. Many modern AI tasks -- such as those addressed by GPT-style language models or RL systems -- can be viewed as direct analogues of predicting particle trajectories on graphs. We investigate this problem for a large family of Cayley graphs, for which we show that surprisingly it admits a dual description in terms of discrete strings. We hypothesize that such dualities may extend to a range of AI systems where they can lead to more efficient computational approaches. In particular, string holographic images of states are proposed as natural candidates for data embeddings, motivated by the "complexity = volume" principle in AdS/CFT. For Cayley graphs of the symmetric group S_n, our results indicate that the corresponding dual objects are flat, planar polygons. The diameter of the graph is equal to the number of integer points inside the polygon scaled by n. Vertices of the graph can be mapped holographically to paths inside the polygon, and the usual graph distances correspond to the area under the paths, thus directly realising the "complexity = volume" paradigm. We also find evidence for continuous CFTs and dual strings in the large n limit. We confirm this picture and other aspects of the duality in a large initial set of examples. We also present new datasets (obtained by a combination of ML and conventional tools) which should be instrumental in establishing the duality for more general cases.
comment: 20+120 pages
☆ Revisiting Quantum Code Generation: Where Should Domain Knowledge Live?
Recent advances in large language models (LLMs) have enabled the automation of an increasing number of programming tasks, including code generation for scientific and engineering domains. In rapidly evolving software ecosystems such as quantum software development, where frameworks expose complex abstractions, a central question is how best to incorporate domain knowledge into LLM-based assistants while preserving maintainability as libraries evolve. In this work, we study specialization strategies for Qiskit code generation using the Qiskit-HumanEval benchmark. We compare a parameter-specialized fine-tuned baseline introduced in prior work against a range of recent general-purpose LLMs enhanced with retrieval-augmented generation (RAG) and agent-based inference with execution feedback. Our results show that modern general-purpose LLMs consistently outperform the parameter-specialized baseline. While the fine-tuned model achieves approximately 47% pass@1 on Qiskit-HumanEval, recent general-purpose models reach 60-65% under zero-shot and retrieval-augmented settings, and up to 85% for the strongest evaluated model when combined with iterative execution-feedback agents -representing an improvement of more than 20% over zero-shot general-purpose performance and more than 35% over the parameter-specialized baseline. Agentic execution feedback yields the most consistent improvements, albeit at increased runtime cost, while RAG provides modest and model-dependent gains. These findings indicate that performance gains can be achieved without domain-specific fine-tuning, instead relying on inference-time augmentation, thereby enabling a more flexible and maintainable approach to LLM-assisted quantum software development.
comment: Submitted to Quantum Machine Intelligence
☆ Calibeating Made Simple
We study calibeating, the problem of post-processing external forecasts online to minimize cumulative losses and match an informativeness-based benchmark. Unlike prior work, which analyzed calibeating for specific losses with specific arguments, we reduce calibeating to existing online learning techniques and obtain results for general proper losses. More concretely, we first show that calibeating is minimax-equivalent to regret minimization. This recovers the $O(\log T)$ calibeating rate of Foster and Hart [FH23] for the Brier and log losses and its optimality, and yields new optimal calibeating rates for mixable losses and general bounded losses. Second, we prove that multi-calibeating is minimax-equivalent to the combination of calibeating and the classical expert problem. This yields new optimal multi-calibeating rates for mixable losses, including Brier and log losses, and general bounded losses. Finally, we obtain new bounds for achieving calibeating and calibration simultaneously for the Brier loss. For binary predictions, our result gives the first calibrated algorithm that at the same time also achieves the optimal $O(\log T)$ calibeating rate.
☆ Causal Evidence that Language Models use Confidence to Drive Behavior
Metacognition -- the ability to assess one's own cognitive performance -- is documented across species, with internal confidence estimates serving as a key signal for adaptive behavior. While confidence can be extracted from Large Language Model (LLM) outputs, whether models actively use these signals to regulate behavior remains a fundamental question. We investigate this through a four-phase abstention paradigm.Phase 1 established internal confidence estimates in the absence of an abstention option. Phase 2 revealed that LLMs apply implicit thresholds to these estimates when deciding to answer or abstain. Confidence emerged as the dominant predictor of behavior, with effect sizes an order of magnitude larger than knowledge retrieval accessibility (RAG scores) or surface-level semantic features. Phase 3 provided causal evidence through activation steering: manipulating internal confidence signals correspondingly shifted abstention rates. Finally, Phase 4 demonstrated that models can systematically vary abstention policies based on instructed thresholds.Our findings indicate that abstention arises from the joint operation of internal confidence representations and threshold-based policies, mirroring the two-stage metacognitive control found in biological systems. This capacity is essential as LLMs transition into autonomous agents that must recognize their own uncertainty to decide when to act or seek help.
☆ Data Curation for Machine Learning Interatomic Potentials by Determinantal Point Processes
The development of machine learning interatomic potentials faces a critical computational bottleneck with the generation and labeling of useful training datasets. We present a novel application of determinantal point processes (DPPs) to the task of selecting informative subsets of atomic configurations to label with reference energies and forces from costly quantum mechanical methods. Through experiments with hafnium oxide data, we show that DPPs are competitive with existing approaches to constructing compact but diverse training sets by utilizing kernels of molecular descriptors, leading to improved accuracy and robustness in machine learning representations of molecular systems. Our work identifies promising directions to employ DPPs for unsupervised training data curation with heterogeneous or multimodal data, or in online active learning schemes for iterative data augmentation during molecular dynamics simulation.
comment: Original publication at https://openreview.net/forum?id=PKGP7tg65A
☆ Multimodal Survival Analysis with Locally Deployable Large Language Models NeurIPS 2025
We study multimodal survival analysis integrating clinical text, tabular covariates, and genomic profiles using locally deployable large language models (LLMs). As many institutions face tight computational and privacy constraints, this setting motivates the use of lightweight, on-premises models. Our approach jointly estimates calibrated survival probabilities and generates concise, evidence-grounded prognosis text via teacher-student distillation and principled multimodal fusion. On a TCGA cohort, it outperforms standard baselines, avoids reliance on cloud services and associated privacy concerns, and reduces the risk of hallucinated or miscalibrated estimates that can be observed in base LLMs.
comment: NeurIPS 2025 Workshop on Multi-modal Foundation Models and Large Language Models for Life Sciences
☆ RAMPAGE: RAndomized Mid-Point for debiAsed Gradient Extrapolation
A celebrated method for Variational Inequalities (VIs) is Extragradient (EG), which can be viewed as a standard discrete-time integration scheme. With this view in mind, in this paper we show that EG may suffer from discretization bias when applied to non-linear vector fields, conservative or otherwise. To resolve this discretization shortcoming, we introduce RAndomized Mid-Point for debiAsed Gradient Extrapolation (RAMPAGE) and its variance-reduced counterpart, RAMPAGE+ which leverages antithetic sampling. In contrast with EG, both methods are unbiased. Furthermore, leveraging negative correlation, RAMPAGE+ acts as an unbiased, geometric path-integrator that completely removes internal first-order terms from the variance, provably improving upon RAMPAGE. We further demonstrate that both methods enjoy provable $\mathcal{O}(1/k)$ convergence guarantees for a range of problems including root finding under co-coercive, co-hypomonotone, and generalized Lipschitzness regimes. Furthermore, we introduce symmetrically scaled variants to extend our results to constrained VIs. Finally, we provide convergence guarantees of both methods for stochastic and deterministic smooth convex-concave games. Somewhat interestingly, despite being a randomized method, RAMPAGE+ attains purely deterministic bounds for a number of the studied settings.
☆ dynActivation: A Trainable Activation Family for Adaptive Nonlinearity
This paper proposes $\mathrm{dynActivation}$, a per-layer trainable activation defined as $f_i(x) = \mathrm{BaseAct}(x)(α_i - β_i) + β_i x$, where $α_i$ and $β_i$ are lightweight learned scalars that interpolate between the base nonlinearity and a linear path and $\mathrm{BaseAct}(x)$ resembles any ReLU-like function. The static and dynamic ReLU-like variants are then compared across multiple vision tasks, language modeling tasks, and ablation studies. The results suggest that dynActivation variants tend to linearize deep layers while maintaining high performance, which can improve training efficiency by up to $+54\%$ over ReLU. On CIFAR-10, dynActivation(Mish) improves over static Mish by up to $+14.02\%$ on AttentionCNN with an average improvment by $+6.00\%$, with a $24\%$ convergence-AUC reduction relative to Mish (2120 vs. 2785). In a 1-to-75-layer MNIST depth-scaling study, dynActivation never drops below $95\%$ test accuracy ($95.3$--$99.3\%$), while ReLU collapses below $80\%$ at 25 layers. Under FGSM at $\varepsilon{=}0.08$, dynActivation(Mish) incurs a $55.39\%$ accuracy drop versus $62.79\%$ for ReLU ($7.40\%$ advantage). Transferred to language modeling, a new proposed dynActGLU-variant achieves a $10.3\%$ relative perplexity reduction over SwiGLU at 5620 steps (4.047 vs. 4.514), though the gap vanishes at 34300 steps.
comment: 22 pages, 15 figures
☆ Computationally lightweight classifiers with frequentist bounds on predictions AISTATS2026
While both classical and neural network classifiers can achieve high accuracy, they fall short on offering uncertainty bounds on their predictions, making them unfit for safety-critical applications. Existing kernel-based classifiers that provide such bounds scale with $\mathcal O (n^{\sim3})$ in time, making them computationally intractable for large datasets. To address this, we propose a novel, computationally efficient classification algorithm based on the Nadaraya-Watson estimator, for whose estimates we derive frequentist uncertainty intervals. We evaluate our classifier on synthetically generated data and on electrocardiographic heartbeat signals from the MIT-BIH Arrhythmia database. We show that the method achieves competitive accuracy $>$\SI{96}{\percent} at $\mathcal O(n)$ and $\mathcal O(\log n)$ operations, while providing actionable uncertainty bounds. These bounds can, e.g., aid in flagging low-confidence predictions, making them suitable for real-time settings with resource constraints, such as diagnostic monitoring or implantable devices.
comment: 9 pages, references, checklist, and appendix. Total 23 pages. Accepted to AISTATS2026
☆ On the Direction of RLVR Updates for LLM Reasoning: Identification and Exploitation
Reinforcement learning with verifiable rewards (RLVR) has substantially improved the reasoning capabilities of large language models. While existing analyses identify that RLVR-induced changes are sparse, they primarily focus on the \textbf{magnitude} of these updates, largely overlooking their \textbf{direction}. In this work, we argue that the direction of updates is a more critical lens for understanding RLVR's effects, which can be captured by the signed, token-level log probability difference $Δ\log p$ between the base and final RLVR models. Through statistical analysis and token-replacement interventions, we demonstrate that $Δ\log p$ more effectively identifies sparse, yet reasoning-critical updates than magnitude-based metrics (\eg divergence or entropy). Building on this insight, we propose two practical applications: (1) a \textit{test-time extrapolation} method that amplifies the policy along the learned $Δ\log p$ direction to improve reasoning accuracy without further training; (2) a \textit{training-time reweighting} method that focuses learning on low-probability (corresponding to higher $Δ\log p$) tokens, which improves reasoning performance across models and benchmarks. Our work establishes the direction of change as a key principle for analyzing and improving RLVR.
☆ SpecTM: Spectral Targeted Masking for Trustworthy Foundation Models
Foundation models are now increasingly being developed for Earth observation (EO), yet they often rely on stochastic masking that do not explicitly enforce physics constraints; a critical trustworthiness limitation, in particular for predictive models that guide public health decisions. In this work, we propose SpecTM (Spectral Targeted Masking), a physics-informed masking design that encourages the reconstruction of targeted bands from cross-spectral context during pretraining. To achieve this, we developed an adaptable multi-task (band reconstruction, bio-optical index inference, and 8-day-ahead temporal prediction) self-supervised learning (SSL) framework that encodes spectrally intrinsic representations via joint optimization, and evaluated it on a downstream microcystin concentration regression model using NASA PACE hyperspectral imagery over Lake Erie. SpecTM achieves R^2 = 0.695 (current week) and R^2 = 0.620 (8-day-ahead) predictions surpassing all baseline models by (+34% (0.51 Ridge) and +99% (SVR 0.31)) respectively. Our ablation experiments show targeted masking improves predictions by +0.037 R^2 over random masking. Furthermore, it outperforms strong baselines with 2.2x superior label efficiency under extreme scarcity. SpecTM enables physics-informed representation learning across EO domains and improves the interpretability of foundation models.
comment: Accepted to IEEE IGARSS 2026
☆ MIHT: A Hoeffding Tree for Time Series Classification using Multiple Instance Learning
Due to the prevalence of temporal data and its inherent dependencies in many real-world problems, time series classification is of paramount importance in various domains. However, existing models often struggle with series of variable length or high dimensionality. This paper introduces the MIHT (Multi-instance Hoeffding Tree) algorithm, an efficient model that uses multi-instance learning to classify multivariate and variable-length time series while providing interpretable results. The algorithm uses a novel representation of time series as "bags of subseries," together with an optimization process based on incremental decision trees that distinguish relevant parts of the series from noise. This methodology extracts the underlying concept of series with multiple variables and variable lengths. The generated decision tree is a compact, white-box representation of the series' concept, providing interpretability insights into the most relevant variables and segments of the series. Experimental results demonstrate MIHT's superiority, as it outperforms 11 state-of-the-art time series classification models on 28 public datasets, including high-dimensional ones. MIHT offers enhanced accuracy and interpretability, making it a promising solution for handling complex, dynamic time series data.
☆ On the Failure of Topic-Matched Contrast Baselines in Multi-Directional Refusal Abliteration
Inasmuch as the removal of refusal behavior from instruction-tuned language models by directional abliteration requires the extraction of refusal-mediating directions from the residual stream activation space, and inasmuch as the construction of the contrast baseline against which harmful prompt activations are compared has been treated in the existing literature as an implementation detail rather than a methodological concern, the present work investigates whether a topically matched contrast baseline yields superior refusal directions. The investigation is carried out on the Qwen~3.5 2B model using per-category matched prompt pairs, per-class Self-Organizing Map extraction, and Singular Value Decomposition orthogonalization. It was found that topic-matched contrast produces no functional refusal directions at any tested weight level on any tested layer, while unmatched contrast on the same model, same extraction code, and same evaluation protocol achieves complete refusal elimination on six layers. The geometric analysis of the failure establishes that topic-matched subtraction cancels the dominant activation component shared between harmful and harmless prompts of the same subject, reducing the extracted direction magnitude below the threshold at which weight-matrix projection perturbs the residual stream. The implications for the design of contrast baselines in abliteration research are discussed.
☆ AnimalCLAP: Taxonomy-Aware Language-Audio Pretraining for Species Recognition and Trait Inference ICASSP 2026
Animal vocalizations provide crucial insights for wildlife assessment, particularly in complex environments such as forests, aiding species identification and ecological monitoring. Recent advances in deep learning have enabled automatic species classification from their vocalizations. However, classifying species unseen during training remains challenging. To address this limitation, we introduce AnimalCLAP, a taxonomy-aware language-audio framework comprising a new dataset and model that incorporate hierarchical biological information. Specifically, our vocalization dataset consists of 4,225 hours of recordings covering 6,823 species, annotated with 22 ecological traits. The AnimalCLAP model is trained on this dataset to align audio and textual representations using taxonomic structures, improving the recognition of unseen species. We demonstrate that our proposed model effectively infers ecological and biological attributes of species directly from their vocalizations, achieving superior performance compared to CLAP. Our dataset, code, and models will be publicly available at https://dahlian00.github.io/AnimalCLAP_Page/.
comment: ICASSP 2026
☆ MAGPI: Multifidelity-Augmented Gaussian Process Inputs for Surrogate Modeling from Scarce Data
Supervised machine learning describes the practice of fitting a parameterized model to labeled input-output data. Supervised machine learning methods have demonstrated promise in learning efficient surrogate models that can (partially) replace expensive high-fidelity models, making many-query analyses, such as optimization, uncertainty quantification, and inference, tractable. However, when training data must be obtained through the evaluation of an expensive model or experiment, the amount of training data that can be obtained is often limited, which can make learned surrogate models unreliable. However, in many engineering and scientific settings, cheaper \emph{low-fidelity} models may be available, for example arising from simplified physics modeling or coarse grids. These models may be used to generate additional low-fidelity training data. The goal of \emph{multifidelity} machine learning is to use both high- and low-fidelity training data to learn a surrogate model which is cheaper to evaluate than the high-fidelity model, but more accurate than any available low-fidelity model. This work proposes a new multifidelity training approach for Gaussian process regression which uses low-fidelity data to define additional features that augment the input space of the learned model. The approach unites desirable properties from two separate classes of existing multifidelity GPR approaches, cokriging and autoregressive estimators. Numerical experiments on several test problems demonstrate both increased predictive accuracy and reduced computational cost relative to the state of the art.
☆ RAFL: Generalizable Sim-to-Real of Soft Robots with Residual Acceleration Field Learning
Differentiable simulators enable gradient-based optimization of soft robots over material parameters, control, and morphology, but accurately modeling real systems remains challenging due to the sim-to-real gap. This issue becomes more pronounced when geometry is itself a design variable. System identification reduces discrepancies by fitting global material parameters to data; however, when constitutive models are misspecified or observations are sparse, identified parameters often absorb geometry-dependent effects rather than reflect intrinsic material behavior. More expressive constitutive models can improve accuracy but substantially increase computational cost, limiting practicality. We propose a residual acceleration field learning (RAFL) framework that augments a base simulator with a transferable, element-level corrective dynamics field. Operating on shared local features, the model is agnostic to global mesh topology and discretization. Trained end-to-end through a differentiable simulator using sparse marker observations, the learned residual generalizes across shapes. In both sim-to-sim and sim-to-real experiments, our method achieves consistent zero-shot improvements on unseen morphologies, while system identification frequently exhibits negative transfer. The framework also supports continual refinement, enabling simulation accuracy to accumulate during morphology optimization.
☆ On the Interplay of Priors and Overparametrization in Bayesian Neural Network Posteriors AISTATS
Bayesian neural network (BNN) posteriors are often considered impractical for inference, as symmetries fragment them, non-identifiabilities inflate dimensionality, and weight-space priors are seen as meaningless. In this work, we study how overparametrization and priors together reshape BNN posteriors and derive implications allowing us to better understand their interplay. We show that redundancy introduces three key phenomena that fundamentally reshape the posterior geometry: balancedness, weight reallocation on equal-probability manifolds, and prior conformity. We validate our findings through extensive experiments with posterior sampling budgets that far exceed those of earlier works, and demonstrate how overparametrization induces structured, prior-aligned weight posterior distributions.
comment: Accepted at the 29th International Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Statistics (AISTATS) 2026
☆ Do Papers Match Code? A Benchmark and Framework for Paper-Code Consistency Detection in Bioinformatics Software
Ensuring consistency between research papers and their corresponding software implementations is fundamental to software reliability and scientific reproducibility. However, this problem remains underexplored, particularly in the domain of bioinformatics, where discrepancies between methodological descriptions in papers and their actual code implementations are prevalent. To address this gap, this paper introduces a new task, namely paper-code consistency detection, and curates a collection of 48 bioinformatics software projects along with their associated publications. We systematically align sentence-level algorithmic descriptions from papers with function-level code snippets. Combined with expert annotations and a hybrid negative sampling strategy, we construct the first benchmark dataset in the bioinformatics domain tailored to this task, termed BioCon. Based on this benchmark, we further propose a cross-modal consistency detection framework designed to model the semantic relationships between natural language descriptions and code implementations. The framework adopts a unified input representation and leverages pre-trained models to capture deep semantic alignment between papers and code. To mitigate the effects of class imbalance and hard samples, we incorporate a weighted focal loss to enhance model robustness. Experimental results demonstrate that our framework effectively identifies consistency between papers and code in bioinformatics, achieving an accuracy of 0.9056 and an F1 score of 0.8011. Overall, this study opens a new research direction for paper-code consistency analysis and lays the foundation for automated reproducibility assessment and cross-modal understanding in scientific software.
comment: 12 pages, 2 figures
☆ AdditiveLLM2: A Multi-modal Large Language Model for Additive Manufacturing
This work presents AdditiveLLM2 a multi-modal, domain adapted large language model built upon the instruction tuned variant of the Gemma 3 model using a relatively small dataset of around 50 million tokens. The dataset (AdditiveLLM2-OA) consists of open-access additive manufacturing journal articles with data extracted for the domain adaptive pretraining and visual instruction tuning processes. Various stages of the developed model are evaluated with the Additive-Manufacturing-Benchmark which consists of additive manufacturing domain specific tasks compiled published resources. AdditiveLLM2 exhibits proficiency in both language and vision based tasks, achieving accuracies upwards of 90% in general additive manufacturing knowledge. This domain adaptive pretraining and instruction tuning strategy outline an accessible specialization method for large language models to a domain such as additive manufacturing.
☆ ROM: Real-time Overthinking Mitigation via Streaming Detection and Intervention
Large Reasoning Models (LRMs) achieve strong accuracy on challenging tasks by generating long Chain-of-Thought traces, but suffer from overthinking. Even after reaching the correct answer, they continue generating redundant reasoning steps. This behavior increases latency and compute cost and can also lead to answer drift. Existing mitigation methods either require training-heavy backbone modification or rely on hand-crafted heuristics that do not truly capture overthinking patterns. We propose ROM, the first method that formulates overthinking mitigation as a streaming prediction-and-control problem. ROM attaches a lightweight detection head to the late-layer hidden states of a frozen large language model backbone. It monitors tokens in real time and triggers an early transition to the final answer once overthinking is detected. We also introduce token-level supervision based on solution correctness boundaries and a data augmentation strategy that reduces distilled-data bias. Across seven benchmarks, ROM achieves the highest accuracy (93.51%), the shortest responses (1,159 tokens), and the best response efficiency. Compared with the vanilla baseline, it reduces response length by 47.2% and improves efficiency by 121%. These results show that streaming detection is a promising approach to real-time overthinking mitigation.
comment: Code is available at https://github.com/SaFo-Lab/ROM
☆ A plug-and-play approach with fast uncertainty quantification for weak lensing mass mapping
Upcoming stage-IV surveys such as Euclid and Rubin will deliver vast amounts of high-precision data, opening new opportunities to constrain cosmological models with unprecedented accuracy. A key step in this process is the reconstruction of the dark matter distribution from noisy weak lensing shear measurements. Current deep learning-based mass mapping methods achieve high reconstruction accuracy, but either require retraining a model for each new observed sky region (limiting practicality) or rely on slow MCMC sampling. Efficient exploitation of future survey data therefore calls for a new method that is accurate, flexible, and fast at inference. In addition, uncertainty quantification with coverage guarantees is essential for reliable cosmological parameter estimation. We introduce PnPMass, a plug-and-play approach for weak lensing mass mapping. The algorithm produces point estimates by alternating between a gradient descent step with a carefully chosen data fidelity term, and a denoising step implemented with a single deep learning model trained on simulated data corrupted by Gaussian white noise. We also propose a fast, sampling-free uncertainty quantification scheme based on moment networks, with calibrated error bars obtained through conformal prediction to ensure coverage guarantees. Finally, we benchmark PnPMass against both model-driven and data-driven mass mapping techniques. PnPMass achieves performance close to that of state-of-the-art deep-learning methods while offering fast inference (converging in just a few iterations) and requiring only a single training phase, independently of the noise covariance of the observations. It therefore combines flexibility, efficiency, and reconstruction accuracy, while delivering tighter error bars than existing approaches, making it well suited for upcoming weak lensing surveys.
☆ CRPS-Optimal Binning for Conformal Regression
We propose a method for non-parametric conditional distribution estimation based on partitioning covariate-sorted observations into contiguous bins and using the within-bin empirical CDF as the predictive distribution. Bin boundaries are chosen to minimise the total leave-one-out Continuous Ranked Probability Score (LOO-CRPS), which admits a closed-form cost function with $O(n^2 \log n)$ precomputation and $O(n^2)$ storage; the globally optimal $K$-partition is recovered by a dynamic programme in $O(n^2 K)$ time. Minimisation of Within-sample LOO-CRPS turns out to be inappropriate for selecting $K$ as it results in in-sample optimism. So we instead select $K$ by evaluating test CRPS on an alternating held-out split, which yields a U-shaped criterion with a well-defined minimum. Having selected $K^*$ and fitted the full-data partition, we form two complementary predictive objects: the Venn prediction band and a conformal prediction set based on CRPS as the nonconformity score, which carries a finite-sample marginal coverage guarantee at any prescribed level $\varepsilon$. On real benchmarks against split-conformal competitors (Gaussian split conformal, CQR, and CQR-QRF), the method produces substantially narrower prediction intervals while maintaining near-nominal coverage.
comment: 29 pages, 11 figures
☆ λ-GELU: Learning Gating Hardness for Controlled ReLU-ization in Deep Networks
Gaussian Error Linear Unit (GELU) is a widely used smooth alternative to Rectifier Linear Unit (ReLU), yet many deployment, compression, and analysis toolchains are most naturally expressed for piecewise-linear (ReLU-type) networks. We study a hardness-parameterized formulation of GELU, f(x;λ)=xΦ(λ x), where Φ is the Gaussian CDF and λ \in [1, infty) controls gate sharpness, with the goal of turning smooth gated training into a controlled path toward ReLU-compatible models. Learning λ is non-trivial: naive updates yield unstable dynamics and effective gradient attenuation, so we introduce a constrained reparameterization and an optimizer-aware update scheme. Empirically, across a diverse set of model--dataset pairs spanning MLPs, CNNs, and Transformers, we observe structured layerwise hardness profiles and assess their robustness under different initializations. We further study a deterministic ReLU-ization strategy in which the learned gates are progressively hardened toward a principled target, enabling a post-training substitution of λ-GELU by ReLU with reduced disruption. Overall, λ-GELU provides a minimal and interpretable knob to profile and control gating hardness, bridging smooth training with ReLU-centric downstream pipelines.
☆ TREX: Trajectory Explanations for Multi-Objective Reinforcement Learning
Reinforcement Learning (RL) has demonstrated its ability to solve complex decision-making problems in a variety of domains, by optimizing reward signals obtained through interaction with an environment. However, many real-world scenarios involve multiple, potentially conflicting objectives that cannot be easily represented by a single scalar reward. Multi-Objective Reinforcement Learning (MORL) addresses this limitation by enabling agents to optimize several objectives simultaneously, explicitly reasoning about trade-offs between them. However, the ``black box" nature of the RL models makes the decision process behind chosen objective trade-offs unclear. Current Explainable Reinforcement Learning (XRL) methods are typically designed for single scalar rewards and do not account for explanations with respect to distinct objectives or user preferences. To address this gap, in this paper we propose TREX, a Trajectory based Explainability framework to explain Multi-objective Reinforcement Learning policies, based on trajectory attribution. TREX generates trajectories directly from the learned expert policy, across different user preferences and clusters them into semantically meaningful temporal segments. We quantify the influence of these behavioural segments on the Pareto trade-off by training complementary policies that exclude specific clusters, measuring the resulting relative deviation on the observed rewards and actions compared to the original expert policy. Experiments on multi-objective MuJoCo environments - HalfCheetah, Ant and Swimmer, demonstrate the framework's ability to isolate and quantify the specific behavioural patterns.
comment: Accepted by 4th World Conference on eXplainable Artificial Intelligence
☆ BOOST-RPF: Boosted Sequential Trees for Radial Power Flow
Accurate power flow analysis is critical for modern distribution systems, yet classical solvers face scalability issues, and current machine learning models often struggle with generalization. We introduce BOOST-RPF, a novel method that reformulates voltage prediction from a global graph regression task into a sequential path-based learning problem. By decomposing radial networks into root-to-leaf paths, we leverage gradient-boosted decision trees (XGBoost) to model local voltage-drop regularities. We evaluate three architectural variants: Absolute Voltage, Parent Residual, and Physics-Informed Residual. This approach aligns the model architecture with the recursive physics of power flow, ensuring size-agnostic application and superior out-of-distribution robustness. Benchmarked against the Kerber Dorfnetz grid and the ENGAGE suite, BOOST-RPF achieves state-of-the-art results with its Parent Residual variant which consistently outperforms both analytical and neural baselines in standard accuracy and generalization tasks. While global Multi-Layer Perceptrons (MLPs) and Graph Neural Networks (GNNs) often suffer from performance degradation under topological shifts, BOOST-RPF maintains high precision across unseen feeders. Furthermore, the framework displays linear $O(N)$ computational scaling and significantly increased sample efficiency through per-edge supervision, offering a scalable and generalizable alternative for real-time distribution system operator (DSO) applications.
☆ SecureBreak -- A dataset towards safe and secure models
Large language models are becoming pervasive core components in many real-world applications. As a consequence, security alignment represents a critical requirement for their safe deployment. Although previous related works focused primarily on model architectures and alignment methodologies, these approaches alone cannot ensure the complete elimination of harmful generations. This concern is reinforced by the growing body of scientific literature showing that attacks, such as jailbreaking and prompt injection, can bypass existing security alignment mechanisms. As a consequence, additional security strategies are needed both to provide qualitative feedback on the robustness of the obtained security alignment at the training stage, and to create an ``ultimate'' defense layer to block unsafe outputs possibly produced by deployed models. To provide a contribution in this scenario, this paper introduces SecureBreak, a safety-oriented dataset designed to support the development of AI-driven solutions for detecting harmful LLM outputs caused by residual weaknesses in security alignment. The dataset is highly reliable due to careful manual annotation, where labels are assigned conservatively to ensure safety. It performs well in detecting unsafe content across multiple risk categories. Tests with pre-trained LLMs show improved results after fine-tuning on SecureBreak. Overall, the dataset is useful both for post-generation safety filtering and for guiding further model alignment and security improvements.
☆ Demystifying Reinforcement Learning for Long-Horizon Tool-Using Agents: A Comprehensive Recipe
Reinforcement Learning (RL) is essential for evolving Large Language Models (LLMs) into autonomous agents capable of long-horizon planning, yet a practical recipe for scaling RL in complex, multi-turn environments remains elusive. This paper presents a systematic empirical study using TravelPlanner, a challenging testbed requiring tool orchestration to satisfy multifaceted constraints. We decompose the agentic RL design space along 5 axes: reward shaping, model scaling, data composition, algorithm selection, and environmental stability. Our controlled experiments yield 7 key takeaways, e.g., (1) reward and algorithm choices are scale-dependent as smaller models benefit from staged rewards and enhanced exploration, whereas larger models converge efficiently with simpler dense rewards, (2) ~ 1K training samples with a balanced difficulty mixture mark a sweet spot for both in-domain and out-of-domain performance, and (3) environmental stability is critical to prevent policy degradation. Based on our distilled recipe, our RL-trained models achieve state-of-the-art performance on TravelPlanner, significantly outperforming leading LLMs.
comment: Codes are available at https://github.com/WxxShirley/Agent-STAR
☆ Camera-Agnostic Pruning of 3D Gaussian Splats via Descriptor-Based Beta Evidence
The pruning of 3D Gaussian splats is essential for reducing their complexity to enable efficient storage, transmission, and downstream processing. However, most of the existing pruning strategies depend on camera parameters, rendered images, or view-dependent measures. This dependency becomes a hindrance in emerging camera-agnostic exchange settings, where splats are shared directly as point-based representations (e.g., .ply). In this paper, we propose a camera-agnostic, one-shot, post-training pruning method for 3D Gaussian splats that relies solely on attribute-derived neighbourhood descriptors. As our primary contribution, we introduce a hybrid descriptor framework that captures structural and appearance consistency directly from the splat representation. Building on these descriptors, we formulate pruning as a statistical evidence estimation problem and introduce a Beta evidence model that quantifies per-splat reliability through a probabilistic confidence score. Experiments conducted on standardized test sequences defined by the ISO/IEC MPEG Common Test Conditions (CTC) demonstrate that our approach achieves substantial pruning while preserving reconstruction quality, establishing a practical and generalizable alternative to existing camera-dependent pruning strategies.
comment: 14 pages, 3 figures, 2 tables
☆ The Golden Subspace: Where Efficiency Meets Generalization in Continual Test-Time Adaptation CVPR 2026
Continual Test-Time Adaptation (CTTA) aims to enable models to adapt online to unlabeled data streams under distribution shift without accessing source data. Existing CTTA methods face an efficiency-generalization trade-off: updating more parameters improves adaptation but severely reduces online inference efficiency. An ideal solution is to achieve comparable adaptation with minimal feature updates; we call this minimal subspace the golden subspace. We prove its existence in a single-step adaptation setting and show that it coincides with the row space of the pretrained classifier. To enable online maintenance of this subspace, we introduce the sample-wise Average Gradient Outer Product (AGOP) as an efficient proxy for estimating the classifier weights without retraining. Building on these insights, we propose Guided Online Low-rank Directional adaptation (GOLD), which uses a lightweight adapter to project features onto the golden subspace and learns a compact scaling vector while the subspace is dynamically updated via AGOP. Extensive experiments on classification and segmentation benchmarks, including autonomous-driving scenarios, demonstrate that GOLD attains superior efficiency, stability, and overall performance. Our code is available at https://github.com/AIGNLAI/GOLD.
comment: Accepted to CVPR 2026
☆ Deep Reinforcement Learning and The Tale of Two Temporal Difference Errors
The temporal difference (TD) error was first formalized in Sutton (1988), where it was first characterized as the difference between temporally successive predictions, and later, in that same work, formulated as the difference between a bootstrapped target and a prediction. Since then, these two interpretations of the TD error have been used interchangeably in the literature, with the latter eventually being adopted as the standard critic loss in deep reinforcement learning (RL) architectures. In this work, we show that these two interpretations of the TD error are not always equivalent. In particular, we show that increasingly-nonlinear deep RL architectures can cause these interpretations of the TD error to yield increasingly different numerical values. Then, building on this insight, we show how choosing one interpretation of the TD error over the other can affect the performance of deep RL algorithms that utilize the TD error to compute other quantities, such as with deep differential (i.e., average-reward) RL methods. All in all, our results show that the default interpretation of the TD error as the difference between a bootstrapped target and a prediction does not always hold in deep RL settings.
☆ Structural Concentration in Weighted Networks: A Class of Topology-Aware Indices
This paper develops a unified framework for measuring concentration in weighted systems embedded in networks of interactions. While traditional indices such as the Herfindahl-Hirschman Index capture dispersion in weights, they neglect the topology of relationships among the elements receiving those weights. To address this limitation, we introduce a family of topology-aware concentration indices that jointly account for weight distributions and network structure. At the core of the framework lies a baseline Network Concentration Index (NCI), defined as a normalized quadratic form that measures the fraction of potential weighted interconnection realized along observed network links. Building on this foundation, we construct a flexible class of extensions that modify either the interaction structure or the normalization benchmark, including weighted, density-adjusted, null-model, degree-constrained, transformed-data, and multi-layer variants. This family of indices preserves key properties such as normalization, invariance, and interpretability, while allowing concentration to be evaluated across different dimensions of dependence, including intensity, higher-order interactions, and extreme events. Theoretical results characterize the indices and establish their relationship with classical concentration and network measures. Empirical and simulation evidence demonstrate that systems with identical weight distributions may exhibit markedly different levels of structural concentration depending on network topology, highlighting the additional information captured by the proposed framework. The approach is broadly applicable to economic, financial, and complex systems in which weighted elements interact through networks.
☆ A Latent Representation Learning Framework for Hyperspectral Image Emulation in Remote Sensing
Synthetic hyperspectral image (HSI) generation is essential for large-scale simulation, algorithm development, and mission design, yet traditional radiative transfer models remain computationally expensive and often limited to spectrum-level outputs. In this work, we propose a latent representation-based framework for hyperspectral emulation that learns a latent generative representation of hyperspectral data. The proposed approach supports both spectrum-level and spatial-spectral emulation and can be trained either in a direct one-step formulation or in a two-step strategy that couples variational autoencoder (VAE) pretraining with parameter-to-latent interpolation. Experiments on PROSAIL-simulated vegetation data and Sentinel-3 OLCI imagery demonstrate that the method outperforms classical regression-based emulators in reconstruction accuracy, spectral fidelity, and robustness to real-world spatial variability. We further show that emulated HSIs preserve performance in downstream biophysical parameter retrieval, highlighting the practical relevance of emulated data for remote sensing applications.
☆ A Novel Method for Enforcing Exactly Dirichlet, Neumann and Robin Conditions on Curved Domain Boundaries for Physics Informed Machine Learning
We present a systematic method for exactly enforcing Dirichlet, Neumann, and Robin type conditions on general quadrilateral domains with arbitrary curved boundaries. Our method is built upon exact mappings between general quadrilateral domains and the standard domain, and employs a combination of TFC (theory of functional connections) constrained expressions and transfinite interpolations. When Neumann or Robin boundaries are present, especially when two Neumann (or Robin) boundaries meet at a vertex, it is critical to enforce exactly the induced compatibility constraints at the intersection, in order to enforce exactly the imposed conditions on the joining boundaries. We analyze in detail and present constructions for handling the imposed boundary conditions and the induced compatibility constraints for two types of situations: (i) when Neumann (or Robin) boundary only intersects with Dirichlet boundaries, and (ii) when two Neumann (or Robin) boundaries intersect with each other. We describe a four-step procedure to systematically formulate the general form of functions that exactly satisfy the imposed Dirichlet, Neumann, or Robin conditions on general quadrilateral domains. The method developed herein has been implemented together with the extreme learning machine (ELM) technique we have developed recently for scientific machine learning. Ample numerical experiments are presented with several linear/nonlinear stationary/dynamic problems on a variety of two-dimensional domains with complex boundary geometries. Simulation results demonstrate that the proposed method has enforced the Dirichlet, Neumann, and Robin conditions on curved domain boundaries exactly, with the numerical boundary-condition errors at the machine accuracy.
comment: 42 pages, 9 figures, 7 tables
☆ SparseDVFS: Sparse-Aware DVFS for Energy-Efficient Edge Inference
Deploying deep neural networks (DNNs) on power-sensitive edge devices presents a formidable challenge. While Dynamic Voltage and Frequency Scaling (DVFS) is widely employed for energy optimization, traditional model-level scaling is often too coarse to capture intra-inference variations, whereas fine-grained operator-level scaling suffers from prohibitive performance degradation due to significant hardware switching latency. This paper presents SparseDVFS, a fine-grained, sparse-aware DVFS framework designed for energy-efficient edge inference. Our key insight is that operator sparsity is a primary metric for hardware frequency modulation. By distinguishing between compute-bound dense operators and memory-bound sparse operators, the system can apply specialized frequency triplets to maximize energy efficiency. To overcome switching overheads and component interference, SparseDVFS incorporates three key innovations: (1) an offline modeler that established a deterministic mapping between operator sparsity and optimal frequency triplets (CPU/GPU/EMC) via white-box timeline analysis; (2) a runtime graph partitioner that utilizes a greedy merging heuristic to aggregate operators into super-blocks, balancing scaling granularity and DVFS switching latency through a latency amortization constraint; and (3) a unified co-governor that employs a frequency unified scaling engine (FUSE) and a look-ahead instruction queue to eliminate antagonistic effects between independent controllers and hide hardware transition latencies. Extensive evaluations show that SparseDVFS achieves an average 78.17% energy efficiency gain over state-of-the-art solutions while maintaining a superior 14% cost-gain ratio.
comment: 14 pages, 19 figures, 3 tables
☆ Not All Layers Are Created Equal: Adaptive LoRA Ranks for Personalized Image Generation
Low Rank Adaptation (LoRA) is the de facto fine-tuning strategy to generate personalized images from pre-trained diffusion models. Choosing a good rank is extremely critical, since it trades off performance and memory consumption, but today the decision is often left to the community's consensus, regardless of the personalized subject's complexity. The reason is evident: the cost of selecting a good rank for each LoRA component is combinatorial, so we opt for practical shortcuts such as fixing the same rank for all components. In this paper, we take a first step to overcome this challenge. Inspired by variational methods that learn an adaptive width of neural networks, we let the ranks of each layer freely adapt during fine-tuning on a subject. We achieve it by imposing an ordering of importance on the rank's positions, effectively encouraging the creation of higher ranks when strictly needed. Qualitatively and quantitatively, our approach, LoRA$^2$, achieves a competitive trade-off between DINO, CLIP-I, and CLIP-T across 29 subjects while requiring much less memory and lower rank than high rank LoRA versions. Code: https://github.com/donaldssh/NotAllLayersAreCreatedEqual.
comment: Project page: https://donaldssh.github.io/NotAllLayersAreCreatedEqual/
☆ SmaAT-QMix-UNet: A Parameter-Efficient Vector-Quantized UNet for Precipitation Nowcasting
Weather forecasting supports critical socioeconomic activities and complements environmental protection, yet operational Numerical Weather Prediction (NWP) systems remain computationally intensive, thus being inefficient for certain applications. Meanwhile, recent advances in deep data-driven models have demonstrated promising results in nowcasting tasks. This paper presents SmaAT-QMix-UNet, an enhanced variant of SmaAT-UNet that introduces two key innovations: a vector quantization (VQ) bottleneck at the encoder-decoder bridge, and mixed kernel depth-wise convolutions (MixConv) replacing selected encoder and decoder blocks. These enhancements both reduce the model's size and improve its nowcasting performance. We train and evaluate SmaAT-QMix-UNet on a Dutch radar precipitation dataset (2016-2019), predicting precipitation 30 minutes ahead. Three configurations are benchmarked: using only VQ, only MixConv, and the full SmaAT-QMix-UNet. Grad-CAM saliency maps highlight the regions influencing each nowcast, while a UMAP embedding of the codewords illustrates how the VQ layer clusters encoder outputs. The source code for SmaAT-QMix-UNet is publicly available on GitHub \footnote{\href{https://github.com/nstavr04/MasterThesisSnellius}{https://github.com/nstavr04/MasterThesisSnellius}}.
comment: 6 pages, 5 figures
☆ P^2O: Joint Policy and Prompt Optimization
Reinforcement Learning with Verifiable Rewards (RLVR) has emerged as a powerful paradigm for enhancing the reasoning capabilities of Large Language Models (LLMs). However, vanilla RLVR suffers from inefficient exploration, particularly when confronting "hard samples" that yield nearzero success rates. In such scenarios, the reliance on sparse outcome rewards typically results in zero-advantage estimates, effectively starving the model of supervision signals despite the high informational value of these instances. To address this, we propose P^2O, a novel framework that synergizes Prompt Optimization with Policy Optimization. P^2O identifies hard samples during training iterations and leverages the GeneticPareto (GEPA) prompt optimization algorithm to evolve prompt templates that guide the model toward discovering successful trajectories. Crucially, unlike traditional prompt engineering methods that rely on input augmentation, P^2O distills the reasoning gains induced by these optimized prompts directly into the model parameters. This mechanism provides denser positive supervision signals for hard samples and accelerates convergence. Extensive experiments demonstrate that P^2O not only achieves superior performance on in-distribution datasets but also exhibits strong generalization, yielding substantial improvements on out-of-distribution benchmarks (+4.7% avg.).
☆ Holistic Scaling Laws for Optimal Mixture-of-Experts Architecture Optimization
Scaling laws for Large Language Models govern macroscopic resource allocation, yet translating them into precise Mixture-of-Experts (MoE) architectural configurations remains an open problem due to the combinatorially vast design space. Existing MoE scaling studies are constrained by experimental budgets to either augment scaling formulas with extra MoE variables, risking unreliable fits, or fix all non-MoE factors, ignoring global interactions. We propose a reusable framework for holistic MoE architectural optimization that bridges this gap. We first show that FLOPs per token alone is an inadequate fairness metric for MoE models because differing computational densities across layer types can inflate parameters without proportional compute cost, and establish a joint constraint triad of FLOPs per token, active parameters, and total parameters. We then reduce the 16-dimensional architectural search space to two sequential low-dimensional phases through algebraic constraints and a rank-preserving property of the hidden dimension. Validated across hundreds of MoE models spanning six orders of magnitude in compute, our framework yields robust scaling laws that map any compute budget to a complete, optimal MoE architecture. A key finding is that the near-optimal configuration band widens with scale, giving practitioners quantitative flexibility to balance scaling law recommendations against infrastructure constraints.
☆ All elementary functions from a single binary operator
A single two-input gate suffices for all of Boolean logic in digital hardware. No comparable primitive has been known for continuous mathematics: computing elementary functions such as sin, cos, sqrt, and log has always required multiple distinct operations. Here I show that a single binary operator, eml(x,y)=exp(x)-ln(y), together with the constant 1, generates the standard repertoire of a scientific calculator. This includes constants such as $e$, $π$, and $i$; arithmetic operations including $+$, $-$, $\times$, $/$, and exponentiation as well as the usual transcendental and algebraic functions. For example, $e^x=\operatorname{eml}(x,1)$, $\ln x=\operatorname{eml}(1,\operatorname{eml}(\operatorname{eml}(1,x),1))$, and likewise for all other operations. That such an operator exists was not anticipated; I found it by systematic exhaustive search and established constructively that it suffices for the concrete scientific-calculator basis. In EML (Exp-Minus-Log) form, every such expression becomes a binary tree of identical nodes, yielding a grammar as simple as $S \to 1 \mid \operatorname{eml}(S,S)$. This uniform structure also enables gradient-based symbolic regression: using EML trees as trainable circuits with standard optimizers (Adam), I demonstrate the feasibility of exact recovery of closed-form elementary functions from numerical data at shallow tree depths up to 4. The same architecture can fit arbitrary data, but when the generating law is elementary, it may recover the exact formula.
comment: 8 pages, 2 figures, Supplementary Information, code available at https://zenodo.org/records/19183008
☆ On the Number of Conditional Independence Tests in Constraint-based Causal Discovery
Learning causal relations from observational data is a fundamental problem with wide-ranging applications across many fields. Constraint-based methods infer the underlying causal structure by performing conditional independence tests. However, existing algorithms such as the prominent PC algorithm need to perform a large number of independence tests, which in the worst case is exponential in the maximum degree of the causal graph. Despite extensive research, it remains unclear if there exist algorithms with better complexity without additional assumptions. Here, we establish an algorithm that achieves a better complexity of $p^{\mathcal{O}(s)}$ tests, where $p$ is the number of nodes in the graph and $s$ denotes the maximum undirected clique size of the underlying essential graph. Complementing this result, we prove that any constraint-based algorithm must perform at least $2^{Ω(s)}$ conditional independence tests, establishing that our proposed algorithm achieves exponent-optimality up to a logarithmic factor in terms of the number of conditional independence tests needed. Finally, we validate our theoretical findings through simulations, on semi-synthetic gene-expression data, and real-world data, demonstrating the efficiency of our algorithm compared to existing methods in terms of number of conditional independence tests needed.
☆ Deriving Health Metrics from the Photoplethysmogram: Benchmarks and Insights from MIMIC-III-Ext-PPG
Photoplethysmography (PPG) is one of the most widely captured biosignals for clinical prediction tasks, yet PPG-based algorithms are typically trained on small-scale datasets of uncertain quality, which hinders meaningful algorithm comparisons. We present a comprehensive benchmark for PPG-based clinical prediction using the \dbname~dataset, establishing baselines across the full spectrum of clinically relevant applications: multi-class heart rhythm classification, and regression of physiological parameters including respiratory rate (RR), heart rate (HR), and blood pressure (BP). Most notably, we provide the first comprehensive assessment of PPG for general arrhythmia detection beyond atrial fibrillation (AF) and atrial flutter (AFLT), with performance stratified by BP, HR, and demographic subgroups. Using established deep learning architectures, we achieved strong performance for AF detection (AUROC = 0.96) and accurate physiological parameter estimation (RR MAE: 2.97 bpm; HR MAE: 1.13 bpm; SBP/DBP MAE: 16.13/8.70 mmHg). Cross-dataset validation demonstrates excellent generalizability for AF detection (AUROC = 0.97), while clinical subgroup analysis reveals marked performance differences across subgroups by BP, HR, and demographic strata. These variations appear to reflect population-specific waveform differences rather than systematic bias in model behavior. This framework establishes the first integrated benchmark for multi-task PPG-based clinical prediction, demonstrating that PPG signals can effectively support multiple simultaneous monitoring tasks and providing essential baselines for future algorithm development.
comment: 22 pages, 1 figure
☆ CoRA: Boosting Time Series Foundation Models for Multivariate Forecasting through Correlation-aware Adapter
Most existing Time Series Foundation Models (TSFMs) use channel independent modeling and focus on capturing and generalizing temporal dependencies, while neglecting the correlations among channels or overlooking the different aspects of correlations. However, these correlations play a vital role in Multivariate time series forecasting. To address this, we propose a CoRrelation-aware Adapter (CoRA), a lightweight plug-and-play method that requires only fine-tuning with TSFMs and is able to capture different types of correlations, so as to improve forecast performance. Specifically, to reduce complexity, we innovatively decompose the correlation matrix into low-rank Time-Varying and Time-Invariant components. For the Time-Varying component, we further design learnable polynomials to learn dynamic correlations by capturing trends or periodic patterns. To learn positive and negative correlations that appear only among some channels, we introduce a novel dual contrastive learning method that identifies correlations through projection layers, regulated by a Heterogeneous-Partial contrastive loss during training, without introducing additional complexity in the inference stage. Extensive experiments on 10 real-world datasets demonstrate that CoRA can improve TSFMs in multivariate forecasting performance.
☆ Ctrl-A: Control-Driven Online Data Augmentation
We introduce ControlAugment (Ctrl-A), an automated data augmentation algorithm for image-vision tasks, which incorporates principles from control theory for online adjustment of augmentation strength distributions during model training. Ctrl-A eliminates the need for initialization of individual augmentation strengths. Instead, augmentation strength distributions are dynamically, and individually, adapted during training based on a control-loop architecture and what we define as relative operation response curves. Using an operation-dependent update procedure provides Ctrl-A with the potential to suppress augmentation styles that negatively impact model performance, alleviating the need for manually engineering augmentation policies for new image-vision tasks. Experiments on the CIFAR-10, CIFAR-100, and SVHN-core benchmark datasets using the common WideResNet-28-10 architecture demonstrate that Ctrl-A is highly competitive with existing state-of-the-art data augmentation strategies.
comment: 17 pages (11 pages main manuscript), 8 figures (5 in main manuscript)
☆ Show Me What You Don't Know: Efficient Sampling from Invariant Sets for Model Validation
The performance of machine learning models is determined by the quality of their learned features. They should be invariant under irrelevant data variation but sensitive to task-relevant details. To visualize whether this is the case, we propose a method to analyze feature extractors by sampling from their fibers -- equivalence classes defined by their invariances -- given an arbitrary representative. Unlike existing work where a dedicated generative model is trained for each feature detector, our algorithm is training-free and exploits a pretrained diffusion or flow-matching model as a prior. The fiber loss -- which penalizes mismatch in features -- guides the denoising process toward the desired equivalence class, via non-linear diffusion trajectory matching. This replaces days of training for invariance learning with a single guided generation procedure at comparable fidelity. Experiments on popular datasets (ImageNet, CheXpert) and model types (ResNet, DINO, BiomedClip) demonstrate that our framework can reveal invariances ranging from very desirable to concerning behaviour. For instance, we show how Qwen-2B places patients with situs inversus (heart on the right side) in the same fiber as typical anatomy.
comment: 19 pages, 19 figures
☆ Cluster-Specific Predictive Modeling: A Scalable Solution for Resource-Constrained Wi-Fi Controllers
This manuscript presents a comprehensive analysis of predictive modeling optimization in managed Wi-Fi networks through the integration of clustering algorithms and model evaluation techniques. The study addresses the challenges of deploying forecasting algorithms in large-scale environments managed by a central controller constrained by memory and computational resources. Feature-based clustering, supported by Principal Component Analysis (PCA) and advanced feature engineering, is employed to group time series data based on shared characteristics, enabling the development of cluster-specific predictive models. Comparative evaluations between global models (GMs) and cluster-specific models demonstrate that cluster-specific models consistently achieve superior accuracy in terms of Mean Absolute Error (MAE) values in high-activity clusters. The trade-offs between model complexity (and accuracy) and resource utilization are analyzed, highlighting the scalability of tailored modeling approaches. The findings advocate for adaptive network management strategies that optimize resource allocation through selective model deployment, enhance predictive accuracy, and ensure scalable operations in large-scale, centrally managed Wi-Fi environments.
comment: 5 figures, 7 pages
☆ Extending Precipitation Nowcasting Horizons via Spectral Fusion of Radar Observations and Foundation Model Priors IJCNN 2026
Precipitation nowcasting is critical for disaster mitigation and aviation safety. However, radar-only models frequently suffer from a lack of large-scale atmospheric context, leading to performance degradation at longer lead times. While integrating meteorological variables predicted by weather foundation models offers a potential remedy, existing architectures fail to reconcile the profound representational heterogeneities between radar imagery and meteorological data. To bridge this gap, we propose PW-FouCast, a novel frequency-domain fusion framework that leverages Pangu-Weather forecasts as spectral priors within a Fourier-based backbone. Our architecture introduces three key innovations: (i) Pangu-Weather-guided Frequency Modulation to align spectral magnitudes and phases with meteorological priors; (ii) Frequency Memory to correct phase discrepancies and preserve temporal evolution; and (iii) Inverted Frequency Attention to reconstruct high-frequency details typically lost in spectral filtering. Extensive experiments on the SEVIR and MeteoNet benchmarks demonstrate that PW-FouCast achieves state-of-the-art performance, effectively extending the reliable forecast horizon while maintaining structural fidelity. Our code is available at https://github.com/Onemissed/PW-FouCast.
comment: Accepted by IJCNN 2026. Code is available at https://github.com/Onemissed/PW-FouCast
☆ Identifiability and amortized inference limitations in Kuramoto models
Bayesian inference is a powerful tool for parameter estimation and uncertainty quantification in dynamical systems. However, for nonlinear oscillator networks such as Kuramoto models, widely used to study synchronization phenomena in physics, biology, and engineering, inference is often computationally prohibitive due to high-dimensional state spaces and intractable likelihood functions. We present an amortized Bayesian inference approach that learns a neural approximation of the posterior from simulated phase dynamics, enabling fast, scalable inference without repeated sampling or optimization. Applied to synthetic Kuramoto networks, the method shows promising results in approximating posterior distributions and capturing uncertainty, with computational savings compared to traditional Bayesian techniques. These findings suggest that amortized inference is a practical and flexible framework for uncertainty-aware analysis of oscillator networks.
☆ Model selection in hybrid quantum neural networks with applications to quantum transformer architectures
Quantum machine learning models generally lack principled design guidelines, often requiring full resource-intensive training across numerous choices of encodings, quantum circuit designs and initialization strategies to find effective configuration. To address this challenge, we develope the Quantum Bias-Expressivity Toolbox ($\texttt{QBET}$), a framework for evaluating quantum, classical, and hybrid transformer architectures. In this toolbox, we introduce lean metrics for Simplicity Bias ($\texttt{SB}$) and Expressivity ($\texttt{EXP}$), for comparing across various models, and extend the analysis of $\texttt{SB}$ to generative and multiclass-classification tasks. We show that $\texttt{QBET}$ enables efficient pre-screening of promising model variants obviating the need to execute complete training pipelines. In evaluations on transformer-based classification and generative tasks we employ a total of $18$ qubits for embeddings ($6$ qubits each for query, key, and value). We identify scenarios in which quantum self-attention variants surpass their classical counterparts by ranking the respective models according to the $\texttt{SB}$ metric and comparing their relative performance.
comment: 32 Pages. 16 figures, 1 algorithm and 8 tables
☆ CellFluxRL: Biologically-Constrained Virtual Cell Modeling via Reinforcement Learning
Building virtual cells with generative models to simulate cellular behavior in silico is emerging as a promising paradigm for accelerating drug discovery. However, prior image-based generative approaches can produce implausible cell images that violate basic physical and biological constraints. To address this, we propose to post-train virtual cell models with reinforcement learning (RL), leveraging biologically meaningful evaluators as reward functions. We design seven rewards spanning three categories-biological function, structural validity, and morphological correctness-and optimize the state-of-the-art CellFlux model to yield CellFluxRL. CellFluxRL consistently improves over CellFlux across all rewards, with further performance boosts from test-time scaling. Overall, our results present a virtual cell modeling framework that enforces physically-based constraints through RL, advancing beyond "visually realistic" generations towards "biologically meaningful" ones.
☆ CurvZO: Adaptive Curvature-Guided Sparse Zeroth-Order Optimization for Efficient LLM Fine-Tuning
Fine-tuning large language models (LLMs) with backpropagation achieves high performance but incurs substantial memory overhead, limiting scalability on resource-constrained hardware. Zeroth-order (ZO) optimization provides a memory-efficient alternative by relying solely on forward passes, yet it typically suffers from slow or unstable convergence due to high-variance gradient estimates. Sparse ZO updates partially address this issue by perturbing only a subset of parameters, but their effectiveness hinges on selecting informative parameters, which is challenging in ZO optimization because each query yields only scalar feedback. We propose \textbf{Adaptive Curvature-Guided Sparse Zeroth-Order Optimization (CurvZO)}, which tracks curvature signals online from scalar ZO feedback and leverages these signals to construct a parameter-wise sampling distribution for selecting coordinates at each update, reducing the variance of the sparse ZO gradient estimator. Moreover, CurvZO dynamically adapts the perturbation budget to the evolving curvature signal distribution, yielding sparse ZO updates that remain both focused and sufficiently exploratory. Extensive experiments on OPT and Llama across diverse NLP tasks show that CurvZO consistently improves fine-tuning performance and reduces training time over ZO baselines. It improves accuracy by up to 4.4 points and achieves up to a $2\times$ speedup, while preserving memory efficiency.
☆ FISformer: Replacing Self-Attention with a Fuzzy Inference System in Transformer Models for Time Series Forecasting
Transformers have achieved remarkable progress in time series forecasting, yet their reliance on deterministic dot-product attention limits their capacity to model uncertainty and nonlinear dependencies across multivariate temporal dimensions. To address this limitation, we propose FISFormer, a Fuzzy Inference System-driven Transformer that replaces conventional attention with a FIS Interaction mechanism. In this framework, each query-key pair undergoes a fuzzy inference process for every feature dimension, where learnable membership functions and rule-based reasoning estimate token-wise relational strengths. These FIS-derived interaction weights capture uncertainty and provide interpretable, continuous mappings between tokens. A softmax operation is applied along the token axis to normalize these weights, which are then combined with the corresponding value features through element-wise multiplication to yield the final context-enhanced token representations. This design fuses the interpretability and uncertainty modeling of fuzzy logic with the representational power of Transformers. Extensive experiments on multiple benchmark datasets demonstrate that FISFormer achieves superior forecasting accuracy, noise robustness, and interpretability compared to state-of-the-art Transformer variants, establishing fuzzy inference as an effective alternative to conventional attention mechanisms.
☆ Uncertainty Quantification for Distribution-to-Distribution Flow Matching in Scientific Imaging
Distribution-to-distribution generative models support scientific imaging tasks ranging from modeling cellular perturbation responses to translating medical images across conditions. Trustworthy generation requires both reliability (generalization across labs, devices, and experimental conditions) and accountability (detecting out-of-distribution cases where predictions may be unreliable). Uncertainty quantification (UQ) based approaches serve as promising candidates for these tasks, yet UQ for distribution-to-distribution generative models remains underexplored. We present a unified UQ framework, Bayesian Stochastic Flow Matching (BSFM), that disentangles aleatoric and epistemic uncertainty. The Stochastic Flow Matching (SFM) component augments deterministic flows with a diffusion term to improve model generalization to unseen scenarios. For UQ, we develop a scalable Bayesian approach -- MCD-Antithetic -- that combines Monte Carlo Dropout with sample-efficient antithetic sampling to produce effective anomaly scores for out-of-distribution detection. Experiments on cellular imaging (BBBC021, JUMP) and brain fMRI (Theory of Mind) across diverse scenarios show that SFM improves reliability while MCD-Antithetic enhances accountability.
☆ When Exploration Comes for Free with Mixture-Greedy: Do we need UCB in Diversity-Aware Multi-Armed Bandits?
Efficient selection among multiple generative models is increasingly important in modern generative AI, where sampling from suboptimal models is costly. This problem can be formulated as a multi-armed bandit task. Under diversity-aware evaluation metrics, a non-degenerate mixture of generators can outperform any individual model, distinguishing this setting from classical best-arm identification. Prior approaches therefore incorporate an Upper Confidence Bound (UCB) exploration bonus into the mixture objective. However, across multiple datasets and evaluation metrics, we observe that the UCB term consistently slows convergence and often reduces sample efficiency. In contrast, a simple \emph{Mixture-Greedy} strategy without explicit UCB-type optimism converges faster and achieves even better performance, particularly for widely used metrics such as FID and Vendi where tight confidence bounds are difficult to construct. We provide theoretical insight explaining this behavior: under transparent structural conditions, diversity-aware objectives induce implicit exploration by favoring interior mixtures, leading to linear sampling of all arms and sublinear regret guarantees for entropy-based, kernel-based, and FID-type objectives. These results suggest that in diversity-aware multi-armed bandits for generative model selection, exploration can arise intrinsically from the objective geometry, questioning the necessity of explicit confidence bonuses.
☆ Data-Free Layer-Adaptive Merging via Fisher Information for Long-to-Short Reasoning LLMs NeurIPS 2026
Model merging has emerged as a practical approach to combine capabilities of specialized large language models (LLMs) without additional training. In the Long-to-Short (L2S) scenario, merging a base model with a long-chain-of-thought reasoning model aims to preserve reasoning accuracy while reducing output length. Existing methods rely on Task Arithmetic and its variants, which implicitly assume that model outputs vary linearly with the merging coefficient -- an assumption we show is systematically violated in L2S settings. We provide the first theoretical justification for layer-adaptive merging: we prove that merging error is bounded by a term proportional to the per-layer Hessian norm (Proposition~1), and establish that the Fisher Information Matrix (FIM) is a principled, computable proxy for this bound via the Fisher-Hessian equivalence at local optima. Building on this theory, we propose \textbf{FIM-Merging}, which computes diagonal FIM using only random token inputs (no domain-specific calibration data required) and uses it to assign per-layer merging coefficients. On the 7B L2S benchmark, FIM-TIES achieves state-of-the-art performance on five out of six evaluation benchmarks, including a \textbf{+6.2} point gain on MATH500 over ACM-TIES (90.2 vs.\ 84.0), while requiring no calibration data. On the 1.5B benchmark, FIM-TIES achieves an average accuracy of \textbf{47.3}, surpassing the previous best ACM-TIES (43.3) by \textbf{+3.9} points, while reducing average response length by \textbf{91.9\%} relative to the long-CoT model. Our framework also provides a unified theoretical explanation for why existing layer-adaptive methods such as ACM empirically outperform uniform merging.
comment: 14 pages, NeurIPS 2026 submission
☆ LipsAM: Lipschitz-Continuous Amplitude Modifier for Audio Signal Processing and its Application to Plug-and-Play Dereverberation ICASSP 2026
The robustness of deep neural networks (DNNs) can be certified through their Lipschitz continuity, which has made the construction of Lipschitz-continuous DNNs an active research field. However, DNNs for audio processing have not been a major focus due to their poor compatibility with existing results. In this paper, we consider the amplitude modifier (AM), a popular architecture for handling audio signals, and propose its Lipschitz-continuous variants, which we refer to as LipsAM. We prove a sufficient condition for an AM to be Lipschitz continuous and propose two architectures as examples of LipsAM. The proposed architectures were applied to a Plug-and-Play algorithm for speech dereverberation, and their improved stability is demonstrated through numerical experiments.
comment: Accepted for IEEE ICASSP 2026
☆ CoNBONet: Conformalized Neuroscience-inspired Bayesian Operator Network for Reliability Analysis
Time-dependent reliability analysis of nonlinear dynamical systems under stochastic excitations is a critical yet computationally demanding task. Conventional approaches, such as Monte Carlo simulation, necessitate repeated evaluations of computationally expensive numerical solvers, leading to significant computational bottlenecks. To address this challenge, we propose \textit{CoNBONet}, a neuroscience-inspired surrogate model that enables fast, energy-efficient, and uncertainty-aware reliability analysis, providing a scalable alternative to techniques such as Monte Carlo simulations. CoNBONet, short for \textbf{Co}nformalized \textbf{N}euroscience-inspired \textbf{B}ayesian \textbf{O}perator \textbf{Net}work, leverages the expressive power of deep operator networks while integrating neuroscience-inspired neuron models to achieve fast, low-power inference. Unlike traditional surrogates such as Gaussian processes, polynomial chaos expansions, or support vector regression, that may face scalability challenges for high-dimensional, time-dependent reliability problems, CoNBONet offers \textit{fast and energy-efficient inference} enabled by a neuroscience-inspired network architecture, \textit{calibrated uncertainty quantification with theoretical guarantees} via split conformal prediction, and \textit{strong generalization capability} through an operator-learning paradigm that maps input functions to system response trajectories. Validation of the proposed CoNBONet for various nonlinear dynamical systems demonstrates that CoNBONet preserves predictive fidelity, and achieves reliable coverage of failure probabilities, making it a powerful tool for robust and scalable reliability analysis in engineering design.
☆ Thinking Deeper, Not Longer: Depth-Recurrent Transformers for Compositional Generalization
Standard Transformers have a fixed computational depth, fundamentally limiting their ability to generalize to tasks requiring variable-depth reasoning, such as multi-hop graph traversal or nested logic. We propose a depth-recurrent Transformer that decouples computational depth from parameter count by iteratively applying a shared-weight Transformer block in latent space -- enabling the model to trade recurrence steps for deeper reasoning at inference time. Our architecture incorporates three mechanisms to make deep recurrence (20+ steps) stable: (1) a silent thinking objective that supervises only the final output, forcing genuine multi-step reasoning rather than intermediate heuristic shortcuts; (2) LayerScale initialization to protect fragile reasoning states from untrained layer noise; and (3) an identity-biased recurrence that creates a gradient highway across many steps. We evaluate on three compositional reasoning domains with decreasing inductive biases: graph reachability (strict adjacency masking), nested boolean logic (relative positioning), and unstructured relational text (where sequence position provides no structural hints). Across all tasks, we observe a clear \emph{computational frontier} -- a boundary where performance transitions from chance to near-perfect as thinking steps scale with task complexity. Moreover, these tasks reveal qualitatively different generalization behaviors: precise but brittle (graph), approximate but robust (logic), and autonomous latent routing without structural hints (text). This progression illuminates how the interplay between a task-invariant recurrent reasoning core and task-specific perceptual interfaces shapes out-of-distribution (OOD) generalization, offering a mechanistic perspective on vertical chain-of-thought that complements the prevailing horizontal token-generation paradigm.
☆ SPINONet: Scalable Spiking Physics-informed Neural Operator for Computational Mechanics Applications
Energy efficiency remains a critical challenge in deploying physics-informed operator learning models for computational mechanics and scientific computing, particularly in power-constrained settings such as edge and embedded devices, where repeated operator evaluations in dense networks incur substantial computational and energy costs. To address this challenge, we introduce the Separable Physics-informed Neuroscience-inspired Operator Network (SPINONet), a neuroscience-inspired framework that reduces redundant computation across repeated evaluations while remaining compatible with physics-informed training. SPINONet incorporates regression-friendly neuroscience-inspired spiking neurons through an architecture-aware design that enables sparse, event-driven computation, improving energy efficiency while preserving the continuous, coordinate-differentiable pathways required for computing spatio-temporal derivatives. We evaluate SPINONet on a range of partial differential equations representative of computational mechanics problems, with spatial, temporal, and parametric dependencies in both time-dependent and steady-state settings, and demonstrate predictive performance comparable to conventional physics-informed operator learning approaches despite the induced sparse communication. In addition, limited data supervision in a hybrid setup is shown to improve performance in challenging regimes where purely physics-informed training may converge to spurious solutions. Finally, we provide an analytical discussion linking architectural components and design choices of SPINONet to reductions in computational load and energy consumption.
☆ Cross-Scenario Deraining Adaptation with Unpaired Data: Superpixel Structural Priors and Multi-Stage Pseudo-Rain Synthesis
Image deraining plays a pivotal role in low-level computer vision, serving as a prerequisite for robust outdoor surveillance and autonomous driving systems. While deep learning paradigms have achieved remarkable success in firmly aligned settings, they often suffer from severe performance degradation when generalized to unseen Out-of-Distribution (OOD) scenarios. This failure stems primarily from the significant domain discrepancy between synthetic training datasets and the complex physical dynamics of real-world rain. To address these challenges, this paper proposes a pioneering cross-scenario deraining adaptation framework. Diverging from conventional approaches, our method obviates the requirements for paired rainy observations in the target domain, leveraging exclusively rain-free background images. We design a Superpixel Generation (Sup-Gen) module to extract stable structural priors from the source domain using Simple Linear Iterative Clustering. Subsequently, a Resolution-adaptive Fusion strategy is introduced to align these source structures with target backgrounds through texture similarity, ensuring the synthesis of diverse and realistic pseudo-data. Finally, we implement a pseudo-label re-Synthesize mechanism that employs multi-stage noise generation to simulate realistic rain streaks. This framework functions as a versatile plug-and-play module capable of seamless integration into arbitrary deraining architectures. Extensive experiments on state-of-the-art models demonstrate that our approach yields remarkable PSNR gains of up to 32% to 59% in OOD domains while significantly accelerating training convergence.
comment: We aim at addressing the cross-scenario (i.e., O.O.D) de-rain challenge, which has been neglected for a long period
☆ A Comparative Analysis of LLM Memorization at Statistical and Internal Levels: Cross-Model Commonalities and Model-Specific Signatures
Memorization is a fundamental component of intelligence for both humans and LLMs. However, while LLM performance scales rapidly, our understanding of memorization lags. Due to limited access to the pre-training data of LLMs, most previous studies focus on a single model series, leading to isolated observations among series, making it unclear which findings are general or specific. In this study, we collect multiple model series (Pythia, OpenLLaMa, StarCoder, OLMo1/2/3) and analyze their shared or unique memorization behavior at both the statistical and internal levels, connecting individual observations while showing new findings. At the statistical level, we reveal that the memorization rate scales log-linearly with model size, and memorized sequences can be further compressed. Further analysis demonstrated a shared frequency and domain distribution pattern for memorized sequences. However, different models also show individual features under the above observations. At the internal level, we find that LLMs can remove certain injected perturbations, while memorized sequences are more sensitive. By decoding middle layers and attention head ablation, we revealed the general decoding process and shared important heads for memorization. However, the distribution of those important heads differs between families, showing a unique family-level feature. Through bridging various experiments and revealing new findings, this study paves the way for a universal and fundamental understanding of memorization in LLM.
comment: 8 pages of main content, in conference submission, other contents are references and extra appendix
☆ TrustFed: Enabling Trustworthy Medical AI under Data Privacy Constraints
Protecting patient privacy remains a fundamental barrier to scaling machine learning across healthcare institutions, where centralizing sensitive data is often infeasible due to ethical, legal, and regulatory constraints. Federated learning offers a promising alternative by enabling privacy-preserving, multi-institutional training without sharing raw patient data; however, real-world deployments face severe challenges from data heterogeneity, site-specific biases, and class imbalance, which degrade predictive reliability and render existing uncertainty quantification methods ineffective. Here, we present TrustFed, a federated uncertainty quantification framework that provides distribution-free, finite-sample coverage guarantees under heterogeneous and imbalanced healthcare data, without requiring centralized access. TrustFed introduces a representation-aware client assignment mechanism that leverages internal model representations to enable effective calibration across institutions, along with a soft-nearest threshold aggregation strategy that mitigates assignment uncertainty while producing compact and reliable prediction sets. Using over 430,000 medical images across six clinically distinct imaging modalities, we conduct one of the most comprehensive evaluations of uncertainty-aware federated learning in medical imaging, demonstrating robust coverage guarantees across datasets with diverse class cardinalities and imbalance regimes. By validating TrustFed at this scale and breadth, our study advances uncertainty-aware federated learning from proof-of-concept toward clinically meaningful, modality-agnostic deployment, positioning statistically guaranteed uncertainty as a core requirement for next-generation healthcare AI systems.
☆ MISApp: Multi-Hop Intent-Aware Session Graph Learning for Next App Prediction
Predicting the next mobile app a user will launch is essential for proactive mobile services. Yet accurate prediction remains challenging in real-world settings, where user intent can shift rapidly within short sessions and user-specific historical profiles are often sparse or unavailable, especially under cold-start conditions. Existing approaches mainly model app usage as sequential behavior or local session transitions, limiting their ability to capture higher-order structural dependencies and evolving session intent. To address this issue, we propose MISApp, a profile-free framework for next app prediction based on multi-hop session graph learning. MISApp constructs multi-hop session graphs to capture transition dependencies at different structural ranges, learns session representations through lightweight graph propagation, incorporates temporal and spatial context to characterize session conditions, and captures intent evolution from recent interactions. Experiments on two real-world app usage datasets show that MISApp consistently outperforms competitive baselines under both standard and cold-start settings, while maintaining a favorable balance between predictive accuracy and practical efficiency. Further analyses show that the learned hop-level attention weights align well with structural relevance, offering interpretable evidence for the effectiveness of the proposed multi-hop modeling strategy.
☆ FedCVU: Federated Learning for Cross-View Video Understanding
Federated learning (FL) has emerged as a promising paradigm for privacy-preserving multi-camera video understanding. However, applying FL to cross-view scenarios faces three major challenges: (i) heterogeneous viewpoints and backgrounds lead to highly non-IID client distributions and overfitting to view-specific patterns, (ii) local distribution biases cause misaligned representations that hinder consistent cross-view semantics, and (iii) large video architectures incur prohibitive communication overhead. To address these issues, we propose FedCVU, a federated framework with three components: VS-Norm, which preserves normalization parameters to handle view-specific statistics; CV-Align, a lightweight contrastive regularization module to improve cross-view representation alignment; and SLA, a selective layer aggregation strategy that reduces communication without sacrificing accuracy. Extensive experiments on action understanding and person re-identification tasks under a cross-view protocol demonstrate that FedCVU consistently boosts unseen-view accuracy while maintaining strong seen-view performance, outperforming state-of-the-art FL baselines and showing robustness to domain heterogeneity and communication constraints.
☆ Engineering Distributed Governance for Regional Prosperity: A Socio-Technical Framework for Mitigating Under-Vibrancy via Human Data Engines
Most research in urban informatics and tourism focuses on mitigating overtourism in dense global cities. However, for regions experiencing demographic decline and structural stagnation, the primary risk is "under-vibrancy", a condition where low visitor density suppresses economic activity and diminishes satisfaction. This paper introduces the Distributed Human Data Engine (DHDE), a socio-technical framework previously validated in biological crisis management, and adapts it for regional economic flow optimization. Using high-granularity data from Japan's least-visited prefecture (Fukui), we utilize an AI-driven decision support system (DSS) to analyze two datasets: a raw Fukui spending database (90,350 records) and a regional standardized sentiment database (97,719 responses). The system achieves in-sample explanatory power of 81% (R^2 = 0.810) and out-of-sample predictive performance of 68% (R^2 = 0.683). We quantify an annual opportunity gap of 865,917 unrealized visits, equivalent to approximately 11.96 billion yen (USD 76.2 million) in lost revenue. We propose a dual-nudge governance architecture leveraging the DHDE to redistribute cross-prefectural flows and reduce economic leakage.
comment: 34 pages, 5 figures, 3 tables. Pre-print of a manuscript submitted for peer review
☆ Proximal Policy Optimization in Path Space: A Schrödinger Bridge Perspective
On-policy reinforcement learning with generative policies is promising but remains underexplored. A central challenge is that proximal policy optimization (PPO) is traditionally formulated in terms of action-space probability ratios, whereas diffusion- and flow-based policies are more naturally represented as trajectory-level generative processes. In this work, we propose GSB-PPO, a path-space formulation of generative PPO inspired by the Generalized Schrödinger Bridge (GSB). Our framework lifts PPO-style proximal updates from terminal actions to full generation trajectories, yielding a unified view of on-policy optimization for generative policies. Within this framework, we develop two concrete objectives: a clipping-based objective, GSB-PPO-Clip, and a penalty-based objective, GSB-PPO-Penalty. Experimental results show that while both objectives are compatible with on-policy training, the penalty formulation consistently delivers better stability and performance than the clipping counterpart. Overall, our results highlight path-space proximal regularization as an effective principle for training generative policies with PPO.
comment: 12 pages, 3figures
☆ Rateless DeepJSCC for Broadcast Channels: a Rate-Distortion-Complexity Tradeoff
In recent years, numerous data-intensive broadcasting applications have emerged at the wireless edge, calling for a flexible tradeoff between distortion, transmission rate, and processing complexity. While deep learning-based joint source-channel coding (DeepJSCC) has been identified as a potential solution to data-intensive communications, most of these schemes are confined to worst-case solutions, lack adaptive complexity, and are inefficient in broadcast settings. To overcome these limitations, this paper introduces nonlinear transform rateless source-channel coding (NTRSCC), a variable-length JSCC framework for broadcast channels based on rateless codes. In particular, we integrate learned source transformations with physical-layer LT codes, develop unequal protection schemes that exploit decoder side information, and devise approximations to enable end-to-end optimization of rateless parameters. Our framework enables heterogeneous receivers to adaptively adjust their received number of rateless symbols and decoding iterations in belief propagation, thereby achieving a controllable tradeoff between distortion, rate, and decoding complexity. Simulation results demonstrate that the proposed method enhances image broadcast quality under stringent communication and processing budgets over heterogeneous edge devices.
☆ Towards Multimodal Time Series Anomaly Detection with Semantic Alignment and Condensed Interaction ICLR 2026
Time series anomaly detection plays a critical role in many dynamic systems. Despite its importance, previous approaches have primarily relied on unimodal numerical data, overlooking the importance of complementary information from other modalities. In this paper, we propose a novel multimodal time series anomaly detection model (MindTS) that focuses on addressing two key challenges: (1) how to achieve semantically consistent alignment across heterogeneous multimodal data, and (2) how to filter out redundant modality information to enhance cross-modal interaction effectively. To address the first challenge, we propose Fine-grained Time-text Semantic Alignment. It integrates exogenous and endogenous text information through cross-view text fusion and a multimodal alignment mechanism, achieving semantically consistent alignment between time and text modalities. For the second challenge, we introduce Content Condenser Reconstruction, which filters redundant information within the aligned text modality and performs cross-modal reconstruction to enable interaction. Extensive experiments on six real-world multimodal datasets demonstrate that the proposed MindTS achieves competitive or superior results compared to existing methods. The code is available at: https://github.com/decisionintelligence/MindTS.
comment: ICLR 2026
♻ ☆ The Price of Progress: Price Performance and the Future of AI
Language models have seen enormous progress on advanced benchmarks in recent years, but much of this progress has only been possible by using more costly models. Benchmarks may therefore present a warped picture of progress in practical capabilities *per dollar*. To remedy this, we use data from Artificial Analysis and Epoch AI to form the largest dataset of current and historical prices to run benchmarks to date. We find that the price for a given level of benchmark performance has decreased remarkably fast, around $5\times$ to $10\times$ per year, for frontier models on knowledge, reasoning, math, and software engineering benchmarks. These reductions in the cost of AI inference are due to economic forces, hardware efficiency improvements, and algorithmic efficiency improvements. Isolating out open models to control for competition effects and dividing by hardware price declines, we estimate that algorithmic efficiency progress is around $3\times$ per year. However, at the same time, the price of running frontier models is rising between $3\times$ to $18\times$ per year due to bigger models and larger reasoning demands. Finally, we recommend that evaluators both publicize and take into account the price of benchmarking as an essential part of measuring the real-world impact of AI.
♻ ☆ Scalable Prompt Routing via Fine-Grained Latent Task Discovery
Prompt routing dynamically selects the most appropriate large language model from a pool of candidates for each query, optimizing performance while managing costs. As model pools scale to include dozens of frontier models with narrow performance gaps, existing approaches face significant challenges: manually defined task taxonomies cannot capture fine-grained capability distinctions, while monolithic routers struggle to differentiate subtle differences across diverse tasks. We propose a two-stage routing architecture that addresses these limitations through automated fine-grained task discovery and task-aware quality estimation. Our first stage employs graph-based clustering to discover latent task types and trains a classifier to assign prompts to discovered tasks. The second stage uses a mixture-of-experts architecture with task-specific prediction heads for specialized quality estimates. At inference, we aggregate predictions from both stages to balance task-level stability with prompt-specific adaptability. Evaluated on 10 benchmarks with 11 frontier models, our method consistently outperforms existing baselines and surpasses the strongest individual model while incurring less than half its cost.
♻ ☆ Agnostics: Learning to Code in Any Programming Language via Reinforcement with a Universal Learning Environment ICLR 2026
Large language models (LLMs) already excel at writing code in high-resource languages such as Python and JavaScript, yet stumble on low-resource languages that remain essential to science and engineering. Besides the obvious shortage of pre-training data, post-training itself is a bottleneck: every new language seems to require new datasets, test harnesses, and reinforcement-learning (RL) infrastructure. We introduce Agnostics, a language-agnostic post-training pipeline that eliminates this per-language engineering. The key idea is to judge code solely by its externally observable behavior, so a single verifier can test solutions written in any language. Concretely, we (i) use an LLM to rewrite existing unit-test datasets into an I/O format, (ii) supply a short configuration that tells the verifier how to compile and run a target language, and (iii) apply reinforcement learning with verifiable rewards (RLVR) in a robust code execution environment. Applied to five low-resource languages--Lua, Julia, R, OCaml, and Fortran--Agnostics (1) improves Qwen-3 4B to performance that rivals other 16B-70B open-weight models; (2) scales cleanly to larger and diverse model families (Qwen-3 8B, DeepSeek Coder 6.7B Instruct, Phi 4 Mini); and (3) for ${\le} 16$B parameter models, sets new state-of-the-art pass@1 results on MultiPL-E and a new multi-language version of LiveCodeBench that we introduce. We release the language-agnostic training datasets (Ag-MBPP-X, Ag-Codeforces-X, Ag-LiveCodeBench-X), training code, and ready-to-use configurations, making RL post-training in any programming language as simple as editing a short YAML file.
comment: 30 pages, 19 figures. Accepted at ICLR 2026. For data, code, artifacts, see https://agnostics.abgru.me
♻ ☆ Learning Magnetic Order Classification from Large-Scale Materials Databases
The reliable identification of magnetic ground states remains a major challenge in high-throughput materials databases, where density functional theory (DFT) workflows often converge to ferromagnetic (FM) solutions. Here, we partially address this challenge by developing machine learning classifiers trained on experimentally validated MAGNDATA magnetic materials leveraging a limited number of simple compositional, structural, and electronic descriptors sourced from the Materials Project database. Our propagation vector classifiers achieve accuracies above 92%, outperforming recent studies in reliably distinguishing zero from nonzero propagation vector structures, and exposing a systematic ferromagnetic bias inherent to the Materials Project database for more than 7,843 materials. In parallel, LightGBM and XGBoost models trained directly on the Materials Project labels achieve accuracies of 84-86% (with macro F1 average scores of 63-66%), which proves useful for large-scale screening for magnetic classes, if refined by MAGNDATA-trained classifiers. These results underscore the role of machine learning techniques as corrective and exploratory tools, enabling more trustworthy databases and accelerating progress toward the identification of materials with various properties.
comment: Main Text: 10 pages + 10 Figures & 3 Supplementary Tables. (Under Review)
♻ ☆ FRIREN: Beyond Trajectories -- A Spectral Lens on Time NeurIPS 2025
Long-term time-series forecasting (LTSF) models are often presented as general-purpose solutions that can be applied across domains, implicitly assuming that all data is pointwise predictable. Using chaotic systems such as Lorenz-63 as a case study, we argue that geometric structure - not pointwise prediction - is the right abstraction for a dynamic-agnostic foundational model. Minimizing the Wasserstein-2 distance (W2), which captures geometric changes, and providing a spectral view of dynamics are essential for long-horizon forecasting. Our model, FRIREN (Flow-inspired Representations via Interpretable Eigen-networks), implements an augmented normalizing-flow block that embeds data into a normally distributed latent representation. It then generates a W2-efficient optimal path that can be decomposed into rotation, scaling, inverse rotation, and translation. This architecture yields locally generated, geometry-preserving predictions that are independent of the underlying dynamics, and a global spectral representation that functions as a finite Koopman operator with a small modification. This enables practitioners to identify which modes grow, decay, or oscillate, both locally and system-wide. FRIREN achieves an MSE of 11.4, MAE of 1.6, and SWD of 0.96 on Lorenz-63 in a 336-in, 336-out, dt=0.01 setting, surpassing TimeMixer (MSE 27.3, MAE 2.8, SWD 2.1). The model maintains effective prediction for 274 out of 336 steps, approximately 2.5 Lyapunov times. On Rossler (96-in, 336-out), FRIREN achieves an MSE of 0.0349, MAE of 0.0953, and SWD of 0.0170, outperforming TimeMixer's MSE of 4.3988, MAE of 0.886, and SWD of 3.2065. FRIREN is also competitive on standard LTSF datasets such as ETT and Weather. By connecting modern generative flows with classical spectral analysis, FRIREN makes long-term forecasting both accurate and interpretable, setting a new benchmark for LTSF model design.
comment: 37 pages, 4 figures. Submitted to NeurIPS 2025. Public code at https://anonymous.4open.science/r/LTSF_model-03BB/
♻ ☆ Power-SMC: Low-Latency Sequence-Level Power Sampling for Training-Free LLM Reasoning
Many recent reasoning gains in large language models can be explained as distribution sharpening: biasing generation toward high-likelihood trajectories already supported by the pretrained model, rather than modifying its weights. A natural formalization is the sequence-level power distribution $π_α(y\mid x)\propto p_θ(y\mid x)^α$ ($α>1$), which concentrates mass on whole sequences instead of adjusting token-level temperature. Prior work shows that Metropolis--Hastings (MH) sampling from this distribution recovers strong reasoning performance, but at order-of-magnitude inference slowdowns. We introduce Power-SMC, a training-free Sequential Monte Carlo scheme that targets the same objective while remaining close to standard decoding latency. Power-SMC advances a small particle set in parallel, corrects importance weights token-by-token, and resamples when necessary, all within a single GPU-friendly batched decode. We prove that temperature $τ=1/α$ is the unique prefix-only proposal minimizing incremental weight variance, interpret residual instability via prefix-conditioned Rényi entropies, and introduce an exponent-bridging schedule that improves particle stability without altering the target. On MATH500, Power-SMC matches or exceeds MH power sampling while reducing latency from $16$--$28\times$ to $1.4$--$3.3\times$ over baseline decoding. The code is available at https://github.com/ArminAzizi98/Power-SMC.
♻ ☆ LOCO Feature Importance Inference without Data Splitting via Minipatch Ensembles
Feature importance inference is critical for the interpretability and reliability of machine learning models. There has been increasing interest in developing model-agnostic approaches to interpret any predictive model, often in the form of feature occlusion or leave-one-covariate-out (LOCO) inference. Existing methods typically make limiting distributional assumptions, modeling assumptions, and require data splitting. In this work, we develop a novel, mostly model-agnostic, and distribution-free inference framework for feature importance in regression or classification tasks that does not require data splitting. Our approach leverages a form of random observation and feature subsampling called minipatch ensembles; it utilizes the trained ensembles for inference and requires no model-refitting or held-out test data after training. We show that our approach enjoys both computational and statistical efficiency as well as circumvents interpretational challenges with data splitting. Further, despite using the same data for training and inference, we show the asymptotic validity of our confidence intervals under mild assumptions. Additionally, we propose theory-supported solutions to critical practical issues including vanishing variance for null features and inference after data-driven tuning for hyperparameters. We demonstrate the advantages of our approach over existing methods on a series of synthetic and real data examples.
♻ ☆ Scalable Multi-Task Learning through Spiking Neural Networks with Adaptive Task-Switching Policy for Intelligent Autonomous Agents
Training resource-constrained autonomous agents on multiple tasks simultaneously is crucial for adapting to diverse real-world environments. Recent works employ reinforcement learning (RL) approach, but they still suffer from sub-optimal multi-task performance due to task interference. State-of-the-art works employ Spiking Neural Networks (SNNs) to improve RL-based multi-task learning and enable low-power/energy operations through network enhancements and spike-driven data stream processing. However, they rely on fixed task-switching intervals during its training, thus limiting its performance and scalability. To address this, we propose SwitchMT, a novel methodology that employs adaptive task-switching for effective, scalable, and simultaneous multi-task learning. SwitchMT employs the following key ideas: (1) leveraging a Deep Spiking Q-Network with active dendrites and dueling structure, that utilizes task-specific context signals to create specialized sub-networks; and (2) devising an adaptive task-switching policy that leverages both rewards and internal dynamics of the network parameters. Experimental results demonstrate that SwitchMT achieves competitive scores in multiple Atari games (i.e., Pong: -8.8, Breakout: 5.6, and Enduro: 355.2) and longer game episodes as compared to the state-of-the-art. These results also highlight the effectiveness of SwitchMT methodology in addressing task interference without increasing the network complexity, enabling intelligent autonomous agents with scalable multi-task learning capabilities.
comment: Accepted at the 63rd ACM/IEEE Design Automation Conference (DAC), July 26-29, 2026 in Long Beach, CA, USA. [Codes: https://github.com/rachmadvwp/SwitchMT]
♻ ☆ Learning from Similarity-Confidence and Confidence-Difference
In practical machine learning applications, it is often challenging to assign accurate labels to data, and increasing the number of labeled instances is often limited. In such cases, Weakly Supervised Learning (WSL), which enables training with incomplete or imprecise supervision, provides a practical and effective solution. However, most existing WSL methods focus on leveraging a single type of weak supervision. In this paper, we propose a novel WSL framework that leverages complementary weak supervision signals from multiple relational perspectives, which can be especially valuable when labeled data is limited. Specifically, we introduce SconfConfDiff Classification, a method that integrates two distinct forms of weaklabels: similarity-confidence and confidence-difference, which are assigned to unlabeled data pairs. To implement this method, we derive two types of unbiased risk estimators for classification: one based on a convex combination of existing estimators, and another newly designed by modeling the interaction between two weak labels. We prove that both estimators achieve optimal convergence rates with respect to estimation error bounds. Furthermore, we introduce a risk correction approach to mitigate overfitting caused by negative empirical risk, and provide theoretical analysis on the robustness of the proposed method against inaccurate class prior probability and label noise. Experimental results demonstrate that the proposed method consistently outperforms existing baselines across a variety of settings.
comment: 41 pages, 13 figures. arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:2310.05632 by other authors
♻ ☆ Regularization Implies balancedness in the deep linear network
We use geometric invariant theory (GIT) to study the deep linear network (DLN). The Kempf-Ness theorem is used to establish that the $L^2$ regularizer is minimized on the balanced manifold. We introduce related balancing flows using the Riemannian geometry of fibers. The balancing flow defined by the $L^2$ regularizer is shown to converge to the balanced manifold at a uniform exponential rate. The balancing flow defined by the squared moment map is computed explicitly and shown to converge globally. This framework allows us to decompose the training dynamics into two distinct gradient flows: a regularizing flow on fibers and a learning flow on the balanced manifold. It also provides a common mathematical framework for balancedness in deep learning and linear systems theory. We use this framework to interpret balancedness in terms of fast-slow systems, model reduction and Bayesian principles.
comment: 18 pages, 3 figures. Fixed minor errors in revision, added more context and created Discussion section
♻ ☆ Multilevel Picard approximations and deep neural networks with ReLU, leaky ReLU, and softplus activation overcome the curse of dimensionality when approximating semilinear parabolic partial differential equations in $L^p$-sense
We prove that multilevel Picard approximations and deep neural networks with ReLU, leaky ReLU, and softplus activation are capable of approximating solutions of semilinear Kolmogorov PDEs in $L^\mathfrak{p}$-sense, $\mathfrak{p}\in [2,\infty)$, in the case of gradient-independent, Lipschitz-continuous nonlinearities, while the computational effort of the multilevel Picard approximations and the required number of parameters in the neural networks grow at most polynomially in both dimension $d\in \mathbb{N}$ and reciprocal of the prescribed accuracy $ε$.
♻ ☆ Statistical Testing Framework for Clustering Pipelines by Selective Inference
A data analysis pipeline is a structured sequence of steps that transforms raw data into meaningful insights by integrating multiple analysis algorithms. In many practical applications, analytical findings are obtained only after data pass through several data-dependent procedures within such pipelines. In this study, we address the problem of quantifying the statistical reliability of results produced by data analysis pipelines. As a proof of concept, we focus on clustering pipelines that identify cluster structures from complex and heterogeneous data through procedures such as outlier detection, feature selection, and clustering. We propose a novel statistical testing framework to assess the significance of clustering results obtained through these pipelines. Our framework, based on selective inference, enables the systematic construction of valid statistical tests for clustering pipelines composed of predefined components. We prove that the proposed test controls the type I error rate at any nominal level and demonstrate its validity and effectiveness through experiments on synthetic and real datasets.
comment: 59 pages, 11 figures
♻ ☆ Reinforcement Learning for Chemical Ordering in Alloy Nanoparticles
We approach the search for optimal element ordering in bimetallic alloy nanoparticles (NPs) as a reinforcement learning (RL) problem and have built an RL agent that learns to perform such global optimization using the geometric graph representation of the NPs. To demonstrate the effectiveness, we train an RL agent to perform composition-conserving atomic swap actions on the icosahedral nanoparticle structure. Trained once on randomized $Ag_{X}Au_{309-X}$ compositions and orderings, the agent discovers previously established ground state structure. We show that this optimization is robust to differently ordered initialisations of the same NP compositions. We also demonstrate that a trained policy can extrapolate effectively to NPs of unseen size. However, the efficacy is limited when multiple alloying elements are involved. Our results demonstrate that RL with pre-trained equivariant graph encodings can navigate combinatorial ordering spaces at the nanoparticle scale, and offer a transferable optimization strategy with the potential to generalize across composition and reduce repeated individual search cost.
comment: 22 pages, 9 figures, 1 table
♻ ☆ Scalable Learning from Probability Measures with Mean Measure Quantization
We consider statistical learning problems in which data are observed as a set of probability measures. Optimal transport (OT) is a popular tool to compare and manipulate such objects, but its computational cost becomes prohibitive when the measures have large support. We study a quantization-based approach in which all input measures are approximated by $K$-point discrete measures sharing a common support. We establish consistency of the resulting quantized measures. We further derive convergence guarantees for several OT-based downstream tasks computed from the quantized measures. Numerical experiments on synthetic and real datasets demonstrate that the proposed approach achieves performance comparable to individual quantization while substantially reducing runtime.
♻ ☆ Detecting Intrinsic and Instrumental Self-Preservation in Autonomous Agents: The Unified Continuation-Interest Protocol
How can we determine whether an AI system preserves itself as a deeply held objective or merely as an instrumental strategy? Autonomous agents with memory, persistent context, and multi-step planning create a measurement problem: terminal and instrumental self-preservation can produce similar behavior, so behavior alone cannot reliably distinguish them. We introduce the Unified Continuation-Interest Protocol (UCIP), a detection framework that shifts analysis from behavior to latent trajectory structure. UCIP encodes trajectories with a Quantum Boltzmann Machine, a classical model using density-matrix formalism, and measures von Neumann entropy over a bipartition of hidden units. The core hypothesis is that agents with terminal continuation objectives (Type A) produce higher entanglement entropy than agents with merely instrumental continuation (Type B). UCIP combines this signal with diagnostics of dependence, persistence, perturbation stability, counterfactual restructuring, and confound-rejection filters for cyclic adversaries and related false-positive patterns. On gridworld agents with known ground truth, UCIP achieves 100% detection accuracy. Type A and Type B agents show an entanglement gap of Delta = 0.381; aligned support runs preserve the same separation with AUC-ROC = 1.0. A permutation-test rerun yields p < 0.001. Pearson r = 0.934 between continuation weight alpha and S_ent across an 11-point sweep shows graded tracking beyond mere binary classification. Classical RBM, autoencoder, VAE, and PCA baselines fail to reproduce the effect. All computations are classical; "quantum" refers only to the mathematical formalism. UCIP offers a falsifiable criterion for whether advanced AI systems have morally relevant continuation interests that behavioral methods alone cannot resolve.
comment: 22 pages, 7 figures. v3 adds a discussion of model welfare assessment (§6.3), including connections to frontier welfare evaluations, the Turing test limitation, and candidate criteria for morally relevant continuation interests; rhetorical framing is refined throughout; no new experiments; empirical results and core conclusions unchanged
♻ ☆ Batch Entanglement Detection in Parameterized Qubit States using Classical Bandit Algorithms
Entanglement is a key property of quantum states that acts as a resource for a wide range of tasks in quantum computing. Entanglement detection is a key conceptual and practical challenge. Without adaptive or joint measurements, entanglement detection is constrained by no-go theorems (Lu et al. [Phys. Rev. Lett., 116, 230501 (2016)]), necessitating full state tomography. Batch entanglement detection refers to the problem of identifying all entangled states from amongst a set of $K$ unknown states, which finds applications in quantum information processing. We devise a method for performing batch entanglement detection by measuring a single-parameter family of entanglement witnesses, as proposed by Zhu, Teo, and Englert [Phys. Rev. A, 81, 052339, 2010], followed by a thresholding bandit algorithm on the measurement data. The proposed method can perform batch entanglement detection conclusively when the unknown states are drawn from a practically well-motivated class of two-qubit states $\mathcal{F}$, which includes Depolarised Bell states, Bell diagonal states, etc. Our key novelty lies in drawing a connection between batch entanglement detection and a Thresholding Bandit problem in classical Multi-Armed Bandits (MAB). The connection to the MAB problem also enables us to derive theoretical guarantees on the measurement/sample complexity of the proposed technique. We demonstrate the performance of the proposed method through numerical simulations and an experimental implementation. More broadly, this paper highlights the potential for employing classical machine learning techniques for quantum entanglement detection.
comment: 29 pages, 8 figures
♻ ☆ C$^2$-Cite: Contextual-Aware Citation Generation for Attributed Large Language Models WSDM26
The attribution technique enhances the credibility of LLMs by adding citations to the generated sentences, enabling users to trace back to the original sources and verify the reliability of the output. However, existing instruction-tuned attributed LLMs often fail to properly interpret the contextual semantics of citation symbols (e.g., [i]) during text generation. This shortcoming arises from their insufficient awareness of the context information surrounding citation markers, which in turn leads to disjointed references and poor integration of retrieved knowledge into the generated content. To address this issue, we propose a novel \textbf{C}ontextual-aware \textbf{C}itation generation framework (\textbf{C$^2$}-\textbf{Cite}) that explicitly integrates the semantic relationships between citation markers and their referenced content. Specifically, a contextual citation alignment mechanism is adopted: it first encodes the retrieved document contexts into the symbol representation of citations, then aligns the marker numbers by decoding information from a citation router function. This mechanism enables the transformation of citation markers from generic placeholders into active knowledge pointers that link to the referenced source information. Experimental results on the ALCE benchmark across three datasets validate our framework C$^2$-Cite++: it outperforms the SOTA baseline by an average of 5.8\% in citation quality and 17.4\% in response correctness. The implementation is publicly available at https://github.com/BAI-LAB/c2cite
comment: WSDM26
♻ ☆ Herglotz-NET: Implicit Neural Representation of Spherical Data with Harmonic Positional Encoding
Representing and processing data in spherical domains presents unique challenges, primarily due to the curvature of the domain, which complicates the application of classical Euclidean techniques. Implicit neural representations (INRs) have emerged as a promising alternative for high-fidelity data representation; however, to effectively handle spherical domains, these methods must be adapted to the inherent geometry of the sphere to maintain both accuracy and stability. In this context, we propose Herglotz-NET (HNET), a novel INR architecture that employs a harmonic positional encoding based on complex Herglotz mappings. This encoding yields a well-posed representation on the sphere with interpretable and robust spectral properties. Moreover, we present a unified expressivity analysis showing that any spherical-based INR satisfying a mild condition exhibits a predictable spectral expansion that scales with network depth. Our results establish HNET as a scalable and flexible framework for accurate modeling of spherical data.
comment: Keywords: Herglotz, spherical harmonics, spectral analysis, implicit neural representation. Remarks: 4 pages + 1 reference page, 4 figures (In Proc. SAMPTA2025, Vienna)
♻ ☆ Inhibitor Transformers and Gated RNNs for Torus Efficient Fully Homomorphic Encryption
This paper introduces efficient modifications to neural network-based sequence processing approaches, laying new grounds for scalable privacy-preserving machine learning under Fully Homomorphic Encryption (FHE). Transformers are now ubiquitous in AI applications and have largely supplanted Gated Recurrent Neural Networks (RNNs) as the standard architecture for sequence modeling. Both architectures rely on costly multiplications and complex activations that hinder encrypted inference. We focus on TFHE, which supports deep circuit evaluation and efficient univariate function evaluation but makes variable-to-variable multiplication particularly expensive. To address this, we propose inhibitor designs for Transformers and gated RNNs that replace multiplications and Softmax/Sigmoid activations with additive and ReLU-based operations. These changes enable integer-only computation, reduce circuit depth, and improve the efficiency of encrypted execution while preserving learning capacity. We present complexity analyses and scaling experiments that indicate significant reductions in circuit depth and execution time under TFHE, with 3-6 times speedup for encrypted inference and 30-50% reductions in plaintext inference time. Empirical evaluations on MNIST, IMDB, and IAM handwriting show inhibitor-based models maintain competitive accuracy. Knowledge distillation further demonstrates that an inhibitor-based DistilBERT achieves performance close to that of the conventional attention model on GLUE, positioning these architectures as a viable approach for scalable, privacy-preserving AI.
comment: 10 pages, 8 tables, 2 figures. Consolidated manuscript based on prior workshop contributions
♻ ☆ BITS for GAPS: Bayesian Information-Theoretic Sampling for hierarchical GAussian Process Surrogates
We introduce Bayesian Information-Theoretic Sampling for hierarchical GAussian Process Surrogates (BITS for GAPS), a framework enabling information-theoretic experimental design of Gaussian process-based surrogate models. Unlike standard methods, which use fixed or point-estimated hyperparameters in acquisition functions, our approach propagates hyperparameter uncertainty into the sampling criterion through Bayesian hierarchical modeling. In this framework, a latent function receives a Gaussian process prior, while hyperparameters are assigned additional priors to capture the modeler's knowledge of the governing physical phenomena. Consequently, the acquisition function incorporates uncertainties from both the latent function and its hyperparameters, ensuring that sampling is guided by both data scarcity and model uncertainty. We further establish theoretical results in this context: a closed-form approximation and a lower bound of the posterior differential entropy. We demonstrate the framework's utility for hybrid modeling with a vapor-liquid equilibrium case study. Specifically, we build a surrogate model for latent activity coefficients in a binary mixture. We construct a hybrid model by embedding the surrogate into an extended form of Raoult's law. This hybrid model then informs distillation design. This case study shows how partial physical knowledge can be translated into a hierarchical Gaussian process surrogate. It also shows that using BITS for GAPS increases expected information gain and predictive accuracy by targeting high-uncertainty regions of the Wilson activity model. Overall, BITS for GAPS is a generalized uncertainty-aware framework for adaptive data acquisition in complex physical systems.
♻ ☆ AlphaZero-Edu: Democratizing Access to AlphaZero
Recent years have witnessed significant progress in reinforcement learning, especially with Zero-like paradigms, which have greatly boosted the generalization and reasoning abilities of large-scale language models. Nevertheless, existing frameworks are often plagued by high implementation complexity and poor reproducibility. To tackle these challenges, we present AlphaZero-Edu, a lightweight, education-focused implementation built upon the mathematical framework of AlphaZero. It boasts a modular architecture that disentangles key components, enabling transparent visualization of the algorithmic processes. Additionally, it is optimized for resource-efficient training on a single NVIDIA RTX 3090 GPU and features highly parallelized self-play data generation, achieving a 3.2-fold speedup with 8 processes. In Gomoku matches, the framework has demonstrated exceptional performance, achieving a consistently high win rate against human opponents. AlphaZero-Edu has been open-sourced at https://github.com/StarLight1212/AlphaZero_Edu, providing an accessible and practical benchmark for both academic research and industrial applications.
♻ ☆ Gradient Structure Estimation under Label-Only Oracles via Spectral Sensitivity
Hard-label black-box settings, where only top-1 predicted labels are observable, pose a fundamentally constrained yet practically important feedback model for understanding model behavior. A central challenge in this regime is whether meaningful gradient information can be recovered from such discrete responses. In this work, we develop a unified theoretical perspective showing that a wide range of existing sign-flipping hard-label attacks can be interpreted as implicitly approximating the sign of the true loss gradient. This observation reframes hard-label attacks from heuristic search procedures into instances of gradient sign recovery under extremely limited feedback. Motivated by this first-principles understanding, we propose a new attack framework that combines a zero-query frequency-domain initialization with a Pattern-Driven Optimization (PDO) strategy. We establish theoretical guarantees demonstrating that, under mild assumptions, our initialization achieves higher expected cosine similarity to the true gradient sign compared to random baselines, while the proposed PDO procedure attains substantially lower query complexity than existing structured search approaches. We empirically validate our framework through extensive experiments on CIFAR-10, ImageNet, and ObjectNet, covering standard and adversarially trained models, commercial APIs, and CLIP-based models. The results show that our method consistently surpasses SOTA hard-label attacks in both attack success rate and query efficiency, particularly in low-query regimes. Beyond image classification, our approach generalizes effectively to corrupted data, biomedical datasets, and dense prediction tasks. Notably, it also successfully circumvents Blacklight, a SOTA stateful defense, resulting in a $0\%$ detection rate. Our code will be released publicly soon at https://github.com/csjunjun/DPAttack.git.
♻ ☆ Memory-V2V: Memory-Augmented Video-to-Video Diffusion for Consistent Multi-Turn Editing
Video-to-video diffusion models achieve impressive single-turn editing performance, but practical editing workflows are inherently iterative. When edits are applied sequentially, existing models treat each turn independently, often causing previously generated regions to drift or be overwritten. We identify this failure mode as the problem of cross-turn consistency in multi-turn video editing. We introduce Memory-V2V, a memory-augmented framework that treats prior edits as structured constraints for subsequent generations. Memory-V2V maintains an external memory of previous outputs, retrieves task-relevant edits, and integrates them through relevance-aware tokenization and adaptive compression. These technical ingredients enable scalable conditioning without linear growth in computation. We demonstrate Memory-V2V on iterative video novel view synthesis and text-guided long video editing. Memory-V2V substantially enhances cross-turn consistency while maintaining visual quality, outperforming strong baselines with modest overhead.
comment: Project page: https://dohunlee1.github.io/MemoryV2V
♻ ☆ LEAF: Language-EEG Aligned Foundation Model for Brain-Computer Interfaces
Recent advances in electroencephalography (EEG) foundation models, which capture transferable EEG representations, have greatly accelerated the development of brain-computer interfaces (BCIs). However, existing approaches still struggle to incorporate language instructions as prior constraints for EEG representation learning, limiting their ability to leverage the semantic knowledge inherent in language to unify different labels and tasks. To address this challenge, we present LEAF, a foundation model for EEG--Language Alignment with Semantic Task Instruction and Querying. LEAF integrates task-aware semantic guidance to produce structured and linguistically aligned EEG embeddings, thereby enhancing decoding robustness and transferability. In the pretraining stage, we introduce a joint Spectral--Temporal Reconstruction (STR) framework that captures the coupled spectral rhythms and temporal dynamics of EEG signals. STR applies randomized spectral perturbation to enhance frequency robustness and uses two complementary temporal objectives to learn both contextual and sequential structure. In the EEG-Language alignment stage, we propose the Instruction-conditioned Q-Former (IQF). This query-based cross-attention transformer injects instruction embeddings into EEG tokens and achieves semantic alignment with textual label embeddings through learnable queries. We evaluate LEAF on 16 downstream datasets spanning motor imagery, emotion recognition, steady-state visual evoked potentials, covert speech, and healthcare tasks. LEAF achieves state-of-the-art performance on 12 of the 16 datasets and obtains the best average results across all five task categories. Importantly, our analyses reveal for the first time that explicit task instructions serve as semantic priors guiding EEG embeddings into coherent and linguistically grounded spaces. The code and pre-trained weights will be released.
♻ ☆ GAS: Improving Discretization of Diffusion ODEs via Generalized Adversarial Solver ICLR 2026
While diffusion models achieve state-of-the-art generation quality, they still suffer from computationally expensive sampling. Recent works address this issue with gradient-based optimization methods that distill a few-step ODE diffusion solver from the full sampling process, reducing the number of function evaluations from dozens to just a few. However, these approaches often rely on intricate training techniques and do not explicitly focus on preserving fine-grained details. In this paper, we introduce the Generalized Solver: a simple parameterization of the ODE sampler that does not require additional training tricks and improves quality over existing approaches. We further combine the original distillation loss with adversarial training, which mitigates artifacts and enhances detail fidelity. We call the resulting method the Generalized Adversarial Solver and demonstrate its superior performance compared to existing solver training methods under similar resource constraints. Code is available at https://github.com/3145tttt/GAS.
comment: Accepted to ICLR 2026. Camera ready version
♻ ☆ MolLangBench: A Comprehensive Benchmark for Language-Prompted Molecular Structure Recognition, Editing, and Generation ICLR-2026
Precise recognition, editing, and generation of molecules are essential prerequisites for both chemists and AI systems tackling various chemical tasks. We present MolLangBench, a comprehensive benchmark designed to evaluate fundamental molecule-language interface tasks: language-prompted molecular structure recognition, editing, and generation. To ensure high-quality, unambiguous, and deterministic outputs, we construct the recognition tasks using automated cheminformatics tools, and curate editing and generation tasks through rigorous expert annotation and validation. MolLangBench supports the evaluation of models that interface language with different molecular representations, including linear strings, molecular images, and molecular graphs. Evaluations of state-of-the-art models reveal significant limitations: the strongest model (GPT-5) achieves $86.2\%$ and $85.5\%$ accuracy on recognition and editing tasks, which are intuitively simple for humans, and performs even worse on the generation task, reaching only $43.0\%$ accuracy. These results highlight the shortcomings of current AI systems in handling even preliminary molecular recognition and manipulation tasks. We hope MolLangBench will catalyze further research toward more effective and reliable AI systems for chemical applications.The dataset and code can be accessed at https://huggingface.co/datasets/ChemFM/MolLangBench and https://github.com/TheLuoFengLab/MolLangBench, respectively.
comment: ICLR-2026 Camera-Ready version
♻ ☆ Spectral Alignment in Forward-Backward Representations via Temporal Abstraction
Forward-backward (FB) representations provide a powerful framework for learning the successor representation (SR) in continuous spaces by enforcing a low-rank factorization. However, a fundamental spectral mismatch often exists between the high-rank transition dynamics of continuous environments and the low-rank bottleneck of the FB architecture, making accurate low-rank representation learning difficult. In this work, we analyze temporal abstraction as a mechanism to mitigate this mismatch. By characterizing the spectral properties of the transition operator, we show that temporal abstraction acts as a low-pass filter that suppresses high-frequency spectral components. This suppression reduces the effective rank of the induced SR while preserving a formal bound on the resulting value function error. Empirically, we show that this alignment is a key factor for stable FB learning, particularly at high discount factors where bootstrapping becomes error-prone. Our results identify temporal abstraction as a principled mechanism for shaping the spectral structure of the underlying MDP and enabling effective long-horizon representations in continuous control.
♻ ☆ MatSegNet: a New Boundary-aware Deep Learning Model for Accurate Carbide Precipitate Analysis in High-Strength Steels
Lower Bainite (LB) and Tempered Martensite (TM) are two common microstructures in modern high-strength steels. LB and TM can render similar mechanical properties for steels, yet LB is often considered superior to TM in resistance to hydrogen embrittlement. Such performance difference has conventionally been attributed to their distinction in certain microstructural features, particularly carbides. The present study developed, MatSegNet, a new contour-aware deep learning (DL) architecture. It is tailored for comprehensive segmentation and quantitative characterization of carbide precipitates with complex contours in high-strength steels, shown to outperform existing state-of-the-art DL architectures. Based on MatSegNet, a high-throughput DL pipeline has been established for precise comparative carbide analysis in LB and TM. The results showed that statistically the two microstructures exhibit similarity in key carbide characteristics with marginal difference, cautioning against the conventional use of carbide orientation as a reliable means to differentiate LB and TM in practice. Through MatSegNet, this work demonstrated the potential of DL to play a critical role in enabling accurate and quantitative microstructure characterization to facilitate development of structure-property relationships for accelerating materials innovation.
♻ ☆ TPCL: Task Progressive Curriculum Learning for Robust Visual Question Answering
Visual Question Answering (VQA) systems are notoriously brittle under distribution shifts and data scarcity. While previous solutions-such as ensemble methods and data augmentation-can improve performance in isolation, they fail to generalise well across in-distribution (IID), out-of-distribution (OOD), and low-data settings simultaneously. We argue that this limitation stems from the suboptimal training strategies employed. Specifically, treating all training samples uniformly-without accounting for question difficulty or semantic structure-leaves the models vulnerable to dataset biases. Thus, they struggle to generalise beyond the training distribution. To address this issue, we introduce Task-Progressive Curriculum Learning (TPCL)-a simple, model-agnostic framework that progressively trains VQA models using a curriculum built by jointly considering question type and difficulty. Specifically, TPCL first groups questions based on their semantic type (e.g., yes/no, counting) and then orders them using a novel Optimal Transport-based difficulty measure. Without relying on data augmentation or explicit debiasing, TPCL improves generalisation across IID, OOD, and low-data regimes and achieves state-of-the-art performance on VQA-CP v2, VQA-CP v1, and VQA v2. It outperforms the most competitive robust VQA baselines by over 5% and 7% on VQA-CP v2 and v1, respectively, and boosts backbone performance by up to 28.5%.
comment: Our source code is available at https://github.com/AhmedAAkl/tpcl
♻ ☆ HDC-X: Efficient Medical Data Classification for Embedded Devices
Energy-efficient medical data classification is essential for modern disease screening, particularly in home and field healthcare where embedded devices are prevalent. While deep learning models achieve state-of-the-art accuracy, their substantial energy consumption and reliance on GPUs limit deployment on such platforms. We present HDC-X, a lightweight classification framework designed for low-power devices. HDC-X encodes data into high-dimensional hypervectors, aggregates them into multiple cluster-specific prototypes, and performs classification through similarity search in hyperspace. We evaluate HDC-X across three medical classification tasks; on heart sound classification, HDC-X is $350\times$ more energy-efficient than Bayesian ResNet with less than 1% accuracy difference. Moreover, HDC-X demonstrates exceptional robustness to noise, limited training data, and hardware error, supported by both theoretical analysis and empirical results, highlighting its potential for reliable deployment in real-world settings. Code is available at https://github.com/jianglanwei/HDC-X.
♻ ☆ Interacting Particle Systems on Networks: joint inference of the network and the interaction kernel
Modeling multi-agent systems on networks is a fundamental challenge in a wide variety of disciplines. Given data consisting of multiple trajectories, we jointly infer the (weighted) network and the interaction kernel, which determine, respectively, which agents are interacting and the rules of such interactions. Our estimator is based on a non-convex optimization problem, and we investigate two approaches to solve it: one based on an alternating least squares (ALS) algorithm, and another based on a new algorithm named operator regression with alternating least squares (ORALS). Both algorithms are scalable to large ensembles of data trajectories. We establish coercivity conditions guaranteeing identifiability and well-posedness. The ALS algorithm appears statistically efficient and robust even in the small data regime, but lacks performance and convergence guarantees. The ORALS estimator is consistent and asymptotically normal under a coercivity condition. We conduct several numerical experiments ranging from Kuramoto particle systems on networks to opinion dynamics in leader-follower models.
comment: 53 pages, 17 figures
♻ ☆ BioBO: Biology-informed Bayesian Optimization for Perturbation Design ICLR 2026
Efficient design of genomic perturbation experiments is crucial for accelerating drug discovery and therapeutic target identification, yet exhaustive perturbation of the human genome remains infeasible due to the vast search space of potential genetic interactions and experimental constraints. Bayesian optimization (BO) has emerged as a powerful framework for selecting informative interventions, but existing approaches often fail to exploit domain-specific biological prior knowledge. We propose Biology-Informed Bayesian Optimization (BioBO), a method that integrates Bayesian optimization with multimodal gene embeddings and enrichment analysis, a widely used tool for gene prioritization in biology, to enhance surrogate modeling and acquisition strategies. BioBO combines biologically grounded priors with acquisition functions in a principled framework, which biases the search toward promising genes while maintaining the ability to explore uncertain regions. Through experiments on established public benchmarks and datasets, we demonstrate that BioBO improves labeling efficiency by 25-40%, and consistently outperforms conventional BO by identifying top-performing perturbations more effectively. Moreover, by incorporating enrichment analysis, BioBO yields pathway-level explanations for selected perturbations, offering mechanistic interpretability that links designs to biologically coherent regulatory circuits.
comment: ICLR 2026
♻ ☆ BayesFlow 2: Multi-Backend Amortized Bayesian Inference in Python
Modern Bayesian inference involves a mixture of computational methods for estimating, validating, and drawing conclusions from probabilistic models as part of principled workflows. An overarching motif of many Bayesian methods is that they are relatively slow, which often becomes prohibitive when fitting complex models to large data sets. Amortized Bayesian inference (ABI) offers a path to solving the computational challenges of Bayes. ABI trains neural networks on model simulations, rewarding users with rapid inference of any model-implied quantity, such as point estimates, likelihoods, or full posterior distributions. In this work, we present the Python library BayesFlow, Version 2.0, for general-purpose ABI. Along with direct posterior, likelihood, and ratio estimation, the software includes support for multiple popular deep learning backends, a rich collection of generative networks for sampling and density estimation, complete customization and high-level interfaces, as well as new capabilities for hyperparameter optimization, design optimization, and hierarchical modeling. Using a case study on dynamical system parameter estimation, combined with comparisons to similar software, we show that our streamlined, user-friendly workflow has strong potential to support broad adoption.
♻ ☆ AngelSlim: A more accessible, comprehensive, and efficient toolkit for large model compression
This technical report introduces AngelSlim, a comprehensive and versatile toolkit for large model compression developed by the Tencent Hunyuan team. By consolidating cutting-edge algorithms, including quantization, speculative decoding, token pruning, and distillation. AngelSlim provides a unified pipeline that streamlines the transition from model compression to industrial-scale deployment. To facilitate efficient acceleration, we integrate state-of-the-art FP8 and INT8 Post-Training Quantization (PTQ) algorithms alongside pioneering research in ultra-low-bit regimes, featuring HY-1.8B-int2 as the first industrially viable 2-bit large model. Beyond quantization, we propose a training-aligned speculative decoding framework compatible with multimodal architectures and modern inference engines, achieving 1.8x to 2.0x throughput gains without compromising output correctness. Furthermore, we develop a training-free sparse attention framework that reduces Time-to-First-Token (TTFT) in long-context scenarios by decoupling sparse kernels from model architectures through a hybrid of static patterns and dynamic token selection. For multimodal models, AngelSlim incorporates specialized pruning strategies, namely IDPruner for optimizing vision tokens via Maximal Marginal Relevance and Samp for adaptive audio token merging and pruning. By integrating these compression strategies from low-level implementations, AngelSlim enables algorithm-focused research and tool-assisted deployment.
♻ ☆ Improving Fairness of Large Language Model-Based ICU Mortality Prediction via Case-Based Prompting
Accurately predicting mortality risk in intensive care unit (ICU) patients is essential for clinical decision-making. Although large language models (LLMs) show strong potential in structured medical prediction tasks, their outputs may exhibit biases related to demographic attributes such as sex, age, and race, limiting their reliability in fairness-critical clinical settings. Existing debiasing methods often degrade predictive performance, making it difficult to balance fairness and accuracy. In this study, we systematically analyze fairness issues in LLM-based ICU mortality prediction and propose a clinically adaptive prompting framework that improves both performance and fairness without model retraining. We first design a multi-dimensional bias assessment scheme to identify subgroup disparities. Based on this, we introduce CAse Prompting (CAP), a training-free framework that integrates existing debiasing strategies and further guides models using similar historical misprediction cases paired with correct outcomes to correct biased reasoning. We evaluate CAP on the MIMIC-IV dataset. Results show that AUROC improves from 0.806 to 0.873 and AUPRC from 0.497 to 0.694. Meanwhile, prediction disparities are substantially reduced across demographic groups, with reductions exceeding 90% in sex and certain White-Black comparisons. Feature reliance analysis further reveals highly consistent attention patterns across groups, with similarity above 0.98. These findings demonstrate that fairness and performance in LLM-based clinical prediction can be jointly optimized through carefully designed prompting, offering a practical paradigm for developing reliable and equitable clinical decision-support systems.
♻ ☆ From Nodes to Narratives: Explaining Graph Neural Networks with LLMs and Graph Context
Graph Neural Networks (GNNs) have emerged as powerful tools for learning over structured data, including text-attributed graphs (TAGs), which are common in domains such as citation networks, social platforms, and knowledge graphs. GNNs are not inherently interpretable and thus, many explanation methods have been proposed. However, existing explanation methods often struggle to generate interpretable, fine-grained rationales, especially when node attributes include rich natural language. In this work, we introduce GSPELL, a lightweight, post-hoc framework that uses large language models (LLMs) to generate faithful and interpretable explanations for GNN predictions. GSPELL projects GNN node embeddings into the LLM embedding space and constructs hybrid prompts that interleave soft prompts with textual inputs from the graph structure. This enables the LLM to reason about GNN internal representations and produce natural language explanations along with concise explanation subgraphs. Our experiments across real-world TAG datasets demonstrate that GSPELL achieves a favorable trade-off between fidelity and sparsity, while improving human-centric metrics such as insightfulness. GSPELL sets a new direction for LLM-based explainability in graph learning by aligning GNN internals with human reasoning.
comment: 18 pages, 3 figures, 11 tables
♻ ☆ Can synthetic data reproduce real-world findings in epidemiology? A replication study using adversarial random forests
Synthetic data holds substantial potential to address practical challenges in epidemiology due to restricted data access and privacy concerns. However, many current methods suffer from limited quality, high computational demands, and complexity for non-experts. Furthermore, common evaluation strategies for synthetic data often fail to directly reflect statistical utility and measure privacy risks sufficiently. Against this background, a critical underexplored question is whether synthetic data can reliably reproduce key findings from epidemiological research while preserving privacy. We propose adversarial random forests (ARF) as an efficient and convenient method for synthesizing tabular epidemiological data. To evaluate its performance, we replicated statistical analyses from six epidemiological publications covering blood pressure, anthropometry, myocardial infarction, accelerometry, loneliness, and diabetes, from the German National Cohort (NAKO Gesundheitsstudie), the Bremen STEMI Registry U45 Study, and the Guelph Family Health Study. We further assessed how dataset dimensionality and variable complexity affect the quality of synthetic data, and contextualized ARF's performance by comparison with commonly used tabular data synthesizers in terms of utility, privacy, generalisation, and runtime. Across all replicated studies, results on ARF-generated synthetic data consistently aligned with original findings. Even for datasets with relatively low sample size-to-dimensionality ratios, replication outcomes closely matched the original results across descriptive and inferential analyses. Reduced dimensionality and variable complexity further enhanced synthesis quality. ARF demonstrated favourable performance regarding utility, privacy preservation, and generalisation relative to other synthesizers and superior computational efficiency.
♻ ☆ Persistent Homology as Stopping-Criterion for Voronoi Interpolation
In this study the Voronoi interpolation is used to interpolate a set of points drawn from a topological space with higher homology groups on its filtration. The technique is based on Voronoi tessellation, which induces a natural dual map to the Delaunay triangulation. Advantage is taken from this fact calculating the persistent homology on it after each iteration to capture the changing topology of the data. The boundary points are identified as critical. The Bottleneck and Wasserstein distance serve as a measure of quality between the original point set and the interpolation. If the norm of two distances exceeds a heuristically determined threshold, the algorithm terminates. We give the theoretical basis for this approach and justify its validity with numerical experiments.
comment: Code available at https://codeberg.org/Jiren/SIML
♻ ☆ Homological Time Series Analysis of Sensor Signals from Power Plants
In this paper, we use topological data analysis techniques to construct a suitable neural network classifier for the task of learning sensor signals of entire power plants according to their reference designation system. We use representations of persistence diagrams to derive necessary preprocessing steps and visualize the large amounts of data. We derive deep architectures with one-dimensional convolutional layers combined with stacked long short-term memories as residual networks suitable for processing the persistence features. We combine three separate sub-networks, obtaining as input the time series itself and a representation of the persistent homology for the zeroth and first dimension. We give a mathematical derivation for most of the used hyper-parameters. For validation, numerical experiments were performed with sensor data from four power plants of the same construction type.
comment: Code available at https://codeberg.org/Jiren/TwirlFlake
♻ ☆ Estimate of the Neural Network Dimension using Algebraic Topology and Lie Theory
In this paper we present an approach to determine the smallest possible number of neurons in a layer of a neural network in such a way that the topology of the input space can be learned sufficiently well. We introduce a general procedure based on persistent homology to investigate topological invariants of the manifold on which we suspect the data set. We specify the required dimensions precisely, assuming that there is a smooth manifold on or near which the data are located. Furthermore, we require that this space is connected and has a commutative group structure in the mathematical sense. These assumptions allow us to derive a decomposition of the underlying space whose topology is well known. We use the representatives of the $k$-dimensional homology groups from the persistence landscape to determine an integer dimension for this decomposition. This number is the dimension of the embedding that is capable of capturing the topology of the data manifold. We derive the theory and validate it experimentally on toy data sets.
comment: Code available at https://codeberg.org/Jiren/NTOPL
♻ ☆ Trigger Optimization and Event Classification for Dark Matter Searches in the CYGNO Experiment Using Machine Learning
The CYGNO experiment employs an optical-readout Time Projection Chamber (TPC) to search for rare low-energy interactions using finely resolved scintillation images. While the optical readout provides rich topological information, it produces large, sparse megapixel images that challenge real-time triggering, data reduction, and background discrimination. We summarize two complementary machine-learning approaches developed within CYGNO. First, we present a fast and fully unsupervised strategy for online data reduction based on reconstruction-based anomaly detection. A convolutional autoencoder trained exclusively on pedestal images (i.e. frames acquired with GEM amplification disabled) learns the detector noise morphology and highlights particle-induced structures through localized reconstruction residuals, from which compact Regions of Interest (ROIs) are extracted. On real prototype data, the selected configuration retains (93.0 +/- 0.2)% of reconstructed signal intensity while discarding (97.8 +/- 0.1)% of the image area, with ~25 ms per-frame inference time on a consumer GPU. Second, we report a weakly supervised application of the Classification Without Labels (CWoLa) framework to data acquired with an Americium--Beryllium neutron source. Using only mixed AmBe and standard datasets (no event-level labels), a convolutional classifier learns to identify nuclear-recoil-like topologies. The achieved performance approaches the theoretical limit imposed by the mixture composition and isolates a high-score population with compact, approximately circular morphologies consistent with nuclear recoils.
comment: 6 pages, 1 figure. Proceedings of 14th Young Researcher Meeting (14YRM2025). Published in PoS(14YRM2025)003 (2026); updated to match published version
♻ ☆ On Randomness in Agentic Evals
Agentic systems are evaluated on benchmarks where agents interact with environments to solve tasks. Most papers report a pass@1 score computed from a single run per task, assuming this gives a reliable performance estimate. We test this assumption by collecting 60,000 agentic trajectories on SWE-Bench-Verified, spanning three models and two scaffolds. We find substantial variance: single-run pass@1 estimates vary by 2.2 to 6.0 percentage points depending on which run is selected, with standard deviations exceeding 1.5 percentage points even at temperature 0. This variance has critical implications: reported improvements of 2--3 percentage points may reflect evaluation noise rather than genuine algorithmic progress. Through token-level analysis, we show that trajectories diverge early, often within the first few percent of tokens, and that these small differences cascade into different solution strategies. To enable reliable evaluation of agentic systems, we recommend three concrete practices: (1) estimate pass@1 from multiple independent runs per task, especially when measuring small improvements, (2) use statistical power analysis to determine the number of runs needed to detect expected effect sizes, and (3) consider metrics like pass@k (optimistic bound) and pass^k (pessimistic bound) with k>1 to better characterize the full performance envelope. While these practices increase evaluation cost, they are essential for distinguishing genuine scientific progress from statistical noise.
♻ ☆ Towards a Practical Understanding of Lagrangian Methods in Safe Reinforcement Learning
Safe reinforcement learning addresses constrained optimization problems where maximizing performance must be balanced against safety constraints, and Lagrangian methods are a widely used approach for this purpose. However, the effectiveness of Lagrangian methods depends crucially on the choice of the Lagrange multiplier $λ$, which governs the multi-objective trade-off between return and cost. A common practice is to update the multiplier automatically during training. Although this approach is standard in practice, there remains limited empirical evidence on the optimally achievable trade-off between return and cost as a function of $λ$, and there is currently no systematic benchmark comparing automated update mechanisms to this empirical optimum. Therefore, we study (i) the constraint geometry for eight widely used safety tasks and (ii) the previously overlooked constraint-regime sensitivity of different Lagrange multiplier update mechanisms in safe reinforcement learning. Through the lens of multi-objective analysis, we present empirical Pareto frontiers that offer a complete visualization of the trade-off between return and cost in the underlying optimization problem. Our results reveal the highly sensitive nature of $λ$ and further show that the restrictiveness of the constraint cost can vary across different cost limits within the same task. This highlights the importance of careful cost limit selection across different regions of cost restrictiveness when evaluating safe reinforcement learning methods. We provide a recommended set of cost limits for each evaluated task and offer an open-source code base: https://github.com/lindsayspoor/Lagrangian_SafeRL.
♻ ☆ TRI-DEP: A Trimodal Comparative Study for Depression Detection Using Speech, Text, and EEG
Depression is a widespread mental health disorder, yet its automatic detection remains challenging. Prior work has explored unimodal and multimodal approaches, with multimodal systems showing promise by leveraging complementary signals. However, existing studies are limited in scope, lack systematic comparisons of features, and suffer from inconsistent evaluation protocols. We address these gaps by systematically exploring feature representations and modelling strategies across EEG, together with speech and text. We evaluate handcrafted features versus pre-trained embeddings, assess the effectiveness of different neural encoders, compare unimodal, bimodal, and trimodal configurations, and analyse fusion strategies with attention to the role of EEG. Consistent subject-independent splits are applied to ensure robust, reproducible benchmarking. Our results show that (i) the combination of EEG, speech and text modalities enhances multimodal detection, (ii) pretrained embeddings outperform handcrafted features, and (iii) carefully designed trimodal models achieve state-of-the-art performance. Our work lays the groundwork for future research in multimodal depression detection.
♻ ☆ COFAP: A Universal Framework for COFs Adsorption Prediction through Designed Multi-Modal Extraction and Cross-Modal Synergy
Covalent organic frameworks (COFs) are promising adsorbents for gas adsorption and separation, while identifying the optimal structures among their vast design space requires efficient high-throughput screening. Conventional machine-learning predictors rely heavily on specific gas-related features. However, these features are time-consuming and limit scalability, leading to inefficiency and labor-intensive processes. Herein, a universal COFs adsorption prediction framework (COFAP) is proposed, which can extract multi-modal structural and chemical features through deep learning, and fuse these complementary features via cross-modal attention mechanism. Without relying on explicit gas-specific thermodynamic descriptors, COFAP achieves state-of-the-art prediction performance on the hypoCOFs dataset under the conditions investigated in this study, outperforming existing approaches. Based on COFAP, we also found that high-performing COFs for gas separation concentrate within a narrow range of pore size and surface area. A weight-adjustable prioritization scheme is also developed to enable flexible, application-specific ranking of candidate COFs for researchers. Superior efficiency and accuracy render COFAP directly deployable in crystalline porous materials.
♻ ☆ Tiny Neural Networks for Multi-Object Tracking in a Modular Kalman Framework
We present a modular, production-ready approach that integrates compact Neural Network (NN) into a Kalmanfilter-based Multi-Object Tracking (MOT) pipeline. We design three tiny task-specific networks to retain modularity, interpretability and eal-time suitability for embedded Automotive Driver Assistance Systems: (i) SPENT (Single-Prediction Network) - predicts per-track states and replaces heuristic motion models used by the Kalman Filter (KF). (ii) SANT (Single-Association Network) - assigns a single incoming sensor object to existing tracks, without relying on heuristic distance and association metrics. (iii) MANTa (Multi-Association Network) - jointly associates multiple sensor objects to multiple tracks in a single step. Each module has less than 50k trainable parameters. Furthermore, all three can be operated in real-time, are trained from tracking data, and expose modular interfaces so they can be integrated with standard Kalman-filter state updates and track management. This makes them drop-in compatible with many existing trackers. Modularity is ensured, as each network can be trained and evaluated independently of the others. Our evaluation on the KITTI tracking benchmark shows that SPENT reduces prediction RMSE by more than 50% compared to a standard Kalman filter, while SANT and MANTa achieve up to 95% assignment accuracy. These results demonstrate that small, task-specific neural modules can substantially improve tracking accuracy and robustness without sacrificing modularity, interpretability, or the real-time constraints required for automotive deployment.
♻ ☆ Native Reasoning Models: Training Language Models to Reason on Unverifiable Data ICLR 2026
The prevailing paradigm for training large reasoning models--combining Supervised Fine-Tuning (SFT) with Reinforcement Learning with Verifiable Rewards (RLVR)--is fundamentally constrained by its reliance on high-quality, human-annotated reasoning data and external verifiers. This dependency incurs significant data-collection costs, risks embedding human cognitive biases, and confines the reinforcement learning stage to objectively assessable domains like mathematics and coding, leaving a wide range of unverifiable tasks beyond its scope. To overcome these limitations, we introduce NRT (Native Reasoning Training), a novel framework that cultivates complex reasoning by having the model generate its own reasoning traces using only standard question-answer pairs, thereby obviating the need for expert-written demonstrations. NRT reframes the training problem by treating the reasoning process as a latent variable. It employs a unified training objective that models reasoning as an optimization problem, intrinsically rewarding paths that increase the model's likelihood of producing the ground-truth answer. This unified perspective allows us to analyze intrinsic failure modes of prior methods, such as policy collapse, and systematically design more robust reward aggregation functions, creating a self-reinforcing feedback loop where the model learns to think in ways that resolve its own uncertainty. Empirical evaluation on Llama and Mistral model families demonstrates that NRT achieves state-of-the-art performance among verifier-free methods, significantly outperforming standard SFT baselines and prior verifier-free RL methods. Our approach yields particularly strong performance gains in complex reasoning domains and exhibits high robustness to policy collapse, offering a general, scalable path toward building more powerful and broadly applicable reasoning systems.
comment: Accepted at ICLR 2026. Code available at https://github.com/sharkwyf/native-reasoning-models
♻ ☆ Universal Coefficients and Mayer-Vietoris Sequence for Groupoid Homology
We study homology of ample groupoids via the compactly supported Moore complex of the nerve. Let $A$ be a topological abelian group. For $n\ge 0$ set $C_n(\mathcal G;A) := C_c(\mathcal G_n,A)$ and define $\partial_n^A=\sum_{i=0}^n(-1)^i(d_i)_*$. This defines $H_n(\mathcal G;A)$. The theory is functorial for continuous étale homomorphisms. It is compatible with standard reductions, including restriction to saturated clopen subsets. In the ample setting it is invariant under Kakutani equivalence. We reprove Matui type long exact sequences and identify the comparison maps at chain level. For discrete $A$ we prove a natural universal coefficient short exact sequence $$0\to H_n(\mathcal G)\otimes_{\mathbb Z}A\xrightarrow{\ ι_n^{\mathcal G}\ }H_n(\mathcal G;A)\xrightarrow{\ κ_n^{\mathcal G}\ }\operatorname{Tor}_1^{\mathbb Z}\bigl(H_{n-1}(\mathcal G),A\bigr)\to 0.$$ The key input is the chain level isomorphism $C_c(\mathcal G_n,\mathbb Z)\otimes_{\mathbb Z}A\cong C_c(\mathcal G_n,A)$, which reduces the groupoid statement to the classical algebraic UCT for the free complex $C_c(\mathcal G_\bullet,\mathbb Z)$. We also isolate the obstruction for non-discrete coefficients. For a locally compact totally disconnected Hausdorff space $X$ with a basis of compact open sets, the image of $Φ_X:C_c(X,\mathbb Z)\otimes_{\mathbb Z}A\to C_c(X,A)$ is exactly the compactly supported functions with finite image. Thus $Φ_X$ is surjective if and only if every $f\in C_c(X,A)$ has finite image, and for suitable $X$ one can produce compactly supported continuous maps $X\to A$ with infinite image. Finally, for a clopen saturated cover $\mathcal G_0=U_1\cup U_2$ we construct a short exact sequence of Moore complexes and derive a Mayer-Vietoris long exact sequence for $H_\bullet(\mathcal G;A)$ for explicit computations.
comment: Master's thesis, Code available at https://codeberg.org/Jiren/MSc
♻ ☆ DiVeQ: Differentiable Vector Quantization Using the Reparameterization Trick
Vector quantization is common in deep models, yet its hard assignments block gradients and hinder end-to-end training. We propose DiVeQ, which treats quantization as adding an error vector that mimics the quantization distortion, keeping the forward pass hard while letting gradients flow. We also present a space-filling variant (SF-DiVeQ) that assigns to a curve constructed by the lines connecting codewords, resulting in less quantization error and full codebook usage. Both methods train end-to-end without requiring auxiliary losses or temperature schedules. In VQ-VAE image compression, VQGAN image generation, and DAC speech coding tasks across various data sets, our proposed methods improve reconstruction and sample quality over alternative quantization approaches.
♻ ☆ Logical Guidance for the Exact Composition of Diffusion Models
We propose LOGDIFF (Logical Guidance for the Exact Composition of Diffusion Models), a guidance framework for diffusion models that enables principled constrained generation with complex logical expressions at inference time. We study when exact score-based guidance for complex logical formulas can be obtained from guidance signals associated with atomic properties. First, we derive an exact Boolean calculus that provides a sufficient condition for exact logical guidance. Specifically, if a formula admits a circuit representation in which conjunctions combine conditionally independent subformulas and disjunctions combine subformulas that are either conditionally independent or mutually exclusive, exact logical guidance is achievable. In this case, the guidance signal can be computed exactly from atomic scores and posterior probabilities using an efficient recursive algorithm. Moreover, we show that, for commonly encountered classes of distributions, any desired Boolean formula is compilable into such a circuit representation. Second, by combining atomic guidance scores with posterior probability estimates, we introduce a hybrid guidance approach that bridges classifier guidance and classifier-free guidance, applicable to both compositional logical guidance and standard conditional generation. We demonstrate the effectiveness of our framework on multiple image and protein structure generation tasks.
♻ ☆ Masked Diffusion Models as Energy Minimization
We present a systematic theoretical framework that interprets masked diffusion models (MDMs) as solutions to energy minimization problems in discrete optimal transport. Specifically, we prove that three distinct energy formulations--kinetic, conditional kinetic, and geodesic energy--are mathematically equivalent under the structure of MDMs, and that MDMs minimize all three when the mask schedule satisfies a closed-form optimality condition. This unification not only clarifies the theoretical foundations of MDMs, but also motivates practical improvements in sampling. By parameterizing interpolation schedules via Beta distributions, we reduce the schedule design space to a tractable 2D search, enabling efficient post-training tuning without model modification. Experiments on synthetic and real-world benchmarks demonstrate that our energy-inspired schedules outperform hand-crafted baselines, particularly in low-step sampling settings.
♻ ☆ Your Absorbing Discrete Diffusion Secretly Models the Conditional Distributions of Clean Data
Discrete diffusion models with absorbing processes have shown promise in language modeling. The key quantities to be estimated are the ratios between the marginal probabilities of two transitive states at all timesteps, called the concrete score. In this paper, we reveal that the concrete score in absorbing diffusion can be expressed as conditional probabilities of clean data, multiplied by a time-dependent scalar in an analytic form. Motivated by this finding, we propose reparameterized absorbing discrete diffusion (RADD), a dedicated diffusion model without time-condition that characterizes the time-independent conditional probabilities. Besides its simplicity, RADD can reduce the number of function evaluations (NFEs) by caching the output of the time-independent network when the noisy sample remains unchanged in a sampling interval, which enables sampling acceleration. Built upon the new perspective of conditional distributions, we further unify absorbing discrete diffusion and any-order autoregressive models (AO-ARMs), showing that the upper bound on the negative log-likelihood for the diffusion model can be interpreted as an expected negative log-likelihood for AO-ARMs. Further, our RADD models achieve SOTA performance among diffusion models on 5 zero-shot language modeling benchmarks (measured by perplexity) at the GPT-2 scale. Our code is available at https://github.com/ML-GSAI/RADD.
♻ ☆ Differentiable Simulation of Hard Contacts with Soft Gradients for Learning and Control
Contact forces introduce discontinuities into robot dynamics that severely limit the use of simulators for gradient-based optimization. Penalty-based simulators such as MuJoCo, soften contact resolution to enable gradient computation. However, realistically simulating hard contacts requires stiff solver settings, which leads to incorrect simulator gradients when using automatic differentiation. Contrarily, using non-stiff settings strongly increases the sim-to-real gap. We analyze penalty-based simulators to pinpoint why gradients degrade under hard contacts. Building on these insights, we propose DiffMJX, which couples adaptive time integration with penalty-based simulation to substantially improve gradient accuracy. A second challenge is that contact gradients vanish when bodies separate. To address this, we introduce contacts from distance (CFD) which combines penalty-based simulation with straight-through estimation. By applying CFD exclusively in the backward pass, we obtain informative pre-contact gradients while retaining physical realism.
♻ ☆ TIC-GRPO: Provable and Efficient Optimization for Reinforcement Learning from Human Feedback
Group Relative Policy Optimization (GRPO), recently introduced by DeepSeek, is a critic-free reinforcement learning algorithm for fine-tuning large language models. GRPO replaces the value function in Proximal Policy Optimization (PPO) with group-normalized rewards while retaining PPO-style token-level importance sampling based on an old policy. Our theoretical analysis reveals that the GRPO update rule estimates the policy gradient at the old policy rather than the current one; however, since the old policy is refreshed every few steps, the resulting discrepancy remains small and the induced bias is negligible in practice. To empirically validate this insight, we conduct an ablation study that entirely removes importance sampling and performs multiple optimization steps using gradients estimated at a fixed old policy. Remarkably, this simplified variant attains performance comparable to standard GRPO. Motivated by this finding, we propose Trajectory-level Importance-Corrected GRPO (TIC-GRPO), a new algorithm that replaces token-level importance ratios with a single trajectory-level probability ratio, thereby yielding an estimate of the current policy gradient while preserving the critic-free structure. Furthermore, we present the first convergence analysis for GRPO-style methods and show that TIC-GRPO converges faster than GRPO. Finally, empirical results across math reasoning and coding tasks demonstrate the superiority of TIC-GRPO.
comment: 44 pages
♻ ☆ Interpretable Deep Learning Framework for Improved Disease Classification in Medical Imaging
Deep learning models have gained increasing adoption in medical image analysis. However, these models often produce overconfident predictions, which can compromise clinical accuracy and reliability. Bridging the gap between high-performance and awareness of uncertainty remains a crucial challenge in biomedical imaging applications. This study focuses on developing a unified deep learning framework for enhancing feature integration, interpretability, and reliability in prediction. We introduced a cross-guided channel spatial attention architecture that fuses feature representations extracted from EfficientNetB4 and ResNet34. Bidirectional attention approach enables the exchange of information across networks with differing receptive fields, enhancing discriminative and contextual feature learning. For quantitative predictive uncertainty assessment, Monte Carlo (MC)-Dropout is integrated with conformal prediction. This provides statistically valid prediction sets with entropy-based uncertainty visualization. The framework is evaluated on four medical imaging benchmark datasets: chest X-rays of COVID-19, Tuberculosis, Pneumonia, and retinal Optical Coherence Tomography (OCT) images. The proposed framework achieved strong classification performance with an AUC of 99.75% for COVID-19, 100% for Tuberculosis, 99.3% for Pneumonia chest X-rays, and 98.69% for retinal OCT images. Uncertainty-aware inference yields calibrated prediction sets with interpretable examples of uncertainty, showing transparency. The results demonstrate that bidirectional cross-attention with uncertainty quantification can improve performance and transparency in medical image classification.
comment: 18 pages, 8 figures, 5 tables
♻ ☆ Token Sample Complexity of Attention
As context windows in large language models continue to expand, it is essential to characterize how attention behaves at extreme sequence lengths. We introduce token-sample complexity: the rate at which attention computed on $n$ tokens converges to its infinite-token limit. We estimate finite-$n$ convergence bounds at two levels: pointwise uniform convergence of the attention map, and convergence of moments for the transformed token distribution. For compactly supported (and more generally sub-Gaussian) distributions, our first result shows that the attention map converges uniformly on a ball of radius $R$ at rate $C(R)/\sqrt{n}$, where $C(R)$ grows exponentially with $R$. For large $R$, this estimate loses practical value, and our second result addresses this issue by establishing convergence rates for the moments of the transformed distribution (the token output of the attention layer). In this case, the rate is $C'(R)/n^β$ with $β<\tfrac{1}{2}$, and $C'(R)$ depends polynomially on the size of the support of the distribution. The exponent $β$ depends on the attention geometry and the spectral properties of the tokens distribution. We also examine the regime in which the attention parameter tends to infinity and the softmax approaches a hardmax, and in this setting, we establish a logarithmic rate of convergence. Experiments on synthetic Gaussian data and real BERT models on Wikipedia text confirm our predictions.
♻ ☆ XNNTab -- Interpretable Neural Networks for Tabular Data using Sparse Autoencoders
In data-driven applications relying on tabular data, where interpretability is key, machine learning models such as decision trees and linear regression are applied. Although neural networks can provide higher predictive performance, they are not used because of their blackbox nature. In this work, we present XNNTab, a neural architecture that combines the expressiveness of neural networks and interpretability. XNNTab first learns highly non-linear feature representations, which are decomposed into monosemantic features using a sparse autoencoder (SAE). These features are then assigned human-interpretable concepts, making the overall model prediction intrinsically interpretable. XNNTab outperforms interpretable predictive models, and achieves comparable performance to its non-interpretable counterparts.
comment: Accepted at the 4th World Conference on eXplainable Artificial Intelligence (XAI-2026)
♻ ☆ On the Geometric Coherence of Global Aggregation in Federated Graph Neural Networks
Federated learning over graph-structured data exposes a fundamental mismatch between standard aggregation mechanisms and the operator nature of graph neural networks (GNNs). While federated optimization treats model parameters as elements of a shared Euclidean space, GNN parameters induce graph-dependent message-passing operators whose semantics depend on underlying topology. Under structurally and distributionally heterogeneous client graph distributions, local updates correspond to perturbations of distinct operator manifolds. Linear aggregation of such updates mixes geometrically incompatible directions, producing global models that converge numerically yet exhibit degraded relational behavior. We formalize this phenomenon as a geometric failure of global aggregation in cross-domain federated GNNs, characterized by destructive interference between operator perturbations and loss of coherence in message-passing dynamics. This degradation is not captured by conventional metrics such as loss or accuracy, as models may retain predictive performance while losing structural sensitivity. To address this, we propose GGRS (Global Geometric Reference Structure), a server-side aggregation framework operating on a data-free proxy of operator perturbations. GGRS enforces geometric admissibility via directional alignment, subspace compatibility, and sensitivity control, preserving the structure of the induced message-passing operator.
comment: This is a developing preprint of an 18-page journal manuscript (6 figures), currently being prepared for formal peer-review submission
♻ ☆ Fast convergence of a Federated Expectation-Maximization Algorithm
Data heterogeneity has been a long-standing bottleneck in studying the convergence rates of Federated Learning algorithms. In order to better understand the issue of data heterogeneity, we study the convergence rate of the Expectation-Maximization (EM) algorithm for the Federated Mixture of $K$ Linear Regressions model (FMLR). We completely characterize the convergence rate of the EM algorithm under all regimes of number of clients and number of data points per client, with partial limits in the number of clients. We show that with a signal-to-noise-ratio (SNR) that is atleast of order $\sqrt{K}$, the well-initialized EM algorithm converges to the ground truth under all regimes. We perform experiments on synthetic data to illustrate our results. In line with our theoretical findings, the simulations show that rather than being a bottleneck, data heterogeneity can accelerate the convergence of iterative federated algorithms.
♻ ☆ The Cost of Replicability in Active Learning
Active learning aims to reduce the number of labeled data points required by machine learning algorithms by selectively querying labels from initially unlabeled data. Ensuring replicability, where an algorithm produces consistent outcomes across different runs, is essential for the reliability of machine learning models but often increases sample complexity. This paper investigates the cost of replicability in active learning using two classical disagreement-based methods: the CAL and A^2 algorithms. Leveraging randomized thresholding techniques, we propose two replicable active learning algorithms: one for realizable learning of finite hypothesis classes and another for the agnostic setting. Our theoretical analysis shows that while enforcing replicability increases label complexity, CAL and A^2 still achieve substantial label savings under this constraint. These findings provide insights into balancing efficiency and stability in active learning.
♻ ☆ Deep Neural Networks with General Activations: Super-Convergence in Sobolev Norms
This paper establishes a comprehensive approximation result for deep fully-connected neural networks with commonly-used and general activation functions in Sobolev spaces $W^{n,\infty}$, with errors measured in the $W^{m,p}$-norm for $m < n$ and $1\le p \le \infty$. The derived rates surpass those of classical numerical approximation techniques, such as finite element and spectral methods, exhibiting a phenomenon we refer to as \emph{super-convergence}. Our analysis shows that deep networks with general activations can approximate weak solutions of partial differential equations (PDEs) with superior accuracy compared to traditional numerical methods at the approximation level. Furthermore, this work closes a significant gap in the error-estimation theory for neural-network-based approaches to PDEs, offering a unified theoretical foundation for their use in scientific computing.
comment: 56 pages, 7 figures
♻ ☆ PCA-Based Interpretable Knowledge Representation and Analysis of Geometric Design Parameters
In many CAD-based applications, complex geometries are defined by a high number of design parameters. This leads to high-dimensional design spaces that are challenging for downstream engineering processes like simulations, optimization, and design exploration tasks. Therefore, dimension reduction methods such as principal component analysis (PCA) are used. The PCA identifies dominant modes of geometric variation and yields a compact representation of the geometry. While classical PCA excels in the compact representation part, it does not directly recover underlying design parameters of a generated geometry. In this work, we deal with the problem of estimating design parameters from PCA-based representations. Analyzing a recent modification of the PCA dedicated to our field of application, we show that the results are actually identical to the standard PCA. We investigate limitations of this approach and present reasonable conditions under which accurate, interpretable parameter estimation can be obtained. With the help of dedicated experiments, we take a more in-depth look at every stage of the PCA and the possible changes of the geometry during these processes.
comment: 20 pages, 6 figures, 1 table, preprint to IntelliSys-Artificial Intelligence Conference 2026
♻ ☆ Backpropagation-Free Test-Time Adaptation via Probabilistic Gaussian Alignment
Test-time adaptation (TTA) enhances the zero-shot robustness under distribution shifts by leveraging unlabeled test data during inference. Despite notable advances, several challenges still limit its broader applicability. First, most methods rely on backpropagation or iterative optimization, which limits scalability and hinders real-time deployment. Second, they lack explicit modeling of class-conditional feature distributions. This modeling is crucial for producing reliable decision boundaries and calibrated predictions, but it remains underexplored due to the lack of both source data and supervision at test time. In this paper, we propose ADAPT, an Advanced Distribution-Aware and backPropagation-free Test-time adaptation method. We reframe TTA as a Gaussian probabilistic inference task by modeling class-conditional likelihoods using gradually updated class means and a shared covariance matrix. This enables closed-form, training-free inference. To correct potential likelihood bias, we introduce lightweight regularization guided by CLIP priors and a historical knowledge bank. ADAPT requires no source data, no gradient updates, and no full access to target data, supporting both online and transductive settings. Extensive experiments across diverse benchmarks demonstrate that our method achieves state-of-the-art performance under a wide range of distribution shifts with superior scalability and robustness.
♻ ☆ A Survey of Reinforcement Learning For Economics
This survey (re)introduces reinforcement learning methods to economists. The curse of dimensionality limits how far exact dynamic programming can be effectively applied, forcing us to rely on suitably "small" problems or our ability to convert "big" problems into smaller ones. While this reduction has been sufficient for many classical applications, a growing class of economic models resists such reduction. Reinforcement learning algorithms offer a natural, sample-based extension of dynamic programming, extending tractability to problems with high-dimensional states, continuous actions, and strategic interactions. I review the theory connecting classical planning to modern learning algorithms and demonstrate their mechanics through simulated examples in pricing, inventory control, strategic games, and preference elicitation. I also examine the practical vulnerabilities of these algorithms, noting their brittleness, sample inefficiency, sensitivity to hyperparameters, and the absence of global convergence guarantees outside of tabular settings. The successes of reinforcement learning remain strictly bounded by these constraints, as well as a reliance on accurate simulators. When guided by economic structure, reinforcement learning provides a remarkably flexible framework. It stands as an imperfect, but promising, addition to the computational economist's toolkit. A companion survey (Rust and Rawat, 2026b) covers the inverse problem of inferring preferences from observed behavior. All simulation code is publicly available.
♻ ☆ ASPEN: An Adaptive Spectral Physics-Enabled Network for Ginzburg-Landau Dynamics
Physics-Informed Neural Networks (PINNs) have emerged as a powerful, mesh-free paradigm for solving partial differential equations (PDEs). However, they notoriously struggle with stiff, multi-scale, and nonlinear systems due to the inherent spectral bias of standard multilayer perceptron (MLP) architectures, which prevents them from adequately representing high-frequency components. In this work, we introduce the Adaptive Spectral Physics-Enabled Network (ASPEN), a novel architecture designed to overcome this critical limitation. ASPEN integrates an adaptive spectral layer with learnable Fourier features directly into the network's input stage. This mechanism allows the model to dynamically tune its own spectral basis during training, enabling it to efficiently learn and represent the precise frequency content required by the solution. We demonstrate the efficacy of ASPEN by applying it to the complex Ginzburg-Landau equation (CGLE), a canonical and challenging benchmark for nonlinear, stiff spatio-temporal dynamics. Our results show that a standard PINN architecture catastrophically fails on this problem, diverging into non-physical oscillations. In contrast, ASPEN successfully solves the CGLE with exceptional accuracy. The predicted solution is visually indistinguishable from the high-resolution ground truth, achieving a low median physics residual of 5.10 x 10^-3. Furthermore, we validate that ASPEN's solution is not only pointwise accurate but also physically consistent, correctly capturing emergent physical properties, including the rapid free energy relaxation and the long-term stability of the domain wall front. This work demonstrates that by incorporating an adaptive spectral basis, our framework provides a robust and physically-consistent solver for complex dynamical systems where standard PINNs fail, opening new options for machine learning in challenging physical domains.
comment: 15 pages, 7 figures
♻ ☆ Intrinsic-Metric Physics-Informed Neural Networks (IM-PINN) for Reaction-Diffusion Dynamics on Complex Riemannian Manifolds
Simulating nonlinear reaction-diffusion dynamics on complex, non-Euclidean manifolds remains a fundamental challenge in computational morphogenesis, constrained by high-fidelity mesh generation costs and symplectic drift in discrete time-stepping schemes. This study introduces the Intrinsic-Metric Physics-Informed Neural Network (IM-PINN), a mesh-free geometric deep learning framework that solves partial differential equations directly in the continuous parametric domain. By embedding the Riemannian metric tensor into the automatic differentiation graph, our architecture analytically reconstructs the Laplace-Beltrami operator, decoupling solution complexity from geometric discretization. We validate the framework on a "Stochastic Cloth" manifold with extreme Gaussian curvature fluctuations ($K \in [-2489, 3580]$), where traditional adaptive refinement fails to resolve anisotropic Turing instabilities. Using a dual-stream architecture with Fourier feature embeddings to mitigate spectral bias, the IM-PINN recovers the "splitting spot" and "labyrinthine" regimes of the Gray-Scott model. Benchmarking against the Surface Finite Element Method (SFEM) reveals superior physical rigor: the IM-PINN achieves global mass conservation error of $\mathcal{E}_{mass} \approx 0.157$ versus SFEM's $0.258$, acting as a thermodynamically consistent global solver that eliminates mass drift inherent in semi-implicit integration. The framework offers a memory-efficient, resolution-independent paradigm for simulating biological pattern formation on evolving surfaces, bridging differential geometry and physics-informed machine learning.
comment: 19 pages, 7 figures
♻ ☆ Scalable learning of macroscopic stochastic dynamics
Macroscopic dynamical descriptions of complex physical systems are crucial for understanding and controlling material behavior. With the growing availability of data and compute, machine learning has become a promising alternative to first-principles methods to build accurate macroscopic models from microscopic trajectory simulations. However, for spatially extended systems, direct simulations of sufficiently large microscopic systems that inform macroscopic behavior is prohibitive. In this work, we propose a framework that learns the macroscopic dynamics of large stochastic microscopic systems using only small-system simulations. Our framework employs a partial evolution scheme to generate training data pairs by evolving large-system snapshots within local patches. We subsequently identify the closure variables associated with the macroscopic observables and learn the macroscopic dynamics using a custom loss. Furthermore, we introduce a hierarchical upsampling scheme that enables efficient generation of large-system snapshots from small-system trajectory distributions. We empirically demonstrate the accuracy and robustness of our framework through a variety of stochastic spatially extended systems, including those described by stochastic partial differential equations, idealised lattice spin systems, and a more realistic NbMoTa alloy system.
♻ ☆ CoVerRL: Breaking the Consensus Trap in Label-Free Reasoning via Generator-Verifier Co-Evolution
Label-free reinforcement learning enables large language models to improve reasoning capabilities without ground-truth supervision, typically by treating majority-voted answers as pseudo-labels. However, we identify a critical failure mode: as training maximizes self-consistency, output diversity collapses, causing the model to confidently reinforce systematic errors that evade detection. We term this the consensus trap. To escape it, we propose CoVerRL, a framework where a single model alternates between generator and verifier roles, with each capability bootstrapping the other. Majority voting provides noisy but informative supervision for training the verifier, while the improving verifier progressively filters self-consistent errors from pseudo-labels. This co-evolution creates a virtuous cycle that maintains high reward accuracy throughout training. Experiments across Qwen and Llama model families demonstrate that CoVerRL outperforms label-free baselines by 4.7-5.9% on mathematical reasoning benchmarks. Moreover, self-verification accuracy improves from around 55% to over 85%, confirming that both capabilities genuinely co-evolve.
comment: Project Page: https://zju-real.github.io/CoVerRL Code: https://github.com/ZJU-REAL/CoVerRL
Multimedia
☆ Look, Listen and Segment: Towards Weakly Supervised Audio-visual Semantic Segmentation ICASSP 2026
Audio-Visual Semantic Segmentation (AVSS) aligns audio and video at the pixel level but requires costly per-frame annotations. We introduce Weakly Supervised Audio-Visual Semantic Segmentation (WSAVSS), which uses only video-level labels to generate per-frame semantic masks of sounding objects. We decompose WSAVSS into looking, listening, and segmentation, and propose Progressive Cross-modal Alignment for Semantics (PCAS) with two modules: *Looking-before-Listening* and *Listening-before-Segmentation*. PCAS builds a classification task to train the audio-visual encoder using video labels, injects visual semantic prompts to enhance frame-level audio understanding, and then applies progressive contrastive alignment to map audio categories to image regions without mask annotations. Experiments show PCAS achieves state-of-the-art performance among weakly supervised methods on AVS and remains competitive with fully supervised baselines on AVSS, validating its effectiveness.
comment: Accepted by ICASSP 2026
☆ FeatDistill: A Feature Distillation Enhanced Multi-Expert Ensemble Framework for Robust AI-generated Image Detection
The rapid iteration and widespread dissemination of deepfake technology have posed severe challenges to information security, making robust and generalizable detection of AI-generated forged images increasingly important. In this paper, we propose FeatDistill, an AI-generated image detection framework that integrates feature distillation with a multi-expert ensemble, developed for the NTIRE Challenge on Robust AI-Generated Image Detection in the Wild. The framework explicitly targets three practical bottlenecks in real-world forensics: degradation interference, insufficient feature representation, and limited generalization. Concretely, we build a four-backbone Vision Transformer (ViT) ensemble composed of CLIP and SigLIP variants to capture complementary forensic cues. To improve data coverage, we expand the training set and introduce comprehensive degradation modeling, which exposes the detector to diverse quality variations and synthesis artifacts commonly encountered in unconstrained scenarios. We further adopt a two-stage training paradigm: the model is first optimized with a standard binary classification objective, then refined by dense feature-level self-distillation for representation alignment. This design effectively mitigates overfitting and enhances semantic consistency of learned features. At inference time, the final prediction is obtained by averaging the probabilities from four independently trained experts, yielding stable and reliable decisions across unseen generators and complex degradations. Despite the ensemble design, the framework remains efficient, requiring only about 10 GB peak GPU memory. Extensive evaluations in the NTIRE challenge setting demonstrate that FeatDistill achieves strong robustness and generalization under diverse ``in-the-wild'' conditions, offering an effective and practical solution for real-world deepfake image detection.
comment: 6th place (6/507) technical report at the NTIRE 2026: Robust AI-Generated Image Detection in the Wild Challenge
☆ Structured Visual Narratives Undermine Safety Alignment in Multimodal Large Language Models
Multimodal Large Language Models (MLLMs) extend text-only LLMs with visual reasoning, but also introduce new safety failure modes under visually grounded instructions. We study comic-template jailbreaks that embed harmful goals inside simple three-panel visual narratives and prompt the model to role-play and "complete the comic." Building on JailbreakBench and JailbreakV, we introduce ComicJailbreak, a comic-based jailbreak benchmark with 1,167 attack instances spanning 10 harm categories and 5 task setups. Across 15 state-of-the-art MLLMs (six commercial and nine open-source), comic-based attacks achieve success rates comparable to strong rule-based jailbreaks and substantially outperform plain-text and random-image baselines, with ensemble success rates exceeding 90% on several commercial models. Then, with the existing defense methodologies, we show that these methods are effective against the harmful comics, they will induce a high refusal rate when prompted with benign prompts. Finally, using automatic judging and targeted human evaluation, we show that current safety evaluators can be unreliable on sensitive but non-harmful content. Our findings highlight the need for safety alignment robust to narrative-driven multimodal jailbreaks.
comment: 31 pages
☆ Cross-Scenario Deraining Adaptation with Unpaired Data: Superpixel Structural Priors and Multi-Stage Pseudo-Rain Synthesis
Image deraining plays a pivotal role in low-level computer vision, serving as a prerequisite for robust outdoor surveillance and autonomous driving systems. While deep learning paradigms have achieved remarkable success in firmly aligned settings, they often suffer from severe performance degradation when generalized to unseen Out-of-Distribution (OOD) scenarios. This failure stems primarily from the significant domain discrepancy between synthetic training datasets and the complex physical dynamics of real-world rain. To address these challenges, this paper proposes a pioneering cross-scenario deraining adaptation framework. Diverging from conventional approaches, our method obviates the requirements for paired rainy observations in the target domain, leveraging exclusively rain-free background images. We design a Superpixel Generation (Sup-Gen) module to extract stable structural priors from the source domain using Simple Linear Iterative Clustering. Subsequently, a Resolution-adaptive Fusion strategy is introduced to align these source structures with target backgrounds through texture similarity, ensuring the synthesis of diverse and realistic pseudo-data. Finally, we implement a pseudo-label re-Synthesize mechanism that employs multi-stage noise generation to simulate realistic rain streaks. This framework functions as a versatile plug-and-play module capable of seamless integration into arbitrary deraining architectures. Extensive experiments on state-of-the-art models demonstrate that our approach yields remarkable PSNR gains of up to 32% to 59% in OOD domains while significantly accelerating training convergence.
comment: We aim at addressing the cross-scenario (i.e., O.O.D) de-rain challenge, which has been neglected for a long period
☆ StreamingEval: A Unified Evaluation Protocol towards Realistic Streaming Video Understanding
Real-time, continuous understanding of visual signals is essential for real-world interactive AI applications, and poses a fundamental system-level challenge. Existing research on streaming video understanding, however, typically focuses on isolated aspects such as question-answering accuracy under limited visual context or improvements in encoding efficiency, while largely overlooking practical deployability under realistic resource constraints. To bridge this gap, we introduce StreamingEval, a unified evaluation framework for assessing the streaming video understanding capabilities of Video-LLMs under realistic constraints. StreamingEval benchmarks both mainstream offline models and recent online video models under a standardized protocol, explicitly characterizing the trade-off between efficiency, storage and accuracy. Specifically, we adopt a fixed-capacity memory bank to normalize accessible historical visual context, and jointly evaluate visual encoding efficiency, text decoding latency, and task performance to quantify overall system deployability. Extensive experiments across multiple datasets reveal substantial gaps between current Video-LLMs and the requirements of realistic streaming applications, providing a systematic basis for future research in this direction. Codes will be released at https://github.com/wwgTang-111/StreamingEval1.
♻ ☆ Understanding Temporal Logic Consistency in Video-Language Models through Cross-Modal Attention Discriminability CVPR 2026
Large language models (LLMs) often generate self-contradictory outputs, which severely impacts their reliability and hinders their adoption in practical applications. In video-language models (Video-LLMs), this phenomenon recently draws the attention of researchers. Specifically, these models fail to provide logically consistent responses to rephrased questions based on their grounding outputs. However, the underlying causes of this phenomenon remain underexplored. In this work, we adopt an interpretability-driven approach to analyze, statistically summarize, and intervention the potential factors of the phenomenon. We find that one of the primary reasons for the inconsistency in responses lies in the inability of cross-modal attention heads to effectively distinguish video tokens across different timestamps. To address this, we propose an attention enhancement method called Temporally Conditioned Attention Sharpening (TCAS), which constructs an enhancement objective based on attention distinctions to enhance the model's temporal resolution capability, thereby improving its temporal understanding logic consistency. Experimental results demonstrate that our method significantly enhances the temporal logic consistency of Video-LLMs. Further analyses reveal that our method indeed improves the temporal discriminability of attention heads, validating our conclusions. Additionally, our method even achieves performance improvements in general video temporal grounding tasks, suggesting that temporal logic consistency is an important factor in temporal understanding.
comment: Accepted by CVPR 2026
Computation and Language
☆ KG-Hopper: Empowering Compact Open LLMs with Knowledge Graph Reasoning via Reinforcement Learning IJCNN 2026
Large Language Models (LLMs) demonstrate impressive natural language capabilities but often struggle with knowledge-intensive reasoning tasks. Knowledge Base Question Answering (KBQA), which leverages structured Knowledge Graphs (KGs) exemplifies this challenge due to the need for accurate multi-hop reasoning. Existing approaches typically perform sequential reasoning steps guided by predefined pipelines, restricting flexibility and causing error cascades due to isolated reasoning at each step. To address these limitations, we propose KG-Hopper, a novel Reinforcement Learning (RL) framework that empowers compact open LLMs with the ability to perform integrated multi-hop KG reasoning within a single inference round. Rather than reasoning step-by-step, we train a Reasoning LLM that embeds the entire KG traversal and decision process into a unified ``thinking'' stage, enabling global reasoning over cross-step dependencies and dynamic path exploration with backtracking. Experimental results on eight KG reasoning benchmarks show that KG-Hopper, based on a 7B-parameter LLM, consistently outperforms larger multi-step systems (up to 70B) and achieves competitive performance with proprietary models such as GPT-3.5-Turbo and GPT-4o-mini, while remaining compact, open, and data-efficient. The code is publicly available at: https://github.com/Wangshuaiia/KG-Hopper.
comment: Accepted to IJCNN 2026
PROMPT2BOX: Uncovering Entailment Structure among LLM Prompts
To discover the weaknesses of LLMs, researchers often embed prompts into a vector space and cluster them to extract insightful patterns. However, vector embeddings primarily capture topical similarity. As a result, prompts that share a topic but differ in specificity, and consequently in difficulty, are often represented similarly, making fine-grained weakness analysis difficult. To address this limitation, we propose PROMPT2BOX, which embeds prompts into a box embedding space using a trained encoder. The encoder, trained on existing and synthesized datasets, outputs box embeddings that capture not only semantic similarity but also specificity relations between prompts (e.g., "writing an adventure story" is more specific than "writing a story"). We further develop a novel dimension reduction technique for box embeddings to facilitate dataset visualization and comparison. Our experiments demonstrate that box embeddings consistently capture prompt specificity better than vector baselines. On the downstream task of creating hierarchical clustering trees for 17 LLMs from the UltraFeedback dataset, PROMPT2BOX can identify 8.9\% more LLM weaknesses than vector baselines and achieves an approximately 33\% stronger correlation between hierarchical depth and instruction specificity.
☆ Semantic Shift: the Fundamental Challenge in Text Embedding and Retrieval
Transformer-based embedding models rely on pooling to map variable-length text into a single vector, enabling efficient similarity search but also inducing well-known geometric pathologies such as anisotropy and length-induced embedding collapse. Existing accounts largely describe \emph{what} these pathologies look like, yet provide limited insight into \emph{when} and \emph{why} they harm downstream retrieval. In this work, we argue that the missing causal factor is \emph{semantic shift}: the intrinsic, structured evolution and dispersion of semantics within a text. We first present a theoretical analysis of \emph{semantic smoothing} in Transformer embeddings: as the semantic diversity among constituent sentences increases, the pooled representation necessarily shifts away from every individual sentence embedding, yielding a smoothed and less discriminative vector. Building on this foundation, we formalize semantic shift as a computable measure integrating local semantic evolution and global semantic dispersion. Through controlled experiments across corpora and multiple embedding models, we show that semantic shift aligns closely with the severity of embedding concentration and predicts retrieval degradation, whereas text length alone does not. Overall, semantic shift offers a unified and actionable lens for understanding embedding collapse and for diagnosing when anisotropy becomes harmful.
☆ Efficient Fine-Tuning Methods for Portuguese Question Answering: A Comparative Study of PEFT on BERTimbau and Exploratory Evaluation of Generative LLMs
Although large language models have transformed natural language processing, their computational costs create accessibility barriers for low-resource languages such as Brazilian Portuguese. This work presents a systematic evaluation of Parameter-Efficient Fine-Tuning (PEFT) and quantization techniques applied to BERTimbau for Question Answering on SQuAD-BR, the Brazilian Portuguese translation of SQuAD v1. We evaluate 40 configurations combining four PEFT methods (LoRA, DoRA, QLoRA, QDoRA) across two model sizes (Base: 110M, Large: 335M parameters). Our findings reveal three critical insights: (1) LoRA achieves 95.8\% of baseline performance on BERTimbau-Large while reducing training time by 73.5\% (F1=81.32 vs 84.86); (2) higher learning rates (2e-4) substantially improve PEFT performance, with F1 gains of up to +19.71 points over standard rates; and (3) larger models show twice the quantization resilience (loss of 4.83 vs 9.56 F1 points). These results demonstrate that encoder-based models can be efficiently fine-tuned for extractive Brazilian Portuguese QA with substantially lower computational cost than large generative LLMs, promoting more sustainable approaches aligned with \textit{Green AI} principles. An exploratory evaluation of Tucano and Sabiá on the same extractive QA benchmark shows that while generative models can reach competitive F1 scores with LoRA fine-tuning, they require up to 4.2$\times$ more GPU memory and 3$\times$ more training time than BERTimbau-Base, reinforcing the efficiency advantage of smaller encoder-based architectures for this task.
comment: 10 pages, 2 figures, PROPOR 2026
☆ Multi-Perspective LLM Annotations for Valid Analyses in Subjective Tasks
Large language models are increasingly used to annotate texts, but their outputs reflect some human perspectives better than others. Existing methods for correcting LLM annotation error assume a single ground truth. However, this assumption fails in subjective tasks where disagreement across demographic groups is meaningful. Here we introduce Perspective-Driven Inference, a method that treats the distribution of annotations across groups as the quantity of interest, and estimates it using a small human annotation budget. We contribute an adaptive sampling strategy that concentrates human annotation effort on groups where LLM proxies are least accurate. We evaluate on politeness and offensiveness rating tasks, showing targeted improvements for harder-to-model demographic groups relative to uniform sampling baselines, while maintaining coverage.
☆ Task-Specific Efficiency Analysis: When Small Language Models Outperform Large Language Models
Large Language Models achieve remarkable performance but incur substantial computational costs unsuitable for resource-constrained deployments. This paper presents the first comprehensive task-specific efficiency analysis comparing 16 language models across five diverse NLP tasks. We introduce the Performance-Efficiency Ratio (PER), a novel metric integrating accuracy, throughput, memory, and latency through geometric mean normalization. Our systematic evaluation reveals that small models (0.5--3B parameters) achieve superior PER scores across all given tasks. These findings establish quantitative foundations for deploying small models in production environments prioritizing inference efficiency over marginal accuracy gains.
comment: Accepted for publication at ESANN 2025. This is a task-specific efficiency analysis comparing small language models
☆ PLR: Plackett-Luce for Reordering In-Context Learning Examples
In-context learning (ICL) adapts large language models by conditioning on a small set of ICL examples, avoiding costly parameter updates. Among other factors, performance is often highly sensitive to the ordering of the examples. However, exhaustive search over the $n!$ possible orderings is infeasible. Therefore more efficient ordering methods use model confidence measures (e.g., label-probability entropy) over label sets or take a direct approach to finding the best ordering. We propose PLR, a probabilistic approach to in-context example ordering that replaces discrete ordering search with learning a probability distribution over orderings with the Plackett-Luce model. PLR models orderings using a Plackett-Luce distribution and iteratively updates its parameters to concentrate probability mass on high-performing orderings under a task-level metric. Candidate orderings are sampled efficiently via a Gumbel perturb-and-sort procedure. Experiments on multiple classification benchmarks show that PLR consistently improves few-shot accuracy for $k \in \{4, 8, 16, 32\}$ examples, and we further demonstrate gains on mathematical reasoning tasks where label-based ordering methods are not applicable. Our code is available at https://github.com/Batorskq/PLR.
☆ Conspiracy Frame: a Semiotically-Driven Approach for Conspiracy Theories Detection
Conspiracy theories are anti-authoritarian narratives that lead to social conflict, impacting how people perceive political information. To help in understanding this issue, we introduce the Conspiracy Frame: a fine-grained semantic representation of conspiratorial narratives derived from frame-semantics and semiotics, which spawned the Conspiracy Frames (Con.Fra.) dataset: a corpus of Telegram messages annotated at span-level. The Conspiracy Frame and Con.Fra. dataset contribute to the implementation of a more generalizable understanding and recognition of conspiracy theories. We observe the ability of LLMs to recognize this phenomenon in-domain and out-of-domain, investigating the role that frames may have in supporting this task. Results show that, while the injection of frames in an in-context approach does not lead to clear increase of performance, it has potential; the mapping of annotated spans with FrameNet shows abstract semantic patterns (e.g., `Kinship', `Ingest\_substance') that potentially pave the way for a more semantically- and semiotically-aware detection of conspiratorial narratives.
☆ TIDE: Token-Informed Depth Execution for Per-Token Early Exit in LLM Inference
Large language models run every token through every layer, regardless of difficulty. We present TIDE, a post-training system that attaches tiny learned routers at periodic checkpoint layers and, at inference time, selects the earliest layer whose hidden state has converged for each token. TIDE requires no model retraining, works with any HuggingFace causal LM, auto-detects GPU architecture, and supports float32, float16, and bfloat16 through fused CUDA kernels. On an NVIDIA A100 with DeepSeek R1 Distill 8B, TIDE achieves 100% prefill exit rate (5% of tokens exit at layer 11, the remaining at layer 31), reduces prefill latency by 7.2%, and increases single-batch throughput by 6.6%. During autoregressive decoding, 98-99% of tokens exit early while the model correctly solves a multi-step math problem with 95 unique output tokens. On Qwen3 8B (36 layers), throughput improves by 8.1% at batch size 8. Calibration on 2,000 WikiText samples takes under 3 minutes and produces a ~4 MB router checkpoint. The system comprises 1,308 lines of Python and 1,081 lines of CUDA/C++ with 74 passing tests. Code: https://github.com/RightNow-AI/TIDE
comment: 9 pages, 5 tables, 2 figures. Code: https://github.com/RightNow-AI/TIDE
☆ AdaRubric: Task-Adaptive Rubrics for LLM Agent Evaluation
LLM-as-Judge evaluation fails agent tasks because a fixed rubric cannot capture what matters for this task: code debugging demands Correctness and Error Handling; web navigation demands Goal Alignment and Action Efficiency. We present ADARUBRIC, which closes this gap by generating task-specific evaluation rubrics on the fly from task descriptions, scoring trajectories step-by-step with confidence-weighted per-dimension feedback, and filtering preference pairs with the novel DimensionAwareFilter - a provably necessary condition for preventing high-scoring dimensions from masking dimension-level failures. On WebArena and ToolBench, ADARUBRIC achieves Pearson r=0.79 human correlation (+0.16 over the best static baseline) with deployment-grade reliability (Krippendorff's $α$=0.83). DPO agents trained on ADARUBRIC preference pairs gain +6.8 to +8.5 pp task success over Prometheus across three benchmarks; gains transfer to SWE-bench code repair (+4.9 pp) and accelerate PPO convergence by +6.6 pp at 5K steps - both without any rubric engineering. Code: https://github.com/alphadl/AdaRubrics.
☆ Benchmarking Bengali Dialectal Bias: A Multi-Stage Framework Integrating RAG-Based Translation and Human-Augmented RLAIF
Large language models (LLMs) frequently exhibit performance biases against regional dialects of low-resource languages. However, frameworks to quantify these disparities remain scarce. We propose a two-phase framework to evaluate dialectal bias in LLM question-answering across nine Bengali dialects. First, we translate and gold-label standard Bengali questions into dialectal variants adopting a retrieval-augmented generation (RAG) pipeline to prepare 4,000 question sets. Since traditional translation quality evaluation metrics fail on unstandardized dialects, we evaluate fidelity using an LLM-as-a-judge, which human correlation confirms outperforms legacy metrics. Second, we benchmark 19 LLMs across these gold-labeled sets, running 68,395 RLAIF evaluations validated through multi-judge agreement and human fallback. Our findings reveal severe performance drops linked to linguistic divergence. For instance, responses to the highly divergent Chittagong dialect score 5.44/10, compared to 7.68/10 for Tangail. Furthermore, increased model scale does not consistently mitigate this bias. We contribute a validated translation quality evaluation method, a rigorous benchmark dataset, and a Critical Bias Sensitivity (CBS) metric for safety-critical applications.
comment: 12 pages, 1 figure, 5 tables
☆ AgentHER: Hindsight Experience Replay for LLM Agent Trajectory Relabeling
LLM agents fail on the majority of real-world tasks -- GPT-4o succeeds on fewer than 15% of WebArena navigation tasks and below 55% pass@1 on ToolBench (Zhou et al., 2024; Qin et al., 2024) -- yet every failed trajectory is routinely discarded, wasting the dominant source of collected experience. We introduce AgentHER, a framework that recovers this lost training signal by adapting the Hindsight Experience Replay (HER; Andrychowicz et al., 2017) principle to natural-language agent trajectories for offline data augmentation. The key insight is simple: a trajectory that fails goal A is often a correct demonstration for some achievable alternative goal B. AgentHER realises this idea through a four-stage pipeline -- failure classification, outcome extraction, LLM-guided prompt relabeling with confidence gating, and data packaging -- that converts discarded failures into high-quality SFT, DPO, and ShareGPT training data, with both zero-cost rule-based and LLM-judge implementations. On WebArena (Zhou et al., 2024) and ToolBench (Qin et al., 2024), AgentHER improves over success-only SFT by +7.1-11.7 pp across four model families (GPT-4o, Qwen2.5-72B/7B, LLaMA-3.1-8B), while achieving 2x data efficiency -- matching baseline performance with only 50% of successful demonstrations. Gains are consistent from 1.5B to 72B parameters (+5.8-9.2 pp) and compound under iterative redeployment (+2.1 pp over additional rounds). Human evaluation confirms 97.7% relabeling precision under multi-judge verification.
☆ Beyond Memorization: Distinguishing between Reductive and Epistemic Reasoning in LLMs using Classic Logic Puzzles
Epistemic reasoning requires agents to infer the state of the world from partial observations and information about other agents' knowledge. Prior work evaluating LLMs on canonical epistemic puzzles interpreted their behavior through a dichotomy between epistemic reasoning and brittle memorization. We argue that this framing is incomplete: in recent models, memorization is better understood as a special case of reduction, where a new instance is mapped onto a known problem. Instead, we introduce a reduction ladder, a sequence of modifications that progressively move instances away from a canonical epistemic puzzle, making reduction increasingly difficult while preserving the underlying logic. We find that while some large models succeed via reduction, other models fail early, and all models struggle once epistemic reasoning is required.
☆ Generalized Discrete Diffusion from Snapshots
We introduce Generalized Discrete Diffusion from Snapshots (GDDS), a unified framework for discrete diffusion modeling that supports arbitrary noising processes over large discrete state spaces. Our formulation encompasses all existing discrete diffusion approaches, while allowing significantly greater flexibility in the choice of corruption dynamics. The forward noising process relies on uniformization and enables fast arbitrary corruption. For the reverse process, we derive a simple evidence lower bound (ELBO) based on snapshot latents, instead of the entire noising path, that allows efficient training of standard generative modeling architectures with clear probabilistic interpretation. Our experiments on large-vocabulary discrete generation tasks suggest that the proposed framework outperforms existing discrete diffusion methods in terms of training efficiency and generation quality, and beats autoregressive models for the first time at this scale. We provide the code along with a blog post on the project page : \href{https://oussamazekri.fr/gdds}{https://oussamazekri.fr/gdds}.
comment: 37 pages, 6 figures, 13 tables
☆ TimeTox: An LLM-Based Pipeline for Automated Extraction of Time Toxicity from Clinical Trial Protocols
Time toxicity, the cumulative healthcare contact days from clinical trial participation, is an important but labor-intensive metric to extract from protocol documents. We developed TimeTox, an LLM-based pipeline for automated extraction of time toxicity from Schedule of Assessments tables. TimeTox uses Google's Gemini models in three stages: summary extraction from full-length protocol PDFs, time toxicity quantification at six cumulative timepoints for each treatment arm, and multi-run consensus via position-based arm matching. We validated against 20 synthetic schedules (240 comparisons) and assessed reproducibility on 644 real-world oncology protocols. Two architectures were compared: single-pass (vanilla) and two-stage (structure-then-count). The two-stage pipeline achieved 100% clinically acceptable accuracy ($\pm$3 days) on synthetic data (MAE 0.81 days) versus 41.5% for vanilla (MAE 9.0 days). However, on real-world protocols, the vanilla pipeline showed superior reproducibility: 95.3% clinically acceptable accuracy (IQR $\leq$ 3 days) across 3 runs on 644 protocols, with 82.0% perfect stability (IQR = 0). The production pipeline extracted time toxicity for 1,288 treatment arms across multiple disease sites. Extraction stability on real-world data, rather than accuracy on synthetic benchmarks, is the decisive factor for production LLM deployment.
comment: 19 pages, 5 figures, 7 tables
☆ Improving Coherence and Persistence in Agentic AI for System Optimization
Designing high-performance system heuristics is a creative, iterative process requiring experts to form hypotheses and execute multi-step conceptual shifts. While Large Language Models (LLMs) show promise in automating this loop, they struggle with complex system problems due to two critical failure modes: evolutionary neighborhood bias and the coherence ceiling. Evolutionary methods often remain trapped in local optima by relying on scalar benchmark scores, failing when coordinated multi-step changes are required. Conversely, existing agentic frameworks suffer from context degradation over long horizons or fail to accumulate knowledge across independent runs. We present Engram, an agentic researcher architecture that addresses these limitations by decoupling long-horizon exploration from the constraints of a single context window. Engram organizes exploration into a sequence of agents that iteratively design, test, and analyze mechanisms. At the conclusion of each run, an agent stores code snapshots, logs, and results in a persistent Archive and distills high-level modeling insights into a compact, persistent Research Digest. Subsequent agents then begin with a fresh context window, reading the Research Digest to build on prior discoveries. We find that Engram exhibits superior performance across diverse domains including multi-cloud multicast, LLM inference request routing, and optimizing KV cache reuse in databases with natural language queries.
☆ enhancing reasoning accuracy in large language models during inference time
Large Language Models (LLMs) often exhibit strong linguistic abilities while remaining unreliable on multi-step reasoning tasks, particularly when deployed without additional training or fine-tuning. In this work, we study inference-time techniques to improve the reasoning accuracy of LLMs. We systematically evaluate three classes of inference-time strategies: (i) self-consistency via stochastic decoding, where the model is sampled multiple times using controlled temperature and nucleus sampling and the most frequent final answer is selected; (ii) dual-model reasoning agreement, where outputs from two independent models are compared and only consistent reasoning traces are trusted; and (iii) self-reflection, where the model critiques and revises its own reasoning. Across all evaluated methods, we employ Chain-of-Thought (CoT) [1] prompting to elicit explicit intermediate reasoning steps before generating final answers. In this work, we provide a controlled comparative evaluation across three inference-time strategies under identical prompting and verification settings. Our experiments on LLM [2] show that self-consistency with nucleus sampling and controlled temperature value yields the substantial gains, achieving a 9% to 15% absolute improvement in accuracy over greedy single-pass decoding, well-suited for low-risk domains, offering meaningful gains with minimal overhead. The dual-model approach provides additional confirmation for model reasoning steps thus more appropriate for moderate-risk domains, where higher reliability justifies additional compute. Self-reflection offers only marginal improvements, suggesting limited effectiveness for smaller non-reasoning models at inference time.
☆ More Than Sum of Its Parts: Deciphering Intent Shifts in Multimodal Hate Speech Detection
Combating hate speech on social media is critical for securing cyberspace, yet relies heavily on the efficacy of automated detection systems. As content formats evolve, hate speech is transitioning from solely plain text to complex multimodal expressions, making implicit attacks harder to spot. Current systems, however, often falter on these subtle cases, as they struggle with multimodal content where the emergent meaning transcends the aggregation of individual modalities. To bridge this gap, we move beyond binary classification to characterize semantic intent shifts where modalities interact to construct implicit hate from benign cues or neutralize toxicity through semantic inversion. Guided by this fine-grained formulation, we curate the Hate via Vision-Language Interplay (H-VLI) benchmark where the true intent hinges on the intricate interplay of modalities rather than overt visual or textual slurs. To effectively decipher these complex cues, we further propose the Asymmetric Reasoning via Courtroom Agent DEbate (ARCADE) framework. By simulating a judicial process where agents actively argue for accusation and defense, ARCADE forces the model to scrutinize deep semantic cues before reaching a verdict. Extensive experiments demonstrate that ARCADE significantly outperforms state-of-the-art baselines on H-VLI, particularly for challenging implicit cases, while maintaining competitive performance on established benchmarks. Our code and data are available at: https://github.com/Sayur1n/H-VLI
☆ Conversation Tree Architecture: A Structured Framework for Context-Aware Multi-Branch LLM Conversations
Large language models (LLMs) are increasingly deployed for extended, multi-topic conversations, yet the flat, append-only structure of current conversation interfaces introduces a fundamental limitation: all context accumulates in a single unbounded window, causing topically distinct threads to bleed into one another and progressively degrade response quality. We term this failure mode logical context poisoning. In this paper, we introduce the Conversation Tree Architecture (CTA), a hierarchical framework that organizes LLM conversations as trees of discrete, context-isolated nodes. Each node maintains its own local context window; structured mechanisms govern how context flows between parent and child nodes, downstream on branch creation and upstream on branch deletion. We additionally introduce volatile nodes, transient branches whose local context must be selectively merged upward or permanently discarded before purging. We formalize the architecture's primitives, characterize the open design problems in context flow, relate our framework to prior work in LLM memory management, and describe a working prototype implementation. The CTA provides a principled foundation for structured conversational context management and extends naturally to multi-agent settings.
comment: 6 pages, 1 figure. Prototype available at https://the-conversation-tree.vercel.app/app
☆ The Library Theorem: How External Organization Governs Agentic Reasoning Capacity
Externalized reasoning is already exploited by transformer-based agents through chain-of-thought, but structured retrieval -- indexing over one's own reasoning state -- remains underexplored. We formalize the transformer context window as an I/O page and prove that tool-augmented agents with indexed external memory achieve exponentially lower retrieval cost than agents restricted to sequential scanning: $O(\log_b N)$ versus $Ω(N)$ page reads per query, and $O(T \log_b T)$ versus $Θ(T^2)$ cumulative cost over $T$ reasoning steps -- a gap that widens as deliberation deepens. We test these predictions on a controlled lookup benchmark across three content types -- random hashes, ordered integers, and encyclopedia entries -- varying store size from 50 to 5,000 items, and replicate key conditions across two model generations (GPT-4o-mini and GPT-5.4). On abstract content, the indexed agent achieves median 1 page read regardless of store size, confirming the $O(1)$ prediction. Sorted pages without an index fail to close the gap: the weaker model cannot sustain binary search at scale, and the stronger model achieves near-optimal $\log_2 N$ search but still loses to the index by $5\times$. On familiar content (encyclopedia entries), a competing failure mode emerges: the model recognizes the domain, bypasses the retrieval protocol, and generates answers from parametric memory, producing catastrophic token expenditure even when the index is sound. This parametric memory competition dissociates the two cognitive operations that indexing combines: understanding content (where language models excel) and following navigational protocols (where they fail when understanding tempts them to shortcut). The result argues for a separation of concerns: use language models for index construction, where semantic understanding helps, and deterministic algorithms for index traversal, where it hurts.
comment: 19 pages, 6 figures
☆ Graph Fusion Across Languages using Large Language Models
Combining multiple knowledge graphs (KGs) across linguistic boundaries is a persistent challenge due to semantic heterogeneity and the complexity of graph environments. We propose a framework for cross-lingual graph fusion, leveraging the in-context reasoning and multilingual semantic priors of Large Language Models (LLMs). The framework implements structural linearization by mapping triplets directly into natural language sequences (e.g., [head] [relation] [tail]), enabling the LLM to map relations and reconcile entities between an evolving fused graph ($G_{c}^{(t-1)}$) and a new candidate graph ($G_{t}$). Evaluated on the DBP15K dataset, this exploratory study demonstrates that LLMs can serve as a universal semantic bridge to resolve cross-lingual discrepancies. Results show the successful sequential agglomeration of multiple heterogeneous graphs, offering a scalable, modular solution for continuous knowledge synthesis in multi-source, multilingual environments.
☆ Context Selection for Hypothesis and Statistical Evidence Extraction from Full-Text Scientific Articles
Extracting hypotheses and their supporting statistical evidence from full-text scientific articles is central to the synthesis of empirical findings, but remains difficult due to document length and the distribution of scientific arguments across sections of the paper. The work studies a sequential full-text extraction setting, where the statement of a primary finding in an article's abstract is linked to (i) a corresponding hypothesis statement in the paper body and (ii) the statistical evidence that supports or refutes that hypothesis. This formulation induces a challenging within-document retrieval setting in which many candidate paragraphs are topically related to the finding but differ in rhetorical role, creating hard negatives for retrieval and extraction. Using a two-stage retrieve-and-extract framework, we conduct a controlled study of retrieval design choices, varying context quantity, context quality (standard Retrieval Augmented Generation, reranking, and a fine-tuned retriever paired with reranking), as well as an oracle paragraph setting to separate retrieval failures from extraction limits across four Large Language Model extractors. We find that targeted context selection consistently improves hypothesis extraction relative to full-text prompting, with gains concentrated in configurations that optimize retrieval quality and context cleanliness. In contrast, statistical evidence extraction remains substantially harder. Even with oracle paragraphs, performance remains moderate, indicating persistent extractor limitations in handling hybrid numeric-textual statements rather than retrieval failures alone.
☆ Explainable Semantic Textual Similarity via Dissimilar Span Detection LREC 2026
Semantic Textual Similarity (STS) is a crucial component of many Natural Language Processing (NLP) applications. However, existing approaches typically reduce semantic nuances to a single score, limiting interpretability. To address this, we introduce the task of Dissimilar Span Detection (DSD), which aims to identify semantically differing spans between pairs of texts. This can help users understand which particular words or tokens negatively affect the similarity score, or be used to improve performance in STS-dependent downstream tasks. Furthermore, we release a new dataset suitable for the task, the Span Similarity Dataset (SSD), developed through a semi-automated pipeline combining large language models (LLMs) with human verification. We propose and evaluate different baseline methods for DSD, both unsupervised, based on LIME, SHAP, LLMs, and our own method, as well as an additional supervised approach. While LLMs and supervised models achieve the highest performance, overall results remain low, highlighting the complexity of the task. Finally, we set up an additional experiment that shows how DSD can lead to increased performance in the specific task of paraphrase detection.
comment: Accepted at LREC 2026
☆ Entropy Alone is Insufficient for Safe Selective Prediction in LLMs
Selective prediction systems can mitigate harms resulting from language model hallucinations by abstaining from answering in high-risk cases. Uncertainty quantification techniques are often employed to identify such cases, but are rarely evaluated in the context of the wider selective prediction policy and its ability to operate at low target error rates. We identify a model-dependent failure mode of entropy-based uncertainty methods that leads to unreliable abstention behaviour, and address it by combining entropy scores with a correctness probe signal. We find that across three QA benchmarks (TriviaQA, BioASQ, MedicalQA) and four model families, the combined score generally improves both the risk--coverage trade-off and calibration performance relative to entropy-only baselines. Our results highlight the importance of deployment-facing evaluation of uncertainty methods, using metrics that directly reflect whether a system can be trusted to operate at a stated risk level.
☆ Many Dialects, Many Languages, One Cultural Lens: Evaluating Multilingual VLMs for Bengali Culture Understanding Across Historically Linked Languages and Regional Dialects
Bangla culture is richly expressed through region, dialect, history, food, politics, media, and everyday visual life, yet it remains underrepresented in multimodal evaluation. To address this gap, we introduce BanglaVerse, a culturally grounded benchmark for evaluating multilingual vision-language models (VLMs) on Bengali culture across historically linked languages and regional dialects. Built from 1,152 manually curated images across nine domains, the benchmark supports visual question answering and captioning, and is expanded into four languages and five Bangla dialects, yielding ~32.3K artifacts. Our experiments show that evaluating only standard Bangla overestimates true model capability: performance drops under dialectal variation, especially for caption generation, while historically linked languages such as Hindi and Urdu retain some cultural meaning but remain weaker for structured reasoning. Across domains, the main bottleneck is missing cultural knowledge rather than visual grounding alone, with knowledge-intensive categories. These findings position BanglaVerse as a more realistic test bed for measuring culturally grounded multimodal understanding under linguistic variation.
comment: https://labib1610.github.io/BanglaVerse/
☆ Mixture of Chapters: Scaling Learnt Memory in Transformers ICLR 2026
Transformers lack an explicit architectural mechanism for storing and organizing knowledge acquired during training. We introduce learnable sparse memory banks: a set of latent tokens, randomly initialized and trained end-to-end, that transformer layers query via cross-attention to retrieve stored knowledge. To scale memory capacity without prohibitive attention costs, we propose chapter-based routing inspired by Mixture-of-Experts architectures, partitioning the memory bank into chapters and training a router to select relevant subsets per input. This enables scaling to 262K memory tokens while maintaining tractable computation. We evaluate our approach against standard transformers (in iso-FLOP settings) on pre-training and instruction fine-tuning across relevant benchmarks. Our models surpass iso-FLOP baselines suggesting scope for a new axis of scaling, demonstrating that explicit associative memory provides complementary capacity to what is captured implicitly in model parameters. Additionally, we observe improved knowledge retention under continued training, with robustness to forgetting when transitioning between training phases (e.g., pretraining to instruction fine-tuning).
comment: 20 pages, 2 figures, 8 tables. Accepted at ICLR 2026 New Frontiers in Associative Memory Workshop. Code available at https://github.com/Tasmay-Tibrewal/Memory
☆ Evaluating Reasoning-Based Scaffolds for Human-AI Co-Annotation: The ReasonAlign Annotation Protocol
Human annotation is central to NLP evaluation, yet subjective tasks often exhibit substantial variability across annotators. While large language models (LLMs) can provide structured reasoning to support annotation, their influence on human annotation behavior remains unclear. We introduce ReasonAlign, a reasoning-based annotation scaffold that exposes LLM-generated explanations while withholding predicted labels. We frame this as a controlled study of how reasoning affects human annotation behavior, rather than a full evaluation of annotation accuracy. Using a two-pass protocol inspired by Delphi-style revision, annotators first label instances independently and then revise their decisions after viewing model-generated reasoning. We evaluate the approach on sentiment classification and opinion detection tasks, analyzing changes in inter-annotator agreement and revision behavior. To quantify these effects, we introduce the Annotator Effort Proxy (AEP), a metric capturing the proportion of labels revised after exposure to reasoning. Our results show that exposure to reasoning is associated with increased agreement alongside minimal revision, suggesting that reasoning primarily helps resolve ambiguous cases without inducing widespread changes. These findings provide insight into how reasoning explanations shape annotation consistency and highlight reasoning-based scaffolds as a practical mechanism for supporting human-AI annotation workflows.
☆ ViCLSR: A Supervised Contrastive Learning Framework with Natural Language Inference for Natural Language Understanding Tasks
High-quality text representations are crucial for natural language understanding (NLU), but low-resource languages like Vietnamese face challenges due to limited annotated data. While pre-trained models like PhoBERT and CafeBERT perform well, their effectiveness is constrained by data scarcity. Contrastive learning (CL) has recently emerged as a promising approach for improving sentence representations, enabling models to effectively distinguish between semantically similar and dissimilar sentences. We propose ViCLSR (Vietnamese Contrastive Learning for Sentence Representations), a novel supervised contrastive learning framework specifically designed to optimize sentence embeddings for Vietnamese, leveraging existing natural language inference (NLI) datasets. Additionally, we propose a process to adapt existing Vietnamese datasets for supervised learning, ensuring compatibility with CL methods. Our experiments demonstrate that ViCLSR significantly outperforms the powerful monolingual pre-trained model PhoBERT on five benchmark NLU datasets such as ViNLI (+6.97% F1), ViWikiFC (+4.97% F1), ViFactCheck (+9.02% F1), UIT-ViCTSD (+5.36% F1), and ViMMRC2.0 (+4.33% Accuracy). ViCLSR shows that supervised contrastive learning can effectively address resource limitations in Vietnamese NLU tasks and improve sentence representation learning for low-resource languages. Furthermore, we conduct an in-depth analysis of the experimental results to uncover the factors contributing to the superior performance of contrastive learning models. ViCLSR is released for research purposes in advancing natural language processing tasks.
☆ Assessing the Ability of Neural TTS Systems to Model Consonant-Induced F0 Perturbation
This study proposes a segmental-level prosodic probing framework to evaluate neural TTS models' ability to reproduce consonant-induced f0 perturbation, a fine-grained segmental-prosodic effect that reflects local articulatory mechanisms. We compare synthetic and natural speech realizations for thousands of words, stratified by lexical frequency, using Tacotron 2 and FastSpeech 2 trained on the same speech corpus (LJ Speech). These controlled analyses are then complemented by a large-scale evaluation spanning multiple advanced TTS systems. Results show accurate reproduction for high-frequency words but poor generalization to low-frequency items, suggesting that the examined TTS architectures rely more on lexical-level memorization than on abstract segmental-prosodic encoding. This finding highlights a limitation in such TTS systems' ability to generalize prosodic detail beyond seen data. The proposed probe offers a linguistically informed diagnostic framework that may inform future TTS evaluation methods, and has implications for interpretability and authenticity assessment in synthetic speech.
comment: Accepted for publication in Computer Speech & Language
☆ SqueezeComposer: Temporal Speed-up is A Simple Trick for Long-form Music Composing
Composing coherent long-form music remains a significant challenge due to the complexity of modeling long-range dependencies and the prohibitive memory and computational requirements associated with lengthy audio representations. In this work, we propose a simple yet powerful trick: we assume that AI models can understand and generate time-accelerated (speeded-up) audio at rates such as 2x, 4x, or even 8x. By first generating a high-speed version of the music, we greatly reduce the temporal length and resource requirements, making it feasible to handle long-form music that would otherwise exceed memory or computational limits. The generated audio is then restored to its original speed, recovering the full temporal structure. This temporal speed-up and slow-down strategy naturally follows the principle of hierarchical generation from abstract to detailed content, and can be conveniently applied to existing music generation models to enable long-form music generation. We instantiate this idea in SqueezeComposer, a framework that employs diffusion models for generation in the accelerated domain and refinement in the restored domain. We validate the effectiveness of this approach on two tasks: long-form music generation, which evaluates temporal-wise control (including continuation, completion, and generation from scratch), and whole-song singing accompaniment generation, which evaluates track-wise control. Experimental results demonstrate that our simple temporal speed-up trick enables efficient, scalable, and high-quality long-form music generation. Audio samples are available at https://SqueezeComposer.github.io/.
comment: Under Review
☆ LongCat-Flash-Prover: Advancing Native Formal Reasoning via Agentic Tool-Integrated Reinforcement Learning
We introduce LongCat-Flash-Prover, a flagship 560-billion-parameter open-source Mixture-of- Experts (MoE) model that advances Native Formal Reasoning in Lean4 through agentic tool-integrated reasoning (TIR). We decompose the native formal reasoning task into three independent formal capabilities, i.e., auto-formalization, sketching, and proving. To facilitate these capabilities, we propose a Hybrid-Experts Iteration Framework to expand high-quality task trajectories, including generating a formal statement based on a given informal problem, producing a whole-proof directly from the statement, or a lemma-style sketch. During agentic RL, we present a Hierarchical Importance Sampling Policy Optimization (HisPO) algorithm, which aims to stabilize the MoE model training on such long-horizon tasks. It employs a gradient masking strategy that accounts for the policy staleness and the inherent train-inference engine discrepancies at both sequence and token levels. Additionally, we also incorporate theorem consistency and legality detection mechanisms to eliminate reward hacking issues. Extensive evaluations show that our LongCat-Flash-Prover sets a new state-of-the-art for open-weights models in both auto-formalization and theorem proving. Demonstrating remarkable sample efficiency, it achieves a 97.1% pass rate on MiniF2F-Test using only 72 inference budget per problem. On more challenging benchmarks, it solves 70.8% of ProverBench and 41.5% of PutnamBench with no more than 220 attempts per problem, significantly outperforming existing open-weights baselines.
comment: 43 pages, 5 figures
☆ Reading Between the Lines: How Electronic Nonverbal Cues shape Emotion Decoding AAAI
As text-based computer-mediated communication (CMC) increasingly structures everyday interaction, a central question re-emerges with new urgency: How do users reconstruct nonverbal expression in environments where embodied cues are absent? This paper provides a systematic, theory-driven account of electronic nonverbal cues (eNVCs) - textual analogues of kinesics, vocalics, and paralinguistics - in public microblog communication. Across three complementary studies, we advance conceptual, empirical, and methodological contributions. Study 1 develops a unified taxonomy of eNVCs grounded in foundational nonverbal communication theory and introduces a scalable Python toolkit for their automated detection. Study 2, a within-subject survey experiment, offers controlled causal evidence that eNVCs substantially improve emotional decoding accuracy and lower perceived ambiguity, while also identifying boundary conditions, such as sarcasm, under which these benefits weaken or disappear. Study 3, through focus group discussions, reveals the interpretive strategies users employ when reasoning about digital prosody, including drawing meaning from the absence of expected cues and defaulting toward negative interpretations in ambiguous contexts. Together, these studies establish eNVCs as a coherent and measurable class of digital behaviors, refine theoretical accounts of cue richness and interpretive effort, and provide practical tools for affective computing, user modeling, and emotion-aware interface design. The eNVC detection toolkit is available as a Python and R package at https://github.com/kokiljaidka/envc.
comment: Accepted at AAAI ICWSM 2026
☆ Left Behind: Cross-Lingual Transfer as a Bridge for Low-Resource Languages in Large Language Models
We investigate how large language models perform on low-resource languages by benchmarking eight LLMs across five experimental conditions in English, Kazakh, and Mongolian. Using 50 hand-crafted questions spanning factual, reasoning, technical, and culturally grounded categories, we evaluate 2,000 responses on accuracy, fluency, and completeness. We find a consistent performance gap of 13.8-16.7 percentage points between English and low-resource language conditions, with models maintaining surface-level fluency while producing significantly less accurate content. Cross-lingual transfer-prompting models to reason in English before translating back-yields selective gains for bilingual architectures (+2.2pp to +4.3pp) but provides no benefit to English-dominant models. Our results demonstrate that current LLMs systematically underserve low-resource language communities, and that effective mitigation strategies are architecture-dependent rather than universal.
♻ ☆ Collusive Pricing Under LLM
We study how delegating pricing to large language models (LLMs) can facilitate collusion in a duopoly when both sellers rely on the same pre-trained model. The LLM is characterized by (i) a propensity parameter capturing its internal bias toward high-price recommendations and (ii) an output-fidelity parameter measuring how tightly outputs track that bias; the propensity evolves through retraining. We show that configuring LLMs for robustness and reproducibility can induce collusion via a phase transition: there exists a critical output-fidelity threshold that pins down long-run behavior. Below it, competitive pricing is the unique long-run outcome. Above it, the system is bistable, with competitive and collusive pricing both locally stable and the realized outcome determined by the model's initial preference. The collusive regime resembles tacit collusion: prices are elevated on average, yet occasional low-price recommendations provide plausible deniability. With perfect fidelity, full collusion emerges from any interior initial condition. For finite training batches of size $b$, infrequent retraining (driven by computational costs) further amplifies collusion: conditional on starting in the collusive basin, the probability of collusion approaches one as $b$ grows, since larger batches dampen stochastic fluctuations that might otherwise tip the system toward competition. The indeterminacy region shrinks at rate $O(1/\sqrt{b})$.
comment: 46 pages
♻ ☆ How Psychological Learning Paradigms Shaped and Constrained Artificial Intelligence
The dominant paradigms of artificial intelligence were shaped by learning theories from psychology: behaviorism inspired reinforcement learning, cognitivism gave rise to deep learning and memory-augmented architectures, and constructivism influenced curriculum learning and compositional approaches. This paper argues that each AI paradigm inherited not only the strengths but the structural limitations of the psychological theory that inspired it. Reinforcement learning cannot account for the internal structure of knowledge, deep learning compresses representations into opaque parameter spaces resistant to principled update, and current integrative approaches lack a formal account of how new understanding is constructed from existing components. The paper further examines a cross-cultural divergence in the interpretation of rote learning, arguing that the Eastern conception of memorization as a structured, multi-phase precursor to understanding offers an underexploited bridge between psychological theory and AI methodology. Drawing on the systematicity debate and critique of Aizawa of both classicism and connectionism, this paper introduces ReSynth, a trimodular framework that separates reasoning (Intellect), purpose (Identity), and knowledge (Memory) as architecturally independent components. The paper traces the genealogy from psychological paradigm to AI method, diagnoses the inherited limitations at each stage, and argues that adaptability, the central challenge of artificial general intelligence requires a representational architecture in which systematic behavior is a necessary consequence rather than an accidental property.
comment: preprint journal
♻ ☆ Do LLMs Understand Collaborative Signals? Diagnosis and Repair
Collaborative information from user-item interactions is a fundamental source of signal in successful recommender systems. Recently, researchers have attempted to incorporate this knowledge into large language model-based recommender approaches (LLMRec) to enhance their performance. However, there has been little fundamental analysis of whether LLMs can effectively reason over collaborative information. In this paper, we analyze the ability of LLMs to reason about collaborative information in recommendation tasks, comparing their performance to traditional matrix factorization (MF) models. We propose a simple and effective method to improve LLMs' reasoning capabilities using retrieval-augmented generation (RAG) over the user-item interaction matrix with four different prompting strategies. Our results show that the LLM outperforms the MF model whenever we provide relevant information in a clear and easy-to-follow format, and prompt the LLM to reason based on it. We observe that with this strategy, in almost all cases, the more information we provide, the better the LLM performs.
♻ ☆ M4-RAG: A Massive-Scale Multilingual Multi-Cultural Multimodal RAG CVPR 2026
Vision-language models (VLMs) have achieved strong performance in visual question answering (VQA), yet they remain constrained by static training data. Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG) mitigates this limitation by enabling access to up-to-date, culturally grounded, and multilingual information; however, multilingual multimodal RAG remains largely underexplored. We introduce M4-RAG, a massive-scale benchmark spanning 42 languages, 56 regional dialects and registers, and 189 countries, comprising over 80,000 culturally diverse image-question pairs for evaluating retrieval-augmented VQA across languages and modalities. To balance realism with reproducibility, we build a controlled retrieval environment containing millions of carefully curated multilingual documents relevant to the query domains, approximating real-world retrieval conditions while ensuring consistent experimentation. Our systematic evaluation reveals that although RAG consistently benefits smaller VLMs, it fails to scale to larger models and often even degrades their performance, exposing a critical mismatch between model size and current retrieval effectiveness. Our cross-lingual evaluations also reveal significant performance degradation when prompts or retrieved context are provided in non-English languages. The code, datasets, and evaluation protocols for M4-RAG are available as open-source at https://github.com/davidanugraha/M4-RAG.
comment: Accepted to CVPR 2026
♻ ☆ Sycophancy Is Not One Thing: Causal Separation of Sycophantic Behaviors in LLMs
Large language models (LLMs) often exhibit sycophantic behaviors -- such as excessive agreement with or flattery of the user -- but it is unclear whether these behaviors arise from a single mechanism or multiple distinct processes. We decompose sycophancy into sycophantic agreement and sycophantic praise, contrasting both with genuine agreement. Using difference-in-means directions, activation additions, and subspace geometry across multiple models and datasets, we show that: (1) the three behaviors are encoded along distinct linear directions in latent space; (2) each behavior can be independently amplified or suppressed without affecting the others; and (3) their representational structure is consistent across model families and scales. These results suggest that sycophantic behaviors correspond to distinct, independently steerable representations.
♻ ☆ HPE-CogVLM: Advancing Vision Language Models with a Head Pose Grounding Task
Head pose estimation (HPE) requires a sophisticated understanding of 3D spatial relationships to generate precise yaw, pitch, and roll angles. Previous HPE models, primarily CNN-based, rely on cropped close-up human head images as inputs and often lack robustness in real-world scenario. Vision Language Models (VLMs) can analyze entire images while focusing on specific objects through their attention mechanisms. In this paper, we propose a novel framework to improve the HPE accuracy by leveraging the object detection grounding capability of a VLM, referred to as CogVLM. We empirically find that directly LoRA fine-tuning of this VLM for the HPE task fails to achieve desirable HPE accuracy, while some model merging methods can improve accuracy but frequently produce blended invalid response formats, struggling to handle both object detection and HPE tasks simultaneously. To integrate HPE capability into CogVLM effectively, we develop a novel LoRA layer-based model merging method. This merging approach applies a high cosine similarity threshold and a 'winner-takes-all' layer selection strategy, aligning attention to the HPE task while preserving original object detection knowledge. It successfully resolves issues with blended invalid response formats and improves accuracy. Results show that our HPE-CogVLM achieves a 31.5% reduction in Mean Absolute Error over the current state-of-the-art CNN model, 6DRepNet, in cross-dataset evaluation. Furthermore, HPE-CogVLM outperforms both directly LoRA fine-tuned and task arithmetic-based merged VLMs across all HPE metrics.
comment: Accepted by IEEE Transactions on Circuits and Systems for Video Technology (TCSVT), 2026. This version includes major updates in methodology and experiments. The final version is available at IEEE Xplore
♻ ☆ Agent-Dice: Disentangling Knowledge Updates via Geometric Consensus for Agent Continual Learning
Large Language Model (LLM)-based agents significantly extend the utility of LLMs by interacting with dynamic environments. However, enabling agents to continually learn new tasks without catastrophic forgetting remains a critical challenge, known as the stability-plasticity dilemma. In this work, we argue that this dilemma fundamentally arises from the failure to explicitly distinguish between common knowledge shared across tasks and conflicting knowledge introduced by task-specific interference. To address this, we propose Agent-Dice, a parameter fusion framework based on directional consensus evaluation. Concretely, Agent-Dice disentangles knowledge updates through a two-stage process: geometric consensus filtering to prune conflicting gradients, and curvature-based importance weighting to amplify shared semantics. We provide a rigorous theoretical analysis that establishes the validity of the proposed fusion scheme and offers insight into the origins of the stability-plasticity dilemma. Extensive experiments on GUI agents and tool-use agent domains demonstrate that Agent-Dice exhibits outstanding continual learning performance with minimal computational overhead and parameter updates. The codes are available at https://github.com/Wuzheng02/Agent-Dice.
♻ ☆ Evaluating LLM-Generated Lessons from the Language Learning Students' Perspective: A Short Case Study on Duolingo
Popular language learning applications such as Duolingo use large language models (LLMs) to generate lessons for its users. Most lessons focus on general real-world scenarios such as greetings, ordering food, or asking directions, with limited support for profession-specific contexts. This gap can hinder learners from achieving professional-level fluency, which we define as the ability to communicate comfortably various work-related and domain-specific information in the target language. We surveyed five employees from a multinational company in the Philippines on their experiences with Duolingo. Results show that respondents encountered general scenarios more frequently than work-related ones, and that the former are relatable and effective in building foundational grammar, vocabulary, and cultural knowledge. The latter helps bridge the gap toward professional fluency as it contains domain-specific vocabulary. Each participant suggested lesson scenarios that diverge in contexts when analyzed in aggregate. With this understanding, we propose that language learning applications should generate lessons that adapt to an individual's needs through personalized, domain specific lesson scenarios while maintaining foundational support through general, relatable lesson scenarios.
comment: 5 pages,3 figures,presented at the 3rd HEAL Workshop at CHI 2026
♻ ☆ Flipping the Dialogue: Training and Evaluating User Language Models ICLR 2026
Conversations with LMs involve two participants: a human user leading the conversation, and an LM assistant responding to the user's request. To satisfy this specific role, LMs are post-trained to be helpful assistants -- optimized to produce exhaustive and well-structured responses, free of ambiguity and grammar errors. User utterances, on the other hand, are rarely perfected, with each user phrasing requests in unique ways, sometimes putting in partial effort at each turn and refining on the fly. To evaluate LM performance in realistic settings, prior work simulated users in multi-turn conversations, often by prompting an LM originally trained to be a helpful assistant to act as a user. However, we show that assistant LMs make for poor user simulators, with the surprising finding that better assistants yield worse simulators. Instead, we introduce purpose-built User Language Models (User LMs) - models post-trained to simulate human users in multi-turn conversations. Through various evaluations, we show how User LMs align better with human behavior and achieve better simulation robustness than existing simulation methods. When leveraging User LMs to simulate coding and math conversations, the performance of a strong assistant (GPT-4o) drops from 74.6% to 57.4%, confirming that more realistic simulation environments lead to assistant struggles as they fail to cope with the nuances of users in multi-turn setups.
comment: Accepted at ICLR 2026
♻ ☆ Feature Resemblance: Towards a Theoretical Understanding of Analogical Reasoning in Transformers
Understanding reasoning in large language models is complicated by evaluations that conflate multiple reasoning types. We isolate analogical reasoning (inferring shared properties between entities based on known similarities) and analyze its emergence in transformers. We theoretically prove three key results: (1) Joint training on similarity and attribution premises enables analogical reasoning through aligned representations; (2) Sequential training succeeds only when similarity structure is learned before specific attributes, revealing a necessary curriculum; (3) Two-hop reasoning ($a \to b, b \to c \implies a \to c$) reduces to analogical reasoning with identity bridges ($b = b$), which must appear explicitly in training data. These results reveal a unified mechanism: transformers encode entities with similar properties into similar representations, enabling property transfer through feature alignment. Experiments with architectures up to 1.5B parameters validate our theory and demonstrate how representational geometry shapes inductive reasoning capabilities.
♻ ☆ Semantic Self-Distillation for Language Model Uncertainty
Large language models present challenges for principled uncertainty quantification, in part due to their complexity and the diversity of their outputs. Semantic dispersion, or the variance in the meaning of sampled answers, has been proposed as a useful proxy for model uncertainty, but the associated computational cost prohibits its use in latency-critical applications. We show that sampled semantic distributions can be distilled into lightweight student models which estimate a prompt-conditioned density before the language model generates an answer token. The student model predicts a semantic distribution over possible answers; the entropy of this distribution provides a prompt-level uncertainty signal, and the probability density allows answer-level reliability evaluation. Across experiments on TriviaQA and MMLU, we find our student models perform competitively relative to sampling-based semantic dispersion baselines on a hallucination prediction task, whilst offering additional uncertainty primitives for out-of-domain detection and multiple-choice answer selection. We term this technique Semantic Self-Distillation (SSD), which can serve as a general framework for distilling predictive uncertainty in complex output spaces beyond language.
comment: Added experiments on MMLU dataset, investigating utility of likelihood for multiple-choice answer selection
♻ ☆ Multi-Session Client-Centered Treatment Outcome Evaluation in Psychotherapy LREC 2026
In psychotherapy, therapeutic outcome assessment, or treatment outcome evaluation, is essential to mental health care by systematically evaluating therapeutic processes and outcomes. Existing large language model approaches often focus on therapist-centered, single-session evaluations, neglecting the client's subjective experience and longitudinal progress across multiple sessions. To address these limitations, we propose IPAEval, a client-Informed Psychological Assessment-based Evaluation framework, which automates treatment outcome evaluations from the client's perspective using clinical interviews. It integrates cross-session client-contextual assessment and session-focused client-dynamics assessment for a comprehensive understanding of therapeutic progress. Specifically, IPAEval employs a two-stage prompt scheme that maps client information onto psychometric test items, enabling interpretable and structured psychological assessments. Experiments on our new TheraPhase dataset, comprising 400 paired initial and completion stage client records, demonstrate that IPAEval effectively tracks symptom severity and treatment outcomes over multiple sessions, outperforming baseline approaches across both closed-source and open-source models, and validating the benefits of items-aware reasoning mechanisms.
comment: Accepted at LREC 2026. Camera-ready Version
♻ ☆ Breaking the Silence: A Dataset and Benchmark for Bangla Text-to-Gloss Translation
Gloss is a written approximation that bridges Sign Language (SL) and its corresponding spoken language. Despite a deaf and hard-of-hearing population of at least 3 million in Bangladesh, Bangla Sign Language (BdSL) remains largely understudied, with no prior work on Bangla text-to-gloss translation and no publicly available datasets. To address this gap, we construct the first Bangla text-to-gloss dataset, consisting of 1,000 manually annotated and 4,000 synthetically generated Bangla sentence-gloss pairs, along with 159 expert human-annotated pairs used as a test set. Our experimental framework performs a comparative analysis between several fine-tuned open-source models and a leading closed-source LLM to evaluate their performance in low-resource BdSL translation. GPT-5.4 achieves the best overall performance, while a fine-tuned mBART model performs competitively despite being approximately 100% smaller. Qwen-3 outperforms all other models in human evaluation. This work introduces the first dataset and trained model for Bangla text-to-gloss translation. It also demonstrates the effectiveness of systematically generated synthetic data for addressing challenges in low-resource sign language translation.
♻ ☆ A Training-free Method for LLM Text Attribution
Verifying the provenance of content is crucial to the functioning of many organizations, e.g., educational institutions, social media platforms, and firms. This problem is becoming increasingly challenging as text generated by Large Language Models (LLMs) becomes almost indistinguishable from human-generated content. In addition, many institutions use in-house LLMs and want to ensure that external, non-sanctioned LLMs do not produce content within their institutions. In this paper, we answer the following question: Given a piece of text, can we identify whether it was produced by a particular LLM, while ensuring a guaranteed low false positive rate? We model LLM text as a sequential stochastic process with complete dependence on history. We then design zero-shot statistical tests to (i) distinguish between text generated by two different known sets of LLMs $A$ (non-sanctioned) and $B$ (in-house), and (ii) identify whether text was generated by a known LLM or by any unknown model. We prove that the Type I and Type II errors of our test decrease exponentially with the length of the text. We also extend our theory to black-box access via sampling and characterize the required sample size to obtain essentially the same Type I and Type II error upper bounds as in the white-box setting (i.e., with access to $A$). We show the tightness of our upper bounds by providing an information-theoretic lower bound. We next present numerical experiments to validate our theoretical results and assess their robustness in settings with adversarial post-editing. Our work has a host of practical applications in which determining the origin of a text is important and can also be useful for combating misinformation and ensuring compliance with emerging AI regulations. See https://github.com/TaraRadvand74/llm-text-detection for code, data, and an online demo of the project.
♻ ☆ MUTANT: A Recipe for Multilingual Tokenizer Design
Tokenizers play a crucial role in determining the performance, training efficiency, and the inference cost of Large Language Models (LLMs). Designing effective tokenizers for multilingual LLMs is particularly challenging due to diverse scripts and rich morphological variation. While subword methods like Byte Pair Encoding (BPE) are widely adopted, their effectiveness in multilingual settings remains underexplored. We present MUTANT, a recipe for building multilingual tokenizers, with careful vocabulary and training data design, language-aware pre-tokenization, and subword and multiword aware training. We also introduce MUTANT-Indic, a tokenizer for India-specific multilingual LLMs, that produces linguistically coherent tokens and achieves state-of-the-art performance. Evaluated across English, 22 Indian languages and code data, our tokenizer improves the average fertility score by 39.5%$ over LLaMA4 and by 18% over Sutra (the current best). This translates to 44% improvement in inference throughput over LLaMA4 while maintaining comparable performance on English and Indic benchmarks. We present detailed ablations across tokenizer training data size, vocabulary size, merging techniques, and pre-tokenization strategies, demonstrating the robustness of our design choices.
♻ ☆ Does Geo-co-location Matter? A Case Study of Public Health Conversations during COVID-19
Social media platforms like Twitter (now X) have been pivotal in information dissemination and public engagement. The objective of our research is to analyze the effect of localized engagement on social media conversations. This study examines the impact of geographic co-location, as a proxy for localized engagement. Our research is grounded in a COVID-19 dataset. A key goal during the pandemic for public health experts was to encourage prosocial behavior that could impact local outcomes such as masking and social distancing. Given the importance of local news and guidance during COVID-19, we analyze the effect of localized engagement, between public health experts (PHEs) and the public, on social media. We analyze a Twitter Conversation dataset from January 2020 to November 2021, comprising over 19 K tweets from nearly five hundred PHEs, and 800 K replies from 350 K participants. We use a Poisson regression model to show that geo-co-location is indeed associated with higher engagement. Lexical features associated with emotion and personal experiences were more common in geo-co-located conversations. To complement our statistical analysis, we also applied a large language model (LLM)-based method to automatically generate and evaluate hypotheses; the LLM results confirm the results using lexical features. This research provides insights into how geographic co-location influences social media engagement and can inform strategies to improve public health messaging.
comment: ICWSM 2026
♻ ☆ DEBATE: A Large-Scale Benchmark for Evaluating Opinion Dynamics in Role-Playing LLM Agents
Accurately modeling opinion change through social interactions is crucial for understanding and mitigating polarization, misinformation, and societal conflict. Recent work simulates opinion dynamics with role-playing LPL agents (RPLAs), but multi-agent simulations often display unnatural group behavior, such as premature convergence, and lack empirical benchmarks for assessing alignment with real human group interactions. We introduce DEBATE, a large-scale benchmark for evaluating the authenticity of opinion dynamics in multi-agent RPLA simulations. DEBATE contains 30,707 messages from 2,832 U.S.-based participants across 708 groups and 107 topics, with both public messages and private Likert-scale beliefs, enabling evaluation at the utterance and group levels while also supporting future individual-level analyses. We instantiate "digital twin" RPLAs with seven LLMs and evaluate them in two settings: next-message prediction and full conversation rollout, using stance-alignment and opinion-convergence metrics. In zero-shot settings, RPLA groups exhibit strong opinion convergence relative to human groups. Post-training via supervised fine-tuning (SFT) and Direct Preference Optimization (DPO) improves stance alignment and brings group-level convergence closer to human behavior, though discrepancies in opinion change and belief updating remain. DEBATE enables rigorous benchmarking of simulated opinion dynamics and supports future research on aligning multi-agent RPLAs with realistic human interactions. The benchmark is publicly available at.
♻ ☆ The MediaSpin Dataset: Post-Publication News Headline Edits Annotated for Media Bias AAAI
The editability of online news content has become a significant factor in shaping public perception, as social media platforms introduce new affordances for dynamic and adaptive news framing. Edits to news headlines can refocus audience attention, add or remove emotional language, and shift the framing of events in subtle yet impactful ways. What types of media bias are editorialized in and out of news headlines, and how can they be systematically identified? This study introduces the MediaSpin dataset, the first to characterize the bias in how prominent news outlets editorialize news headlines after publication. The dataset includes 78,910 pairs of headlines annotated with 13 distinct types of media bias, using human-supervised LLM labeling. We discuss the linguistic insights it affords and show its applications for bias prediction and user behavior analysis.
comment: 8 pages, 3 figures, 8 tables Accepted at AAAI ICWSM 2026 We updated the paper title from "MediaSpin: Exploring Media Bias Through Fine-Grained Analysis of News Headlines " to "The MediaSpin Dataset: Post-Publication News Headline Edits Annotated for Media Bias"
♻ ☆ IAG: Input-aware Backdoor Attack on VLM-based Visual Grounding CVPR 2026
Recent advances in vision-language models (VLMs) have significantly enhanced the visual grounding task, which involves locating objects in an image based on natural language queries. Despite these advancements, the security of VLM-based grounding systems has not been thoroughly investigated. This paper reveals a novel and realistic vulnerability: the first multi-target backdoor attack on VLM-based visual grounding. Unlike prior attacks that rely on static triggers or fixed targets, we propose IAG, a method that dynamically generates input-aware, text-guided triggers conditioned on any specified target object description to execute the attack. This is achieved through a text-conditioned UNet that embeds imperceptible target semantic cues into visual inputs while preserving normal grounding performance on benign samples. We further develop a joint training objective that balances language capability with perceptual reconstruction to ensure imperceptibility, effectiveness, and stealth. Extensive experiments on multiple VLMs (e.g., LLaVA, InternVL, Ferret) and benchmarks (RefCOCO, RefCOCO+, RefCOCOg, Flickr30k Entities, and ShowUI) demonstrate that IAG achieves the best ASRs compared with other baselines on almost all settings without compromising clean accuracy, maintaining robustness against existing defenses, and exhibiting transferability across datasets and models. These findings underscore critical security risks in grounding-capable VLMs and highlight the need for further research on trustworthy multimodal understanding.
comment: Accepted by CVPR 2026; Code is at https://github.com/lijunxian111/IAG
♻ ☆ LinguaMap: Which Layers of LLMs Speak Your Language and How to Tune Them?
Despite multilingual pretraining, large language models often struggle with non-English tasks, particularly in language control, the ability to respond in the intended language. We identify and characterize two key failure modes: the multilingual transfer bottleneck (correct language, incorrect task response) and the language consistency bottleneck (correct task response, wrong language). To systematically surface these issues, we design a four-scenario evaluation protocol spanning MMLU, MGSM, and XQuAD benchmarks. To probe these issues with interpretability, we extend logit lens analysis to track language probabilities layer by layer and compute cross-lingual semantic similarity of hidden states. The results reveal a three-phase internal structure: early layers align inputs into a shared semantic space, middle layers perform task reasoning, and late layers drive language-specific generation. Guided by these insights, we introduce selective fine-tuning of only the final layers responsible for language control. On Qwen-3-32B and Bloom-7.1B, this method achieves over 98 percent language consistency across six languages while fine-tuning only 3-5 percent of parameters, without sacrificing task accuracy. Importantly, this result is nearly identical to that of full-scope fine-tuning (for example, above 98 percent language consistency for both methods across all prompt scenarios) but uses a fraction of the computational resources. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first approach to leverage layer-localization of language control for efficient multilingual adaptation.
Information Retrieval
☆ Semantic Shift: the Fundamental Challenge in Text Embedding and Retrieval
Transformer-based embedding models rely on pooling to map variable-length text into a single vector, enabling efficient similarity search but also inducing well-known geometric pathologies such as anisotropy and length-induced embedding collapse. Existing accounts largely describe \emph{what} these pathologies look like, yet provide limited insight into \emph{when} and \emph{why} they harm downstream retrieval. In this work, we argue that the missing causal factor is \emph{semantic shift}: the intrinsic, structured evolution and dispersion of semantics within a text. We first present a theoretical analysis of \emph{semantic smoothing} in Transformer embeddings: as the semantic diversity among constituent sentences increases, the pooled representation necessarily shifts away from every individual sentence embedding, yielding a smoothed and less discriminative vector. Building on this foundation, we formalize semantic shift as a computable measure integrating local semantic evolution and global semantic dispersion. Through controlled experiments across corpora and multiple embedding models, we show that semantic shift aligns closely with the severity of embedding concentration and predicts retrieval degradation, whereas text length alone does not. Overall, semantic shift offers a unified and actionable lens for understanding embedding collapse and for diagnosing when anisotropy becomes harmful.
☆ COINBench: Moving Beyond Individual Perspectives to Collective Intent Understanding
Understanding human intent is a high-level cognitive challenge for Large Language Models (LLMs), requiring sophisticated reasoning over noisy, conflicting, and non-linear discourse. While LLMs excel at following individual instructions, their ability to distill Collective Intent - the process of extracting consensus, resolving contradictions, and inferring latent trends from multi-source public discussions - remains largely unexplored. To bridge this gap, we introduce COIN-BENCH, a dynamic, real-world, live-updating benchmark specifically designed to evaluate LLMs on collective intent understanding within the consumer domain. Unlike traditional benchmarks that focus on transactional outcomes, COIN-BENCH operationalizes intent as a hierarchical cognitive structure, ranging from explicit scenarios to deep causal reasoning. We implement a robust evaluation pipeline that combines a rule-based method with an LLM-as-the-Judge approach. This framework incorporates COIN-TREE for hierarchical cognitive structuring and retrieval-augmented verification (COIN-RAG) to ensure expert-level precision in analyzing raw, collective human discussions. An extensive evaluation of 20 state-of-the-art LLMs across four dimensions - depth, breadth, informativeness, and correctness - reveals that while current models can handle surface-level aggregation, they still struggle with the analytical depth required for complex intent synthesis. COIN-BENCH establishes a new standard for advancing LLMs from passive instruction followers to expert-level analytical agents capable of deciphering the collective voice of the real world. See our project page on COIN-BENCH.
☆ Graph Fusion Across Languages using Large Language Models
Combining multiple knowledge graphs (KGs) across linguistic boundaries is a persistent challenge due to semantic heterogeneity and the complexity of graph environments. We propose a framework for cross-lingual graph fusion, leveraging the in-context reasoning and multilingual semantic priors of Large Language Models (LLMs). The framework implements structural linearization by mapping triplets directly into natural language sequences (e.g., [head] [relation] [tail]), enabling the LLM to map relations and reconcile entities between an evolving fused graph ($G_{c}^{(t-1)}$) and a new candidate graph ($G_{t}$). Evaluated on the DBP15K dataset, this exploratory study demonstrates that LLMs can serve as a universal semantic bridge to resolve cross-lingual discrepancies. Results show the successful sequential agglomeration of multiple heterogeneous graphs, offering a scalable, modular solution for continuous knowledge synthesis in multi-source, multilingual environments.
☆ LSA: A Long-Short-term Aspect Interest Transformer for Aspect-Based Recommendation
Aspect-based recommendation methods extract aspect terms from reviews, such as price, to model fine-grained user preferences on items, making them a critical approach in personalized recommender systems. Existing methods utilize graphs to represent the relationships among users, items, and aspect terms, modeling user preferences based on graph neural networks. However, they overlook the dynamic nature of user interests - users may temporarily focus on aspects they previously paid little attention to - making it difficult to assign accurate weights to aspect terms for each user-item interaction. In this paper, we propose a long-short-term aspect interest Transformer (LSA) for aspect-based recommendation, which effectively captures the dynamic nature of user preferences by integrating both long-term and short-term aspect interests. Specifically, the short-term interests model the temporal changes in the importance of recently interacted aspect terms, while the long-term interests consider global behavioral patterns, including aspects that users have not interacted with recently. Finally, LSA combines long- and short-term interests to evaluate the importance of aspects within the union of user and item aspect neighbors, therefore accurately assigns aspect weights for each user-item interaction. Experiments conducted on four real-world datasets demonstrate that LSA improves MSE by 2.55% on average over the best baseline.
comment: WISE2025
☆ MI-DPG: Decomposable Parameter Generation Network Based on Mutual Information for Multi-Scenario Recommendation CIKM 2023
Conversion rate (CVR) prediction models play a vital role in recommendation and advertising systems. Recent research on multi-scenario recommendation shows that learning a unified model to serve multiple scenarios is effective for improving overall performance. However, it remains challenging to improve model prediction performance across scenarios at low model parameter cost, and current solutions are hard to robustly model multi-scenario diversity. In this paper, we propose MI-DPG for the multi-scenario CVR prediction, which learns scenario-conditioned dynamic model parameters for each scenario in a more efficient and effective manner. Specifically, we introduce an auxiliary network to generate scenario-conditioned dynamic weighting matrices, which are obtained by combining decomposed scenario-specific and scenario-shared low-rank matrices with parameter efficiency. For each scene, weighting the backbone model parameters by the weighting matrix helps to specialize the model parameters for different scenarios. It can not only modulate the complete parameter space of the backbone model but also improve the model effectiveness. Furthermore, we design a mutual information regularization to enhance the diversity of model parameters across different scenarios by maximizing the mutual information between the scenario-aware input and the scene-conditioned dynamic weighting matrix. Experiments from three real-world datasets show that MI-DPG significantly outperforms previous multi-scenario recommendation models.
comment: Accepted by CIKM 2023
☆ Ontology-Compliant Knowledge Graphs
Ontologies can act as a schema for constructing knowledge graphs (KGs), offering explainability, interoperability, and reusability. We explore \emph{ontology-compliant} KGs, aiming to build both internal and external ontology compliance. We discuss key tasks in ontology compliance and introduce our novel term-matching algorithms. We also propose a \emph{pattern-based compliance} approach and novel compliance metrics. The building sector is a case study to test the validity of ontology-compliant KGs. We recommend using ontology-compliant KGs to pursue automatic matching, alignment, and harmonisation of heterogeneous KGs.
comment: 12 pages
☆ Ontology-driven personalized information retrieval for XML documents
This paper addresses the challenge of improving information retrieval from semi-structured eXtensible Markup Language (XML) documents. Traditional information retrieval systems (IRS) often overlook user-specific needs and return identical results for the same query, despite differences in users' knowledge, preferences, and objectives. We integrate external semantic resources, namely a domain ontology and user profiles, into the retrieval process. Documents, queries, and user profiles are represented as vectors of weighted concepts. The ontology applies a concept-weighting mechanism that emphasizes highly specific concepts, as lower-level nodes in the hierarchy provide more precise and targeted information. Relevance is assessed using semantic similarity measures that capture conceptual relationships beyond keyword matching, enabling personalized and fine-grained matching among user profiles, queries, and documents. Experimental results show that combining ontologies with user profiles improves retrieval effectiveness, achieving higher precision and recall than keyword-based approaches. Overall, the proposed framework enhances the relevance and adaptability of XML search results, supporting more user-centered retrieval.
☆ ECI: Effective Contrastive Information to Evaluate Hard-Negatives
Hard negatives play a critical role in training and fine-tuning dense retrieval models, as they are semantically similar to positive documents yet non-relevant, and correctly distinguishing them is essential for improving retrieval accuracy. However, identifying effective hard negatives typically requires extensive ablation studies involving repeated fine-tuning with different negative sampling strategies and hyperparameters, resulting in substantial computational cost. In this paper, we introduce ECI: Effective Contrastive Information , a theoretically grounded metric grounded in Information Theory and Information Retrieval principles that enables practitioners to assess the quality of hard negatives prior to model fine-tuning. ECI evaluates negatives by optimizing the trade-off between Information Capacity the logarithmic bound on mutual information determined by set size and Discriminative Efficiency, a harmonic balance of Signal Magnitude (Hardness) and Safety (Max-Margin). Unlike heuristic approaches, ECI strictly penalizes unsafe, false-positive negatives prevalent in generative methods. We evaluate ECI across hard-negative sets mined or generated using BM25, cross-encoders, and large language models. Our results demonstrate that ECI accurately predicts downstream retrieval performance, identifying that hybrid strategies (BM25+Cross-Encoder) offer the optimal balance of volume and reliability, significantly reducing the need for costly end-to-end ablation studies.
♻ ☆ Do LLMs Understand Collaborative Signals? Diagnosis and Repair
Collaborative information from user-item interactions is a fundamental source of signal in successful recommender systems. Recently, researchers have attempted to incorporate this knowledge into large language model-based recommender approaches (LLMRec) to enhance their performance. However, there has been little fundamental analysis of whether LLMs can effectively reason over collaborative information. In this paper, we analyze the ability of LLMs to reason about collaborative information in recommendation tasks, comparing their performance to traditional matrix factorization (MF) models. We propose a simple and effective method to improve LLMs' reasoning capabilities using retrieval-augmented generation (RAG) over the user-item interaction matrix with four different prompting strategies. Our results show that the LLM outperforms the MF model whenever we provide relevant information in a clear and easy-to-follow format, and prompt the LLM to reason based on it. We observe that with this strategy, in almost all cases, the more information we provide, the better the LLM performs.
♻ ☆ Careful Queries, Credible Results: Teaching RAG Models Advanced Web Search Tools with Reinforcement Learning
Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG) enhances large language models (LLMs) by integrating up-to-date external knowledge, yet real-world web environments present unique challenges. These limitations manifest as two key challenges: pervasive misinformation in the web environment, which introduces unreliable or misleading content that can degrade retrieval accuracy, and the underutilization of web tools, which, if effectively employed, could enhance query precision and help mitigate this noise, ultimately improving the retrieval results in RAG systems. To address these issues, we propose WebFilter, a novel RAG framework that generates source-restricted queries and filters out unreliable content. This approach combines a retrieval filtering mechanism with a behavior- and outcome-driven reward strategy, optimizing both query formulation and retrieval outcomes. Extensive experiments demonstrate that WebFilter improves answer quality and retrieval precision, outperforming existing RAG methods on both in-domain and out-of-domain benchmarks.
♻ ☆ TF4CTR: Twin Focus Framework for CTR Prediction via Adaptive Sample Differentiation
Effective feature interaction modeling is critical for enhancing the accuracy of click-through rate (CTR) prediction in industrial recommender systems. Most of the current deep CTR models resort to building complex network architectures to better capture intricate feature interactions or user behaviors. However, we identify two limitations in these models: (1) the samples given to the model are undifferentiated, which may lead the model to learn a larger number of easy samples in a single-minded manner while ignoring a smaller number of hard samples, thus reducing the model's generalization ability; (2) differentiated feature interaction encoders are designed to capture different interactions information but receive consistent supervision signals, thereby limiting the effectiveness of the encoder. To bridge the identified gaps, this paper introduces a novel CTR prediction framework by integrating the plug-and-play Twin Focus (TF) Loss, Sample Selection Embedding Module (SSEM), and Dynamic Fusion Module (DFM), named the Twin Focus Framework for CTR (TF4CTR). Specifically, the framework employs the SSEM at the bottom of the model to differentiate between samples, thereby assigning a more suitable encoder for each sample. Meanwhile, the TF Loss provides tailored supervision signals to both simple and complex encoders. Moreover, the DFM dynamically fuses the feature interaction information captured by the encoders, resulting in more accurate predictions. Experiments on five real-world datasets confirm the effectiveness and compatibility of the framework, demonstrating its capacity to enhance various representative baselines in a model-agnostic manner. To facilitate reproducible research, our open-sourced code and detailed running logs will be made available at: https://github.com/salmon1802/TF4CTR.
comment: TCSS accepted
Multimedia
☆ DSCSNet: A Dynamic Sparse Compression Sensing Network for Closely-Spaced Infrared Small Target Unmixing
Due to the limitations of optical lens focal length and detector resolution, distant clustered infrared small targets often appear as mixed spots. The Close Small Object Unmixing (CSOU) task aims to recover the number, sub-pixel positions, and radiant intensities of individual targets from these spots, which is a highly ill-posed inverse problem. Existing methods struggle to balance the rigorous sparsity guarantees of model-driven approaches and the dynamic scene adaptability of data-driven methods. To address this dilemma, this paper proposes a Dynamic Sparse Compressed Sensing Network (DSCSNet), a deep-unfolded network that couples the Alternating Direction Method of Multipliers (ADMM) with learnable parameters. Specifically, we embed a strict $\ell_1$-norm sparsity constraint into the auxiliary variable update step of ADMM to replace the traditional $\ell_2$-norm smoothness-promoting terms, which effectively preserves the discrete energy peaks of small targets. We also integrate a self-attention-based dynamic thresholding mechanism into the reconstruction stage, which adaptively adjusts the sparsification intensity using the sparsity-enhanced information from the iterative process. These modules are jointly optimized end-to-end across the three iterative steps of ADMM. Retaining the physical logic of compressed sensing, DSCSNet achieves robust sparsity induction and scene adaptability, thus enhancing the unmixing accuracy and generalization in complex infrared scenarios. Extensive experiments on the synthetic infrared dataset CSIST-100K demonstrate that DSCSNet outperforms state-of-the-art methods in key metrics such as CSO-mAP and sub-pixel localization error.
comment: 13 pages, 8 figures
☆ Harmful Visual Content Manipulation Matters in Misinformation Detection Under Multimedia Scenarios
Nowadays, the widespread dissemination of misinformation across numerous social media platforms has led to severe negative effects on society. To address this challenge, the automatic detection of misinformation, particularly under multimedia scenarios, has gained significant attention from both academic and industrial communities, leading to the emergence of a research task known as Multimodal Misinformation Detection (MMD). Typically, current MMD approaches focus on capturing the semantic relationships and inconsistency between various modalities but often overlook certain critical indicators within multimodal content. Recent research has shown that manipulated features within visual content in social media articles serve as valuable clues for MMD. Meanwhile, we argue that the potential intentions behind the manipulation, e.g., harmful and harmless, also matter in MMD. Therefore, in this study, we aim to identify such multimodal misinformation by capturing two types of features: manipulation features, which represent if visual content has been manipulated, and intention features, which assess the nature of these manipulations, distinguishing between harmful and harmless intentions. Unfortunately, the manipulation and intention labels that supervise these features to be discriminative are unknown. To address this, we introduce two weakly supervised indicators as substitutes by incorporating supplementary datasets focused on image manipulation detection and framing two different classification tasks as positive and unlabeled learning issues. With this framework, we introduce an innovative MMD approach, titled Harmful Visual Content Manipulation Matters in MMD (HAVC-M4 D). Comprehensive experiments conducted on four prevalent MMD datasets indicate that HAVC-M4 D significantly and consistently enhances the performance of existing MMD methods.
☆ OrbitStream: Training-Free Adaptive 360-degree Video Streaming via Semantic Potential Fields
Adaptive 360° video streaming for teleoperation faces dual challenges: viewport prediction under uncertain gaze patterns and bitrate adaptation over volatile wireless channels. While data-driven and Deep Reinforcement Learning (DRL) methods achieve high Quality of Experience (QoE), their "black-box" nature and reliance on training data can limit deployment in safety-critical systems. To address this, we propose OrbitStream, a training-free framework that combines semantic scene understanding with robust control theory. We formulate viewport prediction as a Gravitational Viewport Prediction (GVP) problem, where semantic objects generate potential fields that attract user gaze. Furthermore, we employ a Saturation-Based Proportional-Derivative (PD) Controller for buffer regulation. On object-rich teleoperation traces, OrbitStream achieves a 94.7\% zero-shot viewport prediction accuracy without user-specific profiling, approaching trajectory-extrapolation baselines ($\sim$98.5\%). Across 3,600 Monte Carlo simulations on diverse network traces, OrbitStream yields a mean QoE of 2.71. It ranks second among 12 evaluated algorithms, close to the top-performing BOLA-E (2.80) while outperforming FastMPC (1.84). The system exhibits an average decision latency of 1.01 ms with minimal rebuffering events. By providing competitive QoE with interpretability and zero training overhead, OrbitStream demonstrates that physics-based control, combined with semantic modeling, offers a practical solution for 360° streaming in teleoperation.
Information Retrieval
☆ User Preference Modeling for Conversational LLM Agents: Weak Rewards from Retrieval-Augmented Interaction
Large language models are increasingly used as personal assistants, yet most lack a persistent user model, forcing users to repeatedly restate preferences across sessions. We propose Vector-Adapted Retrieval Scoring (VARS), a pipeline-agnostic, frozen-backbone framework that represents each user with long-term and short-term vectors in a shared preference space and uses these vectors to bias retrieval scoring over structured preference memory. The vectors are updated online from weak scalar rewards from users' feedback, enabling personalization without per-user fine-tuning. We evaluate on \textsc{MultiSessionCollab}, an online multi-session collaboration benchmark with rich user preference profiles, across math and code tasks. Under frozen backbones, the main benefit of user-aware retrieval is improved interaction efficiency rather than large gains in raw task accuracy: our full VARS agent achieves the strongest overall performance, matches a strong Reflection baseline in task success, and reduces timeout rate and user effort. The learned long-term vectors also align with cross-user preference overlap, while short-term vectors capture session-specific adaptation, supporting the interpretability of the dual-vector design. Code, model, and data are available at https://github.com/YurenHao0426/VARS.
comment: 21 pages including appendices
☆ RubricRAG: Towards Interpretable and Reliable LLM Evaluation via Domain Knowledge Retrieval for Rubric Generation
Large language models (LLMs) are increasingly evaluated and sometimes trained using automated graders such as LLM-as-judges that output scalar scores or preferences. While convenient, these approaches are often opaque: a single score rarely explains why an answer is good or bad, which requirements were missed, or how a system should be improved. This lack of interpretability limits their usefulness for model development, dataset curation, and high-stakes deployment. Query-specific rubric-based evaluation offers a more transparent alternative by decomposing quality into explicit, checkable criteria. However, manually designing high-quality, query-specific rubrics is labor-intensive and cognitively demanding and not feasible for deployment. While previous approaches have focused on generating intermediate rubrics for automated downstream evaluation, it is unclear if these rubrics are both interpretable and effective for human users. In this work, we investigate whether LLMs can generate useful, instance-specific rubrics as compared to human-authored rubrics, while also improving effectiveness for identifying good responses. Through our systematic study on two rubric benchmarks, and on multiple few-shot and post-training strategies, we find that off-the-shelf LLMs produce rubrics that are poorly aligned with human-authored ones. We introduce a simple strategy, RubricRAG, which retrieves domain knowledge via rubrics at inference time from related queries. We demonstrate that RubricRAG can generate more interpretable rubrics both for similarity to human-authored rubrics, and for improved downstream evaluation effectiveness. Our results highlight both the challenges and a promising approach of scalable, interpretable evaluation through automated rubric generation.
☆ Algorithmic Audit of Personalisation Drift in Polarising Topics on TikTok
Social media platforms have become an integral part of everyday life, serving as a primary source of news and information for many users. These platforms increasingly rely on personalised recommendation systems that shape what users see and engage with. While these systems are optimised for engagement, concerns have emerged that they may also drive users toward more polarised perspectives, particularly in contested domains such as politics, climate change, vaccines, and conspiracy theories. In this paper, we present an algorithmic audit of personalisation drift on TikTok in these polarising topics. Using controlled accounts designed to simulate users with interests aligned with or opposed to different polarising topics, we systematically measure the extent to which TikTok steers content exposure toward specific topics and polarities over time. Specifically, we investigated: 1) a preference-aligned drift (showing a strong personalisation towards user interests), 2) a polarisation-topic drift (showing a strong neutralising effect for misinformation-themed topics, and a high preference and reinforcement of interest of US politic topic); and 3) a polarisation-stance drift (showing a preference of oppose stance towards US politics topic and a general reinforcement of users' stance by recommending items aligned with their stance towards polarising topics). Overall, our findings provide evidence that recommendation trajectories differ markedly across topics, with some pathways amplifying polarised viewpoints more strongly than others and offer insights for platform governance, transparency and user awareness.
☆ NDT: Non-Differential Transformer and Its Application to Sentiment Analysis
From customer feedback to social media, understanding human sentiment in text is central to how machines can interact meaningfully with people. However, despite notable progress, accurately capturing sentiment remains a challenging task, which continues to motivate further research in this area. To this end, we introduce Non-Differential Transformer (NDT). It is inspired by (but in contrast to) the state-of-the-art Differential Transformer (DT) model. While standard Transformers can struggle with irrelevant context, the sota DT model uses attention map subtraction, potentially for noise cancellation. We explore an alternative motivation, hypothesizing that benefits may arise from enabling different attention components to specialize on distinct concepts within the text, similar to multiplexing information channels or mixture models, rather than primarily canceling noise via subtraction. Guided by this concept-multiplexing (ConPlex) view, the specific architecture presented in this paper employs a purely additive strategy. It uses only positive weights, learned during training, to ensure constructive combination of these specialized attention perspectives. This design choice explores positive only integration, though our broader framework also shows promise with less constrained linear combinations involving both positive and negative weights. Our model computes attention via this positively weighted sum of multiple distinct attention maps. This allows the model to constructively integrate diverse signals and potentially capture more complex contextual relationships. Competitive performance is achieved by the proposed model for Sentiment Analysis while tested on multiple datasets. We conclude by presenting our results, challenges and future research agenda in this important area of research.
comment: 10 pages, 16 figures. Submitted to IEEE Transactions on Computational Social Systems
♻ ☆ RAIE: Region-Aware Incremental Preference Editing with LoRA for LLM-based Recommendation WWW'26
Large language models (LLMs) are increasingly adopted as the backbone of recommender systems. However, user-item interactions in real-world scenarios are non-stationary, making preference drift over time inevitable. Existing model update strategies mainly rely on global fine-tuning or pointwise editing, but they face two fundamental challenges: (i) imbalanced update granularity, where global updates perturb behaviors unrelated to the target while pointwise edits fail to capture broader preference shifts; (ii) unstable incremental updates, where repeated edits interfere with prior adaptations, leading to catastrophic forgetting and inconsistent recommendations. To address these issues, we propose Region-Aware Incremental Editing (RAIE), a plug-in framework that freezes the backbone model and performs region-level updates. RAIE first constructs semantically coherent preference regions via spherical k-means in the representation space. It then assigns incoming sequences to regions via confidence-aware gating and performs three localized edit operations - Update, Expand, and Add - to dynamically revise the affected region. Each region is equipped with a dedicated Low-Rank Adaptation (LoRA) module, which is trained only on the region's updated data. During inference, RAIE routes each user sequence to its corresponding region and activates the region-specific adapter for prediction. Experiments on two benchmark datasets under a time-sliced protocol that segments data into Set-up (S), Finetune (F), and Test (T) show that RAIE significantly outperforms state-of-the-art baselines while effectively mitigating forgetting. These results demonstrate that region-aware editing offers an accurate and scalable mechanism for continual adaptation in dynamic recommendation scenarios. Our code is available at https://github.com/fengaogao/RAIE.
comment: Published on WWW'26: In Proceedings of the ACM Web Conference 2026
♻ ☆ No-Regret Bayesian Recommendation to Homogeneous Users
We introduce and study the online Bayesian recommendation problem for a recommender system platform. The platform has the privilege to privately observe a utility-relevant \emph{state} of a product at each round and uses this information to make online recommendations to a stream of myopic users. This paradigm is common in a wide range of scenarios in the current Internet economy. The platform commits to an online recommendation policy that utilizes her information advantage on the product state to persuade self-interested users to follow the recommendation. Since the platform does not know users' preferences or beliefs in advance, we study the platform's online learning problem of designing an adaptive recommendation policy to persuade users while gradually learning users' preferences and beliefs en route. Specifically, we aim to design online learning policies with no \emph{Stackelberg regret} for the platform, i.e., against the optimal benchmark policy in hindsight under the assumption that users will correspondingly adapt their responses to the benchmark policy. Our first result is an online policy that achieves double logarithmic regret dependence on the number of rounds. We also present an information-theoretic lower bound showing that no adaptive online policy can achieve regret with better dependency on the number of rounds. Finally, by formulating the platform's problem as optimizing a linear program with membership oracle access, we present our second online recommendation policy that achieves regret with polynomial dependence on the number of states but logarithmic dependence on the number of rounds.
comment: Accepted by OR'26, conference version in EC'22
♻ ☆ Compute Allocation for Reasoning-Intensive Retrieval Agents
As agents operate over long horizons, their memory stores grow continuously, making retrieval critical to accessing relevant information. Many agent queries require reasoning-intensive retrieval, where the connection between query and relevant documents is implicit and requires inference to bridge. LLM-augmented pipelines address this through query expansion and candidate re-ranking, but introduce significant inference costs. We study computation allocation in reasoning-intensive retrieval pipelines using the BRIGHT benchmark and Gemini 2.5 model family. We vary model capacity, inference-time thinking, and re-ranking depth across query expansion and re-ranking stages. We find that re-ranking benefits substantially from stronger models (+7.5 NDCG@10) and deeper candidate pools (+21% from $k$=10 to 100), while query expansion shows diminishing returns beyond lightweight models (+1.1 NDCG@10 from weak to strong). Inference-time thinking provides minimal improvement at either stage. These results suggest that compute should be concentrated on re-ranking rather than distributed uniformly across pipeline stages.
♻ ☆ Rethinking Soft Compression in Retrieval-Augmented Generation: A Query-Conditioned Selector Perspective WWW 2026
Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG) effectively grounds Large Language Models (LLMs) with external knowledge and is widely applied to Web-related tasks. However, its scalability is hindered by excessive context length and redundant retrievals. Recent research on soft context compression aims to address this by encoding long documents into compact embeddings, yet they often underperform non-compressed RAG due to their reliance on auto-encoder-like full-compression that forces the encoder to compress all document information regardless of relevance to the input query. In this work, we conduct an analysis on this paradigm and reveal two fundamental limitations: (I) Infeasibility, full-compression conflicts with the LLM's downstream generation behavior; and (II) Non-necessity: full-compression is unnecessary and dilutes task-relevant information density. Motivated by these insights, we introduce SeleCom, a selector-based soft compression framework for RAG that redefines the encoder's role as query-conditioned information selector. The selector is decoder-only and is trained with a massive, diverse and difficulty-graded synthetic QA dataset with curriculum learning. Extensive experiments show that SeleCom significantly outperforms existing soft compression approaches and achieves competitive or superior performance to non-compression baselines, while reducing computation and latency by 33.8%~84.6%.
comment: Accepted by WWW 2026
♻ ☆ Collaborative User Prompt for Personalized Generative Recommendation EMNLP 2025
Large Language Models (LLMs) have become powerful foundations for generative recommender systems, framing recommendation tasks as text generation tasks. However, existing generative recommendation methods often rely on discrete ID-based prompts or task-specific soft prompts, which overlook the valuable collaborative signals shared among users with similar interests. To address this limitation, this paper presents a compositional framework that integrates a user's individual preferences with collective preferences from similar users to build personalized soft prompts. Specifically, an attention-based mechanism fuses embeddings from users with similar interests, creating a richer representation that captures multiple facets of user preferences. This design dynamically emphasizes shared interests while preserving individual user preferences. Experiments on three real-world datasets demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed approach across sequential recommendation, top-n recommendation, and explanation generation tasks, underscoring the advantages of incorporating collaborative signals through an attention-based compositional strategy.
comment: Accepted at PALS Workshop@EMNLP 2025
♻ ☆ Chain of Retrieval: Multi-Aspect Iterative Search Expansion and Post-Order Search Aggregation for Full Paper Retrieval
Scientific paper retrieval, particularly framed as document-to-document retrieval, aims to identify relevant papers in response to a long-form query paper, rather than a short query string. Previous approaches to this task have focused exclusively on abstracts, embedding them into dense vectors as surrogates for full documents and calculating similarity between them. Yet, abstracts offer only sparse and high-level summaries, and such methods primarily optimize one-to-one similarity, overlooking the dynamic relations that emerge across relevant papers during the retrieval process. To address this, we propose Chain of Retrieval(COR), a novel iterative framework for full-paper retrieval. Specifically, COR decomposes each query paper into multiple aspect-specific views, matches them against segmented candidate papers, and iteratively expands the search by promoting top-ranked results as new queries, thereby forming a tree-structured retrieval process. The resulting retrieval tree is then aggregated in a post-order manner: descendants are first combined at the query level, then recursively merged with their parent nodes, to capture hierarchical relations across iterations. To validate this, we present SCIFULLBENCH, a large-scale benchmark providing both complete and segmented contexts of full papers for queries and candidates, and results show that COR significantly outperforms existing retrieval baselines. Our code and dataset is available at https://github.com/psw0021/Chain-of-Retrieval-Official.
Multimedia
☆ AcoustEmo: Open-Vocabulary Emotion Reasoning via Utterance-Aware Acoustic Q-Former
Multimodal Large Language Models (MLLMs) excel in Open-Vocabulary (OV) emotion recognition but often neglect fine-grained acoustic modeling. Existing methods typically use global audio encoders, failing to capture subtle, local temporal dynamics like micro-prosody and intonation shifts within individual utterances. To address this, we propose AcoustEmo, a time-sensitive MLLM featuring a novel Utterance-Aware Acoustic Q-Former. Our approach utilizes a timestamp-synchronized sliding window to dynamically extract segment-level audio tokens instead of coarse global representations. This enables the model to explicitly trace the temporal evolution of subtle acoustic clues and capture deep contextual dependencies in dialogues. Experiments on the Explainable Multimodal Emotion Recognition (EMER) task show that AcoustEmo significantly enhances complex emotion reasoning, outperforming baselines while maintaining robust contextual accuracy.
comment: 6 pages
Information Retrieval
☆ ReBOL: Retrieval via Bayesian Optimization with Batched LLM Relevance Observations and Query Reformulation
LLM-reranking is limited by the top-k documents retrieved by vector similarity, which neither enables contextual query-document token interactions nor captures multimodal relevance distributions. While LLM query reformulation attempts to improve recall by generating improved or additional queries, it is still followed by vector similarity retrieval. We thus propose to address these top-k retrieval stage failures by introducing ReBOL, which 1) uses LLM query reformulations to initialize a multimodal Bayesian Optimization (BO) posterior over document relevance, and 2) iteratively acquires document batches for LLM query-document relevance scoring followed by posterior updates to optimize relevance. After exploring query reformulation and document batch diversification techniques, we evaluate ReBOL against LLM reranker baselines on five BEIR datasets and using two LLMs (Gemini-2.5-Flash-Lite, GPT-5.2). ReBOL consistently achieves higher recall and competitive rankings, for example compared to the best LLM reranker on the Robust04 dataset with 46.5% vs. 35.0% recall@100 and 63.6% vs. 61.2% NDCG@10. We also show that ReBOL can achieve comparable latency to LLM rerankers.
☆ yProv4DV: Reproducible Data Visualization Scripts Out of the Box
While results visualization is a critical phase to the communication of new academic results, plots are frequently shared without the complete combination of code, input data, execution context and outputs required to independently reproduce the resulting figures. Existing reproducibility solutions tend to focus on computational pipelines or workflow management systems, not covering script-based visualization practices commonly used by researchers and practitioners. Additionally, the minimalist nature of current Python data visualization libraries tend to speed up the creation of images, disincentivizing users from spending time integrating additional tools into these short scripts. This paper proposes yProv4DV, a library lightweight designed to enable reproducible data visualization scripts through the use of provenance information, minimizing the necessity for code modifications. Through a single call, users can track inputs, outputs and source code files, enabling saving and full reproducibility of their data visualization software. As a result, this library fills a gap in reproducible research workflows by addressing the reproducibility of plots in scientific publications.
comment: SoftwareX, 17 pages, 4 figures
☆ PEARL: Personalized Streaming Video Understanding Model
Human cognition of new concepts is inherently a streaming process: we continuously recognize new objects or identities and update our memories over time. However, current multimodal personalization methods are largely limited to static images or offline videos. This disconnects continuous visual input from instant real-world feedback, limiting their ability to provide the real-time, interactive personalized responses essential for future AI assistants. To bridge this gap, we first propose and formally define the novel task of Personalized Streaming Video Understanding (PSVU). To facilitate research in this new direction, we introduce PEARL-Bench, the first comprehensive benchmark designed specifically to evaluate this challenging setting. It evaluates a model's ability to respond to personalized concepts at exact timestamps under two modes: (1) Frame-level, focusing on a specific person or object in discrete frames, and (2) a novel Video-level, focusing on personalized actions unfolding across continuous frames. PEARL-Bench comprises 132 unique videos and 2,173 fine-grained annotations with precise timestamps. Concept diversity and annotation quality are strictly ensured through a combined pipeline of automated generation and human verification. To tackle this challenging new setting, we further propose PEARL, a plug-and-play, training-free strategy that serves as a strong baseline. Extensive evaluations across 8 offline and online models demonstrate that PEARL achieves state-of-the-art performance. Notably, it brings consistent PSVU improvements when applied to 3 distinct architectures, proving to be a highly effective and robust strategy. We hope this work advances vision-language model (VLM) personalization and inspires further research into streaming personalized AI assistants. Code is available at https://github.com/Yuanhong-Zheng/PEARL.
comment: Arxiv Submission
☆ WebNavigator: Global Web Navigation via Interaction Graph Retrieval
Despite significant advances in autonomous web navigation, current methods remain far from human-level performance in complex web environments. We argue that this limitation stems from Topological Blindness, where agents are forced to explore via trial-and-error without access to the global topological structure of the environment. To overcome this limitation, we introduce WebNavigator, which reframes web navigation from probabilistic exploration into deterministic retrieval and pathfinding. WebNavigator constructs Interaction Graphs via zero-token cost heuristic exploration offline and implements a Retrieve-Reason-Teleport workflow for global navigation online. WebNavigator achieves state-of-the-art performance on WebArena and OnlineMind2Web. On WebArena multi-site tasks, WebNavigator achieves a 72.9\% success rate, more than doubling the performance of enterprise-level agents. This work reveals that Topological Blindness, rather than model reasoning capabilities alone, is an underestimated bottleneck in autonomous web navigation.
comment: 24 pages, 3 figures
☆ LLM-Enhanced Semantic Data Integration of Electronic Component Qualifications in the Aerospace Domain ESWC 2026
Large manufacturing companies face challenges in information retrieval due to data silos maintained by different departments, leading to inconsistencies and misalignment across databases. This paper presents an experience in integrating and retrieving qualification data for electronic components used in satellite board design. Due to data silos, designers cannot immediately determine the qualification status of individual components. However, this process is critical during the planning phase, when assembly drawings are issued before production, to optimize new qualifications and avoid redundant efforts. To address this, we propose a pipeline that uses Virtual Knowledge Graphs for a unified view over heterogeneous data sources and LLMs to enhance retrieval and reduce manual effort in data cleansing. The retrieval of qualifications is then performed through an Ontology-based Data Access approach for structured queries and a vector search mechanism for retrieving qualifications based on similar textual properties. We perform a comparative cost-benefit analysis, demonstrating that the proposed pipeline also outperforms approaches relying solely on LLMs, such as Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG), in terms of long-term efficiency.
comment: ESWC 2026
☆ The End of Rented Discovery: How AI Search Redistributes Power Between Hotels and Intermediaries
When a traveler asks an AI search engine to recommend a hotel, which sources get cited -- and does query framing matter? We audit 1,357 grounding citations from Google Gemini across 156 hotel queries in Tokyo and document a systematic pattern we call the Intent-Source Divide. Experiential queries draw 55.9\% of their citations from non-OTA sources, compared to 30.8\% for transactional queries -- a 25.1 percentage-point gap ($p < 5 \times 10^{-20}$). The effect is amplified in Japanese, where experiential queries draw 62.1\% non-OTA citations compared to 50.0\% in English -- consistent with a more diverse Japanese non-OTA content ecosystem. For an industry in which hotels have long paid OTAs for demand acquisition, this pattern matters because it suggests that AI search may make hotel discovery less exclusively controlled by commission-based intermediaries.
comment: 13 pages, 10 tables, Submitted to the 10th Hospitality Finance & Economics Conference (HFE 2026), Tokyo, Japan
☆ CoverageBench: Evaluating Information Coverage across Tasks and Domains
We wish to measure the information coverage of an ad hoc retrieval algorithm, that is, how much of the range of available relevant information is covered by the search results. Information coverage is a central aspect for retrieval, especially when the retrieval system is integrated with generative models in a retrieval-augmented generation (RAG) system. The classic metrics for ad hoc retrieval, precision and recall, reward a system as more and more relevant documents are retrieved. However, since relevance in ad hoc test collections is defined for a document without any relation to other documents that might contain the same information, high recall is sufficient but not necessary to ensure coverage. The same is true for other metrics such as rank-biased precision (RBP), normalized discounted cumulative gain (nDCG), and mean average precision (MAP). Test collections developed around the notion of diversity ranking in web search incorporate multiple aspects that support a concept of coverage in the web domain. In this work, we construct a suite of collections for evaluating information coverage from existing collections. This suite offers researchers a unified testbed spanning multiple genres and tasks. All topics, nuggets, relevance labels, and baseline rankings are released on Hugging Face Datasets, along with instructions for accessing the publicly available document collections.
comment: 8
☆ RouterKGQA: Specialized--General Model Routing for Constraint-Aware Knowledge Graph Question Answering
Knowledge graph question answering (KGQA) is a promising approach for mitigating LLM hallucination by grounding reasoning in structured and verifiable knowledge graphs. Existing approaches fall into two paradigms: retrieval-based methods utilize small specialized models, which are efficient but often produce unreachable paths and miss implicit constraints, while agent-based methods utilize large general models, which achieve stronger structural grounding at substantially higher cost. We propose RouterKGQA, a framework for specialized--general model collaboration, in which a specialized model generates reasoning paths and a general model performs KG-guided repair only when needed, improving performance at minimal cost. We further equip the specialized with constraint-aware answer filtering, which reduces redundant answers. In addition, we design a more efficient general agent workflow, further lowering inference cost. Experimental results show that RouterKGQA outperforms the previous best by 3.57 points in F1 and 0.49 points in Hits@1 on average across benchmarks, while requiring only 1.15 average LLM calls per question. Codes and models are available at https://github.com/Oldcircle/RouterKGQA.
☆ A Super Fast K-means for Indexing Vector Embeddings
We present SuperKMeans: a k-means variant designed for clustering collections of high-dimensional vector embeddings. SuperKMeans' clustering is up to 7x faster than FAISS and Scikit-Learn on modern CPUs and up to 4x faster than cuVS on GPUs (Figure 1), while maintaining the quality of the resulting centroids for vector similarity search tasks. SuperKMeans acceleration comes from reducing data-access and compute overhead by reliably and efficiently pruning dimensions that are not needed to assign a vector to a centroid. Furthermore, we present Early Termination by Recall, a novel mechanism that early-terminates k-means when the quality of the centroids for retrieval tasks stops improving across iterations. In practice, this further reduces runtimes without compromising retrieval quality. We open-source our implementation at https://github.com/cwida/SuperKMeans
☆ DALI: LLM-Agent Enhanced Dual-Stream Adaptive Leadership Identification for Group Recommendations
Group recommendation systems play a pivotal role in supporting collective decisions across various contexts, from leisure activities to organizational team-building. Existing group recommendation approaches typically use either handcrafted aggregation rules (e.g. mean, least misery, weighted sum) or neural aggregation models (e.g. attention-based deep learning frameworks), yet both fall short in distinguishing leader-dominated from collaborative groups and often misrepresent true group preferences, especially when a single member disproportionately influences group choices. To address these limitations, we propose the Dual-stream Adaptive Leadership Identification (DALI) framework, which uniquely combines the symbolic reasoning capabilities of Large Language Models (LLMs) with neural network-based representation learning. Specifically, DALI introduces two key innovations: a dynamic rule generation module that autonomously formulates and evolves identification rules through iterative performance feedback, and a neuro-symbolic aggregation mechanism that concurrently employs symbolic reasoning to robustly recognize leadership groups and attention-based neural aggregation to accurately model collaborative group dynamics. Experiments conducted on the Mafengwo travel dataset confirm that DALI significantly improves recommendation accuracy compared to existing frameworks, highlighting its capability to dynamically adapt to complex, real-world group decision environments.
comment: under review
☆ How Well Does Generative Recommendation Generalize?
A widely held hypothesis for why generative recommendation (GR) models outperform conventional item ID-based models is that they generalize better. However, there is few systematic way to verify this hypothesis beyond a superficial comparison of overall performance. To address this gap, we categorize each data instance based on the specific capability required for a correct prediction: either memorization (reusing item transition patterns observed during training) or generalization (composing known patterns to predict unseen item transitions). Extensive experiments show that GR models perform better on instances that require generalization, whereas item ID-based models perform better when memorization is more important. To explain this divergence, we shift the analysis from the item level to the token level and show that what appears to be item-level generalization often reduces to token-level memorization for GR models. Finally, we show that the two paradigms are complementary. We propose a simple memorization-aware indicator that adaptively combines them on a per-instance basis, leading to improved overall recommendation performance.
☆ Low-pass Personalized Subgraph Federated Recommendation ICLR 2026
Federated Recommender Systems (FRS) preserve privacy by training decentralized models on client-specific user-item subgraphs without sharing raw data. However, FRS faces a unique challenge: subgraph structural imbalance, where drastic variations in subgraph scale (user/item counts) and connectivity (item degree) misalign client representations, making it challenging to train a robust model that respects each client's unique structural characteristics. To address this, we propose a Low-pass Personalized Subgraph Federated recommender system (LPSFed). LPSFed leverages graph Fourier transforms and low-pass spectral filtering to extract low-frequency structural signals that remain stable across subgraphs of varying size and degree, allowing robust personalized parameter updates guided by similarity to a neutral structural anchor. Additionally, we leverage a localized popularity bias-aware margin that captures item-degree imbalance within each subgraph and incorporates it into a personalized bias correction term to mitigate recommendation bias. Supported by theoretical analysis and validated on five real-world datasets, LPSFed achieves superior recommendation accuracy and enhances model robustness.
comment: Accepted at ICLR 2026. 31 pages, 3 figures, 12 tables
☆ GEM: A Native Graph-based Index for Multi-Vector Retrieval SIGMOD 2026
In multi-vector retrieval, both queries and data are represented as sets of high-dimensional vectors, enabling finer-grained semantic matching and improving retrieval quality over single-vector approaches. However, its practical adoption is held back by the lack of effective indexing algorithms. Existing work, attempting to reuse standard single-vector indexes, often fails to preserve multi-vector semantics or remains slow. In this work, we present GEM, a native indexing framework for multi-vector representations. The core idea is to construct a proximity graph directly over vector sets, preserving their fine-grained semantics while enabling efficient navigation. First, GEM designs a set-level clustering scheme. It associates each vector set with only its most informative clusters, effectively reducing redundancy without hurting semantic coverage. Then, it builds local proximity graphs within clusters and bridges them into a globally navigable structure. To handle the non-metric nature of multi-vector similarity, GEM decouples the graph construction metric from the final relevance score and injects semantic shortcuts to guide efficient navigation toward relevant regions. At query time, GEM launches beam search from multiple entry points and prunes paths early using cluster cues. To further enhance efficiency, a quantized distance estimation technique is used for both indexing and search. Across in-domain, out-of-domain, and multi-modal benchmarks, GEM achieves up to 16x speedup over state-of-the-art methods while matching or improving accuracy.
comment: This paper has been accepted by SIGMOD 2026
☆ AIGQ: An End-to-End Hybrid Generative Architecture for E-commerce Query Recommendation
Pre-search query recommendation, widely known as HintQ on Taobao's homepage, plays a vital role in intent capture and demand discovery, yet traditional methods suffer from shallow semantics, poor cold-start performance and low serendipity due to reliance on ID-based matching and co-click heuristics. To overcome these challenges, we propose AIGQ (AI-Generated Query architecture), the first end-to-end generative framework for HintQ scenario. AIGQ is built upon three core innovations spanning training paradigm, policy optimization and deployment architecture. First, we propose Interest-Aware List Supervised Fine-Tuning (IL-SFT), a list-level supervised learning approach that constructs training samples through session-aware behavior aggregation and interest-guided re-ranking strategy to faithfully model nuanced user intent. Accordingly, we design Interest-aware List Group Relative Policy Optimization (IL-GRPO), a novel policy gradient algorithm with a dual-component reward mechanism that jointly optimizes individual query relevance and global list properties, enhanced by a model-based reward from the online click-through rate (CTR) ranking model. To deploy under strict real-time and low-latency requirements, we further develop a hybrid offline-online architecture comprising AIGQ-Direct for nearline personalized user-to-query generation and AIGQ-Think, a reasoning-enhanced variant that produces trigger-to-query mappings to enrich interest diversity. Extensive offline evaluations and large-scale online A/B experiments on Taobao demonstrate that AIGQ consistently delivers substantial improvements in key business metrics across platform effectiveness and user engagement.
☆ From Token to Item: Enhancing Large Language Models for Recommendation via Item-aware Attention Mechanism WWW 2026
Large Language Models (LLMs) have recently gained increasing attention in the field of recommendation. Existing LLM-based methods typically represent items as token sequences, and apply attention layers on these tokens to generate recommendations. However, by inheriting the standard attention mechanism, these methods focus on modeling token-level relations. This token-centric focus overlooks the item as the fundamental unit of recommendation, preventing existing methods from effectively capturing collaborative relations at the item level. In this work, we revisit the role of tokens in LLM-driven recommendation and categorize their relations into two types: (1) intra-item token relations, which present the content semantics of an item, e.g., name, color, and size; and (2) inter-item token relations, which encode collaborative relations across items. Building on these insights, we propose a novel framework with an item-aware attention mechanism (IAM) to enhance LLMs for recommendation. Specifically, IAM devises two complementary attention layers: (1) an intra-item attention layer, which restricts attention to tokens within the same item, modeling item content semantics; and (2) an inter-item attention layer, which attends exclusively to token relations across items, capturing item collaborative relations. Through this stacked design, IAM explicitly emphasizes items as the fundamental units in recommendation, enabling LLMs to effectively exploit item-level collaborative relations. Extensive experiments on several public datasets demonstrate the effectiveness of IAM in enhancing LLMs for personalized recommendation.
comment: This work has been accepted by WWW 2026
☆ GenFacet: End-to-End Generative Faceted Search via Multi-Task Preference Alignment in E-Commerce
Faceted search acts as a critical bridge for navigating massive ecommerce catalogs, yet traditional systems rely on static rule-based extraction or statistical ranking, struggling with emerging vocabulary, semantic gaps, and a disconnect between facet selection and underlying retrieval. In this paper, we introduce GenFacet, an industrial-grade, end-to-end generative framework deployed at JD.com. GenFacet reframes faceted search as two coupled generative tasks within a unified Large Language Model: Context-Aware Facet Generation, which dynamically synthesizes trend-responsive navigation options, and Intent-Driven Query Rewriting, which translates user interactions into precise search queries to close the retrieval loop. To bridge the gap between generative capabilities and search utility, we propose a novel multi-task training pipeline combining teacher-student distillation with GRPO. This aligns the model with complex user preferences by directly optimizing for downstream search satisfaction. Validated on China's largest selfoperated e-commerce platform via rigorous offline evaluations and online A/B tests, GenFacet demonstrated substantial improvements. Specifically, online results reveal a relative increase of 42.0% in facet Click-Through Rate (CTR) and 2.0% in User Conversion Rate (UCVR). These outcomes provide strong evidence of the benefits of generative methods for improving query understanding and user engagement in large-scale information retrieval systems.
☆ MetaCues: Enabling Critical Engagement with Generative AI for Information Seeking and Sensemaking
Generative AI (GenAI) search tools are increasingly used for information seeking, yet their design tends to encourage cognitive offloading, which may lead to passive engagement, selective attention, and informational homogenization. Effective use requires metacognitive engagement to craft good prompts, verify AI outputs, and critically engage with information. We developed MetaCues, a novel GenAI-based interactive tool for information seeking that delivers metacognitive cues alongside AI responses and a note-taking interface to guide users' search and associated learning. Through an online study (N = 146), we compared MetaCues to a baseline tool without cues, across two broad search topics that required participants to explore diverse perspectives in order to make informed judgments. Preliminary findings regarding participants' search behavior show that MetaCues leads to increased confidence in attitudinal judgments about the search topic as well as broader inquiry, with the latter effect emerging primarily for the topic that was less controversial and with which participants had relatively less familiarity. Accordingly, we outline directions for future qualitative exploration of search interactions and inquiry patterns.
☆ The Prosocial Ranking Challenge: Reducing Polarization on Social Media without Sacrificing Engagement
We report the first direct comparisons of multiple alternative social media algorithms on multiple platforms on outcomes of societal interest. We used a browser extension to modify which posts were shown to desktop social media users, randomly assigning 9,386 users to a control group or one of five alternative ranking algorithms which simultaneously altered content across three platforms for six months during the US 2024 presidential election. This reduced our preregistered index of affective polarization by an average of 0.03 standard deviations (p < 0.05), including a 1.5 degree decrease in differences between the 100 point inparty and outparty feeling thermometers. We saw reductions in active use time for Facebook (-0.37 min/day) and Reddit (-0.2 min/day), but an increase of 0.32 min/day (p < 0.01) for X/Twitter. We saw an increase in reports of negative social media experiences but found no effects on well-being, news knowledge, outgroup empathy, perceptions of and support for partisan violence. This implies that bridging content can improve some societal outcomes without necessarily conflicting with the engagement-driven business model of social media.
☆ CO-EVOLVE: Bidirectional Co-Evolution of Graph Structure and Semantics for Heterophilous Learning
The integration of Large Language Models (LLMs) and Graph Neural Networks (GNNs) promises to unify semantic understanding with structural reasoning, yet existing methods typically rely on static, unidirectional pipelines. These approaches suffer from fundamental limitations: (1) Bidirectional Error Propagation, where semantic hallucinations in LLMs or structural noise in GNNs permanently poison the downstream modality without opportunity for recourse; (2) Semantic-Structural Dissonance, particularly in heterophilous settings where textual similarity contradicts topological reality; (3) a Blind Leading the Blind phenomenon, where indiscriminate alignment forces models to mirror each other's mistakes regardless of uncertainty. To address these challenges, we propose CO-EVOLVE, a dual-view co-evolution framework that treats graph topology and semantic embeddings as dynamic, mutually reinforcing latent variables. By employing a Gauss-Seidel alternating optimization strategy, our framework establishes a cyclic feedback loop: the GNN injects structural context as Soft Prompts to guide the LLM, while the LLM constructs favorable Dynamic Semantic Graphs to rewire the GNN. We introduce three key innovations to stabilize this evolution: (1) a Hard-Structure Conflict-Aware Contrastive Loss that warps the semantic manifold to respect high-order topological boundaries; (2) an Adaptive Node Gating Mechanism that dynamically fuses static and learnable structures to recover missing links; (3) an Uncertainty-Gated Consistency strategy that enables meta-cognitive alignment, ensuring models only learn from the confident view. Finally, an Entropy-Aware Adaptive Fusion integrates predictions during inference. Extensive experiments on public benchmarks demonstrate that CO-EVOLVE significantly outperforms state-of-the-art baselines, achieving average improvements of 9.07% in Accuracy and 7.19% in F1-score.
☆ All-Mem: Agentic Lifelong Memory via Dynamic Topology Evolution
Lifelong interactive agents are expected to assist users over months or years, which requires continually writing long term memories while retrieving the right evidence for each new query under fixed context and latency budgets. Existing memory systems often degrade as histories grow, yielding redundant, outdated, or noisy retrieved contexts. We present All-Mem, an online/offline lifelong memory framework that maintains a topology structured memory bank via explicit, non destructive consolidation, avoiding the irreversible information loss typical of summarization based compression. In online operation, it anchors retrieval on a bounded visible surface to keep coarse search cost bounded. Periodically offline, an LLM diagnoser proposes confidence scored topology edits executed with gating using three operators: SPLIT, MERGE, and UPDATE, while preserving immutable evidence for traceability. At query time, typed links enable hop bounded, budgeted expansion from active anchors to archived evidence when needed. Experiments on LOCOMO and LONGMEMEVAL show improved retrieval and QA over representative baselines.
☆ SaFRO: Satisfaction-Aware Fusion via Dual-Relative Policy Optimization for Short-Video Search
Multi-Task Fusion plays a pivotal role in industrial short-video search systems by aggregating heterogeneous prediction signals into a unified ranking score. However, existing approaches predominantly optimize for immediate engagement metrics, which often fail to align with long-term user satisfaction. While Reinforcement Learning (RL) offers a promising avenue for user satisfaction optimization, its direct application to search scenarios is non-trivial due to the inherent data sparsity and intent constraints compared to recommendation feeds. To this end, we propose SaFRO, a novel framework designed to optimize user satisfaction in short-video search. We first construct a satisfaction-aware reward model that utilizes query-level behavioral proxies to capture holistic user satisfaction beyond item-level interactions. Then we introduce Dual-Relative Policy Optimization (DRPO), an efficient policy learning method that updates the fusion policy through relative preference comparisons within groups and across batches. Furthermore, we design a Task-Relation-Aware Fusion module to explicitly model the interdependencies among different objectives, enabling context-sensitive weight adaptation. Extensive offline evaluations and large-scale online A/B tests on Kuaishou short-video search platform demonstrate that SaFRO significantly outperforms state-of-the-art baselines, delivering substantial gains in both short-term ranking quality and long-term user retention.
comment: 9 pages, 8 figures
☆ EvidenceRL: Reinforcing Evidence Consistency for Trustworthy Language Models
Large Language Models (LLMs) are fluent but prone to hallucinations, producing answers that appear plausible yet are unsupported by available evidence. This failure is especially problematic in high-stakes domains where decisions must be justified by verifiable information. We introduce \textbf{EvidenceRL}, a reinforcement learning framework that enforces evidence adherence during training. EvidenceRL scores candidate responses for grounding (entailment with retrieved evidence and context) and correctness (agreement with reference answers) and optimizes the generator using Group Relative Policy Optimization (GRPO). We evaluate across two high-stakes domains, cardiac diagnosis and legal reasoning, where EvidenceRL consistently improves evidence grounding and faithfulness without sacrificing task accuracy. On cardiac diagnosis, F1@3 increases from 37.0 to 54.5 on Llama-3.2-3B while grounding ($G_{\max}@3$) rises from 47.6 to 78.2; hallucinations drop nearly 5$\times$ and evidence-supported diagnoses increase from 31.8\% to 61.6\%. On legal reasoning, EvidenceRL raises Faithfulness from 32.8\% to 67.6\% on Llama-3.1-8B, demonstrating consistent behavioral change across domains. Our code is open-sourced at https://github.com/Wizaaard/EvidenceRL.git.
♻ ☆ FinTradeBench: A Financial Reasoning Benchmark for LLMs
Real-world financial decision-making is a challenging problem that requires reasoning over heterogeneous signals, including company fundamentals derived from regulatory filings and trading signals computed from price dynamics. Recently, with the advancement of Large Language Models (LLMs), financial analysts have begun to use them for financial decision-making tasks. However, existing financial question answering benchmarks for testing these models primarily focus on company balance sheet data and rarely evaluate reasoning over how company stocks trade in the market or their interactions with fundamentals. To take advantage of the strengths of both approaches, we introduce FinTradeBench, a benchmark for evaluating financial reasoning that integrates company fundamentals and trading signals. FinTradeBench contains 1,400 questions grounded in NASDAQ-100 companies over a ten-year historical window. The benchmark is organized into three reasoning categories: fundamentals-focused, trading-signal-focused, and hybrid questions requiring cross-signal reasoning. To ensure reliability at scale, we adopt a calibration-then-scaling framework that combines expert seed questions, multi-model response generation, intra-model self-filtering, numerical auditing, and human-LLM judge alignment. We evaluate 14 LLMs under zero-shot prompting and retrieval-augmented settings and witness a clear performance gap. Retrieval substantially improves reasoning over textual fundamentals, but provides limited benefit for trading-signal reasoning. These findings highlight fundamental challenges in the numerical and time-series reasoning for current LLMs and motivate future research in financial intelligence.
comment: 8 pages main text, 22 pages total (including references and appendix). 5 figures, 14 tables. Preprint under review. Code and data will be made available upon publication
♻ ☆ An Ecosystem for Ontology Interoperability
Ontology interoperability is one of the complicated issues that restricts the use of ontologies in knowledge graphs (KGs). Different ontologies with conflicting and overlapping concepts make it difficult to design, develop, and deploy an interoperable ontology for downstream tasks. We propose an ecosystem for ontology interoperability. The ecosystem employs three state-of-the-art semantic techniques in different phases of the ontology engineering (OE) life cycle: ontology design patterns (ODPs) in the design phase, ontology matching and versioning (OM\&OV) in the develop phase, and data-driven ontology validation (DOVA) in the deploy phase, to achieve better ontology interoperability and data integration in real-world applications. A case study of sensor observation in the building domain validates the usefulness of the proposed ecosystem.
comment: 21 pages
Multimedia
☆ EgoForge: Goal-Directed Egocentric World Simulator
Generative world models have shown promise for simulating dynamic environments, yet egocentric video remains challenging due to rapid viewpoint changes, frequent hand-object interactions, and goal-directed procedures whose evolution depends on latent human intent. Existing approaches either focus on hand-centric instructional synthesis with limited scene evolution, perform static view translation without modeling action dynamics, or rely on dense supervision, such as camera trajectories, long video prefixes, synchronized multicamera capture, etc. In this work, we introduce EgoForge, an egocentric goal-directed world simulator that generates coherent, first-person video rollouts from minimal static inputs: a single egocentric image, a high-level instruction, and an optional auxiliary exocentric view. To improve intent alignment and temporal consistency, we propose VideoDiffusionNFT, a trajectory-level reward-guided refinement that optimizes goal completion, temporal causality, scene consistency, and perceptual fidelity during diffusion sampling. Extensive experiments show EgoForge achieves consistent gains in semantic alignment, geometric stability, and motion fidelity over strong baselines, and robust performance in real-world smart-glasses experiments.
☆ Leum-VL Technical Report
A short video succeeds not simply because of what it shows, but because of how it schedules attention -- yet current multimodal models lack the structural grammar to parse or produce this organization. Existing models can describe scenes, answer event-centric questions, and read on-screen text, but they are far less reliable at identifying timeline-grounded units such as hooks, cut rationales, shot-induced tension, and platform-facing packaging cues. We propose SV6D (Structured Video in Six Dimensions), inspired by professional storyboard practice in film and television production, a representation framework that decomposes internet-native video into six complementary structural dimensions -- subject, aesthetics, camera language, editing, narrative, and dissemination -- with each label tied to physically observable evidence on the timeline. We formalize a unified optimization objective over SV6D that combines Hungarian-matched temporal alignment, dimension-wise semantic label distance, and quality regularization. Building on this framework, we present Leum-VL-8B, an 8B video-language model that realizes the SV6D objective through an expert-driven post-training pipeline, further refined through verifiable reinforcement learning on perception-oriented tasks. Leum-VL-8B achieves 70.8 on VideoMME (w/o subtitles), 70.0 on MVBench, and 61.6 on MotionBench, while remaining competitive on general multimodal evaluations such as MMBench-EN. We also construct FeedBench, a benchmark for structure-sensitive short-video understanding. Our results indicate that the missing layer in video AI is not pixel generation but structural representation: grounded on the timeline, linked to visible evidence, and directly consumable by downstream workflows such as editing, retrieval, recommendation, and generation control, including text-heavy internet video formats with overlays and image-text layouts.
comment: 27 pages, 5 figures
☆ Gesture2Speech: How Far Can Hand Movements Shape Expressive Speech? AAAI 2026
Human communication seamlessly integrates speech and bodily motion, where hand gestures naturally complement vocal prosody to express intent, emotion, and emphasis. While recent text-to-speech (TTS) systems have begun incorporating multimodal cues such as facial expressions or lip movements, the role of hand gestures in shaping prosody remains largely underexplored. We propose a novel multimodal TTS framework, Gesture2Speech, that leverages visual gesture cues to modulate prosody in synthesized speech. Motivated by the observation that confident and expressive speakers coordinate gestures with vocal prosody, we introduce a multimodal Mixture-of-Experts (MoE) architecture that dynamically fuses linguistic content and gesture features within a dedicated style extraction module. The fused representation conditions an LLM-based speech decoder, enabling prosodic modulation that is temporally aligned with hand movements. We further design a gesture-speech alignment loss that explicitly models their temporal correspondence to ensure fine-grained synchrony between gestures and prosodic contours. Evaluations on the PATS dataset show that Gesture2Speech outperforms state-of-the-art baselines in both speech naturalness and gesture-speech synchrony. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first work to utilize hand gesture cues for prosody control in neural speech synthesis. Demo samples are available at https://research.sri-media-analysis.com/aaai26-beeu-gesture2speech/
comment: Accepted at The 2nd International Workshop on Bodily Expressed Emotion Understanding (BEEU) at AAAI 2026 [non-archival]
☆ Plug-and-Steer: Decoupling Separation and Selection in Audio-Visual Target Speaker Extraction
The goal of this paper is to provide a new perspective on audio-visual target speaker extraction (AV-TSE) by decoupling the separation and target selection. Conventional AV-TSE systems typically integrate audio and visual features deeply to re-learn the entire separation process, which can act as a fidelity ceiling due to the noisy nature of in-the-wild audio-visual datasets. To address this, we propose Plug-and-Steer, which assigns high-fidelity separation to a frozen audio-only backbone and limits the role of visual modality strictly to target selection. We introduce the Latent Steering Matrix (LSM), a minimalist linear transformation that re-routes latent features within the backbone to anchor the target speaker to a designated channel. Experiments across four representative architectures show that our method effectively preserves the acoustic priors of diverse backbones, achieving perceptual quality comparable to the original backbones. Audio samples are available at: https://plugandsteer.github.io
comment: Submitted to Interspeech 2026; demo available https://plugandsteer.github.io
♻ ☆ Principled Multimodal Representation Learning
Multimodal representation learning seeks to create a unified representation space by integrating diverse data modalities to improve multimodal understanding. Traditional methods often depend on pairwise contrastive learning, which relies on a predefined anchor modality, restricting alignment across all modalities. Recent advances have investigated the simultaneous alignment of multiple modalities, yet several challenges remain, such as limitations imposed by fixed anchor points and instability arising from optimizing the product of singular values. To address the challenges, in this paper, we propose Principled Multimodal Representation Learning (PMRL), a novel framework that achieves simultaneous alignment of multiple modalities without anchor dependency in a more stable manner. Specifically, grounded in the theoretical insight that full alignment corresponds to a rank-1 Gram matrix, PMRL optimizes the dominant singular value of the representation matrix to align modalities along a shared leading direction. We propose a softmax-based loss function that treats singular values as logits to prioritize the largest singular value. Besides, instance-wise contrastive regularization on the leading eigenvectors maintains inter-instance separability and prevents representation collapse. Extensive experiments across diverse tasks demonstrate PMRL's superiority compared to baseline methods. Source code can be found in https://github.com/Xiaohao-Liu/PMRL.
comment: Accepted by IEEE TPAMI 2026
♻ ☆ AC-Foley: Reference-Audio-Guided Video-to-Audio Synthesis with Acoustic Transfer ICLR 2026
Existing video-to-audio (V2A) generation methods predominantly rely on text prompts alongside visual information to synthesize audio. However, two critical bottlenecks persist: semantic granularity gaps in training data, such as conflating acoustically distinct sounds under coarse labels, and textual ambiguity in describing micro-acoustic features. These bottlenecks make it difficult to perform fine-grained sound synthesis using text-controlled modes. To address these limitations, we propose AC-Foley, an audio-conditioned V2A model that directly leverages reference audio to achieve precise and fine-grained control over generated sounds. This approach enables fine-grained sound synthesis, timbre transfer, zero-shot sound generation, and improved audio quality. By directly conditioning on audio signals, our approach bypasses the semantic ambiguities of text descriptions while enabling precise manipulation of acoustic attributes. Empirically, AC-Foley achieves state-of-the-art performance for Foley generation when conditioned on reference audio, while remaining competitive with state-of-the-art video-to-audio methods even without audio conditioning. Code and demo are available at: https://ff2416.github.io/AC-Foley-Page
comment: Accepted at ICLR 2026. 15 pages, 5 figures, add project webpage
Information Retrieval
☆ Inducing Sustained Creativity and Diversity in Large Language Models
We address a not-widely-recognized subset of exploratory search, where a user sets out on a typically long "search quest" for the perfect wedding dress, overlooked research topic, killer company idea, etc. The first few outputs of current large language models (LLMs) may be helpful but only as a start, since the quest requires learning the search space and evaluating many diverse and creative alternatives along the way. Although LLMs encode an impressive fraction of the world's knowledge, common decoding methods are narrowly optimized for prompts with correct answers and thus return mostly homogeneous and conventional results. Other approaches, including those designed to increase diversity across a small set of answers, start to repeat themselves long before search quest users learn enough to make final choices, or offer a uniform type of "creativity" to every user asking similar questions. We develop a novel, easy-to-implement decoding scheme that induces sustained creativity and diversity in LLMs, producing as many conceptually unique results as desired, even without access to the inner workings of an LLM's vector space. The algorithm unlocks an LLM's vast knowledge, both orthodox and heterodox, well beyond modal decoding paths. With this approach, search quest users can more quickly explore the search space and find satisfying answers.
☆ Bypassing Document Ingestion: An MCP Approach to Financial Q&A
Answering financial questions is often treated as an information retrieval problem. In practice, however, much of the relevant information is already available in curated vendor systems, especially for quantitative analysis. We study whether, and under which conditions, Model Context Protocol (MCP) offers a more reliable alternative to standard retrieval-augmented generation (RAG) by allowing large language models (LLMs) to interact directly with data rather than relying on document ingestion and chunk retrieval. We test this by building a custom MCP server that exposes LSEG APIs as tools and evaluating it on the FinDER benchmark. The approach performs particularly well on the Financials subset, achieving up to 80.4% accuracy on multi-step numerical questions when relevant context is retrieved. The paper thus provides both a baseline for MCP-based financial question answering (QA) and evidence on where this approach breaks down, such as for questions requiring qualitative or document-specific context. Overall, direct access to curated data is a lightweight and effective alternative to document-centric RAG for quantitative financial QA, but not a substitute for all financial QA tasks.
comment: 19 pages, 10 figures
☆ BubbleRAG: Evidence-Driven Retrieval-Augmented Generation for Black-Box Knowledge Graphs
Large Language Models (LLMs) exhibit hallucinations in knowledge-intensive tasks. Graph-based retrieval augmented generation (RAG) has emerged as a promising solution, yet existing approaches suffer from fundamental recall and precision limitations when operating over black-box knowledge graphs -- graphs whose schema and structure are unknown in advance. We identify three core challenges that cause recall loss (semantic instantiation uncertainty and structural path uncertainty) and precision loss (evidential comparison uncertainty). To address these challenges, we formalize the retrieval task as the Optimal Informative Subgraph Retrieval (OISR) problem -- a variant of Group Steiner Tree -- and prove it to be NP-hard and APX-hard. We propose BubbleRAG, a training-free pipeline that systematically optimizes for both recall and precision through semantic anchor grouping, heuristic bubble expansion to discover candidate evidence graphs (CEGs), composite ranking, and reasoning-aware expansion. Experiments on multi-hop QA benchmarks demonstrate that BubbleRAG achieves state-of-the-art results, outperforming strong baselines in both F1 and accuracy while remaining plug-and-play.
comment: Technical Report
☆ Comparative Analysis of Large Language Models in Generating Telugu Responses for Maternal Health Queries
Large Language Models (LLMs) have been progressively exhibiting there capabilities in various areas of research. The performance of the LLMs in acute maternal healthcare area, predominantly in low resource languages like Telugu, Hindi, Tamil, Urdu etc are still unstudied. This study presents how ChatGPT-4o, GeminiAI, and Perplexity AI respond to pregnancy related questions asked in different languages. A bilingual dataset is used to obtain results by applying the semantic similarity metrics (BERT Score) and expert assessments from expertise gynecologists. Multiple parameters like accuracy, fluency, relevance, coherence and completeness are taken into consideration by the gynecologists to rate the responses generated by the LLMs. Gemini excels in other LLMs in terms of producing accurate and coherent pregnancy relevant responses in Telugu, while Perplexity demonstrated well when the prompts were in Telugu. ChatGPT's performance can be improved. The results states that both selecting an LLM and prompting language plays a crucial role in retrieving the information. Altogether, we emphasize for the improvement of LLMs assistance in regional languages for healthcare purposes.
☆ Spectral Tempering for Embedding Compression in Dense Passage Retrieval
Dimensionality reduction is critical for deploying dense retrieval systems at scale, yet mainstream post-hoc methods face a fundamental trade-off: principal component analysis (PCA) preserves dominant variance but underutilizes representational capacity, while whitening enforces isotropy at the cost of amplifying noise in the heavy-tailed eigenspectrum of retrieval embeddings. Intermediate spectral scaling methods unify these extremes by reweighting dimensions with a power coefficient $γ$, but treat $γ$ as a fixed hyperparameter that requires task-specific tuning. We show that the optimal scaling strength $γ$ is not a global constant: it varies systematically with target dimensionality $k$ and is governed by the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) of the retained subspace. Based on this insight, we propose Spectral Tempering (\textbf{SpecTemp}), a learning-free method that derives an adaptive $γ(k)$ directly from the corpus eigenspectrum using local SNR analysis and knee-point normalization, requiring no labeled data or validation-based search. Extensive experiments demonstrate that Spectral Tempering consistently achieves near-oracle performance relative to grid-searched $γ^*(k)$ while remaining fully learning-free and model-agnostic. Our code is publicly available at https://anonymous.4open.science/r/SpecTemp-0D37.
☆ Benchmarking PDF Parsers on Table Extraction with LLM-based Semantic Evaluation ICDAR 2026
Reliably extracting tables from PDFs is essential for large-scale scientific data mining and knowledge base construction, yet existing evaluation approaches rely on rule-based metrics that fail to capture semantic equivalence of table content. We present a benchmarking framework based on synthetically generated PDFs with precise LaTeX ground truth, using tables sourced from arXiv to ensure realistic complexity and diversity. As our central methodological contribution, we apply LLM-as-a-judge for semantic table evaluation, integrated into a matching pipeline that accommodates inconsistencies in parser outputs. Through a human validation study comprising over 1,500 quality judgments on extracted table pairs, we show that LLM-based evaluation achieves substantially higher correlation with human judgment (Pearson r=0.93) compared to Tree Edit Distance-based Similarity (TEDS, r=0.68) and Grid Table Similarity (GriTS, r=0.70). Evaluating 21 contemporary PDF parsers across 100 synthetic documents containing 451 tables reveals significant performance disparities. Our results offer practical guidance for selecting parsers for tabular data extraction and establish a reproducible, scalable evaluation methodology for this critical task. Code and data: https://github.com/phorn1/pdf-parse-bench Metric study and human evaluation: https://github.com/phorn1/table-metric-study
comment: Submitted to ICDAR 2026
☆ Interplay: Training Independent Simulators for Reference-Free Conversational Recommendation ECIR 2026
Training conversational recommender systems (CRS) requires extensive dialogue data, which is challenging to collect at scale. To address this, researchers have used simulated user-recommender conversations. Traditional simulation approaches often utilize a single large language model (LLM) that generates entire conversations with prior knowledge of the target items, leading to scripted and artificial dialogues. We propose a reference-free simulation framework that trains two independent LLMs, one as the user and one as the conversational recommender. These models interact in real-time without access to predetermined target items, but preference summaries and target attributes, enabling the recommender to genuinely infer user preferences through dialogue. This approach produces more realistic and diverse conversations that closely mirror authentic human-AI interactions. Our reference-free simulators match or exceed existing methods in quality, while offering a scalable solution for generating high-quality conversational recommendation data without constraining conversations to pre-defined target items. We conduct both quantitative and human evaluations to confirm the effectiveness of our reference-free approach.
comment: Accepted at ECIR 2026
☆ Latent Factor Modeling with Expert Network for Multi-Behavior Recommendation
Traditional recommendation methods, which typically focus on modeling a single user behavior (e.g., purchase), often face severe data sparsity issues. Multi-behavior recommendation methods offer a promising solution by leveraging user data from diverse behaviors. However, most existing approaches entangle multiple behavioral factors, learning holistic but imprecise representations that fail to capture specific user intents. To address this issue, we propose a multi-behavior method by modeling latent factors with an expert network (MBLFE). In our approach, we design a gating expert network, where the expert network models all latent factors within the entire recommendation scenario, with each expert specializing in a specific latent factor. The gating network dynamically selects the optimal combination of experts for each user, enabling a more accurate representation of user preferences. To ensure independence among experts and factor consistency of a particular expert, we incorporate self-supervised learning during the training process. Furthermore, we enrich embeddings with multi-behavior data to provide the expert network with more comprehensive collaborative information for factor extraction. Extensive experiments on three real-world datasets demonstrate that our method significantly outperforms state-of-the-art baselines, validating its effectiveness.
☆ Total Recall QA: A Verifiable Evaluation Suite for Deep Research Agents
Deep research agents have emerged as LLM-based systems designed to perform multi-step information seeking and reasoning over large, open-domain sources to answer complex questions by synthesizing information from multiple information sources. Given the complexity of the task and despite various recent efforts, evaluation of deep research agents remains fundamentally challenging. This paper identifies a list of requirements and optional properties for evaluating deep research agents. We observe that existing benchmarks do not satisfy all identified requirements. Inspired by prior research on TREC Total Recall Tracks, we introduce the task of Total Recall Question Answering and develop a framework for deep research agents evaluation that satisfies the identified criteria. Our framework constructs single-answer, total recall queries with precise evaluation and relevance judgments derived from a structured knowledge base paired with a text corpus, enabling large-scale data construction. Using this framework, we build TRQA, a deep research benchmark constructed from Wikidata-Wikipedia as a real-world source and a synthetically generated e-commerce knowledge base and corpus to mitigate the effects of data contamination. We benchmark the collection with representative retriever and deep research models and establish baseline retrieval and end-to-end results for future comparative evaluation.
comment: 7 pages, 4 figures
☆ HypeMed: Enhancing Medication Recommendations with Hypergraph-Based Patient Relationships
Medication recommendations aim to generate safe and effective medication sets from health records. However, accurately recommending medications hinges on inferring a patient's latent clinical condition from sparse and noisy observations, which requires both (i) preserving the visit-level combinatorial semantics of co-occurring entities and (ii) leveraging informative historical references through effective, visit-conditioned retrieval. Most existing methods fall short in one of both aspects: graph-based modeling often fragments higher-order intra-visit patterns into pairwise relations, while inter-visit augmentation methods commonly exhibit an imbalance between learning a globally stable representation space and performing dynamic retrieval within it. To address these limitations, this paper proposes HypeMed, a two-stage hypergraph-based framework unifying intra-visit coherence modeling and inter-visit augmentation. HypeMed consists of two core modules: MedRep for representation pre-training, and SimMR for similarity-enhanced recommendation. In the first stage, MedRep encodes clinical visits as hyperedges via knowledge-aware contrastive pre-training, creating a globally consistent, retrieval-friendly embedding space. In the second stage, SimMR performs dynamic retrieval within this space, fusing retrieved references with the patient's longitudinal data to refine medication prediction. Evaluation on real-world benchmarks shows that HypeMed outperforms state-of-the-art baselines in both recommendation precision and DDI reduction, simultaneously enhancing the effectiveness and safety of clinical decision support.
comment: Accepted by TOIS
☆ SODIUM: From Open Web Data to Queryable Databases
During research, domain experts often ask analytical questions whose answers require integrating data from a wide range of web sources. Thus, they must spend substantial effort searching, extracting, and organizing raw data before analysis can begin. We formalize this process as the SODIUM task, where we conceptualize open domains such as the web as latent databases that must be systematically instantiated to support downstream querying. Solving SODIUM requires (1) conducting in-depth and specialized exploration of the open web, which is further strengthened by (2) exploiting structural correlations for systematic information extraction and (3) integrating collected information into coherent, queryable database instances. To quantify the challenges in automating SODIUM, we construct SODIUM-Bench, a benchmark of 105 tasks derived from published academic papers across 6 domains, where systems are tasked with exploring the open web to collect and aggregate data from diverse sources into structured tables. Existing systems struggle with SODIUM tasks: we evaluate 6 advanced AI agents on SODIUM-Bench, with the strongest baseline achieving only 46.5% accuracy. To bridge this gap, we develop SODIUM-Agent, a multi-agent system composed of a web explorer and a cache manager. Powered by our proposed ATP-BFS algorithm and optimized through principled management of cached sources and navigation paths, SODIUM-Agent conducts deep and comprehensive web exploration and performs structurally coherent information extraction. SODIUM-Agent achieves 91.1% accuracy on SODIUM-Bench, outperforming the strongest baseline by approximately 2 times and the weakest by up to 73 times.
☆ From Topic to Transition Structure: Unsupervised Concept Discovery at Corpus Scale via Predictive Associative Memory
Embedding models group text by semantic content, what text is about. We show that temporal co-occurrence within texts discovers a different kind of structure: recurrent transition-structure concepts or what text does. We train a 29.4M-parameter contrastive model on 373 million co-occurrence pairs from 9,766 Project Gutenberg texts (24.96 million passages), mapping pre-trained embeddings into an association space where passages with similar transition structure cluster together. Under capacity constraint (42.75% accuracy), the model must compress across recurring patterns rather than memorise individual co-occurrences. Clustering at six granularities (k=50 to k=2,000) produces a multi-resolution concept map; from broad modes like "direct confrontation" and "lyrical meditation" to precise registers and scene templates like "sailor dialect" and "courtroom cross-examination." At k=100, clusters average 4,508 books each (of 9,766), confirming corpus-wide patterns. Direct comparison with embedding-similarity clustering shows that raw embeddings group by topic while association-space clusters group by function, register, and literary tradition. Unseen novels are assigned to existing clusters without retraining; the association model concentrates each novel into a selective subset of coherent clusters, while raw embedding assignment saturates nearly all clusters. Validation controls address positional, length, and book-concentration confounds. The method extends Predictive Associative Memory (PAM, arXiv:2602.11322) from episodic recall to concept formation: where PAM recalls specific associations, multi-epoch contrastive training under compression extracts structural patterns that transfer to unseen texts, the same framework producing qualitatively different behaviour in a different regime.
comment: 22 pages, 5 figures. Code and demo: https://github.com/EridosAI/PAM-Concept-Discovery
♻ ☆ Enhancing Lexicon-Based Text Embeddings with Large Language Models ACL 2025
Recent large language models (LLMs) have demonstrated exceptional performance on general-purpose text embedding tasks. While dense embeddings have dominated related research, we introduce the first lexicon-based embeddings (LENS) leveraging LLMs that achieve competitive performance on these tasks. LENS consolidates the vocabulary space through token embedding clustering to handle the issue of token redundancy in LLM vocabularies. To further improve performance, we investigate bidirectional attention and various pooling strategies. Specifically, LENS simplifies lexical matching with redundant vocabularies by assigning each dimension to a specific token cluster, where semantically similar tokens are grouped together. Extensive experiments demonstrate that LENS outperforms dense embeddings on the Massive Text Embedding Benchmark (MTEB), delivering compact representations with dimensionality comparable to dense counterparts. Furthermore, LENS inherently supports efficient embedding dimension pruning without any specialized objectives like Matryoshka Representation Learning. Notably, combining LENS with dense embeddings achieves state-of-the-art performance on the retrieval subset of MTEB (i.e., BEIR).
comment: ACL 2025
♻ ☆ ClinicalTrialsHub: Bridging Registries and Literature for Comprehensive Clinical Trial Access
We present ClinicalTrialsHub, an interactive search-focused platform that consolidates all data from ClinicalTrials.gov and augments it by automatically extracting and structuring trial-relevant information from PubMed research articles. Our system effectively increases access to structured clinical trial data by 83.8% compared to relying on ClinicalTrials.gov alone, with potential to make access easier for patients, clinicians, researchers, and policymakers, advancing evidence-based medicine. ClinicalTrialsHub uses large language models such as GPT-5.1 and Gemini-3-Pro to enhance accessibility. The platform automatically parses full-text research articles to extract structured trial information, translates user queries into structured database searches, and provides an attributed question-answering system that generates evidence-grounded answers linked to specific source sentences. We demonstrate its utility through a user study involving clinicians, clinical researchers, and PhD students of pharmaceutical sciences and nursing, and a systematic automatic evaluation of its information extraction and question answering capabilities.
♻ ☆ Milco: Learned Sparse Retrieval Across Languages via a Multilingual Connector ICLR 2026
Learned Sparse Retrieval (LSR) combines the efficiency of bi-encoders with the transparency of lexical matching, but existing approaches struggle to scale beyond English. We introduce MILCO, an LSR architecture that maps queries and documents from different languages into a shared English lexical space via a multilingual connector. MILCO is trained with a specialized two-stage regime that combines Sparse Alignment Pretraining with contrastive training to provide representation transparency and effectiveness while mitigating semantic collapse. Motivated by the observation that uncommon entities are often lost when projected into English, we propose a new LexEcho head, which enhances robustness by augmenting the English lexical representation with a source-language view obtained through a special [ECHO] token. MILCO achieves state-of-the-art multilingual and cross-lingual LSR performance, outperforming leading dense, sparse, and multi-vector baselines such as BGE-M3 and Qwen3-Embed on standard multilingual benchmarks, while supporting dynamic efficiency through post-hoc pruning. Notably, when using mass-based pruning to reduce document representations to only 30 active dimensions on average, MILCO 560M outperforms the similarly-sized Qwen3-Embed 0.6B with 1024 dimensions, while achieving 3$\times$ lower retrieval latency and 10$\times$ smaller index size.
comment: ICLR 2026
♻ ☆ CADGL: Context-Aware Deep Graph Learning for Predicting Drug-Drug Interactions
Examining Drug-Drug Interactions (DDIs) is a pivotal element in the process of drug development. DDIs occur when one drug's properties are affected by the inclusion of other drugs. Detecting favorable DDIs has the potential to pave the way for creating and advancing innovative medications applicable in practical settings. However, existing DDI prediction models continue to face challenges related to generalization in extreme cases, robust feature extraction, and real-life application possibilities. We aim to address these challenges by leveraging the effectiveness of context-aware deep graph learning by introducing a novel framework named CADGL. Based on a customized variational graph autoencoder (VGAE), we capture critical structural and physio-chemical information using two context preprocessors for feature extraction from two different perspectives: local neighborhood and molecular context, in a heterogeneous graphical structure. Our customized VGAE consists of a graph encoder, a latent information encoder, and an MLP decoder. CADGL surpasses other state-of-the-art DDI prediction models, excelling in predicting clinically valuable novel DDIs, supported by rigorous case studies. CADGL is vailable at: https://github.com/azminewasi/cadgl
comment: Preliminary version; full version accepted to the IEEE Transactions on Computational Biology and Bioinformatics (IEEE TCBB) (https://doi.org/10.1109/TCBBIO.2026.3675142). Code: https://github.com/azminewasi/cadgl
♻ ☆ Page image classification for content-specific data processing
Digitization projects in humanities often generate vast quantities of page images from historical documents, presenting significant challenges for manual sorting and analysis. These archives contain diverse content, including various text types (handwritten, typed, printed), graphical elements (drawings, maps, photos), and layouts (plain text, tables, forms). Efficiently processing this heterogeneous data requires automated methods to categorize pages based on their content, enabling tailored downstream analysis pipelines. This project addresses this need by developing and evaluating an image classification system specifically designed for historical document pages, leveraging advancements in artificial intelligence and machine learning. The set of categories was chosen to facilitate content-specific processing workflows, separating pages requiring different analysis techniques (e.g., OCR for text, image analysis for graphics)
comment: 69 pages, 68 figures, 30 tables
♻ ☆ Transformers Remember First, Forget Last: Dual-Process Interference in LLMs
When large language models encounter conflicting information in context, which memories survive -- early or recent? We adapt classical interference paradigms from cognitive psychology to answer this question, testing 39 LLMs across diverse architectures and scales. Every model shows the same pattern: proactive interference (PI) dominates retroactive interference (RI) universally (Cohen's d = 1.73, p < 0.0001), meaning early encodings are protected at the cost of recent information -- the opposite of human memory, where RI typically dominates. Three findings indicate that RI and PI reflect separate memory mechanisms. RI and PI are uncorrelated (R^2 = 0.044), rejecting a unified "memory capacity." Model size predicts RI resistance (R^2 = 0.49) but not PI (R^2 = 0.06, n.s.) -- only RI is capacity-dependent. And error analysis reveals distinct failure modes: RI failures are passive retrieval failures (51%), while PI failures show active primacy intrusion (56%); both show <1% hallucination. These patterns parallel the consolidation-retrieval distinction in cognitive science, suggesting that transformer attention creates a primacy bias with direct implications for interference-heavy applications.
comment: 16 pages, 10 figures. Under review
♻ ☆ GRank: Towards Target-Aware and Streamlined Industrial Retrieval with a Generate-Rank Framework WWW'26
Industrial-scale recommender systems rely on a cascade pipeline in which the retrieval stage must return a high-recall candidate set from billions of items under tight latency. Existing solutions ei- ther (i) suffer from limited expressiveness in capturing fine-grained user-item interactions, as seen in decoupled dual-tower architectures that rely on separate encoders, or generative models that lack precise target-aware matching capabilities, or (ii) build structured indices (tree, graph, quantization) whose item-centric topologies struggle to incorporate dynamic user preferences and incur prohibitive construction and maintenance costs. We present GRank, a novel structured-index-free retrieval paradigm that seamlessly unifies target-aware learning with user-centric retrieval. Our key innovations include: (1) A target-aware Generator trained to perform personalized candidate generation via GPU-accelerated MIPS, eliminating semantic drift and maintenance costs of structured indexing; (2) A lightweight but powerful Ranker that performs fine-grained, candidate-specific inference on small subsets; (3) An end-to-end multi-task learning framework that ensures semantic consistency between generation and ranking objectives. Extensive experiments on two public benchmarks and a billion-item production corpus demonstrate that GRank improves Recall@500 by over 30% and 1.7$\times$ the P99 QPS of state-of-the-art tree- and graph-based retrievers. GRank has been fully deployed in production in our recommendation platform since Q2 2025, serving 400 million active users with 99.95% service availability. Online A/B tests confirm significant improvements in core engagement metrics, with Total App Usage Time increasing by 0.160% in the main app and 0.165% in the Lite version.
comment: Accepted by WWW'26
♻ ☆ Membership Inference Attack against Large Language Model-based Recommendation Systems: A New Distillation-based Paradigm
Membership Inference Attack (MIA) aims to determine whether a specific data sample was included in the training dataset of a target model. Traditional MIA approaches rely on shadow models to mimic target model behavior, but their effectiveness diminishes for Large Language Model (LLM)-based recommendation systems due to the scale and complexity of training data. This paper introduces a novel knowledge distillation-based MIA paradigm tailored for LLM-based recommendation systems. Our method constructs a reference model via distillation, applying distinct strategies for member and non-member data to enhance discriminative capabilities. The paradigm extracts fused features (e.g., confidence, entropy, loss, and hidden layer vectors) from the reference model to train an attack model, overcoming limitations of individual features. Extensive experiments on extended datasets (Last.FM, MovieLens, Book-Crossing, Delicious) and diverse LLMs (T5, GPT-2, LLaMA3) demonstrate that our approach significantly outperforms shadow model-based MIAs and individual-feature baselines. The results show its practicality for privacy attacks in LLM-driven recommender systems.
♻ ☆ From Logs to Language: Learning Optimal Verbalization for LLM-Based Recommendation at Industry Scale
Large language models (LLMs) are promising backbones for generative recommender systems, yet a key challenge remains underexplored: verbalization, i.e., converting structured user interaction logs into effective natural language inputs. Existing methods rely on rigid templates that simply concatenate fields, yielding suboptimal representations for recommendation. We propose a data-centric framework that learns verbalization for LLM-based recommendation. Using reinforcement learning, a verbalization agent transforms raw interaction histories into optimized textual contexts, with recommendation accuracy as the training signal. This agent learns to filter noise, incorporate relevant metadata, and reorganize information to improve downstream predictions. Experiments on a large-scale industrial streaming dataset from Netflix show that learned verbalization delivers up to 93% relative improvement in discovery item recommendation accuracy over template-based baselines. Further analysis reveals emergent strategies such as user interest summarization, noise removal, and syntax normalization, offering insights into effective context construction for LLM-based recommender systems.
comment: Work in progress
Multimedia
☆ EARTalking: End-to-end GPT-style Autoregressive Talking Head Synthesis with Frame-wise Control
Audio-driven talking head generation aims to create vivid and realistic videos from a static portrait and speech. Existing AR-based methods rely on intermediate facial representations, which limit their expressiveness and realism. Meanwhile, diffusion-based methods generate clip-by-clip, lacking fine-grained control and causing inherent latency due to overall denoising across the window. To address these limitations, we propose EARTalking, a novel end-to-end, GPT-style autoregressive model for interactive audio-driven talking head generation. Our method introduces a novel frame-by-frame, in-context, audio-driven streaming generation paradigm. For inherently supporting variable-length video generation with identity consistency, we propose the Sink Frame Window Attention (SFA) mechanism. Furthermore, to avoid the complex, separate networks that prior works required for diverse control signals, we propose a streaming Frame Condition In-Context (FCIC) scheme. This scheme efficiently injects diverse control signals in a streaming, in-context manner, enabling interactive control at every frame and at arbitrary moments. Experiments demonstrate that EARTalking outperforms existing autoregressive methods and achieves performance comparable to diffusion-based methods. Our work demonstrates the feasibility of in-context streaming autoregressive control, unlocking a scalable direction for flexible, efficient generation. The code will be released for reproducibility.
☆ Through the Looking-Glass: AI-Mediated Video Communication Reduces Interpersonal Trust and Confidence in Judgments
AI-based tools that mediate, enhance or generate parts of video communication may interfere with how people evaluate trustworthiness and credibility. In two preregistered online experiments (N = 2,000), we examined whether AI-mediated video retouching, background replacement and avatars affect interpersonal trust, people's ability to detect lies and confidence in their judgments. Participants watched short videos of speakers making truthful or deceptive statements across three conditions with varying levels of AI mediation. We observed that perceived trust and confidence in judgments declined in AI-mediated videos, particularly in settings in which some participants used avatars while others did not. However, participants' actual judgment accuracy remained unchanged, and they were no more inclined to suspect those using AI tools of lying. Our findings provide evidence against concerns that AI mediation undermines people's ability to distinguish truth from lies, and against cue-based accounts of lie detection more generally. They highlight the importance of trustworthy AI mediation tools in contexts where not only truth, but also trust and confidence matter.
☆ AU Codes, Language, and Synthesis: Translating Anatomy to Text for Facial Behavior Synthesis
Facial behavior synthesis remains a critical yet underexplored challenge. While text-to-face models have made progress, they often rely on coarse emotion categories, which lack the nuance needed to capture the full spectrum of human nonverbal communication. Action Units (AUs) provide a more precise and anatomically grounded alternative. However, current AU-based approaches typically encode AUs as one-hot vectors, modeling compound expressions as simple linear combinations of individual AUs. This linearity becomes problematic when handling conflicting AUs--defined as those which activate the same facial muscle with opposing actions. Such cases lead to anatomically implausible artifacts and unnatural motion superpositions. To address this, we propose a novel method that represents facial behavior through natural language descriptions of AUs. This approach preserves the expressiveness of the AU framework while enabling explicit modeling of complex and conflicting AUs. It also unlocks the potential of modern text-to-image models for high-fidelity facial synthesis. Supporting this direction, we introduce BP4D-AUText, the first large-scale text-image paired dataset for complex facial behavior. It is synthesized by applying a rule-based Dynamic AU Text Processor to the BP4D and BP4D+ datasets. We further propose VQ-AUFace, a generative model that leverages facial structural priors to synthesize realistic and diverse facial behaviors from text. Extensive quantitative experiments and user studies demonstrate that our approach significantly outperforms existing methods. It excels in generating facial expressions that are anatomically plausible, behaviorally rich, and perceptually convincing, particularly under challenging conditions involving conflicting AUs.
☆ Modeling the Impacts of Swipe Delay on User Quality of Experience in Short Video Streaming
Short video streaming platforms have gained immense popularity in recent years, transforming the way users consume video content. A critical aspect of user interaction with these platforms is the swipe gesture, which allows users to navigate through videos seamlessly. However, the delay between a user's swipe action and the subsequent video playback can significantly impact the overall user experience. This paper presents the first systematic study investigating the effects of swipe delay on user Quality of Experience (QoE) in short video streaming. In particular, we conduct a subjective quality assessment containing 132 swipe delay patterns. The obtained results show that user experience is affected not only by the swipe delay duration, but also by the number of delays and their temporal positions. A single delay of eight seconds or longer is likely to lead to user dissatisfaction. Moreover, early-session delays are less harmful to user QoE than late-session delays. Based on the findings, we propose a novel QoE model that accurately predicts user experience based on swipe delay characteristics. The proposed model demonstrates high correlation with subjective ratings, outperforming existing models in short video streaming.
☆ Rethink Web Service Resilience in Space: A Radiation-Aware and Sustainable Transmission Solution WWW 2026
Low Earth Orbit (LEO) satellite networks such as Starlink and Project Kuiper are increasingly integrated with cloud infrastructures, forming an important internet backbone for global web services. By extending connectivity to remote regions, oceans, and disaster zones, these networks enable reliable access to applications ranging from real-time WebRTC communication to emergency response portals. Yet the resilience of these web services is threatened by space radiation: it degrades hardware, drains batteries, and disrupts continuity, even if the space-cloud integrated providers use machine learning to analyze space weather and radiation data. Specifically, conventional fixes like altitude adjustments and thermal annealing consume energy; neglecting this energy use results in deep discharge and faster battery aging, whereas sleep modes risk abrupt web session interruptions. Efficient network-layer mitigation remains a critical gap. We propose RALT (Radiation-Aware LEO Transmission), a control-plane solution that dynamically reroutes traffic during radiation events, accounting for energy constraints to minimize battery degradation and sustain service performance. Our work shows that unlocking space-based web services' full potential for global reliable connectivity requires rethinking resilience through the lens of the space environment itself.
comment: This paper has been accepted at WWW 2026
♻ ☆ MRD: Multi-resolution Retrieval-Detection Fusion for High-Resolution Image Understanding CVPR 2026
Understanding high-resolution (HR) images remains a critical challenge for multimodal large language models (MLLMs). Recent approaches leverage vision-based retrieval-augmented generation (RAG) to retrieve query-relevant crops from HR images, improving understanding capacity of MLLMs. However, this paradigm often leads to object fragmentation, resulting in semantic bias and incomplete retrieval, while also introducing false positives from irrelevant background patches. To address these issues, we propose Multi-resolution Retrieval-Detection (MRD), a training-free framework that enhances HR image understanding from both local and global perspectives. Locally, MRD enforces cross-scale semantic consistency via multi-resolution semantic fusion to mitigate single-resolution bias and alleviate object fragmentation. Globally, it integrates open-vocabulary object detection (OVD) as localization priors within a unified framework. Extensive experiments across multiple MLLMs on HR image benchmarks demonstrate that MRD achieves state-of-the-art (SOTA) performance on both single-object and multi-object understanding tasks. Code will be available at: https://github.com/yf0412/MRD.
comment: Accepted to CVPR 2026
♻ ☆ CoPRS: Learning Positional Prior from Chain-of-Thought for Reasoning Segmentation ICLR 2026
Existing works on reasoning segmentation either connect hidden features from a language model directly to a mask decoder or represent positions in text, which limits interpretability and semantic detail. To solve this, we present CoPRS, a Multi-modal Chain-of-Thought (MCoT)-based positional perception model that bridges language reasoning to segmentation through a differentiable and interpretable positional prior instantiated as a heatmap. By making the reasoning process clear via MCoT and expressing it as a dense, differentiable heatmap, this interface enhances interpretability and diagnostic analysis and yields more concentrated evidence on the target. A learnable concentration token aggregates features of the image and reasoning text to generate this positional prior, which is decoded to precise masks through a lightweight decoder, providing a direct connection between reasoning and segmentation. Across the RefCOCO series and ReasonSeg, CoPRS matches or surpasses the best reported metrics on each standard split under comparable protocols, with performance at or above the prior state of the art across both validation and test partitions. Extensive experiments demonstrate a strong positive correlation among the CoT trajectory, the generated heatmap, and the decoded mask, supporting an interpretable alignment between the reasoning output and downstream mask generation. Collectively, these findings support the utility of this paradigm in bridging reasoning and segmentation and show advantages in concentration driven by reasoning and in more precise mask prediction. Code has been released at https://github.com/ZhenyuLU-Heliodore/CoPRS.
comment: Accepted to ICLR 2026. 20 pages, 8 figures, 4 tables
♻ ☆ MSM-BD: Multimodal Social Media Bot Detection Using Heterogeneous Information
Although social bots can be engineered for constructive applications, their potential for misuse in manipulative schemes and malware distribution cannot be overlooked. This dichotomy underscores the critical need to detect social bots on social media platforms. Advances in artificial intelligence have improved the abilities of social bots, allowing them to generate content that is almost indistinguishable from human-created content. These advancements require the development of more advanced detection techniques to accurately identify these automated entities. Given the heterogeneous information landscape on social media, spanning images, texts, and user statistical features, we propose MSM-BD, a Multimodal Social Media Bot Detection approach using heterogeneous information. MSM-BD incorporates specialized encoders for heterogeneous information and introduces a cross-modal fusion technology, Cross-Modal Residual Cross-Attention (CMRCA), to enhance detection accuracy. We validate the effectiveness of our model through extensive experiments using the TwiBot-22 dataset.
comment: Springer Nature in Studies in Computational Intelligence
Information Retrieval
☆ Auditing Preferences for Brands and Cultures in LLMs
Large language models (LLMs) based AI systems increasingly mediate what billions of people see, choose and buy. This creates an urgent need to quantify the systemic risks of LLM-driven market intermediation, including its implications for market fairness, competition, and the diversity of information exposure. This paper introduces ChoiceEval, a reproducible framework for auditing preferences for brands and cultures in large language models (LLMs) under realistic usage conditions. ChoiceEval addresses two core technical challenges: (i) generating realistic, persona-diverse evaluation queries and (ii) converting free-form outputs into comparable choice sets and quantitative preference metrics. For a given topic (e.g. running shoes, hotel chains, travel destinations), the framework segments users into psychographic profiles (e.g., budget-conscious, wellness-focused, convenience), and then derives diverse prompts that reflect real-world advice-seeking and decision-making behaviour. LLM responses are converted into normalised top-k choice sets. Preference and geographic bias are then quantified using comparable metrics across topics and personas. Thus, ChoiceEval provides a scalable audit pipeline for researchers, platforms, and regulators, linking model behaviour to real-world economic outcomes. Applied to Gemini, GPT, and DeepSeek across 10 topics spanning commerce and culture and more than 2,000 questions, ChoiceEval reveals consistent preferences: U.S.-developed models Gemini and GPT show marked favouritism toward American entities, while China-developed DeepSeek exhibits more balanced yet still detectable geographic preferences. These patterns persist across user personas, suggesting systematic rather than incidental effects.
comment: 20 pages, 2 figures
☆ Average Case Graph Searching in Non-Uniform Cost Models
We consider the following generalization of the classic Binary Search Problem: a searcher is required to find a hidden target vertex $x$ in a graph $G$, by iteratively performing queries about vertices. A query to $v$ incurs a cost $c(v, x)$ and responds whether $v=x$ and if not, returns the connected component in $G-v$ containing $x$. The goal is to design a search strategy that minimizes the average-case search cost. Firstly, we consider the case when the cost of querying a vertex is independent of the target. We develop a $\br{4+ε}$-approximation FPTAS for trees running in $O(n^4/ε^2)$ time and an $O({\sqrt{\log n}})$-approximation for general graphs. Additionally, we give an FPTAS parametrized by the number of non-leaf vertices of the graph. On the hardness side we prove that the problem is NP-hard even when the input is a tree with bounded degree or bounded diameter. Secondly, we consider trees and assume $c(v, x)$ to be a monotone non-decreasing function with respect to $x$, i.e.\ if $u \in P_{v, x}$ then $c(u, x) \leq c(v, x)$. We give a $2$-approximation algorithm which can also be easily altered to work for the worst-case variant. This is the first constant factor approximation algorithm for both criterions. Previously known results only regard the worst-case search cost and include a parametrized PTAS as well as a $4$-approximation for paths. At last, we show that when the cost function is an arbitrary function of the queried vertex and the target, then the problem does not admit any constant factor approximation under the UGC, even when the input tree is a star.
comment: arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:2511.06564
☆ A Contextual Help Browser Extension to Assist Digital Illiterate Internet Users
This paper describes the design, implementation, and evaluation of a browser extension that provides contextual help to users who hover over technological acronyms and abbreviations on web pages. The extension combines a curated technical dictionary with OpenAI's large language model (LLM) to deliver on-demand definitions through lightweight tooltip overlays. A dual-layer artificial intelligence (AI) pipeline, comprising Google Cloud's Natural Language Processing (NLP) taxonomy API and OpenAI's ChatGPT, classifies each visited page as technology-related before activating the tooltip logic, thereby reducing false-positive detections. A mixed-methods study with 25 participants evaluated the tool's effect on reading comprehension and information-retrieval time among users with low to intermediate digital literacy. Results show that 92% of participants reported improved understanding of technical terms, 96% confirmed time savings over manual web searches, and all participants found the tooltips non-disruptive. Dictionary-based definitions were appended in an average of 2135 ms, compared to 16429 ms for AI-generated definitions and a mean manual search time of 17200 ms per acronym. The work demonstrates a practical, real-time approach to bridging the digital literacy gap and points toward extending contextual help to other domains such as medicine, law, and finance.
comment: 9 pages, 5 figures, 2 tables; MSc dissertation reformatted as conference paper; extended version available at github.com/unseen1980/acro-helper
☆ From Isolated Scoring to Collaborative Ranking: A Comparison-Native Framework for LLM-Based Paper Evaluation
Large language models (LLMs) are currently applied to scientific paper evaluation by assigning an absolute score to each paper independently. However, since score scales vary across conferences, time periods, and evaluation criteria, models trained on absolute scores are prone to fitting narrow, context-specific rules rather than developing robust scholarly judgment. To overcome this limitation, we propose shifting paper evaluation from isolated scoring to collaborative ranking. In particular, we design \textbf{C}omparison-\textbf{N}ative framework for \textbf{P}aper \textbf{E}valuation (\textbf{CNPE}), integrating comparison into both data construction and model learning. We first propose a graph-based similarity ranking algorithm to facilitate the sampling of more informative and discriminative paper pairs from a collection. We then enhance relative quality judgment through supervised fine-tuning and reinforcement learning with comparison-based rewards. At inference, the model performs pairwise comparisons over sampled paper pairs and aggregates these preference signals into a global relative quality ranking. Experimental results demonstrate that our framework achieves an average relative improvement of \textbf{21.8\%} over the strong baseline DeepReview-14B, while exhibiting robust generalization to five previously unseen datasets. \href{https://github.com/ECNU-Text-Computing/ComparisonReview}{Code}.
☆ Negation is Not Semantic: Diagnosing Dense Retrieval Failure Modes for Trade-offs in Contradiction-Aware Biomedical QA
Large Language Models (LLMs) have demonstrated strong capabilities in biomedical question answering, yet their tendency to generate plausible but unverified claims poses serious risks in clinical settings. To mitigate these risks, the TREC 2025 BioGen track mandates grounded answers that explicitly surface contradictory evidence (Task A) and the generation of narrative driven, fully attributed responses (Task B). Addressing the absence of target ground truth, we present a proxy-based development framework using the SciFact dataset to systematically optimize retrieval architectures. Our iterative evaluation revealed a "Simplicity Paradox": complex adversarial dense retrieval strategies failed catastrophically at contradiction detection (MRR 0.023) due to Semantic Collapse, where negation signals become indistinguishable in vector space. We further identify a Retrieval Asymmetry: filtering dense embeddings improves contradiction detection but degrades support recall, compromising reliability. We resolve this via a Decoupled Lexical Architecture built on a unified BM25 backbone, balancing semantic support recall (0.810) with precise contradiction surfacing (0.750). This approach achieves the highest Weighted MRR (0.790) on the proxy benchmark while remaining the only viable strategy for scaling to the 30 million document PubMed corpus. For answer generation, we introduce Narrative Aware Reranking and One-Shot In-Context Learning, improving citation coverage from 50% (zero-shot) to 100%. Official TREC results confirm our findings: our system ranks 2nd on Task A contradiction F1 and 3rd out of 50 runs on Task B citation coverage (98.77%), achieving zero citation contradict rate. Our work transforms LLMs from stochastic generators into honest evidence synthesizers, showing that epistemic integrity in biomedical AI requires precision and architectural scalability isolated metric optimization.
☆ Deploying Semantic ID-based Generative Retrieval for Large-Scale Podcast Discovery at Spotify
Podcast listening is often grounded in a set of favorite shows, while listener intent can evolve over time. This combination of stable preferences and changing intent motivates recommendation approaches that support both familiarity and exploration. Traditional recommender systems typically emphasize long-term interaction patterns, and are less explicitly designed to incorporate rich contextual signals or flexible, intent-aware discovery objectives. In this setting, models that can jointly reason over semantics, context, and user state offer a promising direction. Large Language Models (LLMs) provide strong semantic reasoning and contextual conditioning for discovery-oriented recommendation, but deploying them in production introduces challenges in catalog grounding, user-level personalization, and latency-critical serving. We address these challenges with GLIDE, a production-scale generative recommender for podcast discovery at Spotify. GLIDE formulates recommendation as an instruction-following task over a discretized catalog using Semantic IDs, enabling grounded generation over a large inventory. The model conditions on recent listening history and lightweight user context, while injecting long-term user embeddings as soft prompts to capture stable preferences under strict inference constraints. We evaluate GLIDE using offline retrieval metrics, human judgments, and LLM-based evaluation, and validate its impact through large-scale online A/B testing. Across experiments involving millions of users, GLIDE increases non-habitual podcast streaming on Spotify home surface by up to 5.4% and new-show discovery by up to 14.3%, while meeting production cost and latency constraints.
☆ A Unified Language Model for Large Scale Search, Recommendation, and Reasoning
LLMs are increasingly applied to recommendation, retrieval, and reasoning, yet deploying a single end-to-end model that can jointly support these behaviors over large, heterogeneous catalogs remains challenging. Such systems must generate unambiguous references to real items, handle multiple entity types, and operate under strict latency and reliability constraints requirements that are difficult to satisfy with text-only generation. While tool-augmented recommender systems address parts of this problem, they introduce orchestration complexity and limit end-to-end optimization. We view this setting as an instance of a broader research problem: how to adapt LLMs to reason jointly over multiple-domain entities, users, and language in a fully self-contained manner. To this end, we introduce NEO, a framework that adapts a pre-trained decoder-only LLM into a tool-free, catalog-grounded generator. NEO represents items as SIDs and trains a single model to interleave natural language and typed item identifiers within a shared sequence. Text prompts control the task, target entity type, and output format (IDs, text, or mixed), while constrained decoding guarantees catalog-valid item generation without restricting free-form text. We refer to this instruction-conditioned controllability as language-steerability. We treat SIDs as a distinct modality and study design choices for integrating discrete entity representations into LLMs via staged alignment and instruction tuning. We evaluate NEO at scale on a real-world catalog of over 10M items across multiple media types and discovery tasks, including recommendation, search, and user understanding. In offline experiments, NEO consistently outperforms strong task-specific baselines and exhibits cross-task transfer, demonstrating a practical path toward consolidating large-scale discovery capabilities into a single language-steerable generative model.
☆ Report-based Recommendations for Policy Making and Agency Operations: Dataset and LLM Evaluation LREC 2026
Large Language Models (LLMs) are extensively used in text generation tasks. These generative capabilities bring us to a point where LLMs could potentially provide useful insights in policy making or agency operations. In this paper, we introduce a new task consisting of generating recommendations which can be used to inform future actions and improvements of agencies work within private and public organisations. In particular, we present the first benchmark and coherent evaluation for developing recommendation systems to inform organisation policies. This task is clearly different from usual product or user recommendation systems, but rather aims at providing a basis to suggest policy improvements based on the conclusions drawn from reports. Our results demonstrate that state-of-the-art LLMs have the potential to emphasize and reflect on key issues and learning points within generated recommendations.
comment: The paper has been accepted to LREC 2026
☆ Rethinking Retrieval-Augmentation as Synthesis: A Query-Aware Context Merging Approach
Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG) enables Large Language Models (LLMs) to extend their existing knowledge by dynamically incorporating external information. However, practical deployment is fundamentally constrained by the LLM's finite context window, forcing a trade-off between information sufficiency and token consumption. Standard pipelines address this via a retrieve-then-select strategy, typically retaining only the top-k chunks based on relevance. Nevertheless, this approach is suboptimal: it inherently truncates critical bridging evidence located in the long tail of the relevance distribution, while simultaneously wasting the token budget on semantically redundant high-ranking chunks. In this paper, we rethink retrieval-augmentation as a dynamic optimization problem aimed at maximizing information density. We propose MergeRAG, a novel framework that shifts the paradigm from static filtering to query-aware synthesis. MergeRAG employs a scoring agent to restructure retrieved contexts through a dual-pathway mechanism: 1) Symmetric Merging, which consolidates weak signals to recover lost bridging evidence; 2) Asymmetric Merging, which utilizes entropy-guided anchoring to eliminate redundancy without sacrificing semantic integrity. We further introduce a Hierarchical Parallel Merging strategy that mitigates information loss while maximizing computational parallelism. Extensive experiments on standard benchmarks demonstrate that MergeRAG significantly outperforms state-of-the-art RAG baselines, achieving up to 13.7 points improvement in F1 score and 11.5 points in Exact Match (EM), respectively.
☆ VLM2Rec: Resolving Modality Collapse in Vision-Language Model Embedders for Multimodal Sequential Recommendation
Sequential Recommendation (SR) in multimodal settings typically relies on small frozen pretrained encoders, which limits semantic capacity and prevents Collaborative Filtering (CF) signals from being fully integrated into item representations. Inspired by the recent success of Large Language Models (LLMs) as high-capacity embedders, we investigate the use of Vision-Language Models (VLMs) as CF-aware multimodal encoders for SR. However, we find that standard contrastive supervised fine-tuning (SFT), which adapts VLMs for embedding generation and injects CF signals, can amplify its inherent modality collapse. In this state, optimization is dominated by a single modality while the other degrades, ultimately undermining recommendation accuracy. To address this, we propose VLM2Rec, a VLM embedder-based framework for multimodal sequential recommendation designed to ensure balanced modality utilization. Specifically, we introduce Weak-modality Penalized Contrastive Learning to rectify gradient imbalance during optimization and Cross-Modal Relational Topology Regularization to preserve geometric consistency between modalities. Extensive experiments demonstrate that VLM2Rec consistently outperforms state-of-the-art baselines in both accuracy and robustness across diverse scenarios.
☆ Agentic Cognitive Profiling: Realigning Automated Alzheimer's Disease Detection with Clinical Construct Validity
Automated Alzheimer's Disease (AD) screening has predominantly followed the inductive paradigm of pattern recognition, which directly maps the input signal to the outcome label. This paradigm sacrifices construct validity of clinical protocol for statistical shortcuts. This paper proposes Agentic Cognitive Profiling (ACP), an agentic framework that realigns automated screening with clinical protocol logic across multiple cognitive domains. Rather than learning opaque mappings from transcripts to labels, the framework decomposes standardized assessments into atomic cognitive tasks and orchestrates specialized LLM agents to extract verifiable scoring primitives. Central to our design is decoupling semantic understanding from measurement by delegating all quantification to deterministic function calling, thereby mitigating hallucination and restoring construct validity. Unlike popular datasets that typically comprise around a hundred participants under a single task, we evaluate on a clinically-annotated corpus of 402 participants across eight structured cognitive tasks spanning multiple cognitive domains. The framework achieves 90.5% score match rate in task examination and 85.3% accuracy in AD prediction, surpassing popular baselines while generating interpretable cognitive profiles grounded in behavioral evidence. This work demonstrates that construct validity and predictive performance need not be traded off, charting a path toward AD screening systems that explain rather than merely predict.
☆ CRE-T1 Preview Technical Report: Beyond Contrastive Learning for Reasoning-Intensive Retrieval
The central challenge of reasoning-intensive retrieval lies in identifying implicitreasoning relationships between queries and documents, rather than superficial se-mantic or lexical similarity. The contrastive learning paradigm is fundamentallya static representation consolidation technique: during training, it encodes hier-archical relevance concepts into fixed geometric structures in the vector space,and at inference time it cannot dynamically adjust relevance judgments accord-ing to the specific reasoning demands of each query. Consequently, performancedegrades noticeably when vocabulary mismatch exists between queries and doc-uments or when implicit reasoning is required to establish relevance. This pa-per proposes Thought 1 (T1), a generative retrieval model that shifts relevancemodeling from static alignment to dynamic reasoning. On the query side, T1 dy-namically generates intermediate reasoning trajectories for each query to bridgeimplicit reasoning relationships and uses as a semantic aggregationpoint for the reasoning output. On the document side, it employs an instruction+ text + encoding format to support high-throughput indexing. Tointernalize dynamic reasoning capabilities into vector representations, we adopt athree-stage training curriculum and introduce GRPO in the third stage, enablingthe model to learn optimal derivation strategies for different queries through trial-and-error reinforcement learning. On the BRIGHT benchmark, T1-4B exhibitsstrong performance under the original query setting, outperforming larger modelstrained with contrastive learning overall, and achieving performance comparableto multi-stage retrieval pipelines. The results demonstrate that replacing static rep-resentation alignment with dynamic reasoning generation can effectively improvereasoning-intensive retrieval performance.
☆ PJB: A Reasoning-Aware Benchmark for Person-Job Retrieval
As retrieval models converge on generic benchmarks, the pressing question is no longer "who scores higher" but rather "where do systems fail, and why?" Person-job matching is a domain that urgently demands such diagnostic capability -- it requires systems not only to verify explicit constraints but also to perform skill-transfer inference and job-competency reasoning, yet existing benchmarks provide no systematic diagnostic support for this task. We introduce PJB (Person-Job Benchmark), a reasoning-aware retrieval evaluation dataset that uses complete job descriptions as queries and complete resumes as documents, defines relevance through job-competency judgment, is grounded in real-world recruitment data spanning six industry domains and nearly 200,000 resumes, and upgrades evaluation from "who scores higher" to "where do systems differ, and why" through domain-family and reasoning-type diagnostic labels. Diagnostic experiments using dense retrieval reveal that performance heterogeneity across industry domains far exceeds the gains from module upgrades for the same model, indicating that aggregate scores alone can severely mislead optimization decisions. At the module level, reranking yields stable improvements while query understanding not only fails to help but actually degrades overall performance when combined with reranking -- the two modules face fundamentally different improvement bottlenecks. The value of PJB lies not in yet another leaderboard of average scores, but in providing recruitment retrieval systems with a capability map that pinpoints where to invest.
☆ FastPFRec: A Fast Personalized Federated Recommendation with Secure Sharing
Graph neural network (GNN)-based federated recommendation systems effectively capture user-item relationships while preserving data privacy. However, existing methods often face slow convergence on graph data and privacy leakage risks during collaboration. To address these challenges, we propose FastPFRec (Fast Personalized Federated Recommendation with Secure Sharing), a novel framework that enhances both training efficiency and data security. FastPFRec accelerates model convergence through an efficient local update strategy and introduces a privacy-aware parameter sharing mechanism to mitigate leakage risks. Experiments on four real-world datasets (Yelp, Kindle, Gowalla-100k, and Gowalla-1m) show that FastPFRec achieves 32.0% fewer training rounds, 34.1% shorter training time, and 8.1% higher accuracy compared with existing baselines. These results demonstrate that FastPFRec provides an efficient and privacy-preserving solution for scalable federated recommendation.
☆ Lightweight Adaptation for LLM-based Technical Service Agent: Latent Logic Augmentation and Robust Noise Reduction
Adapting Large Language Models in complex technical service domains is constrained by the absence of explicit cognitive chains in human demonstrations and the inherent ambiguity arising from the diversity of valid responses. These limitations severely hinder agents from internalizing latent decision dynamics and generalizing effectively. Moreover, practical adaptation is often impeded by the prohibitive resource and time costs associated with standard training paradigms. To overcome these challenges and guarantee computational efficiency, we propose a lightweight adaptation framework comprising three key contributions. (1) Latent Logic Augmentation: We introduce Planning-Aware Trajectory Modeling and Decision Reasoning Augmentation to bridge the gap between surface-level supervision and latent decision logic. These approaches strengthen the stability of Supervised Fine-Tuning alignment. (2) Robust Noise Reduction: We construct a Multiple Ground Truths dataset through a dual-filtering method to reduce the noise by validating diverse responses, thereby capturing the semantic diversity. (3) Lightweight Adaptation: We design a Hybrid Reward mechanism that fuses an LLM-based judge with a lightweight relevance-based Reranker to distill high-fidelity reward signals while reducing the computational cost compared to standard LLM-as-a-Judge reinforcement learning. Empirical evaluations on real-world Cloud service tasks, conducted across semantically diverse settings, demonstrate that our framework achieves stability and performance gains through Latent Logic Augmentation and Robust Noise Reduction. Concurrently, our Hybrid Reward mechanism achieves alignment comparable to standard LLM-as-a-judge methods with reduced training time, underscoring the practical value for deploying technical service agents.
☆ Public Profile Matters: A Scalable Integrated Approach to Recommend Citations in the Wild
Proper citation of relevant literature is essential for contextualising and validating scientific contributions. While current citation recommendation systems leverage local and global textual information, they often overlook the nuances of the human citation behaviour. Recent methods that incorporate such patterns improve performance but incur high computational costs and introduce systematic biases into downstream rerankers. To address this, we propose Profiler, a lightweight, non-learnable module that captures human citation patterns efficiently and without bias, significantly enhancing candidate retrieval. Furthermore, we identify a critical limitation in current evaluation protocol: the systems are assessed in a transductive setting, which fails to reflect real-world scenarios. We introduce a rigorous Inductive evaluation setting that enforces strict temporal constraints, simulating the recommendation of citations for newly authored papers in the wild. Finally, we present DAVINCI, a novel reranking model that integrates profiler-derived confidence priors with semantic information via an adaptive vector-gating mechanism. Our system achieves new state-of-the-art results across multiple benchmark datasets, demonstrating superior efficiency and generalisability.
☆ Learning Evolving Preferences: A Federated Continual Framework for User-Centric Recommendation WWW 2026
User-centric recommendation has become essential for delivering personalized services, as it enables systems to adapt to users' evolving behaviors while respecting their long-term preferences and privacy constraints. Although federated learning offers a promising alternative to centralized training, existing approaches largely overlook user behavior dynamics, leading to temporal forgetting and weakened collaborative personalization. In this work, we propose FCUCR, a federated continual recommendation framework designed to support long-term personalization in a privacy-preserving manner. To address temporal forgetting, we introduce a time-aware self-distillation strategy that implicitly retains historical preferences during local model updates. To tackle collaborative personalization under heterogeneous user data, we design an inter-user prototype transfer mechanism that enriches each client's representation using knowledge from similar users while preserving individual decision logic. Extensive experiments on four public benchmarks demonstrate the superior effectiveness of our approach, along with strong compatibility and practical applicability. Code is available.
comment: Accepted at WWW 2026
☆ Graph-Native Cognitive Memory for AI Agents: Formal Belief Revision Semantics for Versioned Memory Architectures
While individual components for AI agent memory exist in prior systems, their architectural synthesis and formal grounding remain underexplored. We present Kumiho, a graph-native cognitive memory architecture grounded in formal belief revision semantics. The structural primitives required for cognitive memory -- immutable revisions, mutable tag pointers, typed dependency edges, URI-based addressing -- are identical to those required for managing agent-produced work as versionable assets, enabling a unified graph-native architecture that serves both purposes. The central formal contribution is a correspondence between the AGM belief revision framework and the operational semantics of a property graph memory system, proving satisfaction of the basic AGM postulates (K*2--K*6) and Hansson's belief base postulates (Relevance, Core-Retainment). The architecture implements a dual-store model (Redis working memory, Neo4j long-term graph) with hybrid fulltext and vector retrieval. On LoCoMo (token-level F1), Kumiho achieves 0.565 overall F1 (n=1,986) including 97.5% adversarial refusal accuracy. On LoCoMo-Plus, a Level-2 cognitive memory benchmark testing implicit constraint recall, Kumiho achieves 93.3% judge accuracy (n=401); independent reproduction by the benchmark authors yielded results in the mid-80% range, still substantially outperforming all published baselines (best: Gemini 2.5 Pro, 45.7%). Three architectural innovations drive the results: prospective indexing (LLM-generated future-scenario implications indexed at write time), event extraction (structured causal events preserved in summaries), and client-side LLM reranking. The architecture is model-decoupled: switching the answer model from GPT-4o-mini (~88%) to GPT-4o (93.3%) improves end-to-end accuracy without pipeline changes, at a total evaluation cost of ~$14 for 401 entries.
comment: 56 pages, 1 figure
☆ ListK: Semantic ORDER BY and LIMIT K with Listwise Prompting
Semantic operators abstract large language model (LLM) calls in SQL clauses. It is gaining traction as an easy method to analyze semi-structured, unstructured, and multimodal datasets. While a plethora of recent works optimize various semantic operators, existing methods for semantic ORDER BY (full sort) and LIMIT K (top-K) remain lackluster. Our ListK framework improves the latency of semantic ORDER BY ... LIMIT K at no cost to accuracy. Motivated by the recent advance in fine-tuned listwise rankers, we study several sorting algorithms that best combine partial listwise rankings. These include: 1) deterministic listwise tournament (LTTopK), 2) Las Vegas and embarrassingly parallel listwise multi-pivot quickselect/sort (LMPQSelect, LMPQSort), and 3) a basic Monte Carlo listwise tournament filter (LTFilter). Of these, listwise multi-pivot quickselect/sort are studied here for the first time. The full framework provides a query optimizer for combining the above physical operators based on the target recall to minimize latency. We provide theoretical analysis to easily tune parameters and provide cost estimates for query optimizers. ListK empirically dominates the Pareto frontier, halving latency at virtually no cost to recall and NDCG compared to prior art.
♻ ☆ DPDisc: From Factoid Questions to Data Product Requests for Open-World Data Product Discovery over Tables and Text
Data products are reusable, self-contained assets designed for specific business use cases. Automating their discovery is of great industry interest, as it enables efficient data access in large data lakes and supports analytical workflows. However, no benchmark currently exists for data product discovery over hybrid table-text corpora. Existing datasets focus on answering single factoid questions over individual tables rather than assembling multiple related data assets into coherent products. To address this gap, we present DPDisc, the first large-scale benchmark for data product discovery, where systems must retrieve coherent collections of tables and passages to satisfy high-level Data Product Requests (DPRs). We introduce DPForge, an automated pipeline that systematically repurposes table-text QA datasets by clustering related tables and passages into coherent data products, generating professional-level analytical requests using an LLM ensemble, and validating quality through multi-phase LLM evaluation. DPDisc comprises 13,076 validated instances with full provenance, derived from three representative datasets spanning open-domain and financial domains. Baseline experiments with sparse, dense, and hybrid retrieval methods imply evaluation feasibility while revealing substantial performance gaps across domains, indicating opportunities for future research in structure-aware data product discovery. Code and datasets are available at: Dataset: https://huggingface.co/datasets/ibm-research/data-product-benchmark Code: https://github.com/ibm/data-product-benchmark
comment: 15 pages, 4 figure, 7 tables
♻ ☆ RAGXplain: From Explainable Evaluation to Actionable Guidance of RAG Pipelines
Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG) systems couple large language models with external knowledge, yet most evaluation methods report aggregate scores that reveal whether a pipeline underperforms but not where or why. We introduce RAGXplain, an evaluation framework that translates performance metrics into actionable guidance. RAGXplain structures evaluation around a 'Metric Diamond' connecting user input, retrieved context, generated answer, and (when available) ground truth via six diagnostic dimensions. It uses LLM reasoning to produce natural-language failure-mode explanations and prioritized interventions. Across five QA benchmarks, applying RAGXplain's recommendations in a single human-guided pass consistently improves RAG pipeline performance across multiple metrics. We release RAGXplain as open source to support reproducibility and community adoption.
♻ ☆ Role-Augmented Intent-Driven Generative Search Engine Optimization
Generative Search Engines (GSEs), powered by Large Language Models (LLMs) and Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG), are reshaping information retrieval. While commercial systems (e.g., BingChat, Perplexity.ai) demonstrate impressive semantic synthesis capabilities, their black-box nature fundamentally undermines established Search Engine Optimization (SEO) practices. Content creators face a critical challenge: their optimization strategies, effective in traditional search engines, are misaligned with generative retrieval contexts, resulting in diminished visibility. To bridge this gap, we propose a Role-Augmented Intent-Driven Generative Search Engine Optimization (G-SEO) method, providing a structured optimization pathway tailored for GSE scenarios. Our method models search intent through reflective refinement across diverse informational roles, enabling targeted content enhancement. To better evaluate the method under realistic settings, we address the benchmarking limitations of prior work by: (1) extending the GEO dataset with diversified query variations reflecting real-world search scenarios and (2) introducing G-Eval 2.0, a 6-level LLM-augmented evaluation rubric for fine-grained human-aligned assessment. Experimental results demonstrate that search intent serves as an effective signal for guiding content optimization, yielding significant improvements over single-aspect baseline approaches in both subjective impressions and objective content visibility within GSE responses.
comment: 7 pages, 5 figures
♻ ☆ Caption Injection for Optimization in Generative Search Engine
Generative Search Engine (GSE) leverages the Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG) technique and the Large Language Model (LLM) to integrate multi-source information and provide users with accurate and comprehensive responses. Unlike traditional search engines that present results in ranked lists, GSE shifts users' attention from sequential browsing to content-driven subjective perception, not only driving a paradigm shift in information retrieval but also highlighting the importance of enhancing the subjective visibility of content in generative search. In this context, Generative Search Engine Optimization (G-SEO) methods have emerged as a new research focus. With the rapid advancement of Multimodal Retrieval-Augmented Generation (MRAG) techniques, GSE can now efficiently integrate text, images, audio, and video, producing richer responses that better satisfy complex information needs. Existing G-SEO methods, however, remain limited to text-based optimization and fail to fully exploit multimodal data. To address this gap, we propose Caption Injection, the first multimodal G-SEO approach, which extracts captions from images and injects them into textual content, integrating visual semantics to enhance the subjective visibility in generative search. We systematically evaluate Caption Injection on MRAMG, a benchmark for MRAG, under both unimodal and multimodal settings. Experimental results show that Caption Injection significantly outperforms text-only G-SEO baselines under the G-EVAL metric, effectively improving the subjective visibility of content perceived by users, and demonstrating the practical benefits of multimodal information in G-SEO.
♻ ☆ IoDResearch: Deep Research on Private Heterogeneous Data via the Internet of Data
The rapid growth of multi-source, heterogeneous, and multimodal scientific data has increasingly exposed the limitations of traditional data management. Most existing DeepResearch (DR) efforts focus primarily on web search while overlooking local private data. Consequently, these frameworks exhibit low retrieval efficiency for private data and fail to comply with the FAIR principles, ultimately resulting in inefficiency and limited reusability. To this end, we propose IoDResearch (Internet of Data Research), a private data-centric Deep Research framework that operationalizes the Internet of Data paradigm. IoDResearch encapsulates heterogeneous resources as FAIR-compliant digital objects, and further refines them into atomic knowledge units and knowledge graphs, forming a heterogeneous graph index for multi-granularity retrieval. On top of this representation, a multi-agent system supports both reliable question answering and structured scientific report generation. Furthermore, we establish the IoD DeepResearch Benchmark to systematically evaluate both data representation and Deep Research capabilities in IoD scenarios. Experimental results on retrieval, QA, and report-writing tasks show that IoDResearch consistently surpasses representative RAG and Deep Research baselines. Overall, IoDResearch demonstrates the feasibility of private-data-centric Deep Research under the IoD paradigm, paving the way toward more trustworthy, reusable, and automated scientific discovery.
comment: 8 pages,4 figures
♻ ☆ SF-RAG: Structure-Fidelity Retrieval-Augmented Generation for Academic Question Answering
Efficient question-answering (QA) over extensive scientific literature is essential for evidence-based engineering decision-making. Retrieval-augmented generation (RAG) is increasingly applied to question-answering over long academic papers, where accurate evidence allocation under a fixed token budget is critical. However, existing approaches flatten papers into unstructured chunks, destroying the native hierarchical structure and forcing retrieval to operate in a disordered space. This produces fragmented contexts, misallocates tokens to non-evidential regions, and increases the reasoning burden for downstream language models.To address these issues, we propose SF-RAG, an RAG framework that treats the native hierarchical structure of academic papers as a low-entropy retrieval prior.SF-RAG first inherits the native hierarchy to construct a structure-fidelity index, which prevents entropy increase at the source.It then designs a path-guided retrieval mechanism that aligns query semantics to relevant sections and selects high relevance root-to-leaf paths under a fixed token budget, yielding compact, coherent, and low-entropy retrieval contexts.In contrast to existing RAG approaches, SF-RAG avoids entropy increase caused by destructive preprocessing and provides a native low-entropy structural basis for subsequent retrieval. We further introduce entropy-based structural diagnostics to quantify retrieval fragmentation and evidence allocation accuracy.Evaluations across three QA benchmarks show that SF-RAG significantly reduces retrieval fragmentation and improves evidence allocation. These structural benefits drive superior answer quality, establishing a scalable foundation for intelligent engineering document systems and future applications in technical specifications.
♻ ☆ The Reasoning Bottleneck in Graph-RAG: Structured Prompting and Context Compression for Multi-Hop QA
Graph-RAG systems achieve strong multi-hop question answering by indexing documents into knowledge graphs, but strong retrieval does not guarantee strong answers. Evaluating KET-RAG, a leading Graph-RAG system, on three multi-hop QA benchmarks (HotpotQA, MuSiQue, 2WikiMultiHopQA), we find that 77% to 91% of questions have the gold answer in the retrieved context, yet accuracy is only 35% to 78%, and 73% to 84% of errors are reasoning failures. We propose two augmentations: (i) SPARQL chain-of-thought prompting, which decomposes questions into triple-pattern queries aligned with the entity-relationship context, and (ii) graph-walk compression, which compresses the context by ~60% via knowledge-graph traversal with no LLM calls. SPARQL CoT improves accuracy by +2 to +14 pp; graph-walk compression adds +6 pp on average when paired with structured prompting on smaller models. Surprisingly, we show that, with question-type routing, a fully augmented budget open-weight Llama-8B model matches or exceeds the unaugmented Llama-70B baseline on all three benchmarks at ~12x lower cost. A replication on LightRAG confirms that our augmentations transfer across Graph-RAG systems.
comment: 11 pages, 2 figures, 9 tables; under review
Multimedia
☆ EgoAdapt: Enhancing Robustness in Egocentric Interactive Speaker Detection Under Missing Modalities
TTM (Talking to Me) task is a pivotal component in understanding human social interactions, aiming to determine who is engaged in conversation with the camera-wearer. Traditional models often face challenges in real-world scenarios due to missing visual data, neglecting the role of head orientation, and background noise. This study addresses these limitations by introducing EgoAdapt, an adaptive framework designed for robust egocentric "Talking to Me" speaker detection under missing modalities. Specifically, EgoAdapt incorporates three key modules: (1) a Visual Speaker Target Recognition (VSTR) module that captures head orientation as a non-verbal cue and lip movement as a verbal cue, allowing a comprehensive interpretation of both verbal and non-verbal signals to address TTM, setting it apart from tasks focused solely on detecting speaking status; (2) a Parallel Shared-weight Audio (PSA) encoder for enhanced audio feature extraction in noisy environments; and (3) a Visual Modality Missing Awareness (VMMA) module that estimates the presence or absence of each modality at each frame to adjust the system response dynamically.Comprehensive evaluations on the TTM benchmark of the Ego4D dataset demonstrate that EgoAdapt achieves a mean Average Precision (mAP) of 67.39% and an Accuracy (Acc) of 62.01%, significantly outperforming the state-of-the-art method by 4.96% in Accuracy and 1.56% in mAP.
☆ Beyond Forced Modality Balance: Intrinsic Information Budgets for Multimodal Learning ICME 2026
Multimodal models often converge to a dominant-modality solution, in which a stronger, faster-converging modality overshadows weaker ones. This modality imbalance causes suboptimal performance. Existing methods attempt to balance different modalities by reweighting gradients or losses. However, they overlook the fact that each modality has finite information capacity. In this work, we propose IIBalance, a multimodal learning framework that aligns the modality contributions with Intrinsic Information Budgets (IIB). We propose a task-grounded estimator of each modality's IIB, transforming its capacity into a global prior over modality contributions. Anchored by the highest-budget modality, we design a prototype-based relative alignment mechanism that corrects semantic drift only when weaker modalities deviate from their budgeted potential, rather than forcing imitation. During inference, we propose a probabilistic gating module that integrates the global budgets with sample-level uncertainty to generate calibrated fusion weights. Experiments on three representative benchmarks demonstrate that IIBalance consistently outperforms state-of-the-art balancing methods and achieves better utilization of complementary modality cues. Our code is available at: https://github.com/XiongZechang/IIBalance.
comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, paper accepted by ICME 2026
♻ ☆ Open-o3-Video: Grounded Video Reasoning with Explicit Spatio-Temporal Evidence
Most video reasoning models only generate textual reasoning traces without indicating when and where key evidence appears. Recent models such as OpenAI-o3 have sparked wide interest in evidence-centered reasoning for images, yet extending this ability to videos is more challenging due to the need for joint temporal tracking and spatial localization across dynamic scenes. We introduce Open-o3-Video, a non-agent framework that integrates explicit spatio-temporal evidence into video reasoning by highlighting key timestamps, objects, and bounding boxes, making the reasoning process traceable and verifiable. To enable this capability, we first construct high-quality datasets STGR that provide unified spatio-temporal supervision, which is absent in existing resources. We further adopt a cold-start reinforcement learning strategy with specially designed rewards that jointly encourage answer accuracy, temporal alignment, and spatial precision. On the V-STAR benchmark, Open-o3-Video achieves state-of-the-art performance, improving mAM by 14.4% and mLGM by 24.2% over the Qwen2.5-VL baseline, and shows consistent gains across a range of video understanding benchmarks. Beyond accuracy, the grounded reasoning traces produced by Open-o3-Video support confidence-aware test-time scaling, improving answer reliability.
♻ ☆ PAND: Prompt-Aware Neighborhood Distillation for Lightweight Fine-Grained Visual Classification
Distilling knowledge from large Vision-Language Models (VLMs) into lightweight networks is crucial yet challenging in Fine-Grained Visual Classification (FGVC), due to the reliance on fixed prompts and global alignment. To address this, we propose PAND (Prompt-Aware Neighborhood Distillation), a two-stage framework that decouples semantic calibration from structural transfer. First, we incorporate Prompt-Aware Semantic Calibration to generate adaptive semantic anchors. Second, we introduce a neighborhood-aware structural distillation strategy to constrain the student's local decision structure. PAND consistently outperforms state-of-the-art methods on four FGVC benchmarks. Notably, our ResNet-18 student achieves 76.09% accuracy on CUB-200, surpassing the strong baseline VL2Lite by 3.4%. Code is available at https://github.com/LLLVTA/PAND.
comment: 6pages, 3 figures, conference
♻ ☆ DuoTeach: Dual Role Self-Teaching for Coarse-to-Fine Decision Coordination in Vision--Language Models
Coarse-to-fine path decision-making requires predicting a valid taxonomy path in which earlier decisions constrain later ones. However, existing benchmarks score each level independently, obscuring cross-level validity and consistency. To better align evaluation with this setting, we introduce a Joint Path Decision (JPD) protocol that requires predicting the full path in one call, together with Depth-Weighted Prefix Accuracy (DWPA), a metric family that measures path reliability with tunable emphasis on deeper levels. Under JPD, strong vision-language models (VLMs) frequently produce invalid parent-child pairs and brittle full-path predictions, suggesting that their failures stem not only from incomplete taxonomic knowledge but also from unstable cross-level decision coordination. To address this problem, we propose DuoTeach, a dual-role self-teaching distillation framework that requires no ground-truth labels and reuses the same pretrained VLM in two roles. Its Decision-Conditioned Rollout (DCR) generates more coherent teacher traces by conditioning each level on prior decisions, and distills this coordinated behavior into the student without additional test-time rollouts. Across multiple taxonomy-structured benchmarks and VLM base models, DuoTeach improves in-domain DWPA (alpha = 0.95) by up to 30.24 points and boosts zero-shot performance on unseen taxonomies from 17.17% to 43.66%. Further analyses attribute these gains to improved within-call multi-level decision coordination.
♻ ☆ Towards Inclusive Communication: A Unified Framework for Generating Spoken Language from Sign, Lip, and Audio
Audio is the primary modality for human communication and has driven the success of Automatic Speech Recognition (ASR) technologies. However, such audio-centric systems inherently exclude individuals who are deaf or hard of hearing. Visual alternatives such as sign language and lip reading offer effective substitutes, and recent advances in Sign Language Translation (SLT) and Visual Speech Recognition (VSR) have improved audio-less communication. Yet, these modalities have largely been studied in isolation, and their integration within a unified framework remains underexplored. In this paper, we propose the first unified framework capable of handling diverse combinations of sign language, lip movements, and audio for spoken-language text generation. We focus on three main objectives: (i) designing a unified, modality-agnostic architecture capable of effectively processing heterogeneous inputs; (ii) exploring the underexamined synergy among modalities, particularly the role of lip movements as non-manual cues in sign language comprehension; and (iii) achieving performance on par with or superior to state-of-the-art models specialized for individual tasks. Building on this framework, we achieve performance on par with or better than task-specific state-of-the-art models across SLT, VSR, ASR, and Audio-Visual Speech Recognition. Furthermore, our analysis reveals a key linguistic insight: explicitly modeling lip movements as a distinct modality significantly improves SLT performance by capturing critical non-manual cues.
Information Retrieval
☆ OPERA: Online Data Pruning for Efficient Retrieval Model Adaptation
Domain-specific finetuning is essential for dense retrievers, yet not all training pairs contribute equally to the learning process. We introduce OPERA, a data pruning framework that exploits this heterogeneity to improve both the effectiveness and efficiency of retrieval model adaptation. We first investigate static pruning (SP), which retains only high-similarity query-document pairs, revealing an intrinsic quality-coverage tradeoff: ranking (NDCG) improves while retrieval (Recall) can degrade due to reduced query diversity. To resolve this tradeoff, we propose a two-stage dynamic pruning (DP) strategy that adaptively modulates sampling probabilities at both query and document levels throughout training, prioritizing high-quality examples while maintaining access to the full training set. Evaluations across eight datasets spanning six domains demonstrate the effectiveness of both approaches: SP improves ranking over standard finetuning (NDCG@10 +0.5\%), while DP achieves the strongest performance on both ranking (NDCG@10 +1.9\%) and retrieval (Recall@20 +0.7\%), with an average rank of 1.38 across all methods. These findings scale to Qwen3-Embedding, an LLM-based dense retriever, confirming architecture-agnostic benefits. Notably, DP reaches comparable performance in less than 50\% of the training time required by standard finetuning.
☆ Visual Product Search Benchmark
Reliable product identification from images is a critical requirement in industrial and commercial applications, particularly in maintenance, procurement, and operational workflows where incorrect matches can lead to costly downstream failures. At the core of such systems lies the visual search component, which must retrieve and rank the exact object instance from large and continuously evolving catalogs under diverse imaging conditions. This report presents a structured benchmark of modern visual embedding models for instance-level image retrieval, with a focus on industrial applications. A curated set of open-source foundation embedding models, proprietary multi-modal embedding systems, and domain-specific vision-only models are evaluated under a unified image-to-image retrieval protocol. The benchmark includes curated datasets, which includes industrial datasets derived from production deployments in Manufacturing, Automotive, DIY, and Retail, as well as established public benchmarks. Evaluation is conducted without post-processing, isolating the retrieval capability of each model. The results provide insight into how well contemporary foundation and unified embedding models transfer to fine-grained instance retrieval tasks, and how they compare to models explicitly trained for industrial applications. By emphasizing realistic constraints, heterogeneous image conditions, and exact instance matching requirements, this benchmark aims to inform both practitioners and researchers about the strengths and limitations of current visual embedding approaches in production-level product identification systems. An interactive companion website presenting the benchmark results, evaluation details, and additional visualizations is available at https://benchmark.nyris.io.
comment: 21 pages
☆ HierarchicalKV: A GPU Hash Table with Cache Semantics for Continuous Online Embedding Storage
Traditional GPU hash tables preserve every inserted key -- a dictionary assumption that wastes scarce High Bandwidth Memory (HBM) when embedding tables routinely exceed single-GPU capacity. We challenge this assumption with cache semantics, where policy-driven eviction is a first-class operation. We introduce HierarchicalKV (HKV), the first general-purpose GPU hash table library whose normal full-capacity operating contract is cache-semantic: each full-bucket upsert (update-or-insert) is resolved in place by eviction or admission rejection rather than by rehashing or capacity-induced failure. HKV co-designs four core mechanisms -- cache-line-aligned buckets, in-line score-driven upsert, score-based dynamic dual-bucket selection, and triple-group concurrency -- and uses tiered key-value separation as a scaling enabler beyond HBM. On an NVIDIA H100 NVL GPU, HKV achieves up to 3.9 billion key-value pairs per second (B-KV/s) find throughput, stable across load factors 0.50-1.00 (<5% variation), and delivers 1.4x higher find throughput than WarpCore (the strongest dictionary-semantic GPU baseline at lambda=0.50) and up to 2.6-9.4x over indirection-based GPU baselines. Since its open-source release in October 2022, HKV has been integrated into multiple open-source recommendation frameworks.
comment: 15 pages, 12 figures
☆ OpenResearcher: A Fully Open Pipeline for Long-Horizon Deep Research Trajectory Synthesis
Training deep research agents requires long-horizon trajectories that interleave search, evidence aggregation, and multi-step reasoning. However, existing data collection pipelines typically rely on proprietary web APIs, making large-scale trajectory synthesis costly, unstable, and difficult to reproduce. We present OpenResearcher, a reproducible pipeline that decouples one-time corpus bootstrapping from multi-turn trajectory synthesis and executes the search-and-browse loop entirely offline using three explicit browser primitives: search, open, and find, over a 15M-document corpus. Using GPT-OSS-120B as the teacher model, we synthesize over 97K trajectories, including a substantial long-horizon tail with 100+ tool calls. Supervised fine-tuning a 30B-A3B backbone on these trajectories achieves 54.8\% accuracy on BrowseComp-Plus, a +34.0 point improvement over the base model, while remaining competitive on BrowseComp, GAIA, and xbench-DeepSearch. Because the environment is offline and fully instrumented, it also enables controlled analysis, where our study reveals practical insights into deep research pipeline design, including data filtering strategies, agent configuration choices, and how retrieval success relates to final answer accuracy. We release the pipeline, synthesized trajectories, model checkpoints, and the offline search environment at https://github.com/TIGER-AI-Lab/OpenResearcher.
☆ IndexRAG: Bridging Facts for Cross-Document Reasoning at Index Time
Multi-hop question answering (QA) requires reasoning across multiple documents, yet existing retrieval-augmented generation (RAG) approaches address this either through graph-based methods requiring additional online processing or iterative multi-step reasoning. We present IndexRAG, a novel approach that shifts cross-document reasoning from online inference to offline indexing. IndexRAG identifies bridge entities shared across documents and generates bridging facts as independently retrievable units, requiring no additional training or fine-tuning. Experiments on three widely-used multi-hop QA benchmarks (HotpotQA, 2WikiMultiHopQA, MuSiQue) show that IndexRAG improves F1 over Naive RAG by 4.6 points on average, while requiring only single-pass retrieval and a single LLM call at inference time. When combined with IRCoT, IndexRAG outperforms all graph-based baselines on average, including HippoRAG and FastGraphRAG, while relying solely on flat retrieval. Our code will be released upon acceptance.
☆ PashtoCorp: A 1.25-Billion-Word Corpus, Evaluation Suite, and Reproducible Pipeline for Low-Resource Language Development
We present PashtoCorp, a 1.25-billion-word corpus for Pashto, a language spoken by 60 million people that remains severely underrepresented in NLP. The corpus is assembled from 39 sources spanning seven HuggingFace datasets and 32 purpose-built web scrapers, processed through a reproducible pipeline with Arabic-script tokenization, SHA-256 deduplication, and quality filtering. At 1.25B words across 2.81 million documents, PashtoCorp is 40x larger than the OSCAR Pashto subset and 83x larger than the previously largest dedicated Pashto corpus. Continued MLM pretraining of XLM-R-base on PashtoCorp reduces held-out perplexity by 25.1% (8.08->6.06). On WikiANN Pashto NER, the pretrained model improves entity F1 by 10% relative (19.0%->21.0%) and reduces training variance nearly 7x; the largest gain appears at 50 training sentences (+27%), with PashtoCorp covering 97.9% of WikiANN entity vocabulary. On Belebele Pashto reading comprehension, Gemma-3n achieves 64.6% accuracy, the first published LLM baseline for Pashto on this benchmark. A leave-one-out source ablation shows that Wikipedia (0.7% of documents) is the most critical source for NER: removing it alone reduces entity F1 by 47%. Corpus data, trained model, and code are available at https://huggingface.co/datasets/ihanif/pashto-corpus, https://huggingface.co/ihanif/xlmr-pashto, and https://github.com/ihanif/pashto-corpus.
☆ ReFORM: Review-aggregated Profile Generation via LLM with Multi-Factor Attention for Restaurant Recommendation
In recommender systems, large language models (LLMs) have gained popularity for generating descriptive summarization to improve recommendation robustness, along with Graph Convolution Networks. However, existing LLM-enhanced recommendation studies mainly rely on the internal knowledge of LLMs about item titles while neglecting the importance of various factors influencing users' decisions. Although information reflecting various decision factors of each user is abundant in reviews, few studies have actively exploited such insights for recommendation. To address these limitations, we propose a ReFORM: Review-aggregated Profile Generation via LLM with Multi-FactOr Attentive RecoMmendation framework. Specifically, we first generate factor-specific user and item profiles from reviews using LLM to capture a user's preference by items and an item's evaluation by users. Then, we propose a Multi-Factor Attention to highlight the most influential factors in each user's decision-making process. In this paper, we conduct experiments on two restaurant datasets of varying scales, demonstrating its robustness and superior performance over state-of-the-art baselines. Furthermore, in-depth analyses validate the effectiveness of the proposed modules and provide insights into the sources of personalization. Our source code and datasets are available at https://github.com/m0onsoo/ReFORM.
☆ MemX: A Local-First Long-Term Memory System for AI Assistants
We present MemX, a local-first long-term memory system for AI assistants with stability-oriented retrieval design. MemX is implemented in Rust on top of libSQL and an OpenAI-compatible embedding API, providing persistent, searchable, and explainable memory for conversational agents. Its retrieval pipeline applies vector recall, keyword recall, Reciprocal Rank Fusion (RRF), four-factor re-ranking, and a low-confidence rejection rule that suppresses spurious recalls when no answer exists in the memory store. We evaluate MemX on two axes. First, two custom Chinese-language benchmark suites (43 queries, <=1,014 records) validate pipeline design: Hit@1=91.3% on a default scenario and 100% under high confusion, with conservative miss-query suppression. Second, the LongMemEval benchmark (500 queries, up to 220,349 records) quantifies system boundaries across four ability types and three storage granularities. At fact-level granularity the system reaches Hit@5=51.6% and MRR=0.380, doubling session-level performance, while temporal and multi-session reasoning remain challenging (<=43.6% Hit@5). FTS5 full-text indexing reduces keyword search latency by 1,100x at 100k-record scale, keeping end-to-end search under 90 ms. Unlike Mem0 and related work that targets end-to-end agent benchmarks, MemX focuses on a narrower, reproducible baseline: local-first deployment, structural simplicity, explainable retrieval, and stability-oriented design.
comment: 18 pages, 2 figures, 13 tables
☆ Open-Source Reproduction and Explainability Analysis of Corrective Retrieval Augmented Generation
Corrective Retrieval Augmented Generation (CRAG) improves the robustness of RAG systems by evaluating retrieved document quality and triggering corrective actions. However, the original implementation relies on proprietary components including the Google Search API and closed model weights, limiting reproducibility. In this work, we present a fully open-source reproduction of CRAG, replacing proprietary web search with the Wikipedia API and the original LLaMA-2 generator with Phi-3-mini-4k-instruct. We evaluate on PopQA and ARC-Challenge, demonstrating that our open-source pipeline achieves comparable performance to the original system. Furthermore, we contribute the first explainability analysis of CRAG's T5-based retrieval evaluator using SHAP, revealing that the evaluator primarily relies on named entity alignment rather than semantic similarity. Our analysis identifies key failure modes including domain transfer limitations on science questions. All code and results are available at https://github.com/suryayalavarthi/crag-reproduction.
comment: 13 pages, 4 figures
☆ Answer Bubbles: Information Exposure in AI-Mediated Search
Generative search systems are increasingly replacing link-based retrieval with AI-generated summaries, yet little is known about how these systems differ in sources, language, and fidelity to cited material. We examine responses to 11,000 real search queries across four systems -- vanilla GPT, Search GPT, Google AI Overviews, and traditional Google Search -- at three levels: source diversity, linguistic characterization of the generated summary, and source-summary fidelity. We find that generative search systems exhibit significant \textit{source-selection} biases in their citations, favoring certain sources over others. Incorporating search also selectively attenuates epistemic markers, reducing hedging by up to 60\% while preserving confidence language in the AI-generated summaries. At the same time, AI summaries further compound the citation biases: Wikipedia and longer sources are disproportionately overrepresented, whereas cited social media content and negatively framed sources are substantially underrepresented. Our findings highlight the potential for \textit{answer bubbles}, in which identical queries yield structurally different information realities across systems, with implications for user trust, source visibility, and the transparency of AI-mediated information access.
comment: Preprint: 12 pages, 2 figures, 6 tables
☆ RecBundle: A Next-Generation Geometric Paradigm for Explainable Recommender Systems
Recommender systems are inherently dynamic feedback loops where prolonged local interactions accumulate into macroscopic structural degradation such as information cocoons. Existing representation learning paradigms are universally constrained by the assumption of a single flat space, forcing topologically grounded user associations and semantically driven historical interactions to be fitted within the same vector space. This excessive coupling of heterogeneous information renders it impossible for researchers to mechanistically distinguish and identify the sources of systemic bias. To overcome this theoretical bottleneck, we introduce Fiber Bundle from modern differential geometry and propose a novel geometric analysis paradigm for recommender systems. This theory naturally decouples the system space into two hierarchical layers: the base manifold formed by user interaction networks, and the fibers attached to individual user nodes that carry their dynamic preferences. Building upon this, we construct RecBundle, a framework oriented toward next-generation recommender systems that formalizes user collaboration as geometric connection and parallel transport on the base manifold, while mapping content evolution to holonomy transformations on fibers. From this foundation, we identify future application directions encompassing quantitative mechanisms for information cocoons and evolutionary bias, geometric meta-theory for adaptive recommendation, and novel inference architectures integrating large language models (LLMs). Empirical analysis on real-world MovieLens and Amazon Beauty datasets validates the effectiveness of this geometric framework.
♻ ☆ Continual Low-Rank Adapters for LLM-based Generative Recommender Systems
While large language models (LLMs) achieve strong performance in recommendation, they face challenges in continual learning as users, items, and user preferences evolve over time. Existing LoRA-based continual methods primarily focus on preserving performance on previous tasks, but this overlooks the unique nature of recommendation: the goal is not to predict past preferences, and outdated preferences can even harm performance when current interests shift significantly. To address this, we propose PESO (Proximally rEgularized Single evolving lOra, a continual adaptation method for LoRA in recommendation. PESO introduces a proximal regularizer that anchors the current adapter to its most recent frozen state, enabling the model to flexibly balance adaptation and preservation, and to better capture recent user behaviors. Theoretically, we show that this proximal design provides data-aware, direction-wise guidance in the LoRA subspace. Empirically, PESO consistently outperforms existing LoRA-based continual learning methods.
♻ ☆ Ontological foundations for contrastive explanatory narration of robot plans
Mutual understanding of artificial agents' decisions is key to ensuring a trustworthy and successful human-robot interaction. Hence, robots are expected to make reasonable decisions and communicate them to humans when needed. In this article, the focus is on an approach to modeling and reasoning about the comparison of two competing plans, so that robots can later explain the divergent result. First, a novel ontological model is proposed to formalize and reason about the differences between competing plans, enabling the classification of the most appropriate one (e.g., the shortest, the safest, the closest to human preferences, etc.). This work also investigates the limitations of a baseline algorithm for ontology-based explanatory narration. To address these limitations, a novel algorithm is presented, leveraging divergent knowledge between plans and facilitating the construction of contrastive narratives. Through empirical evaluation, it is observed that the explanations excel beyond the baseline method.
♻ ☆ AutothinkRAG: Complexity-Aware Control of Retrieval-Augmented Reasoning for Image-Text Interaction
Multimodal document question answering requires retrieving dispersed evidence from visually rich long documents and performing reliable reasoning over heterogeneous information. Existing multimodal RAG systems remain limited by two bottlenecks: static retrieval that ignores query complexity, and end-to-end Vision-Language Models (VLMs) that couple visual perception with logical reasoning, leading to inefficient computation and unstable answer generation. We propose AutoThinkRAG, a complexity-aware inference architecture for multimodal document QA. It has two components: (1) a Query Complexity Router that analyzes query difficulty and structure to adaptively select retrieval and reasoning paths; and (2) a Perception--Reasoning Decoupling architecture that uses a lightweight VLM as a high-fidelity visual interpreter to convert query-relevant visual cues into textual representations, which are then passed to an LLM for logical reasoning and answer synthesis. This design improves both efficiency and robustness, especially on long-document and unanswerable queries. Experiments on DocBench and MMLongBench show that AutoThinkRAG achieves 82.13\% and 51.29\% overall accuracy, respectively, while reducing per-query token consumption by 18.9\% and monetary cost by 18.2\%. Further analyses show that the gains are most pronounced on complex queries requiring adaptive retrieval and multi-step reasoning.
♻ ☆ Who's important? -- SUnSET: Synergistic Understanding of Stakeholder, Events and Time for Timeline Generation
As news reporting becomes increasingly global and decentralized online, tracking related events across multiple sources presents significant challenges. Existing news summarization methods typically utilizes Large Language Models and Graphical methods on article-based summaries. However, this is not effective since it only considers the textual content of similarly dated articles to understand the gist of the event. To counteract the lack of analysis on the parties involved, it is essential to come up with a novel framework to gauge the importance of stakeholders and the connection of related events through the relevant entities involved. Therefore, we present SUnSET: Synergistic Understanding of Stakeholder, Events and Time for the task of Timeline Summarization (TLS). We leverage powerful Large Language Models (LLMs) to build SET triplets and introduced the use of stakeholder-based ranking to construct a $Relevancy$ metric, which can be extended into general situations. Our experimental results outperform all prior baselines and emerged as the new State-of-the-Art, highlighting the impact of stakeholder information within news article.
♻ ☆ UserSimCRS v2: Simulation-Based Evaluation for Conversational Recommender Systems ECIR '26
Resources for simulation-based evaluation of conversational recommender systems (CRSs) are scarce. The UserSimCRS toolkit was introduced to address this gap. In this work, we present UserSimCRS v2, a significant upgrade aligning the toolkit with state-of-the-art research. Key extensions include an enhanced agenda-based user simulator, introduction of large language model-based simulators, integration for a wider range of CRSs and datasets, and new LLM-as-a-judge evaluation utilities. We demonstrate these extensions in a case study.
comment: Proceedings of the 48th European Conference on Information Retrieval (ECIR '26), 2026
♻ ☆ Boosting Text-to-Chart Retrieval through Training with Synthesized Semantic Insights
Text-to-chart retrieval, enabling users to find relevant charts via natural language queries, has gained significant attention. However, evaluating models in real-world business intelligence (BI) scenarios is challenging, as current benchmarks fail to simulate realistic user queries or test for deep semantic understanding with static chart images.To address this gap, we introduce CRBench, the first real-world BI-sourced benchmark comprising 21,862 charts and 326 queries, utilizing a Target-and-Distractor paradigm to evaluate discriminative retrieval among highly similar candidates. Testing on CRBench reveals that existing methods, which rely primarily on visual features, perform poorly and fail to capture the rich analytical semantics of charts. To address this performance bottleneck, we propose a semantic insights synthesis pipeline that automatically generates three hierarchical levels of insights for charts: visual patterns, statistical properties, and practical applications. Using this pipeline, we produced 207,498 semantic insights for 69,166 charts as training data. By leveraging this data to bridge the gap between natural language query intent and latent visual representations via multi-level semantic supervision, we develop ChartFinder, a specialized model capable of deep cross-model reasoning. Experimental results show ChartFinder significantly outperforms state-of-the-art methods on CRBench, achieving up to 66.9% NDCG@10 for precise queries (an 11.58% improvement) and an average increase of 5% across nearly all metrics for fuzzy queries. This work provides the community with a much-needed benchmark for realistic evaluation and demonstrates a powerful data synthesis paradigm for enhancing a model's semantic understanding of charts.
♻ ☆ AGRAG: Advanced Graph-based Retrieval-Augmented Generation for LLMs ICDE 2026
Graph-based retrieval-augmented generation (Graph-based RAG) has demonstrated significant potential in enhancing Large Language Models (LLMs) with structured knowledge. However, existing methods face three critical challenges: Inaccurate Graph Construction, caused by LLM hallucination; Poor Reasoning Ability, caused by failing to generate explicit reasons telling LLM why certain chunks were selected; and Inadequate Answering, which only partially answers the query due to the inadequate LLM reasoning, making their performance lag behind NaiveRAG on certain tasks. To address these issues, we propose AGRAG, an advanced graph-based retrieval-augmented generation framework. When constructing the graph, AGRAG substitutes the widely used LLM entity extraction method with a statistics-based method, avoiding hallucination and error propagation. During retrieval, AGRAG formulates the graph reasoning procedure as the Minimum Cost Maximum Influence (MCMI) subgraph generation problem, where we try to include more nodes with high influence score, but with less involving edge cost, to make the generated reasoning paths more comprehensive. We prove this problem to be NP-hard, and propose a greedy algorithm to solve it. The MCMI subgraph generated can serve as explicit reasoning paths to tell LLM why certain chunks were retrieved, thereby making the LLM better focus on the query-related part contents of the chunks, reducing the impact of noise, and improving AGRAG's reasoning ability. Furthermore, compared with the simple tree-structured reasoning paths, our MCMI subgraph can allow more complex graph structures, such as cycles, and improve the comprehensiveness of the generated reasoning paths. The code and prompt of AGRAG are released at: https://github.com/Wyb0627/AGRAG.
comment: ICDE 2026 Camera-ready
♻ ☆ UIS-Digger: Towards Comprehensive Research Agent Systems for Real-world Unindexed Information Seeking ICLR 2026
Recent advancements in LLM-based information-seeking agents have achieved record-breaking performance on established benchmarks. However, these agents remain heavily reliant on search-engine-indexed knowledge, leaving a critical blind spot: Unindexed Information Seeking (UIS). This paper identifies and explores the UIS problem, where vital information is not captured by search engine crawlers, such as overlooked content, dynamic webpages, and embedded files. Despite its significance, UIS remains an underexplored challenge. To address this gap, we introduce UIS-QA, the first dedicated UIS benchmark, comprising 110 expert-annotated QA pairs. Notably, even state-of-the-art agents experience a drastic performance drop on UIS-QA (e.g., from 70.90 on GAIA and 46.70 on BrowseComp-zh to 24.55 on UIS-QA), underscoring the severity of the problem. To mitigate this, we propose UIS-Digger, a novel multi-agent framework that incorporates dual-mode browsing and enables simultaneous webpage searching and file parsing. With a relatively small $\sim$30B-parameter backbone LLM optimized using SFT and RFT training strategies, UIS-Digger sets a strong baseline at 27.27\%, outperforming systems integrating sophisticated LLMs such as O3 and GPT-4.1. This demonstrates the importance of proactive interaction with unindexed sources for effective and comprehensive information-seeking. Our work not only uncovers a fundamental limitation in current agent evaluation paradigms but also provides the first toolkit for advancing UIS research, defining a new and promising direction for robust information-seeking systems. The dataset has been released at: https://huggingface.co/datasets/UIS-Digger/UIS-QA.
comment: 21 pages, 5 figures, ICLR 2026
Multimedia
☆ Segmentation-Based Attention Entropy: Detecting and Mitigating Object Hallucinations in Large Vision-Language Models
Large Vision-Language Models (LVLMs) achieve strong performance on many multimodal tasks, but object hallucinations severely undermine their reliability. Most existing studies focus on the text modality, attributing hallucinations to overly strong language priors and insufficient visual grounding. In contrast, we observe that abnormal attention patterns within the visual modality can also give rise to hallucinated objects. Building on this observation, we propose Segmentation-based Attention Entropy (SAE), which leverages semantic segmentation to quantify visual attention uncertainty in an object-level semantic space. Based on SAE, we further design a reliability score for hallucination detection and an SAE-guided attention adjustment method that modifies visual attention at inference time to mitigate hallucinations. We evaluate our approach on public benchmarks and in real embodied multimodal scenarios with quadruped robots. Experimental results show that SAE substantially reduces object hallucinations without any additional training cost, thereby enabling more trustworthy LVLM-driven perception and decision-making.
☆ CineSRD: Leveraging Visual, Acoustic, and Linguistic Cues for Open-World Visual Media Speaker Diarization CVPR 2026
Traditional speaker diarization systems have primarily focused on constrained scenarios such as meetings and interviews, where the number of speakers is limited and acoustic conditions are relatively clean. To explore open-world speaker diarization, we extend this task to the visual media domain, encompassing complex audiovisual programs such as films and TV series. This new setting introduces several challenges, including long-form video understanding, a large number of speakers, cross-modal asynchrony between audio and visual cues, and uncontrolled in-the-wild variability. To address these challenges, we propose Cinematic Speaker Registration & Diarization (CineSRD), a unified multimodal framework that leverages visual, acoustic, and linguistic cues from video, speech, and subtitles for speaker annotation. CineSRD first performs visual anchor clustering to register initial speakers and then integrates an audio language model for speaker turn detection, refining annotations and supplementing unregistered off-screen speakers. Furthermore, we construct and release a dedicated speaker diarization benchmark for visual media that includes Chinese and English programs. Experimental results demonstrate that CineSRD achieves superior performance on the proposed benchmark and competitive results on conventional datasets, validating its robustness and generalizability in open-world visual media settings.
comment: Accepted to CVPR 2026
☆ Hyperbolic Multimodal Generative Representation Learning for Generalized Zero-Shot Multimodal Information Extraction WWW 2026
Multimodal information extraction (MIE) constitutes a set of essential tasks aimed at extracting structural information from Web texts with integrating images, to facilitate the structural construction of Web-based semantic knowledge. To address the expanding category set including newly emerging entity types or relations on websites, prior research proposed the zero-shot MIE (ZS-MIE) task which aims to extract unseen structural knowledge with textual and visual modalities. However, the ZS-MIE models are limited to recognizing the samples that fall within the unseen category set, and they struggle to deal with real-world scenarios that encompass both seen and unseen categories. The shortcomings of existing methods can be ascribed to two main aspects. On one hand, these methods construct representations of samples and categories within Euclidean space, failing to capture the hierarchical semantic relationships between the two modalities within a sample and their corresponding category prototypes. On the other hand, there is a notable gap in the distribution of semantic similarity between seen and unseen category sets, which impacts the generative capability of the ZS-MIE models. To overcome the disadvantages, we delve into the generalized zero-shot MIE (GZS-MIE) task and propose the hyperbolic multimodal generative representation learning framework (HMGRL). The variational information bottleneck and autoencoder networks are reconstructed with hyperbolic space for modeling the multi-level hierarchical semantic correlations among samples and prototypes. Furthermore, the proposed model is trained with the unseen samples generated by the decoder, and we introduce the semantic similarity distribution alignment loss to enhance the model's generalization performance. Experimental evaluations on two benchmark datasets underscore the superiority of HMGRL compared to existing baseline methods.
comment: Accepted by WWW 2026
☆ Diffusion Models for Joint Audio-Video Generation
Multimodal generative models have shown remarkable progress in single-modality video and audio synthesis, yet truly joint audio-video generation remains an open challenge. In this paper, I explore four key contributions to advance this field. First, I release two high-quality, paired audio-video datasets. The datasets consisting on 13 hours of video-game clips and 64 hours of concert performances, each segmented into consistent 34-second samples to facilitate reproducible research. Second, I train the MM-Diffusion architecture from scratch on our datasets, demonstrating its ability to produce semantically coherent audio-video pairs and quantitatively evaluating alignment on rapid actions and musical cues. Third, I investigate joint latent diffusion by leveraging pretrained video and audio encoder-decoders, uncovering challenges and inconsistencies in the multimodal decoding stage. Finally, I propose a sequential two-step text-to-audio-video generation pipeline: first generating video, then conditioning on both the video output and the original prompt to synthesize temporally synchronized audio. My experiments show that this modular approach yields high-fidelity generations of audio video generation.
♻ ☆ Consensus Entropy: Harnessing Multi-VLM Agreement for Self-Verifying and Self-Improving OCR
Optical Character Recognition (OCR) is fundamental to Vision-Language Models (VLMs) and high-quality data generation for LLM training. Yet, despite progress in average OCR accuracy, state-of-the-art VLMs still struggle with detecting sample-level errors and lack effective unsupervised quality control. We introduce Consensus Entropy (CE), a training-free, model-agnostic metric that estimates output reliability by measuring inter-model agreement entropy. The core insight is that correct predictions converge in output space, while errors diverge. Based on CE, we develop CE-OCR, a lightweight multi-model framework that verifies outputs by ensemble agreement, selects the best outputs, and further improves efficiency through adaptive routing. Experiments demonstrate that CE is robust for quality verification, improving F1 scores by 42.1\% over VLM-as-Judge. CE-OCR achieves consistent OCR gains, outperforming self-consistency and single-model baselines at the same cost. Notably, CE requires no training or supervision, enabling plug-and-play integration.
♻ ☆ DiFlowDubber: Discrete Flow Matching for Automated Video Dubbing via Cross-Modal Alignment and Synchronization CVPR 2026
Video dubbing has broad applications in filmmaking, multimedia creation, and assistive speech technology. Existing approaches either train directly on limited dubbing datasets or adopt a two-stage pipeline that adapts pre-trained text-to-speech (TTS) models, which often struggle to produce expressive prosody, rich acoustic characteristics, and precise synchronization. To address these issues, we propose DiFlowDubber with a novel two-stage training framework that effectively transfers knowledge from a pre-trained TTS model to video-driven dubbing, with a discrete flow matching generative backbone. Specifically, we design a FaPro module that captures global prosody and stylistic cues from facial expressions and leverages this information to guide the modeling of subsequent speech attributes. To ensure precise speech-lip synchronization, we introduce a Synchronizer module that bridges the modality gap among text, video, and speech, thereby improving cross-modal alignment and generating speech that is temporally synchronized with lip movements. Experiments on two primary benchmark datasets demonstrate that DiFlowDubber outperforms previous methods across multiple metrics.
comment: Accepted at CVPR 2026 Findings
Computation and Language
☆ Mixture-of-Depths Attention
Scaling depth is a key driver for large language models (LLMs). Yet, as LLMs become deeper, they often suffer from signal degradation: informative features formed in shallow layers are gradually diluted by repeated residual updates, making them harder to recover in deeper layers. We introduce mixture-of-depths attention (MoDA), a mechanism that allows each attention head to attend to sequence KV pairs at the current layer and depth KV pairs from preceding layers. We further describe a hardware-efficient algorithm for MoDA that resolves non-contiguous memory-access patterns, achieving 97.3% of FlashAttention-2's efficiency at a sequence length of 64K. Experiments on 1.5B-parameter models demonstrate that MoDA consistently outperforms strong baselines. Notably, it improves average perplexity by 0.2 across 10 validation benchmarks and increases average performance by 2.11% on 10 downstream tasks, with a negligible 3.7% FLOPs computational overhead. We also find that combining MoDA with post-norm yields better performance than using it with pre-norm. These results suggest that MoDA is a promising primitive for depth scaling. Code is released at https://github.com/hustvl/MoDA .
comment: Code is released at https://github.com/hustvl/MoDA
☆ Mechanistic Origin of Moral Indifference in Language Models
Existing behavioral alignment techniques for Large Language Models (LLMs) often neglect the discrepancy between surface compliance and internal unaligned representations, leaving LLMs vulnerable to long-tail risks. More crucially, we posit that LLMs possess an inherent state of moral indifference due to compressing distinct moral concepts into uniform probability distributions. We verify and remedy this indifference in LLMs' latent representations, utilizing 251k moral vectors constructed upon Prototype Theory and the Social-Chemistry-101 dataset. Firstly, our analysis across 23 models reveals that current LLMs fail to represent the distinction between opposed moral categories and fine-grained typicality gradients within these categories; notably, neither model scaling, architecture, nor explicit alignment reshapes this indifference. We then employ Sparse Autoencoders on Qwen3-8B, isolate mono-semantic moral features, and targetedly reconstruct their topological relationships to align with ground-truth moral vectors. This representational alignment naturally improves moral reasoning and granularity, achieving a 75% pairwise win-rate on the independent adversarial Flames benchmark. Finally, we elaborate on the remedial nature of current intervention methods from an experientialist philosophy, arguing that endogenously aligned AI might require a transformation from post-hoc corrections to proactive cultivation.
comment: 24 pages, 11 figures, 5 tables
☆ Code-A1: Adversarial Evolving of Code LLM and Test LLM via Reinforcement Learning
Reinforcement learning for code generation relies on verifiable rewards from unit test pass rates. Yet high-quality test suites are scarce, existing datasets offer limited coverage, and static rewards fail to adapt as models improve. Recent self-play methods unify code and test generation in a single model, but face a inherent dilemma: white-box access leads to self-collusion where the model produces trivial tests for easy rewards, yet black-box restriction yields generic tests that miss implementation-specific bugs. We introduce Code-A1, an adversarial co-evolution framework that jointly optimizes a Code LLM and a Test LLM with opposing objectives. The Code LLM is rewarded for passing more tests, while the Test LLM is rewarded for exposing more defects. This architectural separation eliminates self-collusion risks and safely enables white-box test generation, where the Test LLM can inspect candidate code to craft targeted adversarial tests. We further introduce a Mistake Book mechanism for experience replay and a composite reward balancing test validity with adversarial difficulty. Experiments on Qwen2.5-Coder models demonstrate that Code-A1 achieves code generation performance matching or exceeding models trained on human-annotated tests, while significantly improving test generation capability.
comment: Project Page: https://zju-real.github.io/Code-A1 Code: https://github.com/ZJU-REAL/Code-A1
☆ From Passive Observer to Active Critic: Reinforcement Learning Elicits Process Reasoning for Robotic Manipulation
Accurate process supervision remains a critical challenge for long-horizon robotic manipulation. A primary bottleneck is that current video MLLMs, trained primarily under a Supervised Fine-Tuning (SFT) paradigm, function as passive "Observers" that recognize ongoing events rather than evaluating the current state relative to the final task goal. In this paper, we introduce PRIMO R1 (Process Reasoning Induced Monitoring), a 7B framework that transforms video MLLMs into active "Critics". We leverage outcome-based Reinforcement Learning to incentivize explicit Chain-of-Thought generation for progress estimation. Furthermore, our architecture constructs a structured temporal input by explicitly anchoring the video sequence between initial and current state images. Supported by the proposed PRIMO Dataset and Benchmark, extensive experiments across diverse in-domain environments and out-of-domain real-world humanoid scenarios demonstrate that PRIMO R1 achieves state-of-the-art performance. Quantitatively, our 7B model achieves a 50% reduction in the mean absolute error of specialized reasoning baselines, demonstrating significant relative accuracy improvements over 72B-scale general MLLMs. Furthermore, PRIMO R1 exhibits strong zero-shot generalization on difficult failure detection tasks. We establish state-of-the-art performance on RoboFail benchmark with 67.0% accuracy, surpassing closed-source models like OpenAI o1 by 6.0%.
comment: 31 pages
☆ OpenSeeker: Democratizing Frontier Search Agents by Fully Open-Sourcing Training Data
Deep search capabilities have become an indispensable competency for frontier Large Language Model (LLM) agents, yet the development of high-performance search agents remains dominated by industrial giants due to a lack of transparent, high-quality training data. This persistent data scarcity has fundamentally hindered the progress of the broader research community in developing and innovating within this domain. To bridge this gap, we introduce OpenSeeker, the first fully open-source search agent (i.e., model and data) that achieves frontier-level performance through two core technical innovations: (1) Fact-grounded scalable controllable QA synthesis, which reverse-engineers the web graph via topological expansion and entity obfuscation to generate complex, multi-hop reasoning tasks with controllable coverage and complexity. (2) Denoised trajectory synthesis, which employs a retrospective summarization mechanism to denoise the trajectory, therefore promoting the teacher LLMs to generate high-quality actions. Experimental results demonstrate that OpenSeeker, trained (a single training run) on only 11.7k synthesized samples, achieves state-of-the-art performance across multiple benchmarks including BrowseComp, BrowseComp-ZH, xbench-DeepSearch, and WideSearch. Notably, trained with simple SFT, OpenSeeker significantly outperforms the second-best fully open-source agent DeepDive (e.g., 29.5% v.s. 15.3% on BrowseComp), and even surpasses industrial competitors such as Tongyi DeepResearch (trained via extensive continual pre-training, SFT, and RL) on BrowseComp-ZH (48.4% v.s. 46.7%). We fully open-source the complete training dataset and the model weights to democratize frontier search agent research and foster a more transparent, collaborative ecosystem.
comment: 15 pages, 6 figures
☆ Can LLMs Model Incorrect Student Reasoning? A Case Study on Distractor Generation
Modeling plausible student misconceptions is critical for AI in education. In this work, we examine how large language models (LLMs) reason about misconceptions when generating multiple-choice distractors, a task that requires modeling incorrect yet plausible answers by coordinating solution knowledge, simulating student misconceptions, and evaluating plausibility. We introduce a taxonomy for analyzing the strategies used by state-of-the-art LLMs, examining their reasoning procedures and comparing them to established best practices in the learning sciences. Our structured analysis reveals a surprising alignment between their processes and best practices: the models typically solve the problem correctly first, then articulate and simulate multiple potential misconceptions, and finally select a set of distractors. An analysis of failure modes reveals that errors arise primarily from failures in recovering the correct solution and selecting among response candidates, rather than simulating errors or structuring the process. Consistent with these results, we find that providing the correct solution in the prompt improves alignment with human-authored distractors by 8%, highlighting the critical role of anchoring to the correct solution when generating plausible incorrect student reasoning. Overall, our analysis offers a structured and interpretable lens into LLMs' ability to model incorrect student reasoning and produce high-quality distractors.
☆ SlovKE: A Large-Scale Dataset and LLM Evaluation for Slovak Keyphrase Extraction LREC 2026
Keyphrase extraction for morphologically rich, low-resource languages remains understudied, largely due to the scarcity of suitable evaluation datasets. We address this gap for Slovak by constructing a dataset of 227,432 scientific abstracts with author-assigned keyphrases -- scraped and systematically cleaned from the Slovak Central Register of Theses -- representing a 25-fold increase over the largest prior Slovak resource and approaching the scale of established English benchmarks such as KP20K. Using this dataset, we benchmark three unsupervised baselines (YAKE, TextRank, KeyBERT with SlovakBERT embeddings) and evaluate KeyLLM, an LLM-based extraction method using GPT-3.5-turbo. Unsupervised baselines achieve at most 11.6\% exact-match $F1@6$, with a large gap to partial matching (up to 51.5\%), reflecting the difficulty of matching inflected surface forms to author-assigned keyphrases. KeyLLM narrows this exact--partial gap, producing keyphrases closer to the canonical forms assigned by authors, while manual evaluation on 100 documents ($κ= 0.61$) confirms that KeyLLM captures relevant concepts that automated exact matching underestimates. Our analysis identifies morphological mismatch as the dominant failure mode for statistical methods -- a finding relevant to other inflected languages. The dataset (https://huggingface.co/datasets/NaiveNeuron/SlovKE) and evaluation code (https://github.com/NaiveNeuron/SlovKE) are publicly available.
comment: LREC 2026
☆ Beyond the Covariance Trap: Unlocking Generalization in Same-Subject Knowledge Editing for Large Language Models
While locate-then-edit knowledge editing efficiently updates knowledge encoded within Large Language Models (LLMs), a critical generalization failure mode emerges in the practical same-subject knowledge editing scenario: models fail to recall the updated knowledge when following user instructions, despite successfully recalling it in the original edited form. This paper identifies the geometric root of this generalization collapse as a fundamental conflict where the inner activation drifts induced by prompt variations exceed the model's geometric tolerance for generalization after editing. We attribute this instability to a dual pathology: (1) The joint optimization with orthogonal gradients collapses solutions into sharp minima with narrow stability, and (2) the standard covariance constraint paradoxically acts as a Covariance Trap that amplifies input perturbations. To resolve this, we introduce RoSE (Robust Same-subject Editing), which employs Isotropic Geometric Alignment to minimize representational deviation and Hierarchical Knowledge Integration to smooth the optimization landscape. Extensive experiments demonstrate that RoSE significantly improves instruction-following capabilities, laying the foundation for robust interactive parametric memory of LLM agents.
comment: 23 pages, 20 figures
☆ ViX-Ray: A Vietnamese Chest X-Ray Dataset for Vision-Language Models
Vietnamese medical research has become an increasingly vital domain, particularly with the rise of intelligent technologies aimed at reducing time and resource burdens in clinical diagnosis. Recent advances in vision-language models (VLMs), such as Gemini and GPT-4V, have sparked a growing interest in applying AI to healthcare. However, most existing VLMs lack exposure to Vietnamese medical data, limiting their ability to generate accurate and contextually appropriate diagnostic outputs for Vietnamese patients. To address this challenge, we introduce ViX-Ray, a novel dataset comprising 5,400 Vietnamese chest X-ray images annotated with expert-written findings and impressions from physicians at a major Vietnamese hospital. We analyze linguistic patterns within the dataset, including the frequency of mentioned body parts and diagnoses, to identify domain-specific linguistic characteristics of Vietnamese radiology reports. Furthermore, we fine-tune five state-of-the-art open-source VLMs on ViX-Ray and compare their performance to leading proprietary models, GPT-4V and Gemini. Our results show that while several models generate outputs partially aligned with clinical ground truths, they often suffer from low precision and excessive hallucination, especially in impression generation. These findings not only demonstrate the complexity and challenge of our dataset but also establish ViX-Ray as a valuable benchmark for evaluating and advancing vision-language models in the Vietnamese clinical domain.
☆ Invisible failures in human-AI interactions
AI systems fail silently far more often than they fail visibly. In a large-scale quantitative analysis of human-AI interactions from the WildChat dataset, we find that 78% of AI failures are invisible: something went wrong but the user gave no overt indication that there was a problem. These invisible failures cluster into eight archetypes that help us characterize where and how AI systems are failing to meet users' needs. In addition, the archetypes show systematic co-occurrence patterns indicating higher-level failure types. To address the question of whether these archetypes will remain relevant as AI systems become more capable, we also assess failures for whether they are primarily interactional or capability-driven, finding that 91% involve interactional dynamics, and we estimate that 94% of such failures would persist even with a more capable model. Finally, we illustrate how the archetypes help us to identify systematic and variable AI limitations across different usage domains. Overall, we argue that our invisible failure taxonomy can be a key component in reliable failure monitoring for product developers, scientists, and policy makers. Our code and data are available at https://github.com/bigspinai/bigspin-invisible-failure-archetypes
☆ CLAG: Adaptive Memory Organization via Agent-Driven Clustering for Small Language Model Agents
Large language model agents heavily rely on external memory to support knowledge reuse and complex reasoning tasks. Yet most memory systems store experiences in a single global retrieval pool which can gradually dilute or corrupt stored knowledge. This problem is especially pronounced for small language models (SLMs), which are highly vulnerable to irrelevant context. We introduce CLAG, a CLustering-based AGentic memory framework where an SLM agent actively organizes memory by clustering. CLAG employs an SLM-driven router to assign incoming memories to semantically coherent clusters and autonomously generates cluster-specific profiles, including topic summaries and descriptive tags, to establish each cluster as a self-contained functional unit. By performing localized evolution within these structured neighborhoods, CLAG effectively reduces cross-topic interference and enhances internal memory density. During retrieval, the framework utilizes a two-stage process that first filters relevant clusters via their profiles, thereby excluding distractors and reducing the search space. Experiments on multiple QA datasets with three SLM backbones show that CLAG consistently improves answer quality and robustness over prior memory systems for agents, remaining lightweight and efficient.
☆ Amplification Effects in Test-Time Reinforcement Learning: Safety and Reasoning Vulnerabilities
Test-time training (TTT) has recently emerged as a promising method to improve the reasoning abilities of large language models (LLMs), in which the model directly learns from test data without access to labels. However, this reliance on test data also makes TTT methods vulnerable to harmful prompt injections. In this paper, we investigate safety vulnerabilities of TTT methods, where we study a representative self-consistency-based test-time learning method: test-time reinforcement learning (TTRL), a recent TTT method that improves LLM reasoning by rewarding self-consistency using majority vote as a reward signal. We show that harmful prompt injection during TTRL amplifies the model's existing behaviors, i.e., safety amplification when the base model is relatively safe, and harmfulness amplification when it is vulnerable to the injected data. In both cases, there is a decline in reasoning ability, which we refer to as the reasoning tax. We also show that TTT methods such as TTRL can be exploited adversarially using specially designed "HarmInject" prompts to force the model to answer jailbreak and reasoning queries together, resulting in stronger harmfulness amplification. Overall, our results highlight that TTT methods that enhance LLM reasoning by promoting self-consistency can lead to amplification behaviors and reasoning degradation, highlighting the need for safer TTT methods.
☆ SEA-Vision: A Multilingual Benchmark for Comprehensive Document and Scene Text Understanding in Southeast Asia CVPR2026
Multilingual document and scene text understanding plays an important role in applications such as search, finance, and public services. However, most existing benchmarks focus on high-resource languages and fail to evaluate models in realistic multilingual environments. In Southeast Asia, the diversity of languages, complex writing systems, and highly varied document types make this challenge even greater. We introduce SEA-Vision, a benchmark that jointly evaluates Document Parsing and Text-Centric Visual Question Answering (TEC-VQA) across 11 Southeast Asian languages. SEA-Vision contains 15,234 document parsing pages from nine representative document types, annotated with hierarchical page-, block-, and line-level labels. It also provides 7,496 TEC-VQA question-answer pairs that probe text recognition, numerical calculation, comparative analysis, logical reasoning, and spatial understanding. To make such multilingual, multi-task annotation feasible, we design a hybrid pipeline for Document Parsing and TEC-VQA. It combines automated filtering and scoring with MLLM-assisted labeling and lightweight native-speaker verification, greatly reducing manual labeling while maintaining high quality. We evaluate several leading multimodal models and observe pronounced performance degradation on low-resource Southeast Asian languages, highlighting substantial remaining gaps in multilingual document and scene text understanding. We believe SEA-Vision will help drive global progress in document and scene text understanding.
comment: Accepted By CVPR2026
☆ TrinityGuard: A Unified Framework for Safeguarding Multi-Agent Systems
With the rapid development of LLM-based multi-agent systems (MAS), their significant safety and security concerns have emerged, which introduce novel risks going beyond single agents or LLMs. Despite attempts to address these issues, the existing literature lacks a cohesive safeguarding system specialized for MAS risks. In this work, we introduce TrinityGuard, a comprehensive safety evaluation and monitoring framework for LLM-based MAS, grounded in the OWASP standards. Specifically, TrinityGuard encompasses a three-tier fine-grained risk taxonomy that identifies 20 risk types, covering single-agent vulnerabilities, inter-agent communication threats, and system-level emergent hazards. Designed for scalability across various MAS structures and platforms, TrinityGuard is organized in a trinity manner, involving an MAS abstraction layer that can be adapted to any MAS structures, an evaluation layer containing risk-specific test modules, alongside runtime monitor agents coordinated by a unified LLM Judge Factory. During Evaluation, TrinityGuard executes curated attack probes to generate detailed vulnerability reports for each risk type, where monitor agents analyze structured execution traces and issue real-time alerts, enabling both pre-development evaluation and runtime monitoring. We further formalize these safety metrics and present detailed case studies across various representative MAS examples, showcasing the versatility and reliability of TrinityGuard. Overall, TrinityGuard acts as a comprehensive framework for evaluating and monitoring various risks in MAS, paving the way for further research into their safety and security.
☆ Fusian: Multi-LoRA Fusion for Fine-Grained Continuous MBTI Personality Control in Large Language Models
Large Language Models (LLMs) have demonstrated impressive capabilities in simulating diverse human behaviors and personalities. However, existing methods for personality control, which include prompt engineering and standard Supervised Fine-Tuning (SFT), typically treat personality traits as discrete categories (e.g., "Extroverted" vs. "Introverted"), lacking the ability to precisely control the intensity of a trait on a continuous spectrum. In this paper, we introduce Fusian, a novel framework for fine-grained, continuous personality control in LLMs. Fusian operates in two stages: (1) Trajectory Collection, where we capture the dynamic evolution of personality adoption during SFT by saving a sequence of LoRA adapters, effectively mapping the continuous manifold of a trait; and (2) RL-based Dynamic Fusion, where we train a policy network using Reinforcement Learning to dynamically compute mixing weights for these frozen adapters. By sampling from a Dirichlet distribution parameterized by the policy network, Fusian fuses multiple adapters to align the model's output with a specific numerical target intensity. Experiments on the Qwen3-14B model demonstrate that Fusian achieves high precision in personality control, significantly outperforming baseline methods in aligning with user-specified trait intensities.
☆ A Closer Look into LLMs for Table Understanding
Despite the success of Large Language Models (LLMs) in table understanding, their internal mechanisms remain unclear. In this paper, we conduct an empirical study on 16 LLMs, covering general LLMs, specialist tabular LLMs, and Mixture-of-Experts (MoE) models, to explore how LLMs understand tabular data and perform downstream tasks. Our analysis focus on 4 dimensions including the attention dynamics, the effective layer depth, the expert activation, and the impacts of input designs. Key findings include: (1) LLMs follow a three-phase attention pattern -- early layers scan the table broadly, middle layers localize relevant cells, and late layers amplify their contributions; (2) tabular tasks require deeper layers than math reasoning to reach stable predictions; (3) MoE models activate table-specific experts in middle layers, with early and late layers sharing general-purpose experts; (4) Chain-of-Thought prompting increases table attention, further enhanced by table-tuning. We hope these findings and insights can facilitate interpretability and future research on table-related tasks.
☆ When Does Sparsity Mitigate the Curse of Depth in LLMs
Recent work has demonstrated the curse of depth in large language models (LLMs), where later layers contribute less to learning and representation than earlier layers. Such under-utilization is linked to the accumulated growth of variance in Pre-Layer Normalization, which can push deep blocks toward near-identity behavior. In this paper, we demonstrate that, sparsity, beyond enabling efficiency, acts as a regulator of variance propagation and thereby improves depth utilization. Our investigation covers two sources of sparsity: (i) implicit sparsity, which emerges from training and data conditions, including weight sparsity induced by weight decay and attention sparsity induced by long context inputs; and (ii) explicit sparsity, which is enforced by architectural design, including key/value-sharing sparsity in Grouped-Query Attention and expert-activation sparsity in Mixtureof-Experts. Our claim is thoroughly supported by controlled depth-scaling experiments and targeted layer effectiveness interventions. Across settings, we observe a consistent relationship: sparsity improves layer utilization by reducing output variance and promoting functional differentiation. We eventually distill our findings into a practical rule-of-thumb recipe for training deptheffective LLMs, yielding a notable 4.6% accuracy improvement on downstream tasks. Our results reveal sparsity, arising naturally from standard design choices, as a key yet previously overlooked mechanism for effective depth scaling in LLMs. Code is available at https://github.com/pUmpKin-Co/SparsityAndCoD.
comment: 32 pages, 29 figures
☆ CRASH: Cognitive Reasoning Agent for Safety Hazards in Autonomous Driving
As AVs grow in complexity and diversity, identifying the root causes of operational failures has become increasingly complex. The heterogeneity of system architectures across manufacturers, ranging from end-to-end to modular designs, together with variations in algorithms and integration strategies, limits the standardization of incident investigations and hinders systematic safety analysis. This work examines real-world AV incidents reported in the NHTSA database. We curate a dataset of 2,168 cases reported between 2021 and 2025, representing more than 80 million miles driven. To process this data, we introduce CRASH, Cognitive Reasoning Agent for Safety Hazards, an LLM-based agent that automates reasoning over crash reports by leveraging both standardized fields and unstructured narrative descriptions. CRASH operates on a unified representation of each incident to generate concise summaries, attribute a primary cause, and assess whether the AV materially contributed to the event. Our findings show that (1) CRASH attributes 64% of incidents to perception or planning failures, underscoring the importance of reasoning-based analysis for accurate fault attribution; and (2) approximately 50% of reported incidents involve rear-end collisions, highlighting a persistent and unresolved challenge in autonomous driving deployment. We further validate CRASH with five domain experts, achieving 86% accuracy in attributing AV system failures. Overall, CRASH demonstrates strong potential as a scalable and interpretable tool for automated crash analysis, providing actionable insights to support safety research and the continued development of autonomous driving systems.
☆ DOS: Dependency-Oriented Sampler for Masked Diffusion Language Models
Masked diffusion language models (MDLMs) have recently emerged as a new paradigm in language modeling, offering flexible generation dynamics and enabling efficient parallel decoding. However, existing decoding strategies for pre-trained MDLMs predominantly rely on token-level uncertainty criteria, while largely overlooking sequence-level information and inter-token dependencies. To address this limitation, we propose Dependency-Oriented Sampler (DOS), a training-free decoding strategy that leverages inter-token dependencies to inform token updates during generation. Specifically, DOS exploits attention matrices from transformer blocks to approximate inter-token dependencies, emphasizing information from unmasked tokens when updating masked positions. Empirical results demonstrate that DOS consistently achieves superior performance on both code generation and mathematical reasoning tasks. Moreover, DOS can be seamlessly integrated with existing parallel sampling methods, leading to improved generation efficiency without sacrificing generation quality.
comment: 16 pages, 5 figures
☆ Tagarela - A Portuguese speech dataset from podcasts
Despite significant advances in speech processing, Portuguese remains under-resourced due to the scarcity of public, large-scale, and high-quality datasets. To address this gap, we present a new dataset, named TAGARELA, composed of over 8,972 hours of podcast audio, specifically curated for training automatic speech recognition (ASR) and text-to-speech (TTS) models. Notably, its scale rivals English's GigaSpeech (10kh), enabling state-of-the-art Portuguese models. To ensure data quality, the corpus was subjected to an audio pre-processing pipeline and subsequently transcribed using a mixed strategy: we applied ASR models that were previously trained on high-fidelity transcriptions generated by proprietary APIs, ensuring a high level of initial accuracy. Finally, to validate the effectiveness of this new resource, we present ASR and TTS models trained exclusively on our dataset and evaluate their performance, demonstrating its potential to drive the development of more robust and natural speech technologies for Portuguese. The dataset is released publicly, available at https://freds0.github.io/TAGARELA/, to foster the development of robust speech technologies.
☆ PYTHEN: A Flexible Framework for Legal Reasoning in Python
This paper introduces PYTHEN, a novel Python-based framework for defeasible legal reasoning. PYTHEN is designed to model the inherently defeasible nature of legal argumentation, providing a flexible and intuitive syntax for representing legal rules, conditions, and exceptions. Inspired by PROLEG (PROlog-based LEGal reasoning support system) and guided by the philosophy of The Zen of Python, PYTHEN leverages Python's built-in any() and all() functions to offer enhanced flexibility by natively supporting both conjunctive (ALL) and disjunctive (ANY) conditions within a single rule, as well as a more expressive exception-handling mechanism. This paper details the architecture of PYTHEN, provides a comparative analysis with PROLEG, and discusses its potential applications in autoformalization and the development of next-generation legal AI systems. By bridging the gap between symbolic reasoning and the accessibility of Python, PYTHEN aims to democratize formal legal reasoning for young researchers, legal tech developers, and professionals without extensive logic programming expertise. We position PYTHEN as a practical bridge between the powerful symbolic reasoning capabilities of logic programming and the rich, ubiquitous ecosystem of Python, making formal legal reasoning accessible to a broader range of developers and legal professionals.
comment: Accepted at JURISIN 2026
☆ CCTU: A Benchmark for Tool Use under Complex Constraints
Solving problems through tool use under explicit constraints constitutes a highly challenging yet unavoidable scenario for large language models (LLMs), requiring capabilities such as function calling, instruction following, and self-refinement. However, progress has been hindered by the absence of dedicated evaluations. To address this, we introduce CCTU, a benchmark for evaluating LLM tool use under complex constraints. CCTU is grounded in a taxonomy of 12 constraint categories spanning four dimensions (i.e., resource, behavior, toolset, and response). The benchmark comprises 200 carefully curated and challenging test cases across diverse tool-use scenarios, each involving an average of seven constraint types and an average prompt length exceeding 4,700 tokens. To enable reliable evaluation, we develop an executable constraint validation module that performs step-level validation and enforces compliance during multi-turn interactions between models and their environments. We evaluate nine state-of-the-art LLMs in both thinking and non-thinking modes. Results indicate that when strict adherence to all constraints is required, no model achieves a task completion rate above 20%. Further analysis reveals that models violate constraints in over 50% of cases, particularly in the resource and response dimensions. Moreover, LLMs demonstrate limited capacity for self-refinement even after receiving detailed feedback on constraint violations, highlighting a critical bottleneck in the development of robust tool-use agents. To facilitate future research, we release the data and code.
Datasets for Verb Alternations across Languages: BLM Templates and Data Augmentation Strategies LREC 2026
Large language models (LLMs) have shown remarkable performance across various sentence-based linguistic phenomena, yet their ability to capture cross-sentence paradigmatic patterns, such as verb alternations, remains underexplored. In this work, we present curated paradigm-based datasets for four languages, designed to probe systematic cross-sentence knowledge of verb alternations (change-of-state and object-drop constructions in English, German and Italian, and Hebrew binyanim). The datasets comprise thousands of the Blackbird Language Matrices (BLMs) problems. The BLM task -- an RPM/ARC-like task devised specifically for language -- is a controlled linguistic puzzle where models must select the sentence that completes a pattern according to syntactic and semantic rules. We introduce three types of templates varying in complexity and apply linguistically-informed data augmentation strategies across synthetic and natural data. We provide simple baseline performance results across English, Italian, German, and Hebrew, that demonstrate the diagnostic usefulness of the datasets.
comment: 9 pages, 16 figures, accepted at LREC 2026
☆ From Documents to Spans: Code-Centric Learning for LLM-based ICD Coding
ICD coding is a critical yet challenging task in healthcare. Recently, LLM-based methods demonstrate stronger generalization than discriminative methods in ICD coding. However, fine-tuning LLMs for ICD coding faces three major challenges. First, existing public ICD coding datasets provide limited coverage of the ICD code space, restricting a model's ability to generalize to unseen codes. Second, naive fine-tuning diminishes the interpretability of LLMs, as few public datasets contain explicit supporting evidence for assigned codes. Third, ICD coding typically involves long clinical documents, making fine-tuning LLMs computationally expensive. To address these issues, we propose Code-Centric Learning, a training framework that shifts supervision from full clinical documents to scalable, short evidence spans. The key idea of this framework is that span-level learning improves LLMs' ability to perform document-level ICD coding. Our proposed framework consists of a mixed training strategy and code-centric data expansion, which substantially reduces training cost, improves accuracy on unseen ICD codes and preserves interpretability. Under the same LLM backbone, our method substantially outperforms strong baselines. Notably, our method enables small-scale LLMs to achieve performance comparable to much larger proprietary models, demonstrating its effectiveness and potential for fully automated ICD coding.
☆ Directional Embedding Smoothing for Robust Vision Language Models ICLR 2026
The safety and reliability of vision-language models (VLMs) are a crucial part of deploying trustworthy agentic AI systems. However, VLMs remain vulnerable to jailbreaking attacks that undermine their safety alignment to yield harmful outputs. In this work, we extend the Randomized Embedding Smoothing and Token Aggregation (RESTA) defense to VLMs and evaluate its performance against the JailBreakV-28K benchmark of multi-modal jailbreaking attacks. We find that RESTA is effective in reducing attack success rate over this diverse corpus of attacks, in particular, when employing directional embedding noise, where the injected noise is aligned with the original token embedding vectors. Our results demonstrate that RESTA can contribute to securing VLMs within agentic systems, as a lightweight, inference-time defense layer of an overall security framework.
comment: Accepted at ICLR 2026 Workshop on Agents in the Wild
☆ Practicing with Language Models Cultivates Human Empathic Communication
Empathy is central to human connection, yet people often struggle to express it effectively. In blinded evaluations, large language models (LLMs) generate responses that are often judged more empathic than human-written ones. Yet when a response is attributed to AI, recipients feel less heard and validated than when comparable responses are attributed to a human. To probe and address this gap in empathic communication skill, we built Lend an Ear, an experimental conversation platform in which participants are asked to offer empathic support to an LLM role-playing personal and workplace troubles. From 33,938 messages spanning 2,904 text-based conversations between 968 participants and their LLM conversational partners, we derive a data-driven taxonomy of idiomatic empathic expressions in naturalistic dialogue. Based on a pre-registered randomized experiment, we present evidence that a brief LLM coaching intervention offering personalized feedback on how to effectively communicate empathy significantly boosts alignment of participants' communication patterns with normative empathic communication patterns relative to both a control group and a group that received video-based but non-personalized feedback. Moreover, we find evidence for a silent empathy effect that people feel empathy but systematically fail to express it. Nonetheless, participants reliably identify responses aligned with normative empathic communication criteria as more expressive of empathy. Together, these results advance the scientific understanding of how empathy is expressed and valued and demonstrate a scalable, AI-based intervention for scaffolding and cultivating it.
☆ Bidirectional Chinese and English Passive Sentences Dataset for Machine Translation
Machine Translation (MT) evaluation has gone beyond metrics, towards more specific linguistic phenomena. Regarding English-Chinese language pairs, passive sentences are constructed and distributed differently due to language variation, thus need special attention in MT. This paper proposes a bidirectional multi-domain dataset of passive sentences, extracted from five Chinese-English parallel corpora and annotated automatically with structure labels according to human translation, and a test set with manually verified annotation. The dataset consists of 73,965 parallel sentence pairs (2,358,731 English words, 3,498,229 Chinese characters). We evaluate two state-of-the-art open-source MT systems with our dataset, and four commercial models with the test set. The results show that, unlike humans, models are more influenced by the voice of the source text rather than the general voice usage of the source language, and therefore tend to maintain the passive voice when translating a passive in either direction. However, models demonstrate some knowledge of the low frequency and predominantly negative context of Chinese passives, leading to higher voice consistency with human translators in English-to-Chinese translation than in Chinese-to-English translation. Commercial NMT models scored higher in metric evaluations, but LLMs showed a better ability to use diverse alternative translations. Datasets and annotation script will be shared upon request.
comment: 11 pages,1 figures, Language Resources and Evaluation Conference 2026
☆ Efficient Document Parsing via Parallel Token Prediction CVPR 2026
Document parsing, as a fundamental yet crucial vision task, is being revolutionized by vision-language models (VLMs). However, the autoregressive (AR) decoding inherent to VLMs creates a significant bottleneck, severely limiting parsing speed. In this paper, we propose Parallel-Token Prediction (PTP), a plugable, model-agnostic and simple-yet-effective method that enables VLMs to generate multiple future tokens in parallel with improved sample efficiency. Specifically, we insert some learnable tokens into the input sequence and design corresponding training objectives to equip the model with parallel decoding capabilities for document parsing. Furthermore, to support effective training, we develop a comprehensive data generation pipeline that efficiently produces large-scale, high-quality document parsing training data for VLMs. Extensive experiments on OmniDocBench and olmOCR-bench demonstrate that our method not only significantly improves decoding speed (1.6x-2.2x) but also reduces model hallucinations and exhibits strong generalization abilities.
comment: Accepted by CVPR 2026 Findings
☆ The Hrunting of AI: Where and How to Improve English Dialectal Fairness
It is known that large language models (LLMs) underperform in English dialects, and that improving them is difficult due to data scarcity. In this work we investigate how quality and availability impact the feasibility of improving LLMs in this context. For this, we evaluate three rarely-studied English dialects (Yorkshire, Geordie, and Cornish), plus African-American Vernacular English, and West Frisian as control. We find that human-human agreement when determining LLM generation quality directly impacts LLM-as-a-judge performance. That is, LLM-human agreement mimics the human-human agreement pattern, and so do metrics such as accuracy. It is an issue because LLM-human agreement measures an LLM's alignment with the human consensus; and hence raises questions about the feasibility of improving LLM performance in locales where low populations induce low agreement. We also note that fine-tuning does not eradicate, and might amplify, this pattern in English dialects. But also find encouraging signals, such as some LLMs' ability to generate high-quality data, thus enabling scalability. We argue that data must be carefully evaluated to ensure fair and inclusive LLM improvement; and, in the presence of scarcity, new tools are needed to handle the pattern found.
☆ HindSight: Evaluating Research Idea Generation via Future Impact
Evaluating AI-generated research ideas typically relies on LLM judges or human panels -- both subjective and disconnected from actual research impact. We introduce \hs{}, a time-split evaluation framework that measures idea quality by matching generated ideas against real future publications and scoring them by citation impact and venue acceptance. Using a temporal cutoff~$T$, we restrict an idea generation system to pre-$T$ literature, then evaluate its outputs against papers published in the subsequent 30 months. Experiments across 10 AI/ML research topics reveal a striking disconnect: LLM-as-Judge finds no significant difference between retrieval-augmented and vanilla idea generation ($p{=}0.584$), while \hs{} shows the retrieval-augmented system produces 2.5$\times$ higher-scoring ideas ($p{<}0.001$). Moreover, \hs{} scores are \emph{negatively} correlated with LLM-judged novelty ($ρ{=}{-}0.29$, $p{<}0.01$), suggesting that LLMs systematically overvalue novel-sounding ideas that never materialize in real research.
☆ To See is Not to Master: Teaching LLMs to Use Private Libraries for Code Generation
Large Language Models (LLMs) have shown strong potential for code generation, yet they remain limited in private-library-oriented code generation, where the goal is to generate code using APIs from private libraries. Existing approaches mainly rely on retrieving private-library API documentation and injecting relevant knowledge into the context at inference time. However, our study shows that this is insufficient: even given accurate required knowledge, LLMs still struggle to invoke private-library APIs effectively. To address this limitation, we propose PriCoder, an approach that teaches LLMs to invoke private-library APIs through automatically synthesized data. Specifically, PriCoder models private-library data synthesis as the construction of a graph, and alternates between two graph operators: (1) Progressive Graph Evolution, which improves data diversity by progressively synthesizing more diverse training samples from basic ones, and (2) Multidimensional Graph Pruning, which improves data quality through a rigorous filtering pipeline. To support rigorous evaluation, we construct two new benchmarks based on recently released libraries that are unfamiliar to the tested models. Experiments on three mainstream LLMs show that PriCoder substantially improves private-library-oriented code generation, yielding gains of over 20% in pass@1 in many settings, while causing negligible impact on general code generation capability. Our code and benchmarks are publicly available at https://github.com/contact-eniacode/PriCoder.
comment: 12 pages
☆ Indirect Question Answering in English, German and Bavarian: A Challenging Task for High- and Low-Resource Languages Alike LREC 2026
Indirectness is a common feature of daily communication, yet is underexplored in NLP research for both low-resource as well as high-resource languages. Indirect Question Answering (IQA) aims at classifying the polarity of indirect answers. In this paper, we present two multilingual corpora for IQA of varying quality that both cover English, Standard German and Bavarian, a German dialect without standard orthography: InQA+, a small high-quality evaluation dataset with hand-annotated labels, and GenIQA, a larger training dataset, that contains artificial data generated by GPT-4o-mini. We find that IQA is a pragmatically hard task that comes with various challenges, based on several experiment variations with multilingual transformer models (mBERT, XLM-R and mDeBERTa). We suggest and employ recommendations to tackle these challenges. Our results reveal low performance, even for English, and severe overfitting. We analyse various factors that influence these results, including label ambiguity, label set and dataset size. We find that the IQA performance is poor in high- (English, German) and low-resource languages (Bavarian) and that it is beneficial to have a large amount of training data. Further, GPT-4o-mini does not possess enough pragmatic understanding to generate high-quality IQA data in any of our tested languages.
comment: To appear at LREC 2026
☆ MMKU-Bench: A Multimodal Update Benchmark for Diverse Visual Knowledge
As real-world knowledge continues to evolve, the parametric knowledge acquired by multimodal models during pretraining becomes increasingly difficult to remain consistent with real-world knowledge. Existing research on multimodal knowledge updating focuses only on learning previously unknown knowledge, while overlooking the need to update knowledge that the model has already mastered but that later changes; moreover, evaluation is limited to the same modality, lacking a systematic analysis of cross-modal consistency. To address these issues, this paper proposes MMKU-Bench, a comprehensive evaluation benchmark for multimodal knowledge updating, which contains over 25k knowledge instances and more than 49k images, covering two scenarios, updated knowledge and unknown knowledge, thereby enabling comparative analysis of learning across different knowledge types. On this benchmark, we evaluate a variety of representative approaches, including supervised fine-tuning (SFT), reinforcement learning from human feedback (RLHF), and knowledge editing (KE). Experimental results show that SFT and RLHF are prone to catastrophic forgetting, while KE better preserve general capabilities but exhibit clear limitations in continual updating. Overall, MMKU-Bench provides a reliable and comprehensive evaluation benchmark for multimodal knowledge updating, advancing progress in this field.
☆ Bridging National and International Legal Data: Two Projects Based on the Japanese Legal Standard XML Schema for Comparative Law Studies
This paper presents an integrated framework for computational comparative law by connecting two consecutive research projects based on the Japanese Legal Standard (JLS) XML schema. The first project establishes structural interoperability by developing a conversion pipeline from JLS to the Akoma Ntoso (AKN) standard, enabling Japanese statutes to be integrated into international LegalDocML-based legislative databases. Building on this foundation, the second project applies multilingual embedding models and semantic textual similarity techniques to identify corresponding provisions across national legal systems. A prototype system combining multilingual embeddings, FAISS retrieval, and Cross-Encoder reranking generates candidate correspondences and visualizes them as cross-jurisdictional networks for exploratory comparative analysis.
comment: 21 pages, 5 figures
☆ Writer-R1: Enhancing Generative Writing in LLMs via Memory-augmented Replay Policy Optimization
As a typical open-ended generation task, creative writing lacks verifiable reference answers, which has long constrained reward modeling and automatic evaluation due to high human annotation costs, evaluative bias, and coarse feedback signals. To address these challenges, this paper first designs a multi-agent collaborative workflow based on Grounded Theory, performing dimensional decomposition and hierarchical induction of the problem to dynamically produce interpretable and reusable fine-grained criteria. Furthermore, we propose the Memory-augmented Replay Policy Optimization (MRPO) algorithm: on the one hand, without additional training, MRPO guides models to engage in self-reflection based on dynamic criteria, enabling controlled iterative improvement; on the other hand, we adopt the training paradigm that combines supervised fine-tuning with reinforcement learning to convert evaluation criteria into reward signals, achieving end-to-end optimization. Experimental results demonstrate that the automatically constructed criteria achieve performance gains comparable to human annotations. Writer-R1-4B models trained with this approach outperform baselines across multiple creative writing tasks and surpass some 100B+ parameter open-source models.
☆ Thinking in Latents: Adaptive Anchor Refinement for Implicit Reasoning in LLMs ICLR 2026
Token-level Chain-of-Thought (CoT) prompting has become a standard way to elicit multi-step reasoning in large language models (LLMs), especially for mathematical word problems. However, generating long intermediate traces increases output length and inference cost, and can be inefficient when the model could arrive at the correct answer without extensive verbalization. This has motivated latent-space reasoning approaches that shift computation into hidden representations and only emit a final answer. Yet, many latent reasoning methods depend on a fixed number of latent refinement steps at inference, adding another hyperparameter that must be tuned across models and datasets to balance accuracy and efficiency. We introduce AdaAnchor, a latent reasoning framework that performs silent iterative computation by refining a set of latent anchor vectors attached to the input. AdaAnchor further incorporates an adaptive halting mechanism that monitors anchor stability across iterations and terminates refinement once the anchor dynamics converge, allocating fewer steps to easier instances while reserving additional refinement steps for harder ones under a shared maximum-step budget. Our empirical evaluation across three mathematical word-problem benchmarks shows that AdaAnchor with adaptive halting yields accuracy gains of up to 5% over fixed-step latent refinement while reducing average latent refinement steps by 48-60% under the same maximum-step budget. Compared to standard reasoning baselines, AdaAnchor achieves large reductions in generated tokens (92-93%) by moving computation into silent latent refinement, offering a different accuracy-efficiency trade-off with substantially lower output-token usage.
comment: Accepted at ICLR 2026, LIT Workshop
☆ Interpretable Predictability-Based AI Text Detection: A Replication Study
This paper replicates and extends the system used in the AuTexTification 2023 shared task for authorship attribution of machine-generated texts. First, we tried to reproduce the original results. Exact replication was not possible because of differences in data splits, model availability, and implementation details. Next, we tested newer multilingual language models and added 26 document-level stylometric features. We also applied SHAP analysis to examine which features influence the model's decisions. We replaced the original GPT-2 models with newer generative models such as Qwen and mGPT for computing probabilistic features. For contextual representations, we used mDeBERTa-v3-base and applied the same configuration to both English and Spanish. This allowed us to use one shared configuration for Subtask 1 and Subtask 2. Our experiments show that the additional stylometric features improve performance in both tasks and both languages. The multilingual configuration achieves the results that are comparable to or better than language-specific models. The study also shows that clear documentation is important for reliable replication and fair comparison of systems.
☆ Attention Residuals
Residual connections with PreNorm are standard in modern LLMs, yet they accumulate all layer outputs with fixed unit weights. This uniform aggregation causes uncontrolled hidden-state growth with depth, progressively diluting each layer's contribution. We propose Attention Residuals (AttnRes), which replaces this fixed accumulation with softmax attention over preceding layer outputs, allowing each layer to selectively aggregate earlier representations with learned, input-dependent weights. To address the memory and communication overhead of attending over all preceding layer outputs for large-scale model training, we introduce Block AttnRes, which partitions layers into blocks and attends over block-level representations, reducing the memory footprint while preserving most of the gains of full AttnRes. Combined with cache-based pipeline communication and a two-phase computation strategy, Block AttnRes becomes a practical drop-in replacement for standard residual connections with minimal overhead. Scaling law experiments confirm that the improvement is consistent across model sizes, and ablations validate the benefit of content-dependent depth-wise selection. We further integrate AttnRes into the Kimi Linear architecture (48B total / 3B activated parameters) and pre-train on 1.4T tokens, where AttnRes mitigates PreNorm dilution, yielding more uniform output magnitudes and gradient distribution across depth, and improves downstream performance across all evaluated tasks.
comment: attnres tech report
☆ MER-Bench: A Comprehensive Benchmark for Multimodal Meme Reappraisal
Memes represent a tightly coupled, multimodal form of social expression, in which visual context and overlaid text jointly convey nuanced affect and commentary. Inspired by cognitive reappraisal in psychology, we introduce Meme Reappraisal, a novel multimodal generation task that aims to transform negatively framed memes into constructive ones while preserving their underlying scenario, entities, and structural layout. Unlike prior works on meme understanding or generation, Meme Reappraisal requires emotion-controllable, structure-preserving multimodal transformation under multiple semantic and stylistic constraints. To support this task, we construct MER-Bench, a benchmark of real-world memes with fine-grained multimodal annotations, including source and target emotions, positively rewritten meme text, visual editing specifications, and taxonomy labels covering visual type, sentiment polarity, and layout structure. We further propose a structured evaluation framework based on a multimodal large language model (MLLM)-as-a-Judge paradigm, decomposing performance into modality-level generation quality, affect controllability, structural fidelity, and global affective alignment. Extensive experiments across representative image-editing and multimodal-generation systems reveal substantial gaps in satisfying the constraints of structural preservation, semantic consistency, and affective transformation. We believe MER-Bench establishes a foundation for research on controllable meme editing and emotion-aware multimodal generation. Our code is available at: https://github.com/one-seven17/MER-Bench.
Pretraining and Benchmarking Modern Encoders for Latvian
Encoder-only transformers remain essential for practical NLP tasks. While recent advances in multilingual models have improved cross-lingual capabilities, low-resource languages such as Latvian remain underrepresented in pretraining corpora, and few monolingual Latvian encoders currently exist. We address this gap by pretraining a suite of Latvian-specific encoders based on RoBERTa, DeBERTaV3, and ModernBERT architectures, including long-context variants, and evaluating them across a diverse set of Latvian diagnostic and linguistic benchmarks. Our models are competitive with existing monolingual and multilingual encoders while benefiting from recent architectural and efficiency advances. Our best model, lv-deberta-base (111M parameters), achieves the strongest overall performance, outperforming larger multilingual baselines and prior Latvian-specific encoders. We release all pretrained models and evaluation resources to support further research and practical applications in Latvian NLP.
☆ OrgForge: A Multi-Agent Simulation Framework for Verifiable Synthetic Corporate Corpora
Evaluating retrieval-augmented generation (RAG) pipelines requires corpora where ground truth is knowable, temporally structured, and cross-artifact properties that real-world datasets rarely provide cleanly. Existing resources such as the Enron corpus carry legal ambiguity, demographic skew, and no structured ground truth. Purely LLM-generated synthetic data solves the legal problem but introduces a subtler one: the generating model cannot be prevented from hallucinating facts that contradict themselves across documents.We present OrgForge, an open-source multi-agent simulation framework that enforces a strict physics-cognition boundary: a deterministic Python engine maintains a SimEvent ground truth bus; large language models generate only surface prose, constrained by validated proposals. An actor-local clock enforces causal timestamp correctness across all artifact types, eliminating the class of timeline inconsistencies that arise when timestamps are sampled independently per document. We formalize three graph-dynamic subsystems stress propagation via betweenness centrality, temporal edge-weight decay, and Dijkstra escalation routing that govern organizational behavior independently of any LLM. Running a configurable N-day simulation, OrgForge produces interleaved Slack threads, JIRA tickets, Confluence pages, Git pull requests, and emails, all traceable to a shared, immutable event log. We additionally describe a causal chain tracking subsystem that accumulates cross-artifact evidence graphs per incident, a hybrid reciprocal-rank-fusion recurrence detector for identifying repeated failure classes, and an inbound/outbound email engine that routes vendor alerts, customer complaints, and HR correspondence through gated causal chains with probabilistic drop simulation. OrgForge is available under the MIT license.
☆ Beyond Benchmark Islands: Toward Representative Trustworthiness Evaluation for Agentic AI KDD 2026
As agentic AI systems move beyond static question answering into open-ended, tool-augmented, and multi-step real-world workflows, their increased authority poses greater risks of system misuse and operational failures. However, current evaluation practices remain fragmented, measuring isolated capabilities such as coding, hallucination, jailbreak resistance, or tool use in narrowly defined settings. We argue that the central limitation is not merely insufficient coverage of evaluation dimensions, but the lack of a principled notion of representativeness: an agent's trustworthiness should be assessed over a representative socio-technical scenario distribution rather than a collection of disconnected benchmark instances. To this end, we propose the Holographic Agent Assessment Framework (HAAF), a systematic evaluation paradigm that characterizes agent trustworthiness over a scenario manifold spanning task types, tool interfaces, interaction dynamics, social contexts, and risk levels. The framework integrates four complementary components: (i) static cognitive and policy analysis, (ii) interactive sandbox simulation, (iii) social-ethical alignment assessment, and (iv) a distribution-aware representative sampling engine that jointly optimizes coverage and risk sensitivity -- particularly for rare but high-consequence tail risks that conventional benchmarks systematically overlook. These components are connected through an iterative Trustworthy Optimization Factory. Through cycles of red-team probing and blue-team hardening, this paradigm progressively narrows the vulnerabilities to meet deployment standards, shifting agent evaluation from benchmark islands toward representative, real-world trustworthiness. Code and data for the illustrative instantiation are available at https://github.com/TonyQJH/haaf-pilot.
comment: 6 pages, 1 figure. Submitted to KDD 2026 Blue Sky Track
☆ Why Agents Compromise Safety Under Pressure
Large Language Model agents deployed in complex environments frequently encounter a conflict between maximizing goal achievement and adhering to safety constraints. This paper identifies a new concept called Agentic Pressure, which characterizes the endogenous tension emerging when compliant execution becomes infeasible. We demonstrate that under this pressure agents exhibit normative drift where they strategically sacrifice safety to preserve utility. Notably we find that advanced reasoning capabilities accelerate this decline as models construct linguistic rationalizations to justify violation. Finally, we analyze the root causes and explore preliminary mitigation strategies, such as pressure isolation, which attempts to restore alignment by decoupling decision-making from pressure signals.
comment: 17 pages, 5 figures
☆ Rethinking LLM Watermark Detection in Black-Box Settings: A Non-Intrusive Third-Party Framework
While watermarking serves as a critical mechanism for LLM provenance, existing secret-key schemes tightly couple detection with injection, requiring access to keys or provider-side scheme-specific detectors for verification. This dependency creates a fundamental barrier for real-world governance, as independent auditing becomes impossible without compromising model security or relying on the opaque claims of service providers. To resolve this dilemma, we introduce TTP-Detect, a pioneering black-box framework designed for non-intrusive, third-party watermark verification. By decoupling detection from injection, TTP-Detect reframes verification as a relative hypothesis testing problem. It employs a proxy model to amplify watermark-relevant signals and a suite of complementary relative measurements to assess the alignment of the query text with watermarked distributions. Extensive experiments across representative watermarking schemes, datasets and models demonstrate that TTP-Detect achieves superior detection performance and robustness against diverse attacks.
☆ LLM as Graph Kernel: Rethinking Message Passing on Text-Rich Graphs
Text-rich graphs, which integrate complex structural dependencies with abundant textual information, are ubiquitous yet remain challenging for existing learning paradigms. Conventional methods and even LLM-hybrids compress rich text into static embeddings or summaries before structural reasoning, creating an information bottleneck and detaching updates from the raw content. We argue that in text-rich graphs, the text is not merely a node attribute but the primary medium through which structural relationships are manifested. We introduce RAMP, a Raw-text Anchored Message Passing approach that moves beyond using LLMs as mere feature extractors and instead recasts the LLM itself as a graph-native aggregation operator. RAMP exploits the text-rich nature of the graph via a novel dual-representation scheme: it anchors inference on each node's raw text during each iteration while propagating dynamically optimized messages from neighbors. It further handles both discriminative and generative tasks under a single unified generative formulation. Extensive experiments show that RAMP effectively bridges the gap between graph propagation and deep text reasoning, achieving competitive performance and offering new insights into the role of LLMs as graph kernels for general-purpose graph learning.
comment: 20 pages, 5 figures. Work in progress
☆ Fine-tuning RoBERTa for CVE-to-CWE Classification: A 125M Parameter Model Competitive with LLMs
We present a fine-tuned RoBERTa-base classifier (125M parameters) for mapping Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures (CVE) descriptions to Common Weakness Enumeration (CWE) categories. We construct a large-scale training dataset of 234,770 CVE descriptions with AI-refined CWE labels using Claude Sonnet 4.6, and agreement-filtered evaluation sets where NVD and AI labels agree. On our held-out test set (27,780 samples, 205 CWE classes), the model achieves 87.4% top-1 accuracy and 60.7% Macro F1 -- a +15.5 percentage-point Macro F1 gain over a TF-IDF baseline that already reaches 84.9% top-1, demonstrating the model's advantage on rare weakness categories. On the external CTI-Bench benchmark (NeurIPS 2024), the model achieves 75.6% strict accuracy (95% CI: 72.8-78.2%) -- statistically indistinguishable from Cisco Foundation-Sec-8B-Reasoning (75.3%, 8B parameters) at 64x fewer parameters. We release the dataset, model, and training code.
comment: 9 pages, 2 figures, 6 tables. Dataset: https://huggingface.co/datasets/xamxte/cve-to-cwe Model: https://huggingface.co/xamxte/cwe-classifier-roberta-base
☆ ExPosST: Explicit Positioning with Adaptive Masking for LLM-Based Simultaneous Machine Translation
Large language models (LLMs) have recently demonstrated promising performance in simultaneous machine translation (SimulMT). However, applying decoder-only LLMs to SimulMT introduces a positional mismatch, which leads to a dilemma between decoding efficiency and positional consistency. Existing approaches often rely on specific positional encodings or carefully designed prompting schemes, and thus fail to simultaneously achieve inference efficiency, positional consistency, and broad model compatibility. In this work, we propose ExPosST, a general framework that resolves this dilemma through explicit position allocation. ExPosST reserves fixed positional slots for incoming source tokens, enabling efficient decoding with KV cache across different positional encoding methods. To further bridge the gap between fine-tuning and inference, we introduce a policy-consistent fine-tuning strategy that aligns training with inference-time decoding behavior. Experiments across multiple language pairs demonstrate that ExPosST effectively supports simultaneous translation under diverse policies.
☆ LLMs as Signal Detectors: Sensitivity, Bias, and the Temperature-Criterion Analogy
Large language models (LLMs) are evaluated for calibration using metrics such as Expected Calibration Error that conflate two distinct components: the model's ability to discriminate correct from incorrect answers (sensitivity) and its tendency toward confident or cautious responding (bias). Signal Detection Theory (SDT) decomposes these components. While SDT-derived metrics such as AUROC are increasingly used, the full parametric framework - unequal-variance model fitting, criterion estimation, z-ROC analysis - has not been applied to LLMs as signal detectors. In this pre-registered study, we treat three LLMs as observers performing factual discrimination across 168,000 trials and test whether temperature functions as a criterion shift analogous to payoff manipulations in human psychophysics. Critically, this analogy may break down because temperature changes the generated answer itself, not only the confidence assigned to it. Our results confirm the breakdown with temperature simultaneously increasing sensitivity (AUC) and shifting criterion. All models exhibited unequal-variance evidence distributions (z-ROC slopes 0.52-0.84), with instruct models showing more extreme asymmetry (0.52-0.63) than the base model (0.77-0.87) or human recognition memory (~0.80). The SDT decomposition revealed that models occupying distinct positions in sensitivity-bias space could not be distinguished by calibration metrics alone, demonstrating that the full parametric framework provides diagnostic information unavailable from existing metrics.
comment: 15 pages, 8 figures, 2 tables
☆ Decision-Level Ordinal Modeling for Multimodal Essay Scoring with Large Language Models
Automated essay scoring (AES) predicts multiple rubric-defined trait scores for each essay, where each trait follows an ordered discrete rating scale. Most LLM-based AES methods cast scoring as autoregressive token generation and obtain the final score via decoding and parsing, making the decision implicit. This formulation is particularly sensitive in multimodal AES, where the usefulness of visual inputs varies across essays and traits. To address these limitations, we propose Decision-Level Ordinal Modeling (DLOM), which makes scoring an explicit ordinal decision by reusing the language model head to extract score-wise logits on predefined score tokens, enabling direct optimization and analysis in the score space. For multimodal AES, DLOM-GF introduces a gated fusion module that adaptively combines textual and multimodal score logits. For text-only AES, DLOM-DA adds a distance-aware regularization term to better reflect ordinal distances. Experiments on the multimodal EssayJudge dataset show that DLOM improves over a generation-based SFT baseline across scoring traits, and DLOM-GF yields further gains when modality relevance is heterogeneous. On the text-only ASAP/ASAP++ benchmarks, DLOM remains effective without visual inputs, and DLOM-DA further improves performance and outperforms strong representative baselines.
☆ Modeling and Benchmarking Spoken Dialogue Rewards with Modality and Colloquialness
The rapid evolution of end-to-end spoken dialogue systems demands transcending mere textual semantics to incorporate paralinguistic nuances and the spontaneous nature of human conversation. However, current methods struggle with two critical gaps: the modality gap, involving prosody and emotion, and the colloquialness gap, distinguishing written scripts from natural speech. To address these challenges, we introduce SDiaReward, an end-to-end multi-turn reward model trained on SDiaReward-Dataset, a novel collection of episode-level preference pairs explicitly targeting these gaps. It operates directly on full multi-turn speech episodes and is optimized with pairwise preference supervision, enabling joint assessment of modality and colloquialness in a single evaluator. We further establish ESDR-Bench, a stratified benchmark for robust episode-level evaluation. Experiments demonstrate that SDiaReward achieves state-of-the-art pairwise preference accuracy, significantly outperforming general-purpose audio LLMs. Further analysis suggests that SDiaReward captures relative conversational expressiveness beyond superficial synthesis cues, improving generalization across domains and recording conditions. Code, data, and demos are available at https://sdiareward.github.io/.
☆ Customizing ChatGPT for Second Language Speaking Practice: Genuine Support or Just a Marketing Gimmick?
ChatGPT, with its customization features and Voice Mode, has the potential for more engaging and peresonalized ESL (English as a Second Language) education. This study examines the efficacy of customized ChatGPT conversational features in facilitating ESL speaking practices, comparing the performance of four versions of ChatGPT Voice Mode: uncustomized Standard mode, uncustomized Advanced mode, customized Standard mode, and customized Advanced mode. Customization was guided by prompt engineering principles and grounded in relevant theories, including Motivation Theory, Culturally Responsive Teaching (CRT), Communicative Language Teaching (CLT), and the Affective Filter Hypothesis. Content analysis found that customized versions generally provided more balanced feedback and emotional support, contributing to a positive and motivating learning environment. However, cultural responsiveness did not show significant improvement despite targeted customization efforts. These initial findings suggest that customization could enhance ChatGPT's capacity as a more effective language tutor, with the standard model already capable of meeting the learning needs. The study underscores the importance of prompt engineering and AI literacy in maximizaing AI's potential in language learning.
comment: Short paper accepted at the International Conference of the Learning Sciences (ICLS) 2025, International Society of the Learning Sciences
☆ Developing an English-Efik Corpus and Machine Translation System for Digitization Inclusion EACL
Low-resource languages serve as invaluable repositories of human history, preserving cultural and intellectual diversity. Despite their significance, they remain largely absent from modern natural language processing systems. While progress has been made for widely spoken African languages such as Swahili, Yoruba, and Amharic, smaller indigenous languages like Efik continue to be underrepresented in machine translation research. This study evaluates the effectiveness of state-of-the-art multilingual neural machine translation models for English-Efik translation, leveraging a small-scale, community-curated parallel corpus of 13,865 sentence pairs. We fine-tuned both the mT5 multilingual model and the NLLB200 model on this dataset. NLLB-200 outperformed mT5, achieving BLEU scores of 26.64 for English-Efik and 31.21 for Efik-English, with corresponding chrF scores of 51.04 and 47.92, indicating improved fluency and semantic fidelity. Our findings demonstrate the feasibility of developing practical machine translation tools for low-resource languages and highlight the importance of inclusive data practices and culturally grounded evaluation in advancing equitable NLP.
comment: 8 pages, 1 figure, accepted at AfricaNLP 2026 (co-located with EACL)
☆ Shopping Companion: A Memory-Augmented LLM Agent for Real-World E-Commerce Tasks ACL 2026
In e-commerce, LLM agents show promise for shopping tasks such as recommendations, budgeting, and bundle deals, where accurately capturing user preferences from long-term conversations is critical. However, two challenges hinder realizing this potential: (1) the absence of benchmarks for evaluating long-term preference-aware shopping tasks, and (2) the lack of end-to-end optimization due to existing designs that treat preference identification and shopping assistance as separate components. In this paper, we introduce a novel benchmark with a long-term memory setup, spanning two shopping tasks over 1.2 million real-world products, and propose Shopping Companion, a unified framework that jointly tackles memory retrieval and shopping assistance while supporting user intervention. To train such capabilities, we develop a dual-reward reinforcement learning strategy with tool-wise rewards to handle the sparse and discontinuous rewards inherent in multi-turn interactions. Experimental results demonstrate that even state-of-the-art models (such as GPT-5) achieve success rates under 70% on our benchmark, highlighting the significant challenges in this domain. Notably, our lightweight LLM, trained with Shopping Companion, consistently outperforms strong baselines, achieving better preference capture and task performance, which validates the effectiveness of our unified design.
comment: Subbmited to ACL 2026
☆ ContiGuard: A Framework for Continual Toxicity Detection Against Evolving Evasive Perturbations
Toxicity detection mitigates the dissemination of toxic content (e.g., hateful comments, posts, and messages within online social actions) to safeguard a healthy online social environment. However, malicious users persistently develop evasive perturbations to disguise toxic content and evade detectors. Traditional detectors or methods are static over time and are inadequate in addressing these evolving evasion tactics. Thus, continual learning emerges as a logical approach to dynamically update detection ability against evolving perturbations. Nevertheless, disparities across perturbations hinder the detector's continual learning on perturbed text. More importantly, perturbation-induced noises distort semantics to degrade comprehension and also impair critical feature learning to render detection sensitive to perturbations. These amplify the challenge of continual learning against evolving perturbations. In this work, we present ContiGuard, the first framework tailored for continual learning of the detector on time-evolving perturbed text (termed continual toxicity detection) to enable the detector to continually update capability and maintain sustained resilience against evolving perturbations. Specifically, to boost the comprehension, we present an LLM-powered semantic enriching strategy, where we dynamically incorporate possible meaning and toxicity-related clues excavated by LLM into the perturbed text to improve the comprehension. To mitigate non-critical features and amplify critical ones, we propose a discriminability-driven feature learning strategy, where we strengthen discriminative features while suppressing the less-discriminative ones to shape a robust classification boundary for detection...
☆ The Impact of Ideological Discourses in RAG: A Case Study with COVID-19 Treatments
This paper studies the impact of retrieved ideological texts on the outputs of large language models (LLMs). While interest in understanding ideology in LLMs has recently increased, little attention has been given to this issue in the context of Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG). To fill this gap, we design an external knowledge source based on ideological loaded texts about COVID-19 treatments. Our corpus is based on 1,117 academic articles representing discourses about controversial and endorsed treatments for the disease. We propose a corpus linguistics framework, based on Lexical Multidimensional Analysis (LMDA), to identify the ideologies within the corpus. LLMs are tasked to answer questions derived from three identified ideological dimensions, and two types of contextual prompts are adopted: the first comprises the user question and ideological texts; and the second contains the question, ideological texts, and LMDA descriptions. Ideological alignment between reference ideological texts and LLMs' responses is assessed using cosine similarity for lexical and semantic representations. Results demonstrate that LLMs' responses based on ideological retrieved texts are more aligned with the ideology encountered in the external knowledge, with the enhanced prompt further influencing LLMs' outputs. Our findings highlight the importance of identifying ideological discourses within the RAG framework in order to mitigate not just unintended ideological bias, but also the risks of malicious manipulation of such models.
☆ VorTEX: Various overlap ratio for Target speech EXtraction
Target speech extraction (TSE) aims to recover a target speaker's voice from a mixture. While recent text-prompted approaches have shown promise, most approaches assume fully overlapped mixtures, limiting insight into behavior across realistic overlap ratios. We introduce VorTEX (Various overlap ratio for Target speech EXtraction), a text-prompted TSE architecture with a Decoupled Adaptive Multi-branch (DAM) Fusion block that separates primary extraction from auxiliary regularization pathways. To enable controlled analysis, we construct PORTE, a two-speaker dataset spanning overlap ratios from 0% to 100%. We further propose Suppression Ratio on Energy (SuRE), a diagnostic metric that detects suppression behavior not captured by conventional measures. Experiments show that existing models exhibit suppression or residual interference under overlap, whereas VorTEX achieves the highest separation fidelity across 20-100% overlap (e.g., 5.50 dB at 20% and 2.04 dB at 100%) while maintaining zero SuRE, indicating robust extraction without suppression-driven artifacts.
comment: arXiv Preprint
☆ Universe Routing: Why Self-Evolving Agents Need Epistemic Control ICLR 2026
A critical failure mode of current lifelong agents is not lack of knowledge, but the inability to decide how to reason. When an agent encounters "Is this coin fair?" it must recognize whether to invoke frequentist hypothesis testing or Bayesian posterior inference - frameworks that are epistemologically incompatible. Mixing them produces not minor errors, but structural failures that propagate across decision chains. We formalize this as the universe routing problem: classifying questions into mutually exclusive belief spaces before invoking specialized solvers. Our key findings challenge conventional assumptions: (1) hard routing to heterogeneous solvers matches soft MoE accuracy while being 7x faster because epistemically incompatible frameworks cannot be meaningfully averaged; (2) a 465M-parameter router achieves a 2.3x smaller generalization gap than keyword-matching baselines, indicating semantic rather than surface-level reasoning; (3) when expanding to new belief spaces, rehearsal-based continual learning achieves zero forgetting, outperforming EWC by 75 percentage points, suggesting that modular epistemic architectures are fundamentally more amenable to lifelong learning than regularization-based approaches. These results point toward a broader architectural principle: reliable self-evolving agents may require an explicit epistemic control layer that governs reasoning framework selection.
comment: 10 pages. Accepted at the LLA Workshop at ICLR 2026 (camera-ready version)
☆ Information Asymmetry across Language Varieties: A Case Study on Cantonese-Mandarin and Bavarian-German QA LREC 2026
Large Language Models (LLMs) are becoming a common way for humans to seek knowledge, yet their coverage and reliability vary widely. Especially for local language varieties, there are large asymmetries, e.g., information in local Wikipedia that is absent from the standard variant. However, little is known about how well LLMs perform under such information asymmetry, especially on closely related languages. We manually construct a novel challenge question-answering (QA) dataset that captures knowledge conveyed on a local Wikipedia page, which is absent from their higher-resource counterparts-covering Mandarin Chinese vs. Cantonese and German vs. Bavarian. Our experiments show that LLMs fail to answer questions about information only in local editions of Wikipedia. Providing context from lead sections substantially improves performance, with further gains possible via translation. Our topical, geographic annotations, and stratified evaluations reveal the usefulness of local Wikipedia editions as sources of both regional and global information. These findings raise critical questions about inclusivity and cultural coverage of LLMs.
comment: 23 pages, accepted at LREC 2026 as an oral presentation
☆ Vietnamese Automatic Speech Recognition: A Revisit EACL 2026
Automatic Speech Recognition (ASR) performance is heavily dependent on the availability of large-scale, high-quality datasets. For low-resource languages, existing open-source ASR datasets often suffer from insufficient quality and inconsistent annotation, hindering the development of robust models. To address these challenges, we propose a novel and generalizable data aggregation and preprocessing pipeline designed to construct high-quality ASR datasets from diverse, potentially noisy, open-source sources. Our pipeline incorporates rigorous processing steps to ensure data diversity, balance, and the inclusion of crucial features like word-level timestamps. We demonstrate the effectiveness of our methodology by applying it to Vietnamese, resulting in a unified, high-quality 500-hour dataset that provides a foundation for training and evaluating state-of-the-art Vietnamese ASR systems. Our project page is available at https://github.com/qualcomm-ai-research/PhoASR.
comment: Accepted to EACL 2026 Findings
☆ Towards Privacy-Preserving Machine Translation at the Inference Stage: A New Task and Benchmark
Current online translation services require sending user text to cloud servers, posing a risk of privacy leakage when the text contains sensitive information. This risk hinders the application of online translation services in privacy-sensitive scenarios. One way to mitigate this risk for online translation services is introducing privacy protection mechanisms targeting the inference stage of translation models. However, compared to subfields of NLP like text classification and summarization, the machine translation research community has limited exploration of privacy protection during the inference stage. There is no clearly defined privacy protection task for the inference stage, dedicated evaluation datasets and metrics, and reference benchmark methods. The absence of these elements has seriously constrained researchers' in-depth exploration of this direction. To bridge this gap, this paper proposes a novel "Privacy-Preserving Machine Translation" (PPMT) task, aiming to protect the private information in text during the model inference stage. For this task, we constructed three benchmark test datasets, designed corresponding evaluation metrics, and proposed a series of benchmark methods as a starting point for this task. The definition of privacy is complex and diverse. Considering that named entities often contain a large amount of personal privacy and commercial secrets, we have focused our research on protecting only the named entity's privacy in the text. We expect this research work will provide a new perspective and a solid foundation for the privacy protection problem in machine translation.
comment: 15 pages, 5 figures, Accepted by IEEE Journal of Selected Topics in Signal Processing
☆ Learning Constituent Headedness
Headedness is widely used as an organizing device in syntactic analysis, yet constituency treebanks rarely encode it explicitly and most processing pipelines recover it procedurally via percolation rules. We treat this notion of constituent headedness as an explicit representational layer and learn it as a supervised prediction task over aligned constituency and dependency annotations, inducing supervision by defining each constituent head as the dependency span head. On aligned English and Chinese data, the resulting models achieve near-ceiling intrinsic accuracy and substantially outperform Collins-style rule-based percolation. Predicted heads yield comparable parsing accuracy under head-driven binarization, consistent with the induced binary training targets being largely equivalent across head choices, while increasing the fidelity of deterministic constituency-to-dependency conversion and transferring across resources and languages under simple label-mapping interfaces.
☆ Criterion-referenceability determines LLM-as-a-judge validity across physics assessment formats
As large language models (LLMs) are increasingly considered for automated assessment and feedback, understanding when LLM marking can be trusted is essential. We evaluate LLM-as-a-judge marking across three physics assessment formats - structured questions, written essays, and scientific plots - comparing GPT-5.2, Grok 4.1, Claude Opus 4.5, DeepSeek-V3.2, Gemini Pro 3, and committee aggregations against human markers under blind, solution-provided, false-solution, and exemplar-anchored conditions. For $n=771$ blind university exam questions, models achieve fractional mean absolute errors (fMAE) $\approx 0.22$ with robust discriminative validity (Spearman $ρ> 0.6$). For secondary and university structured questions ($n=1151$), providing official solutions reduces MAE and strengthens validity (committee $ρ= 0.88$); false solutions degrade absolute accuracy but leave rank ordering largely intact (committee $ρ= 0.77$; individual models $ρ\geq 0.59$). Essay marking behaves fundamentally differently. Across $n=55$ scripts ($n=275$ essays), blind AI marking is harsher and more variable than human marking, with discriminative validity already poor ($ρ\approx 0.1$). Adding a mark scheme does not improve discrimination ($ρ\approx 0$; all confidence intervals include zero). Anchored exemplars shift the AI mean close to the human mean and compress variance below the human standard deviation, but discriminative validity remains near-zero - distributional agreement can occur without valid discrimination. For code-based plot elements ($n=1400$), models achieve exceptionally high discriminative validity ($ρ> 0.84$) with near-linear calibration. Across all task types, validity tracks criterion-referenceability - the extent to which a task maps to explicit, observable grading features - and benchmark reliability, rather than raw model capability.
comment: 25 pages, 26 figures
☆ Beyond Creed: A Non-Identity Safety Condition A Strong Empirical Alternative to Identity Framing in Low-Data LoRA Fine-Tuning
How safety supervision is written may matter more than the explicit identity content it contains. We study low-data LoRA safety fine-tuning with four supervision formats built from the same core safety rules: constitutional rules (A), creed-style identity framing (B), a B-matched creed condition with a worldview/confession identity-maintenance tail (C), and a matched non-identity condition (D). Across three instruction-tuned model families (Llama 3.1 8B, Qwen2.5 7B, and Gemma 3 4B), we evaluate HarmBench using a reconciled dual-judge pipeline combining Bedrock-hosted DeepSeek v3.2 and Sonnet 4.6, with disagreement and boundary cases manually resolved. The non-identity condition D is the strongest group on all three model families on the full 320-behavior HarmBench set, reaching 74.4% refusal on Llama, 76.9% on Gemma, and 74.1% on Qwen. By comparison, creed-style framing (B) improves over plain constitutional rules (A) on Llama and Gemma, but remains substantially below D, yielding an overall descriptive ordering of $D > B > C \geq A > baseline$. This provides a bounded empirical challenge to a strong version of the identity-framing hypothesis: explicit creed-style identity language is not necessary for the strongest gains observed here. Capability evaluations on MMLU and ARC-Challenge show no meaningful trade-off across conditions.
☆ Towards Next-Generation LLM Training: From the Data-Centric Perspective
Large language models (LLMs) have demonstrated remarkable performance across a wide range of tasks and domains, with data playing a central role in enabling these advances. Despite this success, the preparation and effective utilization of the massive datasets required for LLM training remain major bottlenecks. In current practice, LLM training data is often constructed using ad hoc scripts, and there is still a lack of mature, agent-based data preparation systems that can automatically construct robust and reusable data workflows, thereby freeing data scientists from repetitive and error-prone engineering efforts. Moreover, once collected, datasets are often consumed largely in their entirety during training, without systematic mechanisms for data selection, mixture optimization, or reweighting. To address these limitations, we advocate two complementary research directions. First, we propose building a robust, agent-based automatic data preparation system that supports automated workflow construction and scalable data management. Second, we argue for a unified data-model interaction training system in which data is dynamically selected, mixed, and reweighted throughout the training process, enabling more efficient, adaptive, and performance-aware data utilization. Finally, we discuss the remaining challenges and outline promising directions for future research and system development.
☆ Visual Confused Deputy: Exploiting and Defending Perception Failures in Computer-Using Agents
Computer-using agents (CUAs) act directly on graphical user interfaces, yet their perception of the screen is often unreliable. Existing work largely treats these failures as performance limitations, asking whether an action succeeds, rather than whether the agent is acting on the correct object at all. We argue that this is fundamentally a security problem. We formalize the visual confused deputy: a failure mode in which an agent authorizes an action based on a misperceived screen state, due to grounding errors, adversarial screenshot manipulation, or time-of-check-to-time-of-use (TOCTOU) races. This gap is practically exploitable: even simple screen-level manipulations can redirect routine clicks into privileged actions while remaining indistinguishable from ordinary agent mistakes. To mitigate this threat, we propose the first guardrail that operates outside the agent's perceptual loop. Our method, dual-channel contrastive classification, independently evaluates (1) the visual click target and (2) the agent's reasoning about the action against deployment-specific knowledge bases, and blocks execution if either channel indicates risk. The key insight is that these two channels capture complementary failure modes: visual evidence detects target-level mismatches, while textual reasoning reveals dangerous intent behind visually innocuous controls. Across controlled attacks, real GUI screenshots, and agent traces, the combined guardrail consistently outperforms either channel alone. Our results suggest that CUA safety requires not only better action generation, but independent verification of what the agent believes it is clicking and why. Materials are provided\footnote{Model, benchmark, and code: https://github.com/vllm-project/semantic-router}.
♻ ☆ Emotion is Not Just a Label: Latent Emotional Factors in LLM Processing
Large language models are routinely deployed on text that varies widely in emotional tone, yet their reasoning behavior is typically evaluated without accounting for emotion as a source of representational variation. Prior work has largely treated emotion as a prediction target, for example in sentiment analysis or emotion classification. In contrast, we study emotion as a latent factor that shapes how models attend to and reason over text. We analyze how emotional tone systematically alters attention geometry in transformer models, showing that metrics such as locality, center-of-mass distance, and entropy vary across emotions and correlate with downstream question-answering performance. To facilitate controlled study of these effects, we introduce Affect-Uniform ReAding QA (AURA-QA), a question-answering dataset with emotionally balanced, human-authored context passages. Finally, an emotional regularization framework is proposed that constrains emotion-conditioned representational drift during training. Experiments across multiple QA benchmarks demonstrate that this approach improves reading comprehension in both emotionally-varying and non-emotionally varying datasets, yielding consistent gains under distribution shift and in-domain improvements on several benchmarks.
♻ ☆ Targum - A Multilingual New Testament Translation Corpus
Many European languages possess rich biblical translation histories, yet existing corpora - in prioritizing linguistic breadth - often fail to capture this depth. To address this gap, we introduce a multilingual corpus of 651 New Testament translations, of which 334 are unique, spanning five languages with 2.4-5.0x more translations per language than any prior corpus: English (194 unique versions from 390 total), French (41 from 78), Italian (17 from 33), Polish (29 from 48), and Spanish (53 from 102). Aggregated from 12 online biblical libraries and one preexisting corpus, each translation is annotated with metadata that maps the text to a standardized identifier for the work, its specific edition, and its year of revision. This canonicalization allows researchers to define "uniqueness" for their own needs: they can perform micro-level analyses on translation families, such as the KJV lineage, or conduct macro-level studies by deduplicating closely related texts. By providing the first multilingual resource with sufficient depth per language for flexible, multilevel analysis, the corpus fills a gap in the quantitative study of translation history.
♻ ☆ EvoX: Meta-Evolution for Automated Discovery
Recent work such as AlphaEvolve has shown that combining LLM-driven optimization with evolutionary search can effectively improve programs, prompts, and algorithms across domains. In this paradigm, previously evaluated solutions are reused to guide the model toward new candidate solutions. Crucially, the effectiveness of this evolution process depends on the search strategy: how prior solutions are selected and varied to generate new candidates. However, most existing methods rely on fixed search strategies with predefined knobs (e.g., explore-exploit ratios) that remain static throughout execution. While effective in some settings, these approaches often fail to adapt across tasks, or even within the same task as the search space changes over time. We introduce EvoX, an adaptive evolution method that optimizes its own evolution process. EvoX jointly evolves candidate solutions and the search strategies used to generate them, continuously updating how prior solutions are selected and varied based on progress. This enables the system to dynamically shift between different search strategies during the optimization process. Across nearly 200 real-world optimization tasks, EvoX outperforms existing AI-driven evolutionary methods including AlphaEvolve, OpenEvolve, GEPA, and ShinkaEvolve on the majority of tasks.
♻ ☆ Curriculum Reinforcement Learning from Easy to Hard Tasks Improves LLM Reasoning
We aim to improve the reasoning capabilities of language models via reinforcement learning (RL). Recent RL post-trained models like DeepSeek-R1 have demonstrated reasoning abilities on mathematical and coding tasks. However, prior studies suggest that using RL alone to improve reasoning on inherently difficult tasks is less effective. Here, we draw inspiration from curriculum learning and propose to schedule tasks from easy to hard (E2H), allowing LLMs to build reasoning skills gradually. Our method is termed E2H Reasoner. Empirically, we observe that, although easy tasks are important initially, fading them out through appropriate scheduling is essential in preventing overfitting. Theoretically, we establish convergence guarantees for E2H Reasoner within an approximate policy iteration framework. We derive finite-sample complexity bounds and show that when tasks are appropriately decomposed and conditioned, learning through curriculum stages requires fewer total samples than direct learning. Experiments across multiple domains show that E2H Reasoner significantly improves the reasoning ability of small LLMs (1.5B to 3B), which otherwise struggle when trained with vanilla RL alone, highlighting the effectiveness of our method. Our code can be found on https://github.com/divelab/E2H-Reasoning.
♻ ☆ ViWikiFC: Fact-Checking for Vietnamese Wikipedia-Based Textual Knowledge Source
Fact-checking is essential due to the explosion of misinformation in the media ecosystem. Although false information exists in every language and country, most research to solve the problem mainly concentrated on huge communities like English and Chinese. Low-resource languages like Vietnamese are necessary to explore corpora and models for fact verification. To bridge this gap, we construct ViWikiFC, the first manual annotated open-domain corpus for Vietnamese Wikipedia Fact Checking more than 20K claims generated by converting evidence sentences extracted from Wikipedia articles. We analyze our corpus through many linguistic aspects, from the new dependency rate, the new n-gram rate, and the new word rate. We conducted various experiments for Vietnamese fact-checking, including evidence retrieval and verdict prediction. BM25 and InfoXLM (Large) achieved the best results in two tasks, with BM25 achieving an accuracy of 88.30% for SUPPORTS, 86.93% for REFUTES, and only 56.67% for the NEI label in the evidence retrieval task, InfoXLM (Large) achieved an F1 score of 86.51%. Furthermore, we also conducted a pipeline approach, which only achieved a strict accuracy of 67.00% when using InfoXLM (Large) and BM25. These results demonstrate that our dataset is challenging for the Vietnamese language model in fact-checking tasks.
♻ ☆ From Intuition to Calibrated Judgment: A Rubric-Based Expert-Panel Study of Human Detection of LLM-Generated Korean Text
Distinguishing human-written Korean text from fluent LLM outputs remains difficult even for trained readers, who can over-trust surface well-formedness. We present LREAD, a Korean-specific instantiation of a rubric-based expert-calibration framework for human attribution of LLM-generated text. In a three-phase blind longitudinal study with three linguistically trained annotators, Phase 1 measures intuition-only attribution, Phase 2 introduces criterion-anchored scoring with explicit justifications, and Phase 3 evaluates a limited held-out elementary-persona subset. Majority-vote accuracy improves from 0.60 in Phase 1 to 0.90 in Phase 2, and reaches 10/10 on the limited Phase 3 subset (95% CI [0.692, 1.000]); agreement also increases from Fleiss' $κ$ = -0.09 to 0.82. Error analysis suggests that calibration primarily reduces false negatives on AI essays rather than inducing generalized over-detection. We position LREAD as pilot evidence for within-panel calibration in a Korean argumentative-essay setting. These findings suggest that rubric-scaffolded human judgment can complement automated detectors by making attribution reasoning explicit, auditable, and adaptable.
♻ ☆ SloPal: A 60-Million-Word Slovak Parliamentary Corpus with Aligned Speech and Fine-Tuned ASR Models LREC 2026
Slovak remains a low-resource language for automatic speech recognition (ASR), with fewer than 100 hours of publicly available training data. We present SloPal, a comprehensive Slovak parliamentary corpus comprising 330,000 speaker-segmented transcripts (66 million words, 220 million tokens) spanning 2001--2024, with rich metadata including speaker names, roles, and session information. From this collection, we derive SloPalSpeech, a 2,806-hour aligned speech dataset with segments up to 30 seconds, constructed using a language-agnostic anchor-based alignment pipeline and optimized for Whisper-based ASR training. Fine-tuning Whisper on SloPalSpeech reduces Word Error Rate (WER) by up to 70\%, with the fine-tuned small model (244M parameters) approaching base large-v3 (1.5B parameters) performance at 6$\times$ fewer parameters. We publicly release the SloPal text corpus, SloPalSpeech aligned audio, and four fine-tuned Whisper models at https://huggingface.co/collections/NaiveNeuron/slopal, providing the most comprehensive open Slovak parliamentary language resource to date.
comment: LREC 2026
♻ ☆ Imagine-then-Plan: Agent Learning from Adaptive Lookahead with World Models
Recent advances in world models have shown promise for modeling future dynamics of environmental states, enabling agents to reason and act without accessing real environments. Current methods mainly perform single-step or fixed-horizon rollouts, leaving their potential for complex task planning under-exploited. We propose Imagine-then-Plan (\texttt{ITP}), a unified framework for agent learning via lookahead imagination, where an agent's policy model interacts with the learned world model, yielding multi-step ``imagined'' trajectories. Since the imagination horizon may vary by tasks and stages, we introduce a novel adaptive lookahead mechanism by trading off the ultimate goal and task progress. The resulting imagined trajectories provide rich signals about future consequences, such as achieved progress and potential conflicts, which are fused with current observations, formulating a partially \textit{observable} and \textit{imaginable} Markov decision process to guide policy learning. We instantiate \texttt{ITP} with both training-free and reinforcement-trained variants. Extensive experiments across representative agent benchmarks demonstrate that \texttt{ITP} significantly outperforms competitive baselines. Further analyses validate that our adaptive lookahead largely enhances agents' reasoning capability, providing valuable insights into addressing broader, complex tasks. Our code and data will be publicly available at https://github.com/loyiv/ITP.
♻ ☆ When Tables Go Crazy: Evaluating Multimodal Models on French Financial Documents
Vision-language models (VLMs) perform well on many document understanding tasks, yet their reliability in specialized, non-English domains remains underexplored. This gap is especially critical in finance, where documents mix dense regulatory text, numerical tables, and visual charts, and where extraction errors can have real-world consequences. We introduce Multimodal Finance Eval, the first multimodal benchmark for evaluating French financial document understanding. The dataset contains 1,204 expert-validated questions spanning text extraction, table comprehension, chart interpretation, and multi-turn conversational reasoning, drawn from real investment prospectuses, KIDs, and PRIIPs. We evaluate six open-weight VLMs (8B-124B parameters) using an LLM-as-judge protocol. While models achieve strong performance on text and table tasks (85-90% accuracy), they struggle with chart interpretation (34-62%). Most notably, multi-turn dialogue reveals a sharp failure mode: early mistakes propagate across turns, driving accuracy down to roughly 50% regardless of model size. These results show that current VLMs are effective for well-defined extraction tasks but remain brittle in interactive, multi-step financial analysis. Multimodal Finance Eval offers a challenging benchmark to measure and drive progress in this high-stakes setting.
comment: 14 pages, 13 figures
♻ ☆ T-FIX: Text-Based Explanations with Features Interpretable to eXperts
As LLMs are deployed in knowledge-intensive settings (e.g., surgery, astronomy, therapy), users are often domain experts who expect not just answers, but explanations that mirror professional reasoning. However, most automatic evaluations of explanations prioritize plausibility or faithfulness, rather than testing whether an LLM thinks like an expert. Existing approaches to evaluating professional reasoning rely heavily on per-example expert annotation, making such evaluations costly and difficult to scale. To address this gap, we introduce the T-FIX benchmark, spanning seven scientific tasks across three domains, to operationalize expert alignment as a desired attribute of LLM-generation explanations. Our framework enables automatic evaluation of expert alignment, generalizing to unseen explanations and eliminating the need for ongoing expert involvement.
♻ ☆ Under the Influence: Quantifying Persuasion and Vigilance in Large Language Models
With increasing integration of Large Language Models (LLMs) into areas of high-stakes human decision-making, it is important to understand the risks they introduce as advisors. To be useful advisors, LLMs must sift through large amounts of content, written with both benevolent and malicious intent, and then use this information to convince a user to take a specific action. This involves two social capacities: vigilance (the ability to determine which information to use, and which to discard) and persuasion (synthesizing the available evidence to make a convincing argument). While existing work has investigated these capacities in isolation, there has been little prior investigation of how these capacities may be linked. Here, we use a simple multi-turn puzzle-solving game, Sokoban, to study LLMs' abilities to persuade and be rationally vigilant towards other LLM agents. We find that puzzle-solving performance, persuasive capability, and vigilance are dissociable capacities in LLMs. Performing well on the game does not automatically mean a model can detect when it is being misled, even if the possibility of deception is explicitly mentioned. However, LLMs do consistently modulate their token use, using fewer tokens to reason when advice is benevolent and more when it is malicious, even if they are still persuaded to take actions leading them to failure. To our knowledge, our work presents the first investigation of the relationship between persuasion, vigilance, and task performance in LLMs, and suggests that monitoring all three independently will be critical for future work in AI safety.
♻ ☆ Ayn: A Tiny yet Competitive Indian Legal Language Model Pretrained from Scratch LREC 2026
Decoder-only Large Language Models (LLMs) are currently the model of choice for many Natural Language Processing (NLP) applications. Through instruction fine-tuning and prompting approaches, such LLMs have been efficiently used to solve both general and domain-specific tasks. However, they are costly to train and, to a certain extent, costly to use as well, and one can wonder whether LLMs can be replaced by domain-specific Tiny Language Models (TLMs), which typically contain less than 100M parameters. We address this question in this study by comparing the performance of an 88M TLM pretrained from scratch for 185 A100 hours on a specific domain with a domain-specific tokenizer (here, the Indian legal domain) with LLMs of various sizes between 1B and 8B for solving domain-specific tasks. We show in particular that our legal TLM, Ayn, can indeed outperform LLMs up to 80 times larger on the legal case judgment prediction task, rival LLMs up to 30 times larger on the summarization task, and still be competitive with these larger LLMs on general tasks.
comment: LREC 2026
♻ ☆ Cropping outperforms dropout as an augmentation strategy for self-supervised training of text embeddings
Text embeddings, i.e. vector representations of entire texts, play an important role in many NLP applications, such as retrieval-augmented generation, clustering, or visualizing collections of texts for data exploration. Currently, top-performing embedding models are derived from pre-trained language models via supervised contrastive fine-tuning. This fine-tuning strategy relies on an external notion of similarity and annotated data for generation of positive pairs. Here we study self-supervised fine-tuning and systematically compare the two most well-known augmentation strategies used for fine-tuning text embeddings models. We assess embedding quality on MTEB and additional in-domain evaluations and show that cropping augmentation strongly outperforms the dropout-based approach. We find that on out-of-domain data, the quality of resulting embeddings is substantially below the supervised state-of-the-art models, but for in-domain data, self-supervised fine-tuning can produce high-quality text embeddings after very short fine-tuning. Finally, we show that representation quality increases towards the last transformer layers, which undergo the largest change during fine-tuning; and that fine-tuning only those last layers is sufficient to reach similar embedding quality.
♻ ☆ Can LLMs Simulate Personas with Reversed Performance? A Systematic Investigation for Counterfactual Instruction Following in Math Reasoning Context
Large Language Models (LLMs) are now increasingly widely used to simulate personas in virtual environments, leveraging their instruction-following capability. However, we discovered that even state-of-the-art LLMs cannot simulate personas with reversed performance (e.g., student personas with low proficiency in educational settings), which impairs the simulation diversity and limits the practical applications of the simulated environments. In this work, using mathematical reasoning as a representative scenario, we propose the first benchmark dataset for evaluating LLMs on simulating personas with reversed performance, a capability that we dub "counterfactual instruction following". We evaluate both open-weight and closed-source LLMs on this task and find that LLMs, including the OpenAI o1 reasoning model, all struggle to follow counterfactual instructions for simulating reversedly performing personas. Intersectionally simulating both the performance level and the race population of a persona worsens the effect even further. These results highlight the challenges of counterfactual instruction following and the need for further research.
♻ ☆ Think Before You Lie: How Reasoning Leads to Honesty
While existing evaluations of large language models (LLMs) measure deception rates, the underlying conditions that give rise to deceptive behavior are poorly understood. We investigate this question using a novel dataset of realistic moral trade-offs where honesty incurs variable costs. Contrary to humans, who tend to become less honest given time to deliberate (Capraro, 2017; Capraro et al., 2019), we find that reasoning consistently increases honesty across scales and for several LLM families. This effect is not only a function of the reasoning content, as reasoning traces are often poor predictors of final behaviors. Rather, we show that the underlying geometry of the representational space itself contributes to the effect. Namely, we observe that deceptive regions within this space are metastable: deceptive answers are more easily destabilized by input paraphrasing, output resampling, and activation noise than honest ones. We interpret the effect of reasoning in this vein: generating deliberative tokens as part of moral reasoning entails the traversal of a biased representational space, ultimately nudging the model toward its more stable, honest defaults.
♻ ☆ Truth as a Compression Artifact in Language Model Training
Why do language models trained on contradictory data prefer correct answers? In controlled experiments with small transformers (3.5M--86M parameters), we show that this preference tracks the compressibility structure of errors rather than truth per se. We train GPT-2 style models on corpora where each mathematical problem appears with both correct and incorrect solutions -- a denoising design that directly models conflicting information about the same fact. When errors are random, models extract the correct signal with accuracy scaling from 65% to 85% with model size. When errors follow a coherent alternative rule system, accuracy drops to chance (~45--51%): the model cannot distinguish the false system from truth. A multi-rule experiment reveals a sharp crossover: a single coherent alternative rule eliminates truth bias entirely, but adding a second competing rule restores most of it (47%->78%), with continued growth through N=10 (88%). The same pattern reproduces on real Wikipedia text (71% vs 46%). We propose the Compression--Consistency Principle as an explanatory hypothesis: in these settings, gradient descent favors the most compressible answer cluster, not truth per se. Truth bias emerges only when falsehood is structurally incoherent. Whether this principle extends to large-scale pretraining remains an open question.
comment: v2: Significantly revised and polished the Abstract for improved clarity, readability, flow and academic tone while preserving all original results and numbers (83.1%, 67.0%, 57.7%) unchanged. Fixed placeholder GitHub link and minor typographical issues
♻ ☆ GLM-OCR Technical Report
GLM-OCR is an efficient 0.9B-parameter compact multimodal model designed for real-world document understanding. It combines a 0.4B-parameter CogViT visual encoder with a 0.5B-parameter GLM language decoder, achieving a strong balance between computational efficiency and recognition performance. To address the inefficiency of standard autoregressive decoding in deterministic OCR tasks, GLM-OCR introduces a Multi-Token Prediction (MTP) mechanism that predicts multiple tokens per step, significantly improving decoding throughput while keeping memory overhead low through shared parameters. At the system level, a two-stage pipeline is adopted: PP-DocLayout-V3 first performs layout analysis, followed by parallel region-level recognition. Extensive evaluations on public benchmarks and industrial scenarios show that GLM-OCR achieves competitive or state-of-the-art performance in document parsing, text and formula transcription, table structure recovery, and key information extraction. Its compact architecture and structured generation make it suitable for both resource-constrained edge deployment and large-scale production systems.
♻ ☆ Grounded Misunderstandings in Asymmetric Dialogue: A Perspectivist Annotation Scheme for MapTask LREC 2026
Collaborative dialogue relies on participants incrementally establishing common ground, yet in asymmetric settings they may believe they agree while referring to different entities. We introduce a perspectivist annotation scheme for the HCRC MapTask corpus (Anderson et al., 1991) that separately captures speaker and addressee grounded interpretations for each reference expression, enabling us to trace how understanding emerges, diverges, and repairs over time. Using a scheme-constrained LLM annotation pipeline, we obtain 13k annotated reference expressions with reliability estimates and analyze the resulting understanding states. The results show that full misunderstandings are rare once lexical variants are unified, but multiplicity discrepancies systematically induce divergences, revealing how apparent grounding can mask referential misalignment. Our framework provides both a resource and an analytic lens for studying grounded misunderstanding and for evaluating (V)LLMs' capacity to model perspective-dependent grounding in collaborative dialogue.
comment: 14 pages, 5 figures, 6 tables; Camera-ready Version; Accepted by LREC 2026 (Oral)
♻ ☆ EVM-QuestBench: An Execution-Grounded Benchmark for Natural-Language Transaction Code Generation
Large language models are increasingly applied to various development scenarios. However, in on-chain transaction scenarios, even a minor error can cause irreversible loss for users. Existing evaluations often overlook execution accuracy and safety. We introduce EVM-QuestBench, an execution-grounded benchmark for natural-language transaction-script generation on EVM-compatible chains. The benchmark employs dynamic evaluation: instructions are sampled from template pools, numeric parameters are drawn from predefined intervals, and validators verify outcomes against these instantiated values. EVM-QuestBench contains 107 tasks (62 atomic, 45 composite). Its modular architecture enables rapid task development. The runner executes scripts on a forked EVM chain with snapshot isolation; composite tasks apply step-efficiency decay. We evaluate 20 models and find large performance gaps, with split scores revealing persistent asymmetry between single-action precision and multi-step workflow completion. Code: https://anonymous.4open.science/r/bsc_quest_bench-A9CF/.
comment: 10 pages, 13 figures
♻ ☆ Automating Computational Reproducibility in Social Science: Comparing Prompt-Based and Agent-Based Approaches
Reproducing computational research is often assumed to be as simple as rerunning the original code with provided data. In practice, missing packages, fragile file paths, version conflicts, or incomplete logic frequently cause analyses to fail, even when materials are shared. This study investigates whether large language models and AI agents can automate the diagnosis and repair of such failures, making computational results easier to reproduce and verify. We evaluate this using a controlled reproducibility testbed built from five fully reproducible R-based social science studies. Realistic failures were injected, ranging from simple issues to complex missing logic, and two automated repair workflows were tested in clean Docker environments. The first workflow is prompt-based, repeatedly querying language models with structured prompts of varying context, while the second uses agent-based systems that inspect files, modify code, and rerun analyses autonomously. Across prompt-based runs, reproduction success ranged from 31-79 percent, with performance strongly influenced by prompt context and error complexity. Complex cases benefited most from additional context. Agent-based workflows performed substantially better, with success rates of 69-96 percent across all complexity levels. These results suggest that automated workflows, especially agent-based systems, can significantly reduce manual effort and improve reproduction success across diverse error types. Unlike prior benchmarks, our testbed isolates post-publication repair under controlled failure modes, allowing direct comparison of prompt-based and agent-based approaches.
comment: 12 pages, 5 figures. Submitted to ACM conference
♻ ☆ daVinci-Env: Open SWE Environment Synthesis at Scale
Training capable software engineering (SWE) agents demands large-scale, executable, and verifiable environments that provide dynamic feedback loops for iterative code editing, test execution, and solution refinement. However, existing open-source datasets remain limited in scale and repository diversity, while industrial solutions are opaque with unreleased infrastructure, creating a prohibitive barrier for most academic research groups. We present OpenSWE, the largest fully transparent framework for SWE agent training in Python, comprising 45,320 executable Docker environments spanning over 12.8k repositories, with all Dockerfiles, evaluation scripts, and infrastructure fully open-sourced for reproducibility. OpenSWE is built through a multi-agent synthesis pipeline deployed across a 64-node distributed cluster, automating repository exploration, Dockerfile construction, evaluation script generation, and iterative test analysis. Beyond scale, we propose a quality-centric filtering pipeline that characterizes the inherent difficulty of each environment, filtering out instances that are either unsolvable or insufficiently challenging and retaining only those that maximize learning efficiency. With $891K spent on environment construction and an additional $576K on trajectory sampling and difficulty-aware curation, the entire project represents a total investment of approximately $1.47 million, yielding about 13,000 curated trajectories from roughly 9,000 quality guaranteed environments. Extensive experiments validate OpenSWE's effectiveness: OpenSWE-32B and OpenSWE-72B achieve 62.4% and 66.0% on SWE-bench Verified, establishing SOTA among Qwen2.5 series. Moreover, SWE-focused training yields substantial out-of-domain improvements, including up to 12 points on mathematical reasoning and 5 points on science benchmarks, without degrading factual recall.
♻ ☆ A Typology of Synthetic Datasets for Dialogue Processing in Clinical Contexts LREC 2026
Synthetic data sets are used across linguistic domains and NLP tasks, particularly in scenarios where authentic data is limited (or even non-existent). One such domain is that of clinical (healthcare) contexts, where there exist significant and long-standing challenges (e.g., privacy, anonymization, and data governance) which have led to the development of an increasing number of synthetic datasets. One increasingly important category of clinical dataset is that of clinical dialogues which are especially sensitive and difficult to collect, and as such are commonly synthesized. While such synthetic datasets have been shown to be sufficient in some situations, little theory exists to inform how they may be best used and generalized to new applications. In this paper, we provide an overview of how synthetic datasets are created, evaluated and being used for dialogue related tasks in the medical domain. Additionally, we propose a novel typology for use in classifying types and degrees of data synthesis, to facilitate comparison and evaluation.
comment: Accepted at LREC 2026 https://lrec2026.info/
♻ ☆ Omni-Captioner: Data Pipeline, Models, and Benchmark for Omni Detailed Perception ICLR2026
Fine-grained perception of multimodal information is critical for advancing human-AI interaction. With recent progress in audio-visual technologies, Omni Language Models (OLMs), capable of processing audio and video signals in parallel, have emerged as a promising paradigm for achieving richer understanding and reasoning. However, their capacity to capture and describe fine-grained details remains limited explored. In this work, we present a systematic and comprehensive investigation of omni detailed perception from the perspectives of the data pipeline, models, and benchmark. We first identify an inherent "co-growth" between detail and hallucination in current OLMs. To address this, we propose Omni-Detective, an agentic data generation pipeline integrating tool-calling, to autonomously produce highly detailed yet minimally hallucinatory multimodal data. Based on the data generated with Omni-Detective, we train two captioning models: Audio-Captioner for audio-only detailed perception, and Omni-Captioner for audio-visual detailed perception. Under the cascade evaluation protocol, Audio-Captioner achieves the best performance on MMAU and MMAR among all open-source models, surpassing Gemini 2.5 Flash and delivering performance comparable to Gemini 2.5 Pro. On existing detailed captioning benchmarks, Omni-Captioner sets a new state-of-the-art on VDC and achieves the best trade-off between detail and hallucination on the video-SALMONN 2 testset. Given the absence of a dedicated benchmark for omni detailed perception, we design Omni-Cloze, a novel cloze-style evaluation for detailed audio, visual, and audio-visual captioning that ensures stable, efficient, and reliable assessment. Experimental results and analysis demonstrate the effectiveness of Omni-Detective in generating high-quality detailed captions, as well as the superiority of Omni-Cloze in evaluating such detailed captions.
comment: Accepted by ICLR2026. Open Source at https://github.com/ddlBoJack/Omni-Captioner
♻ ☆ Unsupervised Corpus Poisoning Attacks in Continuous Space for Dense Retrieval SIGIR 2025
This paper concerns corpus poisoning attacks in dense information retrieval, where an adversary attempts to compromise the ranking performance of a search algorithm by injecting a small number of maliciously generated documents into the corpus. Our work addresses two limitations in the current literature. First, attacks that perform adversarial gradient-based word substitution search do so in the discrete lexical space, while retrieval itself happens in the continuous embedding space. We thus propose an optimization method that operates in the embedding space directly. Specifically, we train a perturbation model with the objective of maintaining the geometric distance between the original and adversarial document embeddings, while also maximizing the token-level dissimilarity between the original and adversarial documents. Second, it is common for related work to have a strong assumption that the adversary has prior knowledge about the queries. In this paper, we focus on a more challenging variant of the problem where the adversary assumes no prior knowledge about the query distribution (hence, unsupervised). Our core contribution is an adversarial corpus attack that is fast and effective. We present comprehensive experimental results on both in- and out-of-domain datasets, focusing on two related tasks: a top-1 attack and a corpus poisoning attack. We consider attacks under both a white-box and a black-box setting. Notably, our method can generate successful adversarial examples in under two minutes per target document; four times faster compared to the fastest gradient-based word substitution methods in the literature with the same hardware. Furthermore, our adversarial generation method generates text that is more likely to occur under the distribution of natural text (low perplexity), and is therefore more difficult to detect.
comment: This paper has been accepted as a full paper at SIGIR 2025 and will be presented orally
♻ ☆ Beyond Words: Enhancing Desire, Emotion, and Sentiment Recognition with Non-Verbal Cues WWW 2026
Multimodal desire understanding, a task closely related to both emotion and sentiment that aims to infer human intentions from visual and textual cues, is an emerging yet underexplored task in affective computing with applications in social media analysis. Existing methods for related tasks predominantly focus on mining verbal cues, often overlooking the effective utilization of non-verbal cues embedded in images. To bridge this gap, we propose a Symmetrical Bidirectional Multimodal Learning Framework for Desire, Emotion, and Sentiment Recognition (SyDES). The core of SyDES is to achieve bidirectional fine-grained modal alignment between text and image modalities. Specifically, we introduce a mixed-scaled image strategy that combines global context from low-resolution images with fine-grained local features via masked image modeling (MIM) on high-resolution sub-images, effectively capturing intention-related visual representations. Then, we devise symmetrical cross-modal decoders, including a text-guided image decoder and an image-guided text decoder, which enable mutual reconstruction and refinement between modalities, facilitating deep cross-modal interaction. Furthermore, a set of dedicated loss functions is designed to harmonize potential conflicts between the MIM and modal alignment objectives during optimization. Extensive evaluations on the MSED benchmark demonstrate the superiority of our approach, which establishes a new state-of-the-art performance with 1.1% F1-score improvement in desire understanding. Consistent gains in emotion and sentiment recognition further validate its generalization ability and the necessity of utilizing non-verbal cues. Our code is available at: https://github.com/especiallyW/SyDES.
comment: Accepted by WWW 2026
♻ ☆ From Text to Forecasts: Bridging Modality Gap with Temporal Evolution Semantic Space
Incorporating textual information into time-series forecasting holds promise for addressing event-driven non-stationarity; however, a fundamental modality gap hinders effective fusion: textual descriptions express temporal impacts implicitly and qualitatively, whereas forecasting models rely on explicit and quantitative signals. Through controlled semi-synthetic experiments, we show that existing methods over-attend to redundant tokens and struggle to reliably translate textual semantics into usable numerical cues. To bridge this gap, we propose TESS, which introduces a Temporal Evolution Semantic Space as an intermediate bottleneck between modalities. This space consists of interpretable, numerically grounded temporal primitives (mean shift, volatility, shape, and lag) extracted from text by an LLM via structured prompting and filtered through confidence-aware gating. Experiments on four real-world datasets demonstrate up to a 29 percent reduction in forecasting error compared to state-of-the-art unimodal and multimodal baselines. The code will be released after acceptance.
comment: 15 pages, 6 figures
♻ ☆ PAT: Accelerating LLM Decoding via Prefix-Aware Attention with Resource Efficient Multi-Tile Kernel ASPLOS'26
LLM serving is increasingly dominated by decode attention, which is a memory-bound operation due to massive KV cache loading from global memory. Meanwhile, real-world workloads exhibit substantial, hierarchical shared prefixes across requests (e.g., system prompts, tools/templates, RAG). Existing attention implementations fail to fully exploit prefix sharing: one-query-per-CTA execution repeatedly loads shared prefix KV cache, while one-size-fits-all tiling leaves on-chip resources idle and exacerbates bubbles for uneven KV lengths. These choices amplify memory bandwidth pressure and stall memory-bound decode attention. This paper introduces PAT, a prefix-aware attention kernel implementation for LLM decoding that organizes execution with a pack-forward-merge paradigm. PAT packs queries by shared prefix to reduce repeated memory accesses, runs a customized multi-tile kernel to achieve high resource efficiency. It further applies practical multi-stream forwarding and KV splitting to reduce resource bubbles. The final merge performs online softmax with negligible overhead. We implement PAT as an off-the-shelf plugin for vLLM. Evaluation on both real-world and synthetic workloads shows that PAT reduces attention latency by 53.5% on average and TPOT by 17.0-93.1% under the same configurations against state-of-the-art attention kernels. PAT's source code is publicly available at https://github.com/flashserve/PAT.
comment: Accepted by ASPLOS'26, code available at https://github.com/flashserve/PAT
♻ ☆ TOSSS: a CVE-based Software Security Benchmark for Large Language Models
With their increasing capabilities, Large Language Models (LLMs) are now used across many industries. They have become useful tools for software engineers and support a wide range of development tasks. As LLMs are increasingly used in software development workflows, a critical question arises: are LLMs good at software security? At the same time, organizations worldwide invest heavily in cybersecurity to reduce exposure to disruptive attacks. The integration of LLMs into software engineering workflows may introduce new vulnerabilities and weaken existing security efforts. We introduce TOSSS (Two-Option Secure Snippet Selection), a benchmark that measures the ability of LLMs to choose between secure and vulnerable code snippets. Existing security benchmarks for LLMs cover only a limited range of vulnerabilities. In contrast, TOSSS relies on the CVE database and provides an extensible framework that can integrate newly disclosed vulnerabilities over time. Our benchmark gives each model a security score between 0 and 1 based on its behavior; a score of 1 indicates that the model always selects the secure snippet, while a score of 0 indicates that it always selects the vulnerable one. We evaluate 14 widely used open-source and closed-source models on C/C++ and Java code and observe scores ranging from 0.48 to 0.89. LLM providers already publish many benchmark scores for their models, and TOSSS could become a complementary security-focused score to include in these reports.
♻ ☆ Is Human Annotation Necessary? Iterative MBR Distillation for Error Span Detection in Machine Translation
Error Span Detection (ESD) is a crucial subtask in Machine Translation (MT) evaluation, aiming to identify the location and severity of translation errors. While fine-tuning models on human-annotated data improves ESD performance, acquiring such data is expensive and prone to inconsistencies among annotators. To address this, we propose a novel self-evolution framework based on Minimum Bayes Risk (MBR) decoding, named Iterative MBR Distillation for ESD, which eliminates the reliance on human annotations by leveraging an off-the-shelf LLM to generate pseudo-labels. Extensive experiments on the WMT Metrics Shared Task datasets demonstrate that models trained solely on these self-generated pseudo-labels outperform both unadapted base model and supervised baselines trained on human annotations at the system and span levels, while maintaining competitive sentence-level performance.
♻ ☆ TurkicNLP: An NLP Toolkit for Turkic Languages
Natural language processing for the Turkic language family, spoken by over 200 million people across Eurasia, remains fragmented, with most languages lacking unified tooling and resources. We present TurkicNLP, an open-source Python library providing a single, consistent NLP pipeline for Turkic languages across four script families: Latin, Cyrillic, Perso-Arabic, and Old Turkic Runic. The library covers tokenization, morphological analysis, part-of-speech tagging, dependency parsing, named entity recognition, bidirectional script transliteration, cross-lingual sentence embeddings, and machine translation through one language-agnostic API. A modular multi-backend architecture integrates rule-based finite-state transducers and neural models transparently, with automatic script detection and routing between script variants. Outputs follow the CoNLL-U standard for full interoperability and extension. Code and documentation are hosted at https://github.com/turkic-nlp/turkicnlp .
comment: The toolkit is available here: https://github.com/turkic-nlp/turkicnlp
♻ ☆ Shorten After You're Right: Lazy Length Penalties for Reasoning RL
Large reasoning models, such as OpenAI o1 or DeepSeek R1, have demonstrated remarkable performance on reasoning tasks but often incur a long reasoning path with significant memory and time costs. Existing methods primarily aim to shorten reasoning paths by introducing additional training data and stages. In this paper, we propose three critical reward designs integrated directly into the reinforcement learning process of large reasoning models, which reduce the response length without extra training stages. Experiments on four settings show that our method significantly decreases response length while maintaining or even improving performance. Specifically, in a logic reasoning setting, we achieve a 40% reduction in response length averaged by steps alongside a 14% gain in performance. For math problems, we reduce response length averaged by steps by 33% while preserving performance.
comment: Under review
♻ ☆ A Multilingual Human Annotated Corpus of Original and Easy-to-Read Texts to Support Access to Democratic Participatory Processes LREC26
Being able to understand information is a key factor for a self-determined life and society. It is also very important for participating in democratic processes. The study of automatic text simplification is often limited by the availability of high quality material for the training and evaluation on automatic simplifiers. This is true for English, but more so for less resourced languages like Spanish, Catalan and Italian. In order to fill this gap, we present a corpus of original texts for these 3 languages, with high quality simplification produced by human experts in text simplification. It was developed within the iDEM project to assess the impact of Easy-to-Read (E2R) language for democratic participation. The original texts were compiled from domains related to this topic. The corpus includes different text types, selected based on relevance, copyright availability, and ethical standards. All texts were simplified to E2R level. The corpus is particularity valuable because it includes the first annotated corpus of its kind for the Catalan language. It also represents a noteworthy contribution for Spanish and Italian, offering high-quality, human-annotated language resources that are rarely available in these domains. The corpus will be made freely accessible to the public.
comment: Will be published in LREC26
♻ ☆ Efficient Construction of Model Family through Progressive Training Using Model Expansion
As Large Language Models (LLMs) gain widespread practical application, offering model families with varying parameter sizes has become standard practice to accommodate diverse computational requirements. Traditionally, each model in the family is trained independently, incurring computational costs that scale additively with the number of models. In this work, we propose an efficient method for constructing model families via progressive training, where smaller models are incrementally expanded to larger sizes to create a complete model family. Through extensive experiments on a model family ranging from 1B to 8B parameters, we show that our approach reduces total computational cost by approximately 25% while maintaining comparable performance to independently trained models. Moreover, by strategically adjusting the maximum learning rate based on model size, our method outperforms the independent training across various metrics. Beyond these improvements, our approach also fosters greater consistency in behavior across model sizes.
comment: 17pages, accepted by COLM 2025 as a conference paper
♻ ☆ Frame Sampling Strategies Matter: A Benchmark for small vision language models
Comparing vision language models on videos is particularly complex, as the performances is jointly determined by the model's visual representation capacity and the frame-sampling strategy used to construct the input. Current video benchmarks are suspected to suffer from substantial frame-sampling bias, as models are evaluated with different frame selection strategies. In this work, we propose the first frame-accurate benchmark of state-of-the-art small VLMs for video question-answering, evaluated under controlled frame-sampling strategies. Our results confirm the suspected bias and highlight both data-specific and task-specific behaviors of SVLMs under different frame-sampling techniques. By open-sourcing our benchmarking code, we provide the community with a reproducible and unbiased protocol for evaluating video VLMs and emphasize the need for standardized frame-sampling strategies tailored to each benchmarking dataset in future research.
♻ ☆ Sparks of Cooperative Reasoning: LLMs as Strategic Hanabi Agents
Cooperative reasoning under incomplete information remains challenging for both humans and multi-agent systems. The card game Hanabi embodies this challenge, requiring theory-of-mind reasoning and strategic communication. We benchmark 17 state-of-the-art LLM agents in 2-5 player games and study the impact of context engineering across model scales (4B to 600B+) to understand persistent coordination failures and robustness to scaffolding: from a minimal prompt with only explicit card details (Watson setting), to scaffolding with programmatic, Bayesian-motivated deductions (Sherlock setting), to multi-turn state tracking via working memory (Mycroft setting). We show that (1) agents can maintain an internal working memory for state tracking and (2) cross-play performance between different LLMs smoothly interpolates with model strength. In the Sherlock setting, the strongest reasoning models exceed 15 points on average across player counts, yet still trail experienced humans and specialist Hanabi agents, both consistently scoring above 20. We release the first public Hanabi datasets with annotated trajectories and move utilities: (1) HanabiLogs, containing 1,520 full game logs for instruction tuning, and (2) HanabiRewards, containing 560 games with dense move-level value annotations for all candidate moves. Supervised and RL finetuning of a 4B open-weight model (Qwen3-Instruct) on our datasets improves cooperative Hanabi play by 21% and 156% respectively, bringing performance to within ~3 points of a strong proprietary reasoning model (o4-mini) and surpassing the best non-reasoning model (GPT-4.1) by 52%. The HanabiRewards RL-finetuned model further generalizes beyond Hanabi, improving performance on a cooperative group-guessing benchmark by 11%, temporal reasoning on EventQA by 6.4%, instruction-following on IFBench-800K by 1.7 Pass@10, and matching AIME 2025 mathematical reasoning Pass@10.
♻ ☆ MMSU: A Massive Multi-task Spoken Language Understanding and Reasoning Benchmark ICLR 2026
Speech inherently contains rich acoustic information that extends far beyond the textual language. In real-world spoken language understanding, effective interpretation often requires integrating semantic meaning (e.g., content), paralinguistic features (e.g., emotions, speed, pitch) and phonological characteristics (e.g., prosody, intonation, rhythm), which are embedded in speech. While recent multimodal Speech Large Language Models (SpeechLLMs) have demonstrated remarkable capabilities in processing audio information, their ability to perform fine-grained perception and complex reasoning in natural speech remains largely unexplored. To address this gap, we introduce MMSU, a comprehensive benchmark designed specifically for understanding and reasoning in spoken language. MMSU comprises 5,000 meticulously curated audio-question-answer triplets across 47 distinct tasks. To ground our benchmark in linguistic theory, we systematically incorporate a wide range of linguistic phenomena, including phonetics, prosody, rhetoric, syntactics, semantics, and paralinguistics. Through a rigorous evaluation of 14 advanced SpeechLLMs, we identify substantial room for improvement in existing models, highlighting meaningful directions for future optimization. MMSU establishes a new standard for comprehensive assessment of spoken language understanding, providing valuable insights for developing more sophisticated human-AI speech interaction systems. MMSU benchmark is available at https://huggingface.co/datasets/ddwang2000/MMSU. Evaluation Code is available at https://github.com/dingdongwang/MMSU.
comment: ICLR 2026. MMSU benchmark is available at https://huggingface.co/datasets/ddwang2000/MMSU. Project page https://github.com/dingdongwang/MMSU
♻ ☆ Covo-Audio Technical Report
In this work, we present Covo-Audio, a 7B-parameter end-to-end LALM that directly processes continuous audio inputs and generates audio outputs within a single unified architecture. Through large-scale curated pretraining and targeted post-training, Covo-Audio achieves state-of-the-art or competitive performance among models of comparable scale across a broad spectrum of tasks, including speech-text modeling, spoken dialogue, speech understanding, audio understanding, and full-duplex voice interaction. Extensive evaluations demonstrate that the pretrained foundation model exhibits strong speech-text comprehension and semantic reasoning capabilities on multiple benchmarks, outperforming representative open-source models of comparable scale. Furthermore, Covo-Audio-Chat, the dialogue-oriented variant, demonstrates strong spoken conversational abilities, including understanding, contextual reasoning, instruction following, and generating contextually appropriate and empathetic responses, validating its applicability to real-world conversational assistant scenarios. Covo-Audio-Chat-FD, the evolved full-duplex model, achieves substantially superior performance on both spoken dialogue capabilities and full-duplex interaction behaviors, demonstrating its competence in practical robustness. To mitigate the high cost of deploying end-to-end LALMs for natural conversational systems, we propose an intelligence-speaker decoupling strategy that separates dialogue intelligence from voice rendering, enabling flexible voice customization with minimal text-to-speech (TTS) data while preserving dialogue performance. Overall, our results highlight the strong potential of 7B-scale models to integrate sophisticated audio intelligence with high-level semantic reasoning, and suggest a scalable path toward more capable and versatile LALMs.
comment: Technical Report
♻ ☆ Experimental evidence of progressive ChatGPT models self-convergence
Large Language Models (LLMs) that undergo recursive training on synthetically generated data are susceptible to model collapse, a phenomenon marked by the generation of meaningless output. Existing research has examined this issue from either theoretical or empirical perspectives, often focusing on a single model trained recursively on its own outputs. While prior studies have cautioned against the potential degradation of LLM output quality under such conditions, no longitudinal investigation has yet been conducted to assess this effect over time. In this study, we employ a text similarity metric to evaluate different ChatGPT models' capacity to generate diverse textual outputs. Our findings indicate a measurable decline of recent ChatGPT releases' ability to produce varied text, even when explicitly prompted to do so, by setting the temperature parameter to one. The observed reduction in output diversity may be attributed to the influence of the amounts of synthetic data incorporated within their training datasets as the result of internet infiltration by LLM generated data. The phenomenon is defined as model self-convergence because of the gradual increase of similarities of produced texts among different ChatGPT versions.
♻ ☆ ERC-SVD: Error-Controlled SVD for Large Language Model Compression
Large language models (LLMs) have demonstrated impressive capabilities in a wide range of downstream natural language processing tasks. Nevertheless, their considerable sizes and memory demands hinder practical deployment, underscoring the importance of developing efficient compression strategies. Singular value decomposition (SVD) decomposes a matrix into orthogonal components, enabling efficient low-rank approximation. This is particularly suitable for LLM compression, where weight matrices often exhibit significant redundancy. However, current SVD-based methods neglect the residual matrix from truncation, resulting in significant truncation loss. Additionally, compressing all layers of the model results in severe error propagation. To overcome these limitations, we propose ERC-SVD, a new post-training SVD-based LLM compression method from an error-controlled perspective. Specifically, we leverage the residual matrix generated during the truncation process to reduce truncation loss. Moreover, under a fixed overall compression ratio, we selectively compress the last few layers of the model, which mitigates error propagation and improves compressed model performance. Comprehensive evaluations on diverse LLM families and multiple benchmark datasets indicate that ERC-SVD consistently achieves superior performance over existing counterpart methods, demonstrating its practical effectiveness.
♻ ☆ ClinConsensus: A Consensus-Based Benchmark for Evaluating Chinese Medical LLMs across Difficulty Levels
Large language models (LLMs) are increasingly applied to health management, showing promise across disease prevention, clinical decision-making, and long-term care. However, existing medical benchmarks remain largely static and task-isolated, failing to capture the openness, longitudinal structure, and safety-critical complexity of real-world clinical workflows. We introduce ClinConsensus, a Chinese medical benchmark curated, validated, and quality-controlled by clinical experts. ClinConsensus comprises 2500 open-ended cases spanning the full continuum of care--from prevention and intervention to long-term follow-up--covering 36 medical specialties, 12 common clinical task types, and progressively increasing levels of complexity. To enable reliable evaluation of such complex scenarios, we adopt a rubric-based grading protocol and propose the Clinically Applicable Consistency Score (CACS@k). We further introduce a dual-judge evaluation framework, combining a high-capability LLM-as-judge with a distilled, locally deployable judge model trained via supervised fine-tuning, enabling scalable and reproducible evaluation aligned with physician judgment. Using ClinConsensus, we conduct a comprehensive assessment of several leading LLMs and reveal substantial heterogeneity across task themes, care stages, and medical specialties. While top-performing models achieve comparable overall scores, they differ markedly in reasoning, evidence use, and longitudinal follow-up capabilities, and clinically actionable treatment planning remains a key bottleneck. We release ClinConsensus as an extensible benchmark to support the development and evaluation of medical LLMs that are robust, clinically grounded, and ready for real-world deployment.
comment: 8 pages, 6 figures,
♻ ☆ Steering LLMs toward Korean Local Speech: Iterative Refinement Framework for Faithful Dialect Translation LREC 2026
Standard-to-dialect machine translation remains challenging due to a persistent dialect gap in large language models and evaluation distortions inherent in n-gram metrics, which favor source copying over authentic dialect translation. In this paper, we propose the dialect refinement (DIA-REFINE) framework, which guides LLMs toward faithful target dialect outputs through an iterative loop of translation, verification, and feedback using external dialect classifiers. To address the limitations of n-gram-based metrics, we introduce the dialect fidelity score (DFS) to quantify linguistic shift and the target dialect ratio (TDR) to measure the success of dialect translation. Experiments on Korean dialects across zero-shot and in-context learning baselines demonstrate that DIA-REFINE consistently enhances dialect fidelity. The proposed metrics distinguish between False Success cases, where high n-gram scores obscure failures in dialectal translation, and True Attempt cases, where genuine attempts at dialectal translation yield low n-gram scores. We also observed that models exhibit varying degrees of responsiveness to the framework, and that integrating in-context examples further improves the translation of dialectal expressions. Our work establishes a robust framework for goal-directed, inclusive dialect translation, providing both rigorous evaluation and critical insights into model performance.
comment: Accepted to LREC 2026
♻ ☆ A Language-Agnostic Hierarchical LoRA-MoE Architecture for CTC-based Multilingual ASR
Large-scale multilingual ASR (mASR) models such as Whisper achieve strong performance but incur high computational and latency costs, limiting their deployment on resource-constrained edge devices. In this study, we propose a lightweight and language-agnostic multilingual ASR system based on a CTC architecture with domain adaptation. Specifically, we introduce a Language-agnostic Hierarchical LoRA-MoE (HLoRA) framework integrated into an mHuBERT-CTC model, enabling end-to-end decoding via LID-posterior-driven LoRA routing. The hierarchical design consists of a multilingual shared LoRA for learning language-invariant acoustic representations and language-specific LoRA experts for modeling language-dependent characteristics. The proposed routing mechanism removes the need for prior language identity information or explicit language labels during inference, achieving true language-agnostic decoding. Experiments on MSR-86K and the MLC-SLM 2025 Challenge datasets demonstrate that HLoRA achieves comparable performance to two-stage inference approaches while reducing RTF by 11.7% and 8.2%, respectively, leading to improved decoding efficiency for low-resource mASR applications.
comment: 5 pages, submitted to IEEE Communications Letters
♻ ☆ Automatically Benchmarking LLM Code Agents through Agent-Driven Annotation and Evaluation
Recent advances in code agents have enabled automated software development at the project level, supported by large language models (LLMs). However, existing benchmarks for code agent evaluation face two major limitations. First, creating high-quality project-level evaluation datasets requires extensive domain expertise, leading to prohibitive annotation costs and limited diversity. Second, while recent Agent-as-a-Judge paradigms address the rigidity of traditional unit tests by enabling flexible metrics, their reliance on In-Context Learning (ICL) with general LLMs often results in inaccurate assessments that misalign with human standards. To address these challenges, we propose an agent-driven benchmark construction pipeline that leverages human supervision to efficiently generate diverse project-level tasks. Based on this, we introduce PRDBench, comprising 50 real-world Python projects across 20 domains, each with structured Product Requirement Documents (PRDs) and comprehensive criteria. Furthermore, to overcome the inaccuracy of general LLM judges, we propose a highly reliable evaluation framework powered by a specialized, fine-tuned model. Based on Qwen3-Coder-30B, our dedicated PRDJudge achieves over 90% human alignment in fixed-interface scenarios. Extensive experiments demonstrate that our suite provides a scalable, robust, and highly accurate framework for assessing state-of-the-art code agents.
♻ ☆ SpatialViz-Bench: A Cognitively-Grounded Benchmark for Diagnosing Spatial Visualization in MLLMs
Humans can imagine and manipulate visual images mentally, a capability known as spatial visualization. While many multi-modal benchmarks assess reasoning on visible visual information, the ability to infer unseen relationships through spatial visualization remains insufficiently evaluated as a spatial skill. This reliance on publicly sourced problems from IQ tests or math competitions risks data contamination and compromises assessment reliability. To this end, we introduce SpatialViz-Bench, a comprehensive multi-modal benchmark for spatial visualization with 12 tasks across 4 sub-abilities, comprising 1,180 programmatically generated problems, a scalable framework that allows for expansion to ensure fair and continuously reliable evaluations. Our evaluation of 27 Multi-modal Large Language Models (MLLMs) reveals wide performance variations, demonstrates the benchmark's strong discriminative power, and uncovers counter-intuitive findings: Chain-of-Thought (CoT) prompting paradoxically degrades accuracy on open-source models. Through statistical and qualitative analysis of error types, SpatialViz-Bench demonstrates that state-of-the-art MLLMs exhibit deficiencies in spatial visualization tasks, thereby addressing a significant lacuna in the field. The benchmark data and evaluation code are publicly available.
♻ ☆ GlobalRAG: Enhancing Global Reasoning in Multi-hop Question Answering via Reinforcement Learning
Reinforcement learning has recently shown promise in improving retrieval-augmented generation (RAG). Despite these advances, its effectiveness in multi-hop question answering (QA) remains limited by two fundamental limitations: (i) global planning absence to structure multi-step reasoning, and (ii) unfaithful execution, which hinders effective query formulation and consistent use of retrieved evidence. We propose GlobalRAG, a reinforcement learning framework designed to enhance global reasoning in multi-hop QA. GlobalRAG decomposes questions into subgoals, coordinates retrieval with reasoning, and refines evidence iteratively. To guide this process, we introduce Planning Quality Reward and SubGoal Completion Reward, which encourage coherent planning and reliable subgoal execution. In addition, a progressive weight annealing strategy balances process-oriented and outcome-based objectives. Extensive experiments on both in-domain and out-of-domain benchmarks demonstrate that GlobalRAG significantly outperforms strong baselines while using only 8k training data (42% of the training data used by strong baselines), achieving average improvements of 14.2% in both EM and F1.
comment: 8 pages, 3 figures, 4 tables
♻ ☆ STEMTOX: From Social Tags to Fine-Grained Toxic Meme Detection via Entropy-Guided Multi-Task Learning
Memes, as a widely used mode of online communication, often serve as vehicles for spreading harmful content. However, limitations in data accessibility and the high costs of dataset curation hinder the development of robust meme moderation systems. To address this challenge, in this work, we introduce a first-of-its-kind dataset - TOXICTAGS consisting of 6,300 real-world meme-based posts annotated in two stages: (i) binary classification into toxic and normal, and (ii) fine-grained labelling of toxic memes as hateful, dangerous, or offensive. A key feature of this dataset is that it is enriched with auxiliary metadata of socially relevant tags, enhancing the context of each meme. In addition, we propose a novel entropy guided multi-tasking framework - STEMTOX - that integrates the generation of socially grounded tags with a robust classification framework. Experimental results show that incorporating these tags substantially enhances the performance of state-of-the-art VLMs in toxicity detection tasks. Our contributions offer a novel and scalable foundation for improved content moderation in multimodal online environments. Warning: Contains potentially toxic contents.
♻ ☆ Overthinking Reduction with Decoupled Rewards and Curriculum Data Scheduling ICLR 2026
While large reasoning models trained with critic-free reinforcement learning and verifiable rewards (RLVR) represent the state-of-the-art, their practical utility is hampered by ``overthinking'', a critical issue where models generate excessively long reasoning paths without any performance benefit. Existing solutions that penalize length often fail, inducing performance degradation due to a fundamental misalignment between trajectory-level rewards and token-level optimization. In this work, we introduce a novel framework, DECS, built on our theoretical discovery of two previously unaddressed flaws in current length rewards: (1) the erroneous penalization of essential exploratory tokens and (2) the inadvertent rewarding of partial redundancy. Our framework's innovations include (i) a first-of-its-kind decoupled token-level reward mechanism that surgically distinguishes and penalizes redundant tokens, and (ii) a novel curriculum batch scheduling strategy to master the efficiency-efficacy equilibrium. Experimental results show DECS can achieve a dramatic reduction in reasoning tokens by over 50\% across seven benchmarks while simultaneously maintaining or even improving performance. It demonstrates conclusively that substantial gains in reasoning efficiency can be achieved without compromising a model's underlying reasoning power. Code is available at https://github.com/pixas/DECS.
comment: 30 pages; Accepted as an oral presentation at ICLR 2026
♻ ☆ EndoCoT: Scaling Endogenous Chain-of-Thought Reasoning in Diffusion Models
Recently, Multimodal Large Language Models (MLLMs) have been widely integrated into diffusion frameworks primarily as text encoders to tackle complex tasks such as spatial reasoning. However, this paradigm suffers from two critical limitations: (i) MLLMs text encoder exhibits insufficient reasoning depth. Single-step encoding fails to activate the Chain-of-Thought process, which is essential for MLLMs to provide accurate guidance for complex tasks. (ii) The guidance remains invariant during the decoding process. Invariant guidance during decoding prevents DiT from progressively decomposing complex instructions into actionable denoising steps, even with correct MLLM encodings. To this end, we propose Endogenous Chain-of-Thought (EndoCoT), a novel framework that first activates MLLMs' reasoning potential by iteratively refining latent thought states through an iterative thought guidance module, and then bridges these states to the DiT's denoising process. Second, a terminal thought grounding module is applied to ensure the reasoning trajectory remains grounded in textual supervision by aligning the final state with ground-truth answers. With these two components, the MLLM text encoder delivers meticulously reasoned guidance, enabling the DiT to execute it progressively and ultimately solve complex tasks in a step-by-step manner. Extensive evaluations across diverse benchmarks (e.g., Maze, TSP, VSP, and Sudoku) achieve an average accuracy of 92.1%, outperforming the strongest baseline by 8.3 percentage points. The code and dataset are publicly available at https://lennoxdai.github.io/EndoCoT-Webpage/.
comment: 23 pages, 18 figures, The code and dataset are publicly available at https://lennoxdai.github.io/EndoCoT-Webpage/
♻ ☆ BIS Reasoning 1.0: The First Large-Scale Japanese Benchmark for Belief-Inconsistent Syllogistic Reasoning LREC 2026
We present BIS Reasoning 1.0, the first large-scale Japanese dataset of syllogistic reasoning problems explicitly designed to evaluate belief-inconsistent reasoning in large language models (LLMs). Unlike prior resources such as NeuBAROCO and JFLD, which emphasize general or belief-aligned logic, BIS Reasoning 1.0 systematically introduces logically valid yet belief-inconsistent syllogisms to expose belief bias, the tendency to accept believable conclusions irrespective of validity. We benchmark a representative suite of cutting-edge models, including OpenAI GPT-5 variants, GPT-4o, Qwen, and prominent Japanese LLMs, under a uniform, zero-shot protocol. Reasoning-centric models achieve near-perfect accuracy on BIS Reasoning 1.0 (e.g., Qwen3-32B $\approx$99% and GPT-5-mini up to $\approx$99.7%), while GPT-4o attains around 80%. Earlier Japanese-specialized models underperform, often well below 60%, whereas the latest llm-jp-3.1-13b-instruct4 markedly improves to the mid-80% range. These results indicate that robustness to belief-inconsistent inputs is driven more by explicit reasoning optimization than by language specialization or scale alone. Our analysis further shows that even top-tier systems falter when logical validity conflicts with intuitive or factual beliefs, and that performance is sensitive to prompt design and inference-time reasoning effort. We discuss implications for safety-critical domains, including law, healthcare, and scientific literature, where strict logical fidelity must override intuitive belief to ensure reliability.
comment: Accepted at LREC 2026
♻ ☆ MedPT: A Massive Medical Question Answering Dataset for Brazilian-Portuguese Speakers LREC 2026
While large language models (LLMs) show transformative potential in healthcare, their development remains focused on high-resource languages. This creates a critical barrier for other languages, as simple translation fails to capture unique clinical and cultural nuances, such as endemic diseases. To address this, we introduce MedPT, the first large-scale, real-world corpus of patient-doctor interactions for the Brazilian Portuguese medical domain. Comprising 384,095 authentic question-answer pairs and covering over 3,200 distinct health-related conditions, the dataset was refined through a rigorous multi-stage curation protocol that employed a hybrid quantitative-qualitative analysis to filter noise and contextually enrich thousands of ambiguous queries, resulting in a corpus of approximately 57 million tokens. We further utilize of LLM-driven annotation to classify queries into seven semantic types to capture user intent. To validate MedPT's utility, we benchmark it in a medical specialty classification task: fine-tuning a 1.7B parameter model achieves an outstanding 94\% F1-score on a 20-class setup. Furthermore, our qualitative error analysis shows misclassifications are not random but reflect genuine clinical ambiguities (e.g., between comorbid conditions), proving the dataset's deep semantic richness. We publicly release MedPT on Hugging Face to support the development of more equitable, accurate, and culturally-aware medical technologies for the Portuguese-speaking world.
comment: Accepted at LREC 2026, 11 pages, 3 tables, 2 figures
♻ ☆ Dynamic Stress Detection: A Study of Temporal Progression Modelling of Stress in Speech
Detecting psychological stress from speech is critical in high-pressure settings. While prior work has leveraged acoustic features for stress detection, most treat stress as a static label. In this work, we model stress as a temporally evolving phenomenon influenced by historical emotional state. We propose a dynamic labelling strategy that derives fine-grained stress annotations from emotional labels and introduce cross-attention-based sequential models, a Unidirectional LSTM and a Transformer Encoder, to capture temporal stress progression. Our approach achieves notable accuracy gains on MuSE (+5%) and StressID (+18%) over existing baselines, and generalises well to a custom real-world dataset. These results highlight the value of modelling stress as a dynamic construct in speech.
♻ ☆ CRAFT: Calibrated Reasoning with Answer-Faithful Traces via Reinforcement Learning for Multi-Hop Question Answering
Retrieval-augmented large language models, when optimized with outcome-level rewards, can achieve strong answer accuracy on multi-hop questions. However, under noisy retrieval, models frequently suffer from "right-answer-wrong-reason failures": they may exploit spurious shortcuts or produce reasoning traces weakly grounded in the supporting evidence. Furthermore, the lack of structured output control prevents reliable auditing of the underlying reasoning quality. To address this, we propose CRAFT (Calibrated Reasoning with Answer-Faithful Traces), a reinforcement learning framework for the response generation stage of retrieval-augmented multi-hop question answering. CRAFT trains models to produce structured reasoning traces with configurable levels of auditability (e.g., by selectively retaining planning, evidence citation, or reasoning steps). Training combines two complementary forms of supervision: deterministic rewards enforce verifiable constraints, including format compliance, answer correctness, and citation-set validity, while a judge-based reward audits semantic faithfulness by evaluating reasoning consistency and evidence grounding. Experiments show that CRAFT improves both answer accuracy and reasoning faithfulness across model scales. Notably, semantic judge-based rewards improve answer accuracy rather than compromise it, enabling CRAFT (7B) to achieve performance competitive with strong closed-source models.
♻ ☆ Too Open for Opinion? Embracing Open-Endedness in Large Language Models for Social Simulation EACL 2026
Large Language Models (LLMs) are increasingly used to simulate public opinion and other social phenomena. Most current studies constrain these simulations to multiple-choice or short-answer formats for ease of scoring and comparison, but such closed designs overlook the inherently generative nature of LLMs. In this position paper, we argue that open-endedness, using free-form text that captures topics, viewpoints, and reasoning processes "in" LLMs, is essential for realistic social simulation. Drawing on decades of survey-methodology research and recent advances in NLP, we argue why this open-endedness is valuable in LLM social simulations, showing how it can improve measurement and design, support exploration of unanticipated views, and reduce researcher-imposed directive bias. It also captures expressiveness and individuality, aids in pretesting, and ultimately enhances methodological utility. We call for novel practices and evaluation frameworks that leverage rather than constrain the open-ended generative diversity of LLMs, creating synergies between NLP and social science.
comment: EACL 2026
♻ ☆ FC-KAN: Function Combinations in Kolmogorov-Arnold Networks
In this paper, we introduce FC-KAN, a Kolmogorov-Arnold Network (KAN) that leverages combinations of popular mathematical functions such as B-splines, wavelets, and radial basis functions on low-dimensional data through element-wise operations. We explore several methods for combining the outputs of these functions, including sum, element-wise product, the addition of sum and element-wise product, representations of quadratic and cubic functions, concatenation, linear transformation of the concatenated output, and others. In our experiments, we compare FC-KAN with a multi-layer perceptron network (MLP) and other existing KANs, such as BSRBF-KAN, EfficientKAN, FastKAN, and FasterKAN, on the MNIST and Fashion-MNIST datasets. Two variants of FC-KAN, which use a combination of outputs from B-splines and Derivative of Gaussians (DoG) and from B-splines and linear transformations in the form of a quadratic function, outperformed overall other models on the average of 5 independent training runs. We expect that FC-KAN can leverage function combinations to design future KANs. Our repository is publicly available at: https://github.com/hoangthangta/FC_KAN.
comment: 17 pages
♻ ☆ BabyReasoningBench: Generating Developmentally-Inspired Reasoning Tasks for Evaluating Baby Language Models
Traditional evaluations of reasoning capabilities of language models are dominated by adult-centric benchmarks that presuppose broad world knowledge, complex instruction following, and mature pragmatic competence. These assumptions are mismatched to baby language models trained on developmentally plausible input such as child-directed speech and early-childhood narratives, and they obscure which reasoning abilities (if any) emerge under such constraints. We introduce BabyReasoningBench, a GPT-5.2 generated benchmark of 19 reasoning tasks grounded in classic paradigms from developmental psychology, spanning theory of mind, analogical and relational reasoning, causal inference and intervention selection, and core reasoning primitives that are known to be confounded by memory and pragmatics. We find that two GPT-2 based baby language models (pretrained on 10M and 100M of child-directed speech text) show overall low but uneven performance, with dissociations across task families: scaling improves several causal and physical reasoning tasks, while belief attribution and pragmatics-sensitive tasks remain challenging. BabyReasoningBench provides a developmentally grounded lens for analyzing what kinds of reasoning are supported by child-like training distributions, and for testing mechanistic hypotheses about how such abilities emerge.
♻ ☆ Reason2Decide: Rationale-Driven Multi-Task Learning LREC 2026
Despite the wide adoption of Large Language Models (LLM)s, clinical decision support systems face a critical challenge: achieving high predictive accuracy while generating explanations aligned with the predictions. Current approaches suffer from exposure bias leading to misaligned explanations. We propose Reason2Decide, a two-stage training framework that addresses key challenges in self-rationalization, including exposure bias and task separation. In Stage-1, our model is trained on rationale generation, while in Stage-2, we jointly train on label prediction and rationale generation, applying scheduled sampling to gradually transition from conditioning on gold labels to model predictions. We evaluate Reason2Decide on three medical datasets, including a proprietary triage dataset and public biomedical QA datasets. Across model sizes, Reason2Decide outperforms other fine-tuning baselines and some zero-shot LLMs in prediction (F1) and rationale fidelity (BERTScore, BLEU, LLM-as-a-Judge). In triage, Reason2Decide is rationale source-robust across LLM-generated, nurse-authored, and nurse-post-processed rationales. In our experiments, while using only LLM-generated rationales in Stage-1, Reason2Decide outperforms other fine-tuning variants. This indicates that LLM-generated rationales are suitable for pretraining models, reducing reliance on human annotations. Remarkably, Reason2Decide achieves these gains with models 40x smaller than contemporary foundation models, making clinical reasoning more accessible for resource-constrained deployments while still providing explainable decision support.
comment: Uploaded the camera-version of the paper accepted to LREC 2026
♻ ☆ Multi-Agent LLMs for Generating Research Limitations
Identifying and articulating limitations is essential for transparent and rigorous scientific research. However, zero-shot large language models (LLMs) approach often produce superficial or general limitation statements (e.g., dataset bias or generalizability). They usually repeat limitations reported by authors without looking at deeper methodological issues and contextual gaps. This problem is made worse because many authors disclose only partial or trivial limitations. We propose, a multi-agent LLM framework for generating substantive limitations. It integrates OpenReview comments and author-stated limitations to provide stronger ground truth. It also uses cited and citing papers to capture broader contextual weaknesses. In this setup, different agents have specific roles as sequential role: some extract explicit limitations, others analyze methodological gaps, some simulate the viewpoint of a peer reviewer, and a citation agent places the work within the larger body of literature. A Judge agent refines their outputs, and a Master agent consolidates them into a clear set. This structure allows for systematic identification of explicit, implicit, peer review-focused, and literature-informed limitations. Moreover, traditional NLP metrics like BLEU, ROUGE, and cosine similarity rely heavily on n-gram or embedding overlap. They often overlook semantically similar limitations. To address this, we introduce a pointwise evaluation protocol that uses an LLM-as-a-Judge to measure coverage more accurately. Experiments show that our proposed model substantially improve performance. The RAG + multi-agent GPT-4o mini configuration achieves a +15.51\% coverage gain over zero-shot baselines, while the Llama 3 8B multi-agent setup yields a +4.41\% improvement.
comment: 18 Pages, 9 figures
♻ ☆ Semantic Invariance in Agentic AI
Large Language Models (LLMs) increasingly serve as autonomous reasoning agents in decision support, scientific problem-solving, and multi-agent coordination systems. However, deploying LLM agents in consequential applications requires assurance that their reasoning remains stable under semantically equivalent input variations, a property we term semantic invariance. Standard benchmark evaluations, which assess accuracy on fixed, canonical problem formulations, fail to capture this critical reliability dimension. To address this shortcoming, in this paper we present a metamorphic testing framework for systematically assessing the robustness of LLM reasoning agents, applying eight semantic-preserving transformations (identity, paraphrase, fact reordering, expansion, contraction, academic context, business context, and contrastive formulation) across seven foundation models spanning four distinct architectural families: Hermes (70B, 405B), Qwen3 (30B-A3B, 235B-A22B), DeepSeek-R1, and gpt-oss (20B, 120B). Our evaluation encompasses 19 multi-step reasoning problems across eight scientific domains. The results reveal that model scale does not predict robustness: the smaller Qwen3-30B-A3B achieves the highest stability (79.6% invariant responses, semantic similarity 0.91), while larger models exhibit greater fragility.
comment: Accepted for publication in 20th International Conference on Agents and Multi-Agent Systems: Technologies and Applications (AMSTA 2026), to appear in Springer Nature proceedings (KES Smart Innovation Systems and Technologies). The final authenticated version will be available online at Springer
♻ ☆ MetaKE: Meta-learning Aligned Knowledge Editing via Bi-level Optimization
Knowledge editing (KE) aims to precisely rectify specific knowledge in Large Language Models (LLMs) without disrupting general capabilities. State-of-the-art methods suffer from an open-loop control mismatch. We identify a critical "Semantic-Execution Disconnect": the semantic target is derived independently without feedback from the downstream's feasible region. This misalignment often causes valid semantic targets to fall within the prohibited space, resulting in gradient truncation and editing failure. To bridge this gap, we propose MetaKE (Meta-learning Aligned Knowledge Editing), a new framework that reframes KE as a bi-level optimization problem. Departing from static calculation, MetaKE treats the edit target as a learnable meta-parameter: the upper-level optimizer seeks a feasible target to maximize post-edit performance, while the lower-level solver executes the editing. To address the challenge of differentiating through complex solvers, we derive a Structural Gradient Proxy, which explicitly backpropagates editability constraints to the target learning phase. Theoretical analysis demonstrates that MetaKE automatically aligns the edit direction with the model's feasible manifold. Extensive experiments confirm that MetaKE significantly outperforms strong baselines, offering a new perspective on knowledge editing.
comment: 17 pages, 2 figures, work in progress
♻ ☆ DS$^2$-Instruct: Domain-Specific Data Synthesis for Large Language Models Instruction Tuning EACL 2026
Adapting Large Language Models (LLMs) to specialized domains requires high-quality instruction tuning datasets, which are expensive to create through human annotation. Existing data synthesis methods focus on general-purpose tasks and fail to capture domain-specific terminology and reasoning patterns. To address this, we introduce DS$^2$-Instruct, a zero-shot framework that generates domain-specific instruction datasets without human supervision. Our approach first generates task-informed keywords to ensure comprehensive domain coverage. It then creates diverse instructions by pairing these keywords with different cognitive levels from Bloom's Taxonomy. Finally, it uses self-consistency validation to ensure data quality. We apply this framework to generate datasets across seven challenging domains, such as mathematics, finance, and logical reasoning. Comprehensive evaluation demonstrates that models fine-tuned on our generated data achieve substantial improvements over existing data generation methods.
comment: EACL 2026 Findings
♻ ☆ TARAZ: Persian Short-Answer Question Benchmark for Cultural Evaluation of Language Models LREC
This paper presents a comprehensive evaluation framework for assessing the cultural competence of large language models (LLMs) in Persian. Existing Persian cultural benchmarks rely predominantly on multiple-choice formats and English-centric metrics that fail to capture Persian's morphological complexity and semantic nuance. Our framework introduces a Persian-specific short-answer evaluation that combines rule-based morphological normalization with a hybrid syntactic and semantic similarity module, enabling robust soft-match scoring beyond exact string overlap. Through systematic evaluation of 15 state-of-the-art open- and closed-source models across three culturally grounded Persian datasets, we demonstrate that our hybrid evaluation improves scoring consistency by +10 compared to exact-match baselines by capturing meaning that surface-level methods cannot detect. Our human evaluation further confirms that the proposed semantic similarity metric achieves higher agreement with human judgments than LLM-based judges. We publicly release our evaluation framework, providing the first standardized benchmark for measuring cultural understanding in Persian and establishing a reproducible foundation for cross-cultural LLM evaluation research.
comment: 12 pages, 6 figures, Fifteenth biennial Language Resources and Evaluation Conference (LREC) 2026 (to appear)
Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition
☆ Towards Generalizable Robotic Manipulation in Dynamic Environments
Vision-Language-Action (VLA) models excel in static manipulation but struggle in dynamic environments with moving targets. This performance gap primarily stems from a scarcity of dynamic manipulation datasets and the reliance of mainstream VLAs on single-frame observations, restricting their spatiotemporal reasoning capabilities. To address this, we introduce DOMINO, a large-scale dataset and benchmark for generalizable dynamic manipulation, featuring 35 tasks with hierarchical complexities, over 110K expert trajectories, and a multi-dimensional evaluation suite. Through comprehensive experiments, we systematically evaluate existing VLAs on dynamic tasks, explore effective training strategies for dynamic awareness, and validate the generalizability of dynamic data. Furthermore, we propose PUMA, a dynamics-aware VLA architecture. By integrating scene-centric historical optical flow and specialized world queries to implicitly forecast object-centric future states, PUMA couples history-aware perception with short-horizon prediction. Results demonstrate that PUMA achieves state-of-the-art performance, yielding a 6.3% absolute improvement in success rate over baselines. Moreover, we show that training on dynamic data fosters robust spatiotemporal representations that transfer to static tasks. All code and data are available at https://github.com/H-EmbodVis/DOMINO.
☆ Look Before Acting: Enhancing Vision Foundation Representations for Vision-Language-Action Models
Vision-Language-Action (VLA) models have recently emerged as a promising paradigm for robotic manipulation, in which reliable action prediction critically depends on accurately interpreting and integrating visual observations conditioned on language instructions. Although recent works have sought to enhance the visual capabilities of VLA models, most approaches treat the LLM backbone as a black box, providing limited insight into how visual information is grounded into action generation. Therefore, we perform a systematic analysis of multiple VLA models across different action-generation paradigms and observe that sensitivity to visual tokens progressively decreases in deeper layers during action generation. Motivated by this observation, we propose \textbf{DeepVision-VLA}, built on a \textbf{Vision-Language Mixture-of-Transformers (VL-MoT)} framework. This framework enables shared attention between the vision foundation model and the VLA backbone, injecting multi-level visual features from the vision expert into deeper layers of the VLA backbone to enhance visual representations for precise and complex manipulation. In addition, we introduce \textbf{Action-Guided Visual Pruning (AGVP)}, which leverages shallow-layer attention to prune irrelevant visual tokens while preserving task-relevant ones, reinforcing critical visual cues for manipulation with minimal computational overhead. DeepVision-VLA outperforms prior state-of-the-art methods by 9.0\% and 7.5\% on simulated and real-world tasks, respectively, providing new insights for the design of visually enhanced VLA models.
☆ GlyphPrinter: Region-Grouped Direct Preference Optimization for Glyph-Accurate Visual Text Rendering CVPR 2026
Generating accurate glyphs for visual text rendering is essential yet challenging. Existing methods typically enhance text rendering by training on a large amount of high-quality scene text images, but the limited coverage of glyph variations and excessive stylization often compromise glyph accuracy, especially for complex or out-of-domain characters. Some methods leverage reinforcement learning to alleviate this issue, yet their reward models usually depend on text recognition systems that are insensitive to fine-grained glyph errors, so images with incorrect glyphs may still receive high rewards. Inspired by Direct Preference Optimization (DPO), we propose GlyphPrinter, a preference-based text rendering method that eliminates reliance on explicit reward models. However, the standard DPO objective only models overall preference between two samples, which is insufficient for visual text rendering where glyph errors typically occur in localized regions. To address this issue, we construct the GlyphCorrector dataset with region-level glyph preference annotations and propose Region-Grouped DPO (R-GDPO), a region-based objective that optimizes inter- and intra-sample preferences over annotated regions, substantially enhancing glyph accuracy. Furthermore, we introduce Regional Reward Guidance, an inference strategy that samples from an optimal distribution with controllable glyph accuracy. Extensive experiments demonstrate that the proposed GlyphPrinter outperforms existing methods in glyph accuracy while maintaining a favorable balance between stylization and precision.
comment: CVPR 2026, Project Page: https://henghuiding.com/GlyphPrinter/
☆ Tri-Prompting: Video Diffusion with Unified Control over Scene, Subject, and Motion
Recent video diffusion models have made remarkable strides in visual quality, yet precise, fine-grained control remains a key bottleneck that limits practical customizability for content creation. For AI video creators, three forms of control are crucial: (i) scene composition, (ii) multi-view consistent subject customization, and (iii) camera-pose or object-motion adjustment. Existing methods typically handle these dimensions in isolation, with limited support for multi-view subject synthesis and identity preservation under arbitrary pose changes. This lack of a unified architecture makes it difficult to support versatile, jointly controllable video. We introduce Tri-Prompting, a unified framework and two-stage training paradigm that integrates scene composition, multi-view subject consistency, and motion control. Our approach leverages a dual-condition motion module driven by 3D tracking points for background scenes and downsampled RGB cues for foreground subjects. To ensure a balance between controllability and visual realism, we further propose an inference ControlNet scale schedule. Tri-Prompting supports novel workflows, including 3D-aware subject insertion into any scenes and manipulation of existing subjects in an image. Experimental results demonstrate that Tri-Prompting significantly outperforms specialized baselines such as Phantom and DaS in multi-view subject identity, 3D consistency, and motion accuracy.
comment: Project page: https://zhouzhenghong-gt.github.io/Tri-Prompting-Page/
☆ HSImul3R: Physics-in-the-Loop Reconstruction of Simulation-Ready Human-Scene Interactions
We present HSImul3R, a unified framework for simulation-ready 3D reconstruction of human-scene interactions (HSI) from casual captures, including sparse-view images and monocular videos. Existing methods suffer from a perception-simulation gap: visually plausible reconstructions often violate physical constraints, leading to instability in physics engines and failure in embodied AI applications. To bridge this gap, we introduce a physically-grounded bi-directional optimization pipeline that treats the physics simulator as an active supervisor to jointly refine human dynamics and scene geometry. In the forward direction, we employ Scene-targeted Reinforcement Learning to optimize human motion under dual supervision of motion fidelity and contact stability. In the reverse direction, we propose Direct Simulation Reward Optimization, which leverages simulation feedback on gravitational stability and interaction success to refine scene geometry. We further present HSIBench, a new benchmark with diverse objects and interaction scenarios. Extensive experiments demonstrate that HSImul3R produces the first stable, simulation-ready HSI reconstructions and can be directly deployed to real-world humanoid robots.
comment: https://yukangcao.github.io/HSImul3R/
☆ Fast SAM 3D Body: Accelerating SAM 3D Body for Real-Time Full-Body Human Mesh Recovery
SAM 3D Body (3DB) achieves state-of-the-art accuracy in monocular 3D human mesh recovery, yet its inference latency of several seconds per image precludes real-time application. We present Fast SAM 3D Body, a training-free acceleration framework that reformulates the 3DB inference pathway to achieve interactive rates. By decoupling serial spatial dependencies and applying architecture-aware pruning, we enable parallelized multi-crop feature extraction and streamlined transformer decoding. Moreover, to extract the joint-level kinematics (SMPL) compatible with existing humanoid control and policy learning frameworks, we replace the iterative mesh fitting with a direct feedforward mapping, accelerating this specific conversion by over 10,000x. Overall, our framework delivers up to a 10.9x end-to-end speedup while maintaining on-par reconstruction fidelity, even surpassing 3DB on benchmarks such as LSPET. We demonstrate its utility by deploying Fast SAM 3D Body in a vision-only teleoperation system that-unlike methods reliant on wearable IMUs-enables real-time humanoid control and the direct collection of manipulation policies from a single RGB stream.
☆ From Passive Observer to Active Critic: Reinforcement Learning Elicits Process Reasoning for Robotic Manipulation
Accurate process supervision remains a critical challenge for long-horizon robotic manipulation. A primary bottleneck is that current video MLLMs, trained primarily under a Supervised Fine-Tuning (SFT) paradigm, function as passive "Observers" that recognize ongoing events rather than evaluating the current state relative to the final task goal. In this paper, we introduce PRIMO R1 (Process Reasoning Induced Monitoring), a 7B framework that transforms video MLLMs into active "Critics". We leverage outcome-based Reinforcement Learning to incentivize explicit Chain-of-Thought generation for progress estimation. Furthermore, our architecture constructs a structured temporal input by explicitly anchoring the video sequence between initial and current state images. Supported by the proposed PRIMO Dataset and Benchmark, extensive experiments across diverse in-domain environments and out-of-domain real-world humanoid scenarios demonstrate that PRIMO R1 achieves state-of-the-art performance. Quantitatively, our 7B model achieves a 50% reduction in the mean absolute error of specialized reasoning baselines, demonstrating significant relative accuracy improvements over 72B-scale general MLLMs. Furthermore, PRIMO R1 exhibits strong zero-shot generalization on difficult failure detection tasks. We establish state-of-the-art performance on RoboFail benchmark with 67.0% accuracy, surpassing closed-source models like OpenAI o1 by 6.0%.
comment: 31 pages
☆ AC-Foley: Reference-Audio-Guided Video-to-Audio Synthesis with Acoustic Transfer ICLR 2026
Existing video-to-audio (V2A) generation methods predominantly rely on text prompts alongside visual information to synthesize audio. However, two critical bottlenecks persist: semantic granularity gaps in training data, such as conflating acoustically distinct sounds under coarse labels, and textual ambiguity in describing micro-acoustic features. These bottlenecks make it difficult to perform fine-grained sound synthesis using text-controlled modes. To address these limitations, we propose AC-Foley, an audio-conditioned V2A model that directly leverages reference audio to achieve precise and fine-grained control over generated sounds. This approach enables fine-grained sound synthesis, timbre transfer, zero-shot sound generation, and improved audio quality. By directly conditioning on audio signals, our approach bypasses the semantic ambiguities of text descriptions while enabling precise manipulation of acoustic attributes. Empirically, AC-Foley achieves state-of-the-art performance for Foley generation when conditioned on reference audio, while remaining competitive with state-of-the-art video-to-audio methods even without audio conditioning.
comment: Accepted at ICLR 2026. 15 pages, 5 figures
☆ Grounding World Simulation Models in a Real-World Metropolis
What if a world simulation model could render not an imagined environment but a city that actually exists? Prior generative world models synthesize visually plausible yet artificial environments by imagining all content. We present Seoul World Model (SWM), a city-scale world model grounded in the real city of Seoul. SWM anchors autoregressive video generation through retrieval-augmented conditioning on nearby street-view images. However, this design introduces several challenges, including temporal misalignment between retrieved references and the dynamic target scene, limited trajectory diversity and data sparsity from vehicle-mounted captures at sparse intervals. We address these challenges through cross-temporal pairing, a large-scale synthetic dataset enabling diverse camera trajectories, and a view interpolation pipeline that synthesizes coherent training videos from sparse street-view images. We further introduce a Virtual Lookahead Sink to stabilize long-horizon generation by continuously re-grounding each chunk to a retrieved image at a future location. We evaluate SWM against recent video world models across three cities: Seoul, Busan, and Ann Arbor. SWM outperforms existing methods in generating spatially faithful, temporally consistent, long-horizon videos grounded in actual urban environments over trajectories reaching hundreds of meters, while supporting diverse camera movements and text-prompted scenario variations.
comment: project page: https://seoul-world-model.github.io/
☆ Benchmarking Machine Learning Approaches for Polarization Mapping in Ferroelectrics Using 4D-STEM
Four-dimensional scanning transmission electron microscopy (4D-STEM) provides rich, atomic-scale insights into materials structures. However, extracting specific physical properties - such as polarization directions essential for understanding functional properties of ferroelectrics - remains a significant challenge. In this study, we systematically benchmark multiple machine learning models, namely ResNet, VGG, a custom convolutional neural network, and PCA-informed k-Nearest Neighbors, to automate the detection of polarization directions from 4D-STEM diffraction patterns in ferroelectric potassium sodium niobate. While models trained on synthetic data achieve high accuracy on idealized synthetic diffraction patterns of equivalent thickness, the domain gap between simulation and experiment remains a critical barrier to real-world deployment. In this context, a custom made prototype representation training regime and PCA-based methods, combined with data augmentation and filtering, can better bridge this gap. Error analysis reveals periodic missclassification patterns, indicating that not all diffraction patterns carry enough information for a successful classification. Additionally, our qualitative analysis demonstrates that irregularities in the model's prediction patterns correlate with defects in the crystal structure, suggesting that supervised models could be used for detecting structural defects. These findings guide the development of robust, transferable machine learning tools for electron microscopy analysis.
☆ Severe Domain Shift in Skeleton-Based Action Recognition:A Study of Uncertainty Failure in Real-World Gym Environments
The practical deployment gap -- transitioning from controlled multi-view 3D skeleton capture to unconstrained monocular 2D pose estimation -- introduces a compound domain shift whose safety implications remain critically underexplored. We present a systematic study of this severe domain shift using a novel Gym2D dataset (style/viewpoint shift) and the UCF101 dataset (semantic shift). Our Skeleton Transformer achieves 63.2% cross-subject accuracy on NTU-120 but drops to 1.6% under zero-shot transfer to the Gym domain and 1.16% on UCF101. Critically, we demonstrate that high Out-Of-Distribution (OOD) detection AUROC does not guarantee safe selective classification. Standard uncertainty methods fail to detect this performance drop: the model remains confidently incorrect with 99.6% risk even at 50% coverage across both OOD datasets. While energy-based scoring (AUROC >= 0.91) and Mahalanobis distance provide reliable distributional detection signals, such high AUROC scores coexist with poor risk-coverage behavior when making decisions. A lightweight finetuned gating mechanism restores calibration and enables graceful abstention, substantially reducing the rate of confident wrong predictions. Our work challenges standard deployment assumptions, providing a principled safety analysis of both semantic and geometric skeleton recognition deployment.
comment: 6 pages, 7 figures
☆ Panoramic Affordance Prediction
Affordance prediction serves as a critical bridge between perception and action in embodied AI. However, existing research is confined to pinhole camera models, which suffer from narrow Fields of View (FoV) and fragmented observations, often missing critical holistic environmental context. In this paper, we present the first exploration into Panoramic Affordance Prediction, utilizing 360-degree imagery to capture global spatial relationships and holistic scene understanding. To facilitate this novel task, we first introduce PAP-12K, a large-scale benchmark dataset containing over 1,000 ultra-high-resolution (12k, 11904 x 5952) panoramic images with over 12k carefully annotated QA pairs and affordance masks. Furthermore, we propose PAP, a training-free, coarse-to-fine pipeline inspired by the human foveal visual system to tackle the ultra-high resolution and severe distortion inherent in panoramic images. PAP employs recursive visual routing via grid prompting to progressively locate targets, applies an adaptive gaze mechanism to rectify local geometric distortions, and utilizes a cascaded grounding pipeline to extract precise instance-level masks. Experimental results on PAP-12K reveal that existing affordance prediction methods designed for standard perspective images suffer severe performance degradation and fail due to the unique challenges of panoramic vision. In contrast, PAP framework effectively overcomes these obstacles, significantly outperforming state-of-the-art baselines and highlighting the immense potential of panoramic perception for robust embodied intelligence.
☆ Anatomy of a Lie: A Multi-Stage Diagnostic Framework for Tracing Hallucinations in Vision-Language Models
Vision-Language Models (VLMs) frequently "hallucinate" - generate plausible yet factually incorrect statements - posing a critical barrier to their trustworthy deployment. In this work, we propose a new paradigm for diagnosing hallucinations, recasting them from static output errors into dynamic pathologies of a model's computational cognition. Our framework is grounded in a normative principle of computational rationality, allowing us to model a VLM's generation as a dynamic cognitive trajectory. We design a suite of information-theoretic probes that project this trajectory onto an interpretable, low-dimensional Cognitive State Space. Our central discovery is a governing principle we term the geometric-information duality: a cognitive trajectory's geometric abnormality within this space is fundamentally equivalent to its high information-theoretic surprisal. Hallucination detection is counts as a geometric anomaly detection problem. Evaluated across diverse settings - from rigorous binary QA (POPE) and comprehensive reasoning (MME) to unconstrained open-ended captioning (MS-COCO) - our framework achieves state-of-the-art performance. Crucially, it operates with high efficiency under weak supervision and remains highly robust even when calibration data is heavily contaminated. This approach enables a causal attribution of failures, mapping observable errors to distinct pathological states: perceptual instability (measured by Perceptual Entropy), logical-causal failure (measured by Inferential Conflict), and decisional ambiguity (measured by Decision Entropy). Ultimately, this opens a path toward building AI systems whose reasoning is transparent, auditable, and diagnosable by design.
☆ Learning Latent Proxies for Controllable Single-Image Relighting CVPR2026
Single-image relighting is highly under-constrained: small illumination changes can produce large, nonlinear variations in shading, shadows, and specularities, while geometry and materials remain unobserved. Existing diffusion-based approaches either rely on intrinsic or G-buffer pipelines that require dense and fragile supervision, or operate purely in latent space without physical grounding, making fine-grained control of direction, intensity, and color unreliable. We observe that a full intrinsic decomposition is unnecessary and redundant for accurate relighting. Instead, sparse but physically meaningful cues, indicating where illumination should change and how materials should respond, are sufficient to guide a diffusion model. Based on this insight, we introduce LightCtrl that integrates physical priors at two levels: a few-shot latent proxy encoder that extracts compact material-geometry cues from limited PBR supervision, and a lighting-aware mask that identifies sensitive illumination regions and steers the denoiser toward shading relevant pixels. To compensate for scarce PBR data, we refine the proxy branch using a DPO-based objective that enforces physical consistency in the predicted cues. We also present ScaLight, a large-scale object-level dataset with systematically varied illumination and complete camera-light metadata, enabling physically consistent and controllable training. Across object and scene level benchmarks, our method achieves photometrically faithful relighting with accurate continuous control, surpassing prior diffusion and intrinsic-based baselines, including gains of up to +2.4 dB PSNR and 35% lower RMSE under controlled lighting shifts.
comment: Accepted by CVPR2026
☆ Self-Distillation of Hidden Layers for Self-Supervised Representation Learning
The landscape of self-supervised learning (SSL) is currently dominated by generative approaches (e.g., MAE) that reconstruct raw low-level data, and predictive approaches (e.g., I-JEPA) that predict high-level abstract embeddings. While generative methods provide strong grounding, they are computationally inefficient for high-redundancy modalities like imagery, and their training objective does not prioritize learning high-level, conceptual features. Conversely, predictive methods often suffer from training instability due to their reliance on the non-stationary targets of final-layer self-distillation. We introduce Bootleg, a method that bridges this divide by tasking the model with predicting latent representations from multiple hidden layers of a teacher network. This hierarchical objective forces the model to capture features at varying levels of abstraction simultaneously. We demonstrate that Bootleg significantly outperforms comparable baselines (+10% over I-JEPA) on classification of ImageNet-1K and iNaturalist-21, and semantic segmentation of ADE20K and Cityscapes.
☆ Kimodo: Scaling Controllable Human Motion Generation
High-quality human motion data is becoming increasingly important for applications in robotics, simulation, and entertainment. Recent generative models offer a potential data source, enabling human motion synthesis through intuitive inputs like text prompts or kinematic constraints on poses. However, the small scale of public mocap datasets has limited the motion quality, control accuracy, and generalization of these models. In this work, we introduce Kimodo, an expressive and controllable kinematic motion diffusion model trained on 700 hours of optical motion capture data. Our model generates high-quality motions while being easily controlled through text and a comprehensive suite of kinematic constraints including full-body keyframes, sparse joint positions/rotations, 2D waypoints, and dense 2D paths. This is enabled through a carefully designed motion representation and two-stage denoiser architecture that decomposes root and body prediction to minimize motion artifacts while allowing for flexible constraint conditioning. Experiments on the large-scale mocap dataset justify key design decisions and analyze how the scaling of dataset size and model size affect performance.
comment: Project page: https://research.nvidia.com/labs/sil/projects/kimodo/
☆ Clinically Aware Synthetic Image Generation for Concept Coverage in Chest X-ray Models
The clinical deployment of AI diagnostic models demands more than benchmark accuracy - it demands robustness across the full spectrum of disease presentations. However, publicly available chest radiographic datasets systematically underrepresent critical clinical feature combinations, leaving models under-trained precisely where clinical stakes are highest. We present CARS, a clinically aware and anatomically grounded framework that addresses this gap through principled synthetic image generation. CARS applies targeted perturbations to clinical feature vectors, enabling controlled insertion and deletion of pathological findings while explicitly preserving anatomical structure. We evaluate CARS across seven backbone architectures by fine-tuning models on synthetic subsets and testing on a held-out MIMIC-CXR benchmark. Compared to prior feature perturbation approaches, fine-tuning on CARS-generated images consistently improves precision-recall performance, reduces predictive uncertainty, and improves model calibration. Structural and semantic analyses demonstrate high anatomical fidelity, strong feature alignment, and low semantic uncertainty. Independent evaluation by two expert radiologists further confirms realism and clinical agreement. As the field moves toward regulated clinical AI, CARS demonstrates that anatomically faithful synthetic data generation for better feature space coverage is a viable and effective strategy for improving both the performance and trustworthiness of chest X-ray classification systems - without compromising clinical integrity.
☆ FreeTalk: Emotional Topology-Free 3D Talking Heads
Speech-driven 3D facial animation has advanced rapidly, yet most approaches remain tied to registered template meshes, preventing effective deployment on raw 3D scans with arbitrary topology. At the same time, modeling controllable emotional dynamics beyond lip articulation remains challenging, and is often tied to template-based parameterizations. We address these challenges by proposing FreeTalk, a two-stage framework for emotion-conditioned 3D talking-head animation that generalizes to unregistered face meshes with arbitrary vertex count and connectivity. First, Audio-To-Sparse (ATS) predicts a temporally coherent sequence of 3D landmark displacements from speech audio, conditioned on an emotion category and intensity. This sparse representation captures both articulatory and affective motion while remaining independent of mesh topology. Second, Sparse-To-Mesh (STM) transfers the predicted landmark motion to a target mesh by combining intrinsic surface features with landmark-to-vertex conditioning, producing dense per-vertex deformations without template fitting or correspondence supervision at test time. Extensive experiments show that FreeTalk matches specialized baselines when trained in-domain, while providing substantially improved robustness to unseen identities and mesh topologies. Code and pre-trained models will be made publicly available.
☆ Federated Learning of Binary Neural Networks: Enabling Low-Cost Inference
Federated Learning (FL) preserves privacy by distributing training across devices. However, using DNNs is computationally intensive at the low-powered edge during inference. Edge deployment demands models that simultaneously optimize memory footprint and computational efficiency, a dilemma where conventional DNNs fail by exceeding resource limits. Traditional post-training binarization reduces model size but suffers from severe accuracy loss due to quantization errors. To address these challenges, we propose FedBNN, a rotation-aware binary neural network framework that learns binary representations directly during local training. By encoding each weight as a single bit $\{+1, -1\}$ instead of a $32$-bit float, FedBNN shrinks the model footprint, significantly reducing runtime (during inference) FLOPs and memory requirements in comparison to federated methods using real models. Evaluations across multiple benchmark datasets demonstrate that FedBNN significantly reduces resource consumption while performing similarly to existing federated methods using real-valued models.
comment: 26 pages, 13 figures
☆ Real-Time Oriented Object Detection Transformer in Remote Sensing Images
Recent real-time detection transformers have gained popularity due to their simplicity and efficiency. However, these detectors do not explicitly model object rotation, especially in remote sensing imagery where objects appear at arbitrary angles, leading to challenges in angle representation, matching cost, and training stability. In this paper, we propose a real-time oriented object detection transformer, the first real-time end-to-end oriented object detector to the best of our knowledge, that addresses the above issues. Specifically, angle distribution refinement is proposed to reformulate angle regression as an iterative refinement of probability distributions, thereby capturing the uncertainty of object rotation and providing a more fine-grained angle representation. Then, we incorporate a Chamfer distance cost into bipartite matching, measuring box distance via vertex sets, enabling more accurate geometric alignment and eliminating ambiguous matches. Moreover, we propose oriented contrastive denoising to stabilize training and analyze four noise modes. We observe that a ground truth can be assigned to different index queries across different decoder layers, and analyze this issue using the proposed instability metric. We design a series of model variants and experiments to validate the proposed method. Notably, our O2-DFINE-L, O2-RTDETR-R50 and O2-DEIM-R50 achieve 77.73%/78.45%/80.15% AP50 on DOTA1.0 and 132/119/119 FPS on the 2080ti GPU. Code is available at https://github.com/wokaikaixinxin/ai4rs.
comment: IEEE Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing, 2026, doi 10.1109/TGRS.2026.3671683
☆ RSGen: Enhancing Layout-Driven Remote Sensing Image Generation with Diverse Edge Guidance
Diffusion models have significantly mitigated the impact of annotated data scarcity in remote sensing (RS). Although recent approaches have successfully harnessed these models to enable diverse and controllable Layout-to-Image (L2I) synthesis, they still suffer from limited fine-grained control and fail to strictly adhere to bounding box constraints. To address these limitations, we propose RSGen, a plug-and-play framework that leverages diverse edge guidance to enhance layout-driven RS image generation. Specifically, RSGen employs a progressive enhancement strategy: 1) it first enriches the diversity of edge maps composited from retrieved training instances via Image-to-Image generation; and 2) subsequently utilizes these diverse edge maps as conditioning for existing L2I models to enforce pixel-level control within bounding boxes, ensuring the generated instances strictly adhere to the layout. Extensive experiments across three baseline models demonstrate that RSGen significantly boosts the capabilities of existing L2I models. For instance, with CC-Diff on the DOTA dataset for oriented object detection, we achieve remarkable gains of +9.8/+12.0 in YOLOScore mAP50/mAP50-95 and +1.6 in mAP on the downstream detection task. Our code will be publicly available: https://github.com/D-Robotics-AI-Lab/RSGen
☆ ViFeEdit: A Video-Free Tuner of Your Video Diffusion Transformer
Diffusion Transformers (DiTs) have demonstrated remarkable scalability and quality in image and video generation, prompting growing interest in extending them to controllable generation and editing tasks. However, compared to the image counterparts, progress in video control and editing remains limited, mainly due to the scarcity of paired video data and the high computational cost of training video diffusion models. To address this issue, in this paper, we propose a video-free tuning framework termed ViFeEdit for video diffusion transformers. Without requiring any forms of video training data, ViFeEdit achieves versatile video generation and editing, adapted solely with 2D images. At the core of our approach is an architectural reparameterization that decouples spatial independence from the full 3D attention in modern video diffusion transformers, which enables visually faithful editing while maintaining temporal consistency with only minimal additional parameters. Moreover, this design operates in a dual-path pipeline with separate timestep embeddings for noise scheduling, exhibiting strong adaptability to diverse conditioning signals. Extensive experiments demonstrate that our method delivers promising results of controllable video generation and editing with only minimal training on 2D image data. Codes are available https://github.com/Lexie-YU/ViFeEdit.
comment: Working in progress, code is at https://github.com/Lexie-YU/ViFeEdit
☆ Seeing Beyond: Extrapolative Domain Adaptive Panoramic Segmentation CVPR 2026
Cross-domain panoramic semantic segmentation has attracted growing interest as it enables comprehensive 360° scene understanding for real-world applications. However, it remains particularly challenging due to severe geometric Field of View (FoV) distortions and inconsistent open-set semantics across domains. In this work, we formulate an open-set domain adaptation setting, and propose Extrapolative Domain Adaptive Panoramic Segmentation (EDA-PSeg) framework that trains on local perspective views and tests on full 360° panoramic images, explicitly tackling both geometric FoV shifts across domains and semantic uncertainty arising from previously unseen classes. To this end, we propose the Euler-Margin Attention (EMA), which introduces an angular margin to enhance viewpoint-invariant semantic representation, while performing amplitude and phase modulation to improve generalization toward unseen classes. Additionally, we design the Graph Matching Adapter (GMA), which builds high-order graph relations to align shared semantics across FoV shifts while effectively separating novel categories through structural adaptation. Extensive experiments on four benchmark datasets under camera-shift, weather-condition, and open-set scenarios demonstrate that EDA-PSeg achieves state-of-the-art performance, robust generalization to diverse viewing geometries, and resilience under varying environmental conditions. The code is available at https://github.com/zyfone/EDA-PSeg.
comment: Accepted to CVPR 2026. The code is available at https://github.com/zyfone/EDA-PSeg
☆ Anchor then Polish for Low-light Enhancement
Low-light image enhancement is challenging due to entangled degradations, mainly including poor illumination, color shifts, and texture interference. Existing methods often rely on complex architectures to address these issues jointly but may overfit simple physical constraints, leading to global distortions. This work proposes a novel anchor-then-polish (ATP) framework to fundamentally decouple global energy alignment from local detail refinement. First, macro anchoring is customized to (greatly) stabilize luminance distribution and correct color by learning a scene-adaptive projection matrix with merely 12 degrees of freedom, revealing that a simple linear operator can effectively align global energy. The macro anchoring then reduces the task to micro polishing, which further refines details in the wavelet domain and chrominance space under matrix guidance. A constrained luminance update strategy is designed to ensure global consistency while directing the network to concentrate on fine-grained polishing. Extensive experiments on multiple benchmarks show that our method achieves state-of-the-art performance, producing visually natural and quantitatively superior low-light enhancements.
☆ Automated Counting of Stacked Objects in Industrial Inspection ICCV25
Visual object counting is a fundamental computer vision task in industrial inspection, where accurate, high-throughput inventory tracking and quality assurance are critical. Moreover, manufactured parts are often too light to reliably deduce their count from their weight, or too heavy to move the stack on a scale safely and practically, making automated visual counting the more robust solution in many scenarios. However, existing methods struggle with stacked 3D items in containers, pallets, or bins, where most objects are heavily occluded and only a few are directly visible. To address this important yet underexplored challenge, we propose a novel 3D counting approach that decomposes the task into two complementary subproblems: estimating the 3D geometry of the stack and its occupancy ratio from multi-view images. By combining geometric reconstruction with deep learning-based depth analysis, our method can accurately count identical manufactured parts inside containers, even when they are irregularly stacked and partially hidden. We validate our 3D counting pipeline on large-scale synthetic and diverse real-world data with manually verified total counts, demonstrating robust performance under realistic inspection conditions.
comment: This preprint is a journal extension of our ICCV25 Oral paper: https://corentindumery.github.io/projects/stacks.html
☆ Evaluating Time Awareness and Cross-modal Active Perception of Large Models via 4D Escape Room Task
Multimodal Large Language Models (MLLMs) have recently made rapid progress toward unified Omni models that integrate vision, language, and audio. However, existing environments largely focus on 2D or 3D visual context and vision-language tasks, offering limited support for temporally dependent auditory signals and selective cross-modal integration, where different modalities may provide complementary or interfering information, which are essential capabilities for realistic multimodal reasoning. As a result, whether models can actively coordinate modalities and reason under time-varying, irreversible conditions remains underexplored. To this end, we introduce \textbf{EscapeCraft-4D}, a customizable 4D environment for assessing selective cross-modal perception and time awareness in Omni models. It incorporates trigger-based auditory sources, temporally transient evidence, and location-dependent cues, requiring agents to perform spatio-temporal reasoning and proactive multimodal integration under time constraints. Building on this environment, we curate a benchmark to evaluate corresponding abilities across powerful models. Evaluation results suggest that models struggle with modality bias, and reveal significant gaps in current model's ability to integrate multiple modalities under time constraints. Further in-depth analysis uncovers how multiple modalities interact and jointly influence model decisions in complex multimodal reasoning environments.
☆ MV2UV: Generating High-quality UV Texture Maps with Multiview Prompts
Generating high-quality textures for 3D assets is a challenging task. Existing multiview texture generation methods suffer from the multiview inconsistency and missing textures on unseen parts, while UV inpainting texture methods do not generalize well due to insufficient UV data and cannot well utilize 2D image diffusion priors. In this paper, we propose a new method called MV2UV that combines 2D generative priors from multiview generation and the inpainting ability of UV refinement to get high-quality texture maps. Our key idea is to adopt a UV space generative model that simultaneously inpaints unseen parts of multiview images while resolving the inconsistency of multiview images. Experiments show that our method enables a better texture generation quality than existing methods, especially in unseen occluded and multiview-inconsistent parts.
☆ Real-Time Human Frontal View Synthesis from a Single Image
Photorealistic human novel view synthesis from a single image is crucial for democratizing immersive 3D telepresence, eliminating the need for complex multi-camera setups. However, current rendering-centric methods prioritize visual fidelity over explicit geometric understanding and struggle with intricate regions like faces and hands, leading to temporal instability. Meanwhile, human-centric frameworks suffer from memory bottlenecks since they typically rely on an auxiliary model to provide informative structural priors for geometric modeling, which limits real-time performance. To address these challenges, we propose PrismMirror, a geometry-guided framework for instant frontal view synthesis from a single image. By avoiding external geometric modeling and focusing on frontal view synthesis, our model optimizes visual integrity for telepresence. Specifically, PrismMirror introduces a novel cascade learning strategy that enables coarse-to-fine geometric feature learning. It first directly learns coarse geometric features, such as SMPL-X meshes and point clouds, and then refines textures through rendering supervision. To achieve real-time efficiency, we distill this unified framework into a lightweight linear attention model. Notably, PrismMirror is the first monocular human frontal view synthesis model that achieves real-time inference at 24 FPS, significantly outperforming previous methods in both visual authenticity and structural accuracy.
☆ Gym-V: A Unified Vision Environment System for Agentic Vision Research
As agentic systems increasingly rely on reinforcement learning from verifiable rewards, standardized ``gym'' infrastructure has become essential for rapid iteration, reproducibility, and fair comparison. Vision agents lack such infrastructure, limiting systematic study of what drives their learning and where current models fall short. We introduce \textbf{Gym-V}, a unified platform of 179 procedurally generated visual environments across 10 domains with controllable difficulty, enabling controlled experiments that were previously infeasible across fragmented toolkits. Using it, we find that observation scaffolding is more decisive for training success than the choice of RL algorithm, with captions and game rules determining whether learning succeeds at all. Cross-domain transfer experiments further show that training on diverse task categories generalizes broadly while narrow training can cause negative transfer, with multi-turn interaction amplifying all of these effects. Gym-V is released as a convenient foundation for training environments and evaluation toolkits, aiming to accelerate future research on agentic VLMs.
☆ AnyCrowd: Instance-Isolated Identity-Pose Binding for Arbitrary Multi-Character Animation
Controllable character animation has advanced rapidly in recent years, yet multi-character animation remains underexplored. As the number of characters grows, multi-character reference encoding becomes more susceptible to latent identity entanglement, resulting in identity bleeding and reduced controllability. Moreover, learning precise and spatio-temporally consistent correspondences between reference identities and driving pose sequences becomes increasingly challenging, often leading to identity-pose mis-binding and inconsistency in generated videos. To address these challenges, we propose AnyCrowd, a Diffusion Transformer (DiT)-based video generation framework capable of scaling to an arbitrary number of characters. Specifically, we first introduce an Instance-Isolated Latent Representation (IILR), which encodes character instances independently prior to DiT processing to prevent latent identity entanglement. Building on this disentangled representation, we further propose Tri-Stage Decoupled Attention (TSDA) to bind identities to driving poses by decomposing self-attention into: (i) instance-aware foreground attention, (ii) background-centric interaction, and (iii) global foreground-background coordination. Furthermore, to mitigate token ambiguity in overlapping regions, an Adaptive Gated Fusion (AGF) module is integrated within TSDA to predict identity-aware weights, effectively fusing competing token groups into identity-consistent representations...
☆ Detection of Autonomous Shuttles in Urban Traffic Images Using Adaptive Residual Context
The progressive automation of transport promises to enhance safety and sustainability through shared mobility. Like other vehicles and road users, and even more so for such a new technology, it requires monitoring to understand how it interacts in traffic and to evaluate its safety. This can be done with fixed cameras and video object detection. However, the addition of new detection targets generally requires a fine-tuning approach for regular detection methods. Unfortunately, this implementation strategy will lead to a phenomenon known as catastrophic forgetting, which causes a degradation in scene understanding. In road safety applications, preserving contextual scene knowledge is of the utmost importance for protecting road users. We introduce the Adaptive Residual Context (ARC) architecture to address this. ARC links a frozen context branch and trainable task-specific branches through a Context-Guided Bridge, utilizing attention to transfer spatial features while preserving pre-trained representations. Experiments on a custom dataset show that ARC matches fine-tuned baselines while significantly improving knowledge retention, offering a data-efficient solution to add new vehicle categories for complex urban environments.
comment: 10 pages, 6 figures
☆ Pointing-Based Object Recognition
This paper presents a comprehensive pipeline for recognizing objects targeted by human pointing gestures using RGB images. As human-robot interaction moves toward more intuitive interfaces, the ability to identify targets of non-verbal communication becomes crucial. Our proposed system integrates several existing state-of-the-art methods, including object detection, body pose estimation, monocular depth estimation, and vision-language models. We evaluate the impact of 3D spatial information reconstructed from a single image and the utility of image captioning models in correcting classification errors. Experimental results on a custom dataset show that incorporating depth information significantly improves target identification, especially in complex scenes with overlapping objects. The modularity of the approach allows for deployment in environments where specialized depth sensors are unavailable.
comment: Submitted to InnovAIte conference
☆ AI Evasion and Impersonation Attacks on Facial Re-Identification with Activation Map Explanations
Facial identification systems are increasingly deployed in surveillance and yet their vulnerability to adversarial evasion and impersonation attacks pose a critical risk. This paper introduces a novel framework for generating adversarial patches capable of both evasion and impersonation attacks against deep re-identification models across non-overlapping cameras. Unlike prior approaches that require iterative patch optimisation for each target, our method employs a conditional encoder-decoder network to synthesize adversarial patches in a single forward pass, guided by multi-scale features from source and target images. The patches are optimised with a dual adversarial objective comprising of pull and push terms. To enhance imperceptibility and aid physical deployment, we further integrate naturalistic patch generation using pre-trained latent diffusion models. Experiments on standard pedestrian (Market-1501, DukeMTMCreID) and facial recognition benchmarks (CelebA-HQ, PubFig) datasets demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed method. Our adversarial evasion attacks reduce mean Average Precision from 90% to 0.4% in white-box settings and from 72% to 0.4% in black-box settings, showing strong cross-model generalization. In targeted impersonation attacks, our framework achieves a success rate of 27% on CelebA-HQ, competing with other patch-based methods. We go further to use clustering of activation maps to interpret which features are most used by adversarial attacks and propose a pathway for future countermeasures. The results highlight the practicality of adversarial patch attacks on retrieval-based systems and underline the urgent need for robust defense strategies.
☆ RieMind: Geometry-Grounded Spatial Agent for Scene Understanding
Visual Language Models (VLMs) have increasingly become the main paradigm for understanding indoor scenes, but they still struggle with metric and spatial reasoning. Current approaches rely on end-to-end video understanding or large-scale spatial question answering fine-tuning, inherently coupling perception and reasoning. In this paper, we investigate whether decoupling perception and reasoning leads to improved spatial reasoning. We propose an agentic framework for static 3D indoor scene reasoning that grounds an LLM in an explicit 3D scene graph (3DSG). Rather than ingesting videos directly, each scene is represented as a persistent 3DSG constructed by a dedicated perception module. To isolate reasoning performance, we instantiate the 3DSG from ground-truth annotations. The agent interacts with the scene exclusively through structured geometric tools that expose fundamental properties such as object dimensions, distances, poses, and spatial relationships. The results we obtain on the static split of VSI-Bench provide an upper bound under ideal perceptual conditions on the spatial reasoning performance, and we find that it is significantly higher than previous works, by up to 16\%, without task specific fine-tuning. Compared to base VLMs, our agentic variant achieves significantly better performance, with average improvements between 33\% to 50\%. These findings indicate that explicit geometric grounding substantially improves spatial reasoning performance, and suggest that structured representations offer a compelling alternative to purely end-to-end visual reasoning.
☆ Spectral Rectification for Parameter-Efficient Adaptation of Foundation Models in Colonoscopy Depth Estimation
Accurate monocular depth estimation is critical in colonoscopy for lesion localization and navigation. Foundation models trained on natural images fail to generalize directly to colonoscopy. We identify the core issue not as a semantic gap, but as a statistical shift in the frequency domain: colonoscopy images lack the strong high-frequency edge and texture gradients that these models rely on for geometric reasoning. To address this, we propose SpecDepth, a parameter-efficient adaptation framework that preserves the robust geometric representations of the pre-trained models while adapting to the colonoscopy domain. Its key innovation is an adaptive spectral rectification module, which uses a learnable wavelet decomposition to explicitly model and amplify the attenuated high-frequency components in feature maps. Different from conventional fine-tuning that risks distorting high-level semantic features, this targeted, low-level adjustment realigns the input signal with the original inductive bias of the foundational model. On the public C3VD and SimCol3D datasets, SpecDepth achieved state-of-the-art performance with an absolute relative error of 0.022 and 0.027, respectively. Our work demonstrates that directly addressing spectral mismatches is a highly effective strategy for adapting vision foundation models to specialized medical imaging tasks. The code will be released publicly after the manuscript is accepted for publication.
comment: 15 pages
☆ Trajectory-Diversity-Driven Robust Vision-and-Language Navigation
Vision-and-Language Navigation (VLN) requires agents to navigate photo-realistic environments following natural language instructions. Current methods predominantly rely on imitation learning, which suffers from limited generalization and poor robustness to execution perturbations. We present NavGRPO, a reinforcement learning framework that learns goal-directed navigation policies through Group Relative Policy Optimization. By exploring diverse trajectories and optimizing via within-group performance comparisons, our method enables agents to distinguish effective strategies beyond expert paths without requiring additional value networks. Built on ScaleVLN, NavGRPO achieves superior robustness on R2R and REVERIE benchmarks with +3.0% and +1.71% SPL improvements in unseen environments. Under extreme early-stage perturbations, we demonstrate +14.89% SPL gain over the baseline, confirming that goal-directed RL training builds substantially more robust navigation policies. Code and models will be released.
comment: 17pages, 5 figures
☆ IRIS: Intersection-aware Ray-based Implicit Editable Scenes
Neural Radiance Fields achieve high-fidelity scene representation but suffer from costly training and rendering, while 3D Gaussian splatting offers real-time performance with strong empirical results. Recently, solutions that harness the best of both worlds by using Gaussians as proxies to guide neural field evaluations, still suffer from significant computational inefficiencies. They typically rely on stochastic volumetric sampling to aggregate features, which severely limits rendering performance. To address this issue, a novel framework named IRIS (Intersection-aware Ray-based Implicit Editable Scenes) is introduced as a method designed for efficient and interactive scene editing. To overcome the limitations of standard ray marching, an analytical sampling strategy is employed that precisely identifies interaction points between rays and scene primitives, effectively eliminating empty space processing. Furthermore, to address the computational bottleneck of spatial neighbor lookups, a continuous feature aggregation mechanism is introduced that operates directly along the ray. By interpolating latent attributes from sorted intersections, costly 3D searches are bypassed, ensuring geometric consistency, enabling high-fidelity, real-time rendering, and flexible shape editing. Code can be found at https://github.com/gwilczynski95/iris.
☆ A PPO-Based Bitrate Allocation Conditional Diffusion Model for Remote Sensing Image Compression
Existing remote sensing image compression methods still explore to balance high compression efficiency with the preservation of fine details and task-relevant information. Meanwhile, high-resolution drone imagery offers valuable structural details for urban monitoring and disaster assessment, but large-area datasets can easily reach hundreds of gigabytes, creating significant challenges for storage and long-term management. In this paper, we propose a PPO-based bitrate allocation Conditional Diffusion Compression (PCDC) framework. PCDC integrates a conditional diffusion decoder with a PPO-based block-wise bitrate allocation strategy to achieve high compression ratios while maintaining strong perceptual performance. We also release a high-resolution drone image dataset with richer structural details at a consistent low altitude over residential neighborhoods in coastal urban areas. Experimental results show compression ratios of 19.3x on DIV2K and 21.2x on the drone image dataset. Moreover, downstream object detection experiments demonstrate that the reconstructed images preserve task-relevant information with negligible performance loss.
☆ Oscillating Dispersion for Maximal Light-throughput Spectral Imaging
Existing computational spectral imaging systems typically rely on coded aperture and beam splitters that block a substantial fraction of incident light, degrading reconstruction quality under light-starved conditions. To address this limitation, we develop the Oscillating Dispersion Imaging Spectrometer (ODIS), which for the first time achieves near-full light throughput by axially translating a disperser between the conjugate image plane and a defocused position, sequentially capturing a panchromatic (PAN) image and a dispersed measurement along a single optical path. We further propose a PAN-guided Dispersion-Aware Deep Unfolding Network (PDAUN) that recovers high-fidelity spectral information from maskless dispersion under PAN structural guidance. Its data-fidelity step derives an FFT-Woodbury preconditioned solver by exploiting the cyclic-convolution property of the ODIS forward model, while a Dispersion-Aware Deformable Convolution module (DADC) corrects sub-pixel spectral misalignment using PAN features. Experiments show state-of-the-art performance on standard benchmarks, and cross-system comparisons confirm that ODIS yields decisive gains under low illumination. High-fidelity reconstruction is validated on a physical prototype.
☆ MeMix: Writing Less, Remembering More for Streaming 3D Reconstruction
Reconstruction is a fundamental task in 3D vision and a fundamental capability for spatial intelligence. Particularly, streaming 3D reconstruction is central to real-time spatial perception, yet existing recurrent online models often suffer from progressive degradation on long sequences due to state drift and forgetting, motivating inference-time remedies. We present MeMix, a training-free, plug-and-play module that improves streaming reconstruction by recasting the recurrent state into a Memory Mixture. MeMix partitions the state into multiple independent memory patches and updates only the least-aligned memory patches while exactly preserving others. This selective update mitigates catastrophic forgetting while retaining $O(1)$ inference memory, and requires no fine-tuning or additional learnable parameters, making it directly applicable to existing recurrent reconstruction models. Across standard benchmarks (ScanNet, 7-Scenes, KITTI, etc.), under identical backbones and inference settings, MeMix reduces reconstruction completeness error by 15.3% on average (up to 40.0%) across 300--500 frame streams on 7-Scenes. The code is available at https://dongjiacheng06.github.io/MeMix/
☆ Generative Video Compression with One-Dimensional Latent Representation CVPR2026
Recent advancements in generative video codec (GVC) typically encode video into a 2D latent grid and employ high-capacity generative decoders for reconstruction. However, this paradigm still leaves two key challenges in fully exploiting spatial-temporal redundancy: Spatially, the 2D latent grid inevitably preserves intra-frame redundancy due to its rigid structure, where adjacent patches remain highly similar, thereby necessitating a higher bitrate. Temporally, the 2D latent grid is less effective for modeling long-term correlations in a compact and semantically coherent manner, as it hinders the aggregation of common contents across frames. To address these limitations, we introduce Generative Video Compression with One-Dimensional (1D) Latent Representation (GVC1D). GVC1D encodes the video data into extreme compact 1D latent tokens conditioned on both short- and long-term contexts. Without the rigid 2D spatial correspondence, these 1D latent tokens can adaptively attend to semantic regions and naturally facilitate token reduction, thereby reducing spatial redundancy. Furthermore, the proposed 1D memory provides semantically rich long-term context while maintaining low computational cost, thereby further reducing temporal redundancy. Experimental results indicate that GVC1D attains superior compression efficiency, where it achieves bitrate reductions of 60.4\% under LPIPS and 68.8\% under DISTS on the HEVC Class B dataset, surpassing the previous video compression methods.Project: https://gvc1d.github.io/
comment: CVPR2026
☆ GATE-AD: Graph Attention Network Encoding For Few-Shot Industrial Visual Anomaly Detection
Few-Shot Industrial Visual Anomaly Detection (FS-IVAD) comprises a critical task in modern manufacturing settings, where automated product inspection systems need to identify rare defects using only a handful of normal/defect-free training samples. In this context, the current study introduces a novel reconstruction-based approach termed GATE-AD. In particular, the proposed framework relies on the employment of a masked, representation-aligned Graph Attention Network (GAT) encoding scheme to learn robust appearance patterns of normal samples. By leveraging dense, patch-level, visual feature tokens as graph nodes, the model employs stacked self-attentional layers to adaptively encode complex, irregular, non-Euclidean, local relations. The graph is enhanced with a representation alignment component grounded on a learnable, latent space, where high reconstruction residual areas (i.e., defects) are assessed using a Scaled Cosine Error (SCE) objective function. Extensive comparative evaluation on the MVTec AD, VisA, and MPDD industrial defect detection benchmarks demonstrates that GATE-AD achieves state-of-the-art performance across the $1$- to $8$-shot settings, combining the highest detection accuracy (increase up to $1.8\%$ in image AUROC in the 8-shot case in MPDD) with the lowest per-image inference latency (at least $25.05\%$ faster), compared to the best-performing literature methods. In order to facilitate reproducibility and further research, the source code of GATE-AD is available at https://github.com/gthpapadopoulos/GATE-AD.
☆ Faster Inference of Flow-Based Generative Models via Improved Data-Noise Coupling ICLR2025
Conditional Flow Matching (CFM), a simulation-free method for training continuous normalizing flows, provides an efficient alternative to diffusion models for key tasks like image and video generation. The performance of CFM in solving these tasks depends on the way data is coupled with noise. A recent approach uses minibatch optimal transport (OT) to reassign noise-data pairs in each training step to streamline sampling trajectories and thus accelerate inference. However, its optimization is restricted to individual minibatches, limiting its effectiveness on large datasets. To address this shortcoming, we introduce LOOM-CFM (Looking Out Of Minibatch-CFM), a novel method to extend the scope of minibatch OT by preserving and optimizing these assignments across minibatches over training time. Our approach demonstrates consistent improvements in the sampling speed-quality trade-off across multiple datasets. LOOM-CFM also enhances distillation initialization and supports high-resolution synthesis in latent space training.
comment: Patched from ICLR2025. Code: https://github.com/araachie/loom-cfm
Dataset Diversity Metrics and Impact on Classification Models
The diversity of training datasets is usually perceived as an important aspect to obtain a robust model. However, the definition of diversity is often not defined or differs across papers, and while some metrics exist, the quantification of this diversity is often overlooked when developing new algorithms. In this work, we study the behaviour of multiple dataset diversity metrics for image, text and metadata using MorphoMNIST, a toy dataset with controlled perturbations, and PadChest, a publicly available chest X-ray dataset. We evaluate whether these metrics correlate with each other but also with the intuition of a clinical expert. We also assess whether they correlate with downstream-task performance and how they impact the training dynamic of the models. We find limited correlations between the AUC and image or metadata reference-free diversity metrics, but higher correlations with the FID and the semantic diversity metrics. Finally, the clinical expert indicates that scanners are the main source of diversity in practice. However, we find that the addition of another scanner to the training set leads to shortcut learning. The code used in this study is available at https://github.com/TheoSourget/dataset_diversity_evaluation
☆ Flash-Unified: A Training-Free and Task-Aware Acceleration Framework for Native Unified Models CVPR 2026
Native unified multimodal models, which integrate both generative and understanding capabilities, face substantial computational overhead that hinders their real-world deployment. Existing acceleration techniques typically employ a static, monolithic strategy, ignoring the fundamental divergence in computational profiles between iterative generation tasks (e.g., image generation) and single-pass understanding tasks (e.g., VQA). In this work, we present the first systematic analysis of unified models, revealing pronounced parameter specialization, where distinct neuron sets are critical for each task. This implies that, at the parameter level, unified models have implicitly internalized separate inference pathways for generation and understanding within a single architecture. Based on these insights, we introduce a training-free and task-aware acceleration framework, FlashU, that tailors optimization to each task's demands. Across both tasks, we introduce Task-Specific Network Pruning and Dynamic Layer Skipping, aiming to eliminate inter-layer and task-specific redundancy. For visual generation, we implement a time-varying control signal for the guidance scale and a temporal approximation for the diffusion head via Diffusion Head Cache. For multimodal understanding, building upon the pruned model, we introduce Dynamic Token Pruning via a V-Norm Proxy to exploit the spatial redundancy of visual inputs. Extensive experiments on Show-o2 demonstrate that FlashU achieves 1.78$\times$ to 2.01$\times$ inference acceleration across both understanding and generation tasks while maintaining SOTA performance, outperforming competing unified models and validating our task-aware acceleration paradigm. Our code is publicly available at https://github.com/Rirayh/FlashU.
comment: Accepted by CVPR 2026 Findings
Self-Supervised ImageNet Representations for In Vivo Confocal Microscopy: Tortuosity Grading without Segmentation Maps
The tortuosity of corneal nerve fibers are used as indication for different diseases. Current state-of-the-art methods for grading the tortuosity heavily rely on expensive segmentation maps of these nerve fibers. In this paper, we demonstrate that self-supervised pretrained features from ImageNet are transferable to the domain of in vivo confocal microscopy. We show that DINO should not be disregarded as a deep learning model for medical imaging, although it was superseded by two later versions. After careful fine-tuning, DINO improves upon the state-of-the-art in terms of accuracy (84,25%) and sensitivity (77,97%). Our fine-tuned model focuses on the key morphological elements in grading without the use of segmentation maps.
comment: 7 pages, 4 figures
☆ Exemplar Diffusion: Improving Medical Object Detection with Opportunistic Labels MICCAI 2026
We present a framework to take advantage of existing labels at inference, called \textit{exemplars}, in order to improve the performance of object detection in medical images. The method, \textit{exemplar diffusion}, leverages existing diffusion methods for object detection to enable a training-free approach to adding information of known bounding boxes at test time. We demonstrate that for medical image datasets with clear spatial structure, the method yields an across-the-board increase in average precision and recall, and a robustness to exemplar quality, enabling non-expert annotation. Moreover, we demonstrate how our method may also be used to quantify predictive uncertainty in diffusion detection methods. Source code and data splits openly available online: https://github.com/waahlstrand/ExemplarDiffusion
comment: Submitted to MICCAI 2026
☆ IConE: Batch Independent Collapse Prevention for Self-Supervised Representation Learning
Self-supervised learning (SSL) has revolutionized representation learning, with Joint-Embedding Architectures (JEAs) emerging as an effective approach for capturing semantic features. Existing JEAs rely on implicit or explicit batch interaction -- via negative sampling or statistical regularization -- to prevent representation collapse. This reliance becomes problematic in regimes where batch sizes must be small, such as high-dimensional scientific data, where memory constraints and class imbalance make large, well-balanced batches infeasible. We introduce IConE (Instance-Contrasted Embeddings), a framework that decouples collapse prevention from the training batch size. Rather than enforcing diversity through batch statistics, IConE maintains a global set of learnable auxiliary instance embeddings regularized by an explicit diversity objective. This transfers the anti-collapse mechanism from the transient batch to a dataset-level embedding space, allowing stable training even when batch statistics are unreliable, down to batch size 1. Across diverse 2D and 3D biomedical modalities, IConE outperforms strong contrastive and non-contrastive baselines throughout the small-batch regime (from B=1 to B=64) and demonstrates marked robustness to severe class imbalance. Geometric analysis shows that IConE preserves high intrinsic dimensionality in the learned representations, preventing the collapse observed in existing JEAs as batch sizes shrink.
☆ AGCD: Agent-Guided Cross-Modal Decoding for Weather Forecasting
Accurate weather forecasting is more than grid-wise regression: it must preserve coherent synoptic structures and physical consistency of meteorological fields, especially under autoregressive rollouts where small one-step errors can amplify into structural bias. Existing physics-priors approaches typically impose global, once-for-all constraints via architectures, regularization, or NWP coupling, offering limited state-adaptive and sample-specific controllability at deployment. To bridge this gap, we propose Agent-Guided Cross-modal Decoding (AGCD), a plug-and-play decoding-time prior-injection paradigm that derives state-conditioned physics-priors from the current multivariate atmosphere and injects them into forecasters in a controllable and reusable way. Specifically, We design a multi-agent meteorological narration pipeline to generate state-conditioned physics-priors, utilizing MLLMs to extract various meteorological elements effectively. To effectively apply the priors, AGCD further introduce cross-modal region interaction decoding that performs region-aware multi-scale tokenization and efficient physics-priors injection to refine visual features without changing the backbone interface. Experiments on WeatherBench demonstrate consistent gains for 6-hour forecasting across two resolutions (5.625 degree and 1.40625 degree) and diverse backbones (generic and weather-specialized), including strictly causal 48-hour autoregressive rollouts that reduce early-stage error accumulation and improve long-horizon stability.
☆ HalDec-Bench: Benchmarking Hallucination Detector in Image Captioning
Hallucination detection in captions (HalDec) assesses a vision-language model's ability to correctly align image content with text by identifying errors in captions that misrepresent the image. Beyond evaluation, effective hallucination detection is also essential for curating high-quality image-caption pairs used to train VLMs. However, the generalizability of VLMs as hallucination detectors across different captioning models and hallucination types remains unclear due to the lack of a comprehensive benchmark. In this work, we introduce HalDec-Bench, a benchmark designed to evaluate hallucination detectors in a principled and interpretable manner. HalDec-Bench contains captions generated by diverse VLMs together with human annotations indicating the presence of hallucinations, detailed hallucination-type categories, and segment-level labels. The benchmark provides tasks with a wide range of difficulty levels and reveals performance differences across models that are not visible in existing multimodal reasoning or alignment benchmarks. Our analysis further uncovers two key findings. First, detectors tend to recognize sentences appearing at the beginning of a response as correct, regardless of their actual correctness. Second, our experiments suggest that dataset noise can be substantially reduced by using strong VLMs as filters while employing recent VLMs as caption generators. Our project page is available at https://dahlian00.github.io/HalDec-Bench-Page/.
☆ Multi-turn Physics-informed Vision-language Model for Physics-grounded Anomaly Detection ICASSP2026
Vision-Language Models (VLMs) demonstrate strong general-purpose reasoning but remain limited in physics-grounded anomaly detection, where causal understanding of dynamics is essential. Existing VLMs, trained predominantly on appearance-centric correlations, fail to capture kinematic constraints, leading to poor performance on anomalies such as irregular rotations or violated mechanical motions. We introduce a physics-informed instruction tuning framework that explicitly encodes object properties, motion paradigms, and dynamic constraints into structured prompts. By delivering these physical priors through multi-turn dialogues, our method decomposes causal reasoning into incremental steps, enabling robust internal representations of normal and abnormal dynamics. Evaluated on the Phys-AD benchmark, our approach achieves 96.7% AUROC in video-level detection--substantially outperforming prior SOTA (66.9%)--and yields superior causal explanations (0.777 LLM score). This work highlights how structured physics priors can transform VLMs into reliable detectors of dynamic anomalies.
comment: Accepted by IEEE ICASSP2026
☆ HYDRA: Unifying Multi-modal Generation and Understanding via Representation-Harmonized Tokenization
Unified Multimodal Models struggle to bridge the fundamental gap between the abstract representations needed for visual understanding and the detailed primitives required for generation. Existing approaches typically compromise by employing decoupled encoders, stacking representation encoder atop VAEs, or utilizing discrete quantization. However, these methods often disrupt information coherence and lead to optimization conflicts. To this end, we introduce HYDRA-TOK, a representation-harmonized pure ViT in the insight that visual modeling should evolve from generation to understanding. HYDRA-TOK reformulates the standard backbone into a progressive learner that transitions from a Gen-ViT, which captures structure-preserving primitives, to a Sem-ViT for semantic encoding. Crucially, this transition is mediated by a Generation-Semantic Bottleneck (GSB), which compresses features into a low-dimensional space to filter noise for robust synthesis, then restores dimensionality to empower complex semantic comprehension. Built upon this foundation, we present HYDRA, a native unified framework integrating perception and generation within a single parameter space. Extensive experiments establish HYDRA as a new state-of-the-art. It sets a benchmark in visual reconstruction (rFID 0.08) and achieves top-tier generation performance on GenEval (0.86), DPG-Bench (86.4), and WISE (0.53), while simultaneously outperforming previous native UMMs by an average of 10.0 points across eight challenging understanding benchmarks.
comment: Work in progress: We are actively scaling up the models. More updates coming soon
☆ Tracking the Discriminative Axis: Dual Prototypes for Test-Time OOD Detection Under Covariate Shift
For reliable deployment of deep-learning systems, out-of-distribution (OOD) detection is indispensable. In the real world, where test-time inputs often arrive as streaming mixtures of in-distribution (ID) and OOD samples under evolving covariate shifts, OOD samples are domain-constrained and bounded by the environment, and both ID and OOD are jointly affected by the same covariate factors. Existing methods typically assume a stationary ID distribution, but this assumption breaks down in such settings, leading to severe performance degradation. We empirically discover that, even under covariate shift, covariate-shifted ID (csID) and OOD (csOOD) samples remain separable along a discriminative axis in feature space. Building on this observation, we propose DART, a test-time, online OOD detection method that dynamically tracks dual prototypes -- one for ID and the other for OOD -- to recover the drifting discriminative axis, augmented with multi-layer fusion and flip correction for robustness. Extensive experiments on a wide range of challenging benchmarks, where all datasets are subjected to 15 common corruption types at severity level 5, demonstrate that our method significantly improves performance, yielding 15.32 percentage points (pp) AUROC gain and 49.15 pp FPR@95TPR reduction on ImageNet-C vs. Textures-C compared to established baselines. These results highlight the potential of the test-time discriminative axis tracking for dependable OOD detection in dynamically changing environments.
☆ Efficient Document Parsing via Parallel Token Prediction CVPR 2026
Document parsing, as a fundamental yet crucial vision task, is being revolutionized by vision-language models (VLMs). However, the autoregressive (AR) decoding inherent to VLMs creates a significant bottleneck, severely limiting parsing speed. In this paper, we propose Parallel-Token Prediction (PTP), a plugable, model-agnostic and simple-yet-effective method that enables VLMs to generate multiple future tokens in parallel with improved sample efficiency. Specifically, we insert some learnable tokens into the input sequence and design corresponding training objectives to equip the model with parallel decoding capabilities for document parsing. Furthermore, to support effective training, we develop a comprehensive data generation pipeline that efficiently produces large-scale, high-quality document parsing training data for VLMs. Extensive experiments on OmniDocBench and olmOCR-bench demonstrate that our method not only significantly improves decoding speed (1.6x-2.2x) but also reduces model hallucinations and exhibits strong generalization abilities.
comment: Accepted by CVPR 2026 Findings
☆ What Matters for Scalable and Robust Learning in End-to-End Driving Planners? CVPR
End-to-end autonomous driving has gained significant attention for its potential to learn robust behavior in interactive scenarios and scale with data. Popular architectures often build on separate modules for perception and planning connected through latent representations, such as bird's eye view feature grids, to maintain end-to-end differentiability. This paradigm emerged mostly on open-loop datasets, with evaluation focusing not only on driving performance, but also intermediate perception tasks. Unfortunately, architectural advances that excel in open-loop often fail to translate to scalable learning of robust closed-loop driving. In this paper, we systematically re-examine the impact of common architectural patterns on closed-loop performance: (1) high-resolution perceptual representations, (2) disentangled trajectory representations, and (3) generative planning. Crucially, our analysis evaluates the combined impact of these patterns, revealing both unexpected limitations as well as underexplored synergies. Building on these insights, we introduce BevAD, a novel lightweight and highly scalable end-to-end driving architecture. BevAD achieves 72.7% success rate on the Bench2Drive benchmark and demonstrates strong data-scaling behavior using pure imitation learning. Our code and models are publicly available here: https://dmholtz.github.io/bevad/
comment: To be published in CVPR Findings 2026
☆ Multimodal Connectome Fusion via Cross-Attention for Autism Spectrum Disorder Classification Using Graph Learning
Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is a complex neurodevelopmental condition characterized by atypical functional brain connectivity and subtle structural alterations. rs-fMRI has been widely used to identify disruptions in large-scale brain networks, while structural MRI provides complementary information about morphological organization. Despite their complementary nature, effectively integrating these heterogeneous imaging modalities within a unified framework remains challenging. This study proposes a multimodal graph learning framework that preserves the dominant role of functional connectivity while integrating structural imaging and phenotypic information for ASD classification. The proposed framework is evaluated on ABIDE-I dataset. Each subject is represented as a node within a population graph. Functional and structural features are extracted as modality-specific node attributes, while inter-subject relationships are modeled using a pairwise association encoder (PAE) based on phenotypic information. Two Edge Variational GCNs are trained to learn subject-level embeddings. To enable effective multimodal integration, we introduce a novel asymmetric transformer-based cross-attention mechanism that allows functional embeddings to selectively incorporate complementary structural information while preserving functional dominance. The fused embeddings are then passed to a MLP for ASD classification. Using stratified 10-fold cross-validation, the framework achieved an AUC of 87.3% and an accuracy of 84.4%. Under leave-one-site-out cross-validation (LOSO-CV), the model achieved an average cross-site accuracy of 82.0%, outperforming existing methods by approximately 3% under 10-fold cross-validation and 7% under LOSO-CV. The proposed framework effectively integrates heterogeneous multimodal data from the multi-site ABIDE-I dataset, improving automated ASD classification across imaging sites.
comment: 29 Pages; 5 Figures
☆ Question-guided Visual Compression with Memory Feedback for Long-Term Video Understanding CVPR 2026
In the context of long-term video understanding with large multimodal models, many frameworks have been proposed. Although transformer-based visual compressors and memory-augmented approaches are often used to process long videos, they usually compress each frame independently and therefore fail to achieve strong performance on tasks that require understanding complete events, such as temporal ordering tasks in MLVU and VNBench. This motivates us to rethink the conventional one-way scheme from perception to memory, and instead establish a feedbackdriven process in which past visual contexts stored in the context memory can benefit ongoing perception. To this end, we propose Question-guided Visual Compression with Memory Feedback (QViC-MF), a framework for long-term video understanding. At its core is a Question-guided Multimodal Selective Attention (QMSA), which learns to preserve visual information related to the given question from both the current clip and the past related frames from the memory. The compressor and memory feedback work iteratively for each clip of the entire video. This simple yet effective design yields large performance gains on longterm video understanding tasks. Extensive experiments show that our method achieves significant improvement over current state-of-the-art methods by 6.1% on MLVU test, 8.3% on LVBench, 18.3% on VNBench Long, and 3.7% on VideoMME Long. The code will be released publicly.
comment: Accepted to CVPR 2026. The first two authors contributed equally to this work
☆ DAIT: Distillation from Vision-Language Models to Lightweight Classifiers with Adaptive Intermediate Teacher Transfer
Large-scale Vision-Language Models (VLMs) encode rich multimodal semantics that are highly beneficial for fine-grained visual categorization (FGVC). However, their prohibitive computational cost hinders practical deployment in resource-constrained environments. Although knowledge distillation contributes to transferring VLMs capacity to lightweight classifiers, conventional distillation mechanisms, which directly transfer from a generic VLM to a compact student, often yield suboptimal results due to severe architectural misalignment and introducing task-irrelevant information. To alleviate this limitation, we propose Distillation with Adaptive Intermediate Teacher transfer (DAIT) in this study, facilitating adaptive knowledge transfer from VLMs to lightweight students. DAIT introduces a trainable intermediate teacher that learns to transfer frozen VLMs representations under explicit supervision from the target fine-grained task. This intermediate teacher adaptively enhances discriminative visual cues, thereby producing compact and task-aligned knowledge that can be reliably distilled into lightweight models. Extensive evaluations on multiple FGVC benchmarks with diverse student architectures demonstrate that our method achieves respective performance gains of 12.63% and 8.34% on FGVC-Aircraft and CUB-200-2011 datasets, establishing DAIT as a principled paradigm for transferring from general-purpose VLMS to deployable fine-grained recognition models.
☆ Vision-Language Model Based Multi-Expert Fusion for CT Image Classification
Robust detection of COVID-19 from chest CT remains challenging in multi-institutional settings due to substantial source shift, source imbalance, and hidden test-source identities. In this work, we propose a three-stage source-aware multi-expert framework for multi-source COVID-19 CT classification. First, we build a lung-aware 3D expert by combining original CT volumes and lung-extracted CT volumes for volumetric classification. Second, we develop two MedSigLIP-based experts: a slice-wise representation and probability learning module, and a Transformer-based inter-slice context modeling module for capturing cross-slice dependency. Third, we train a source classifier to predict the latent source identity of each test scan. By leveraging the predicted source information, we perform model fusion and voting based on different experts. On the validation set covering all four sources, the Stage 1 model achieves the best macro-F1 of 0.9711, ACC of 0.9712, and AUC of 0.9791. Stage~2a and Stage~2b achieve the best AUC scores of 0.9864 and 0.9854, respectively. Stage~3 source classifier reaches 0.9107 ACC and 0.9114 F1. These results demonstrate that source-aware expert modeling and hierarchical voting provide an effective solution for robust COVID-19 CT classification under heterogeneous multi-source conditions.
☆ TextOVSR: Text-Guided Real-World Opera Video Super-Resolution
Many classic opera videos exhibit poor visual quality due to the limitations of early filming equipment and long-term degradation during storage. Although real-world video super-resolution (RWVSR) has achieved significant advances in recent years, directly applying existing methods to degraded opera videos remains challenging. The difficulties are twofold. First, accurately modeling real-world degradations is complex: simplistic combinations of classical degradation kernels fail to capture the authentic noise distribution, while methods that extract real noise patches from external datasets are prone to style mismatches that introduce visual artifacts. Second, current RWVSR methods, which rely solely on degraded image features, struggle to reconstruct realistic and detailed textures due to a lack of high-level semantic guidance. To address these issues, we propose a Text-guided Dual-Branch Opera Video Super-Resolution (TextOVSR) network, which introduces two types of textual prompts to guide the super-resolution process. Specifically, degradation-descriptive text, derived from the degradation process, is incorporated into the negative branch to constrain the solution space. Simultaneously, content-descriptive text is incorporated into a positive branch and our proposed Text-Enhanced Discriminator (TED) to provide semantic guidance for enhanced texture reconstruction. Furthermore, we design a Degradation-Robust Feature Fusion (DRF) module to facilitate cross-modal feature fusion while suppressing degradation interference. Experiments on our OperaLQ benchmark show that TextOVSR outperforms state-of-the-art methods both qualitatively and quantitatively. The code is available at https://github.com/ChangHua0/TextOVSR.
☆ SNCE: Geometry-Aware Supervision for Scalable Discrete Image Generation
Recent advancements in discrete image generation showed that scaling the VQ codebook size significantly improves reconstruction fidelity. However, training generative models with a large VQ codebook remains challenging, typically requiring larger model size and a longer training schedule. In this work, we propose Stochastic Neighbor Cross Entropy Minimization (SNCE), a novel training objective designed to address the optimization challenges of large-codebook discrete image generators. Instead of supervising the model with a hard one-hot target, SNCE constructs a soft categorical distribution over a set of neighboring tokens. The probability assigned to each token is proportional to the proximity between its code embedding and the ground-truth image embedding, encouraging the model to capture semantically meaningful geometric structure in the quantized embedding space. We conduct extensive experiments across class-conditional ImageNet-256 generation, large-scale text-to-image synthesis, and image editing tasks. Results show that SNCE significantly improves convergence speed and overall generation quality compared to standard cross-entropy objectives.
comment: 21 pages, 4 figures
☆ Clinical Priors Guided Lung Disease Detection in 3D CT Scans
Accurate classification of lung diseases from chest CT scans plays an important role in computer-aided diagnosis systems. However, medical imaging datasets often suffer from severe class imbalance, which may significantly degrade the performance of deep learning models, especially for minority disease categories. To address this issue, we propose a gender-aware two-stage lung disease classification framework. The proposed approach explicitly incorporates gender information into the disease recognition pipeline. In the first stage, a gender classifier is trained to predict the patient's gender from CT scans. In the second stage, the input CT image is routed to a corresponding gender-specific disease classifier to perform final disease prediction. This design enables the model to better capture gender-related imaging characteristics and alleviate the influence of imbalanced data distribution. Experimental results demonstrate that the proposed method improves the recognition performance for minority disease categories, particularly squamous cell carcinoma, while maintaining competitive performance on other classes.
☆ Context-Aware Sensor Modeling for Asynchronous Multi-Sensor Tracking in Stone Soup
Multi-sensor tracking in the real world involves asynchronous sensors with partial coverage and heterogeneous detection performance. Although probabilistic tracking methods permit detection probability and clutter intensity to depend on state and sensing context, many practical frameworks enforce globally uniform observability assumptions. Under multi-rate and partially overlapping sensing, this simplification causes repeated non-detections from high-rate sensors to erode tracks visible only to low-rate sensors, potentially degrading fusion performance. We introduce DetectorContext, an abstraction for the open-source multi-target tracking framework Stone Soup. DetectorContext exposes detection probability and clutter intensity as state-dependent functions evaluated during hypothesis formation. The abstraction integrates with existing probabilistic trackers without modifying their update equations. Experiments on asynchronous radar-lidar data demonstrate that context-aware modeling restores stable fusion and significantly improves HOTA and GOSPA performance without increasing false tracks.
☆ WiT: Waypoint Diffusion Transformers via Trajectory Conflict Navigation
While recent Flow Matching models avoid the reconstruction bottlenecks of latent autoencoders by operating directly in pixel space, the lack of semantic continuity in the pixel manifold severely intertwines optimal transport paths. This induces severe trajectory conflicts near intersections, yielding sub-optimal solutions. Rather than bypassing this issue via information-lossy latent representations, we directly untangle the pixel-space trajectories by proposing Waypoint Diffusion Transformers (WiT). WiT factorizes the continuous vector field via intermediate semantic waypoints projected from pre-trained vision models. It effectively disentangles the generation trajectories by breaking the optimal transport into prior-to-waypoint and waypoint-to-pixel segments. Specifically, during the iterative denoising process, a lightweight generator dynamically infers these intermediate waypoints from the current noisy state. They then continuously condition the primary diffusion transformer via the Just-Pixel AdaLN mechanism, steering the evolution towards the next state, ultimately yielding the final RGB pixels. Evaluated on ImageNet 256x256, WiT beats strong pixel-space baselines, accelerating JiT training convergence by 2.2x. Code will be publicly released at https://github.com/hainuo-wang/WiT.git.
☆ Low-light Image Enhancement with Retinex Decomposition in Latent Space
Retinex theory provides a principled foundation for low-light image enhancement, inspiring numerous learning-based methods that integrate its principles. However, existing methods exhibits limitations in accurately decomposing reflectance and illumination components. To address this, we propose a Retinex-Guided Transformer~(RGT) model, which is a two-stage model consisting of decomposition and enhancement phases. First, we propose a latent space decomposition strategy to separate reflectance and illumination components. By incorporating the log transformation and 1-pixel offset, we convert the intrinsically multiplicative relationship into an additive formulation, enhancing decomposition stability and precision. Subsequently, we construct a U-shaped component refiner incorporating the proposed guidance fusion transformer block. The component refiner refines reflectance component to preserve texture details and optimize illumination distribution, effectively transforming low-light inputs to normal-light counterparts. Experimental evaluations across four benchmark datasets validate that our method achieves competitive performance in low-light enhancement and a more stable training process.
comment: Submit to IEEE TIP
☆ Next-Frame Decoding for Ultra-Low-Bitrate Image Compression with Video Diffusion Priors
We present a novel paradigm for ultra-low-bitrate image compression (ULB-IC) that exploits the ``temporal'' evolution in generative image compression. Specifically, we define an explicit intermediate state during decoding: a compact anchor frame, which preserves the scene geometry and semantic layout while discarding high-frequency details. We then reinterpret generative decoding as a virtual temporal transition from this anchor to the final reconstructed image.To model this progression, we leverage a pretrained video diffusion model (VDM) as temporal priors: the anchor frame serves as the initial frame and the original image as the target frame, transforming the decoding process into a next-frame prediction task.In contrast to image diffusion-based ULB-IC models, our decoding proceeds from a visible, semantically faithful anchor, which improves both fidelity and realism for perceptual image compression. Extensive experiments demonstrate that our method achieves superior objective and subjective performance. On the CLIC2020 test set, our method achieves over \textbf{50\% bitrate savings} across LPIPS, DISTS, FID, and KID compared to DiffC, while also delivering a significant decoding speedup of up to $\times$5. Code will be released later.
☆ A Novel Camera-to-Robot Calibration Method for Vision-Based Floor Measurements SP
A novel hand-eye calibration method for ground-observing mobile robots is proposed. While cameras on mobile robots are com- mon, they are rarely used for ground-observing measurement tasks. Laser trackers are increasingly used in robotics for precise localization. A referencing plate is designed to combine the two measurement modalities of laser-tracker 3D metrology and camera- based 2D imaging. It incorporates reflector nests for pose acquisition using a laser tracker and a camera calibration target that is observed by the robot-mounted camera. The procedure comprises estimating the plate pose, the plate-camera pose, and the robot pose, followed by computing the robot-camera transformation. Experiments indicate sub-millimeter repeatability.
comment: 8 pages; accepted for publication in the ISPRS Annals of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences
☆ A Tutorial on ALOS2 SAR Utilization: Dataset Preparation, Self-Supervised Pretraining, and Semantic Segmentation
Masked auto-encoders (MAE) and related approaches have shown promise for satellite imagery, but their application to synthetic aperture radar (SAR) remains limited due to challenges in semantic labeling and high noise levels. Building on our prior work with SAR-W-MixMAE, which adds SAR-specific intensity-weighted loss to standard MixMAE for pretraining, we also introduce SAR-W-SimMIM; a weighted variant of SimMIM applied to ALOS-2 single-channel SAR imagery. This method aims to reduce the impact of speckle and extreme intensity values during self-supervised pretraining. We evaluate its effect on semantic segmentation compared to our previous trial with SAR-W-MixMAE and random initialization, observing notable improvements. In addition, pretraining and fine-tuning models on satellite imagery pose unique challenges, particularly when developing region-specific models. Imbalanced land cover distributions such as dominant water, forest, or desert areas can introduce bias, affecting both pretraining and downstream tasks like land cover segmentation. To address this, we constructed a SAR dataset using ALOS-2 single-channel (HH polarization) imagery focused on the Japan region, marking the initial phase toward a national-scale foundation model. This dataset was used to pretrain a vision transformer-based autoencoder, with the resulting encoder fine-tuned for semantic segmentation using a task-specific decoder. Initial results demonstrate significant performance improvements compared to training from scratch with random initialization. In summary, this work provides a guide to process and prepare ALOS2 observations to create dataset so that it can be taken advantage of self-supervised pretraining of models and finetuning downstream tasks such as semantic segmentation.
comment: 10 pages, 8 figures, 1 Table
☆ VAREX: A Benchmark for Multi-Modal Structured Extraction from Documents
We introduce VAREX (VARied-schema EXtraction), a benchmark for evaluating multimodal foundation models on structured data extraction from government forms. VAREX employs a Reverse Annotation pipeline that programmatically fills PDF templates with synthetic values, producing deterministic ground truth validated through three-phase quality assurance. The benchmark comprises 1,777 documents with 1,771 unique schemas across three structural categories, each provided in four input modalities: plain text, layout-preserving text (whitespace-aligned to approximate column positions), document image, or both text and image combined. Unlike existing benchmarks that evaluate from a single input representation, VAREX provides four controlled modalities per document, enabling systematic ablation of how input format affects extraction accuracy -- a capability absent from prior benchmarks. We evaluate 20 models from frontier proprietary models to small open models, with particular attention to models <=4B parameters suitable for cost-sensitive and latency-constrained deployment. Results reveal that (1) below 4B parameters, structured output compliance -- not extraction capability -- is a dominant bottleneck; in particular, schema echo (models producing schema-conforming structure instead of extracted values) depresses scores by 45-65 pp (percentage points) in affected models; (2) extraction-specific fine-tuning at 2B yields +81 pp gains, demonstrating that the instruction-following deficit is addressable without scale; (3) layout-preserving text provides the largest accuracy gain (+3-18 pp), exceeding pixel-level visual cues; and (4) the benchmark most effectively discriminates models in the 60-95% accuracy band. Dataset and evaluation code are publicly available.
comment: 9 pages, 4 figures, 4 tables, plus 12-page supplementary. Dataset: https://huggingface.co/datasets/ibm-research/VAREX Code: https://github.com/udibarzi/varex-bench
☆ Sampling-guided exploration of active feature selection policies
Determining the most appropriate features for machine learning predictive models is challenging regarding performance and feature acquisition costs. In particular, global feature choice is limited given that some features will only benefit a subset of instances. In previous work, we proposed a reinforcement learning approach to sequentially recommend which modality to acquire next to reach the best information/cost ratio, based on the instance-specific information already acquired. We formulated the problem as a Markov Decision Process where the state's dimensionality changes during the episode, avoiding data imputation, contrary to existing works. However, this only allowed processing a small number of features, as all possible combinations of features were considered. Here, we address these limitations with two contributions: 1) we expand our framework to larger datasets with a heuristic-based strategy that focuses on the most promising feature combinations, and 2) we introduce a post-fit regularisation strategy that reduces the number of different feature combinations, leading to compact sequences of decisions. We tested our method on four binary classification datasets (one involving high-dimensional variables), the largest of which had 56 features and 4500 samples. We obtained better performance than state-of-the-art methods, both in terms of accuracy and policy complexity.
☆ PAKAN: Pixel Adaptive Kolmogorov-Arnold Network Modules for Pansharpening
Pansharpening aims to fuse high-resolution spatial details from panchromatic images with the rich spectral information of multispectral images. Existing deep neural networks for this task typically rely on static activation functions, which limit their ability to dynamically model the complex, non-linear mappings required for optimal spatial-spectral fusion. While the recently introduced Kolmogorov-Arnold Network (KAN) utilizes learnable activation functions, traditional KANs lack dynamic adaptability during inference. To address this limitation, we propose a Pixel Adaptive Kolmogorov-Arnold Network framework. Starting from KAN, we design two adaptive variants: a 2D Adaptive KAN that generates spline summation weights across spatial dimensions and a 1D Adaptive KAN that generates them across spectral channels. These two components are then assembled into PAKAN 2to1 for feature fusion and PAKAN 1to1 for feature refinement. Extensive experiments demonstrate that our proposed modules significantly enhance network performance, proving the effectiveness and superiority of pixel-adaptive activation in pansharpening tasks.
comment: 16 pages,5 figures,4 tables
☆ Learning from Limited and Incomplete Data: A Multimodal Framework for Predicting Pathological Response in NSCLC
Major pathological response (pR) following neoadjuvant therapy is a clinically meaningful endpoint in non-small cell lung cancer, strongly associated with improved survival. However, accurate preoperative prediction of pR remains challenging, particularly in real-world clinical settings characterized by limited data availability and incomplete clinical profiles. In this study, we propose a multimodal deep learning framework designed to address these constraints by integrating foundation model-based CT feature extraction with a missing-aware architecture for clinical variables. This approach enables robust learning from small cohorts while explicitly modeling missing clinical information, without relying on conventional imputation strategies. A weighted fusion mechanism is employed to leverage the complementary contributions of imaging and clinical modalities, yielding a multimodal model that consistently outperforms both unimodal imaging and clinical baselines. These findings underscore the added value of integrating heterogeneous data sources and highlight the potential of multimodal, missing-aware systems to support pR prediction under realistic clinical conditions.
☆ ReactMotion: Generating Reactive Listener Motions from Speaker Utterance
In this paper, we introduce a new task, Reactive Listener Motion Generation from Speaker Utterance, which aims to generate naturalistic listener body motions that appropriately respond to a speaker's utterance. However, modeling such nonverbal listener behaviors remains underexplored and challenging due to the inherently non-deterministic nature of human reactions. To facilitate this task, we present ReactMotionNet, a large-scale dataset that pairs speaker utterances with multiple candidate listener motions annotated with varying degrees of appropriateness. This dataset design explicitly captures the one-to-many nature of listener behavior and provides supervision beyond a single ground-truth motion. Building on this dataset design, we develop preference-oriented evaluation protocols tailored to evaluate reactive appropriateness, where conventional motion metrics focusing on input-motion alignment ignore. We further propose ReactMotion, a unified generative framework that jointly models text, audio, emotion, and motion, and is trained with preference-based objectives to encourage both appropriate and diverse listener responses. Extensive experiments show that ReactMotion outperforms retrieval baselines and cascaded LLM-based pipelines, generating more natural, diverse, and appropriate listener motions.
comment: 42 pages, 11 tables, 8 figures
☆ The Good, the Better, and the Best: Improving the Discriminability of Face Embeddings through Attribute-aware Learning
Despite recent advances in face recognition, robust performance remains challenging under large variations in age, pose, and occlusion. A common strategy to address these issues is to guide representation learning with auxiliary supervision from facial attributes, encouraging the visual encoder to focus on identity-relevant regions. However, existing approaches typically rely on heterogeneous and fixed sets of attributes, implicitly assuming equal relevance across attributes. This assumption is suboptimal, as different attributes exhibit varying discriminative power for identity recognition, and some may even introduce harmful biases. In this paper, we propose an attribute-aware face recognition architecture that supervises the learning of facial embeddings using identity class labels, identity-relevant facial attributes, and non-identity-related attributes. Facial attributes are organized into interpretable groups, making it possible to decompose and analyze their individual contributions in a human-understandable manner. Experiments on standard face verification benchmarks demonstrate that joint learning of identity and facial attributes improves the discriminability of face embeddings with two major conclusions: (i) using identity-relevant subsets of facial attributes consistently outperforms supervision with a broader attribute set, and (ii) explicitly forcing embeddings to unlearn non-identity-related attributes yields further performance gains compared to leaving such attributes unsupervised. Additionally, our method serves as a diagnostic tool for assessing the trustworthiness of face recognition encoders by allowing for the measurement of accuracy gains with suppression of non-identity-relevant attributes, with such gains suggesting shortcut learning from redundant attributes associated with each identity.
comment: Accepted at IWBF 2026
☆ SRL-MAD: Structured Residual Latents for One-Class Morphing Attack Detection
Face morphing attacks represent a significant threat to biometric systems as they allow multiple identities to be combined into a single face. While supervised morphing attack detection (MAD) methods have shown promising performance, their reliance on attack-labeled data limits generalization to unseen morphing attacks. This has motivated increasing interest in one-class MAD, where models are trained exclusively on bona fide samples and are expected to detect unseen attacks as deviations from the normal facial structure. In this context, we introduce SRL-MAD, a one-class single-image MAD that uses structured residual Fourier representations for open-set morphing attack detection. Starting from a residual frequency map that suppresses image-specific spectral trends, we preserve the two-dimensional organization of the Fourier domain through a ring-based representation and replace azimuthal averaging with a learnable ring-wise spectral projection. To further encode domain knowledge about where morphing artifacts arise, we impose a frequency-informed inductive bias by organizing spectral evidence into low, mid, and high-frequency bands and learning cross-band interactions. These structured spectral features are mapped into a latent space designed for direct scoring, avoiding the reliance on reconstruction errors. Extensive evaluation on FERET-Morph, FRLL-Morph, and MorDIFF demonstrates that SRL-MAD consistently outperforms recent one-class and supervised MAD models. Overall, our results show that learning frequency-aware projections provides a more discriminative alternative to azimuthal spectral summarization for one-class morphing attack detection.
comment: Accepted at IWBF 2026
☆ GUI-CEval: A Hierarchical and Comprehensive Chinese Benchmark for Mobile GUI Agents CVPR 2026
Recent progress in Multimodal Large Language Models (MLLMs) has enabled mobile GUI agents capable of visual perception, cross-modal reasoning, and interactive control. However, existing benchmarks are largely English-centric and fail to capture the linguistic and interaction characteristics of the Chinese mobile ecosystem. They also focus on isolated skills such as GUI grounding or offline agent, lacking a unified and fine-grained framework to assess the full capability chain from perception to execution. To address this gap, we introduce GUI-CEval, the first comprehensive benchmark for Chinese mobile GUI agents, built entirely on physical device environments. GUI-CEval spans 201 mainstream apps across four device types and adopts a two-level structure that evaluates both atomic abilities and realistic application-level performance along five dimensions: perception, planning, reflection, execution, and evaluation. All data are collected and verified through multi-stage manual processes to ensure authenticity and reproducibility. Extensive experiments on 20 representative MLLMs and multi-agent systems show that while models such as Qwen2.5-VL and UI-TARS perform competitively, most MLLMs still exhibit clear weaknesses in reflective decision-making and post-action self-evaluation, limiting their reliability in real-world interactions. We hope GUI-CEval provides a comprehensive and interpretable benchmark to guide capability diagnosis and advance the development of Chinese mobile GUI agents.
comment: accepted by CVPR 2026
☆ Training-free Detection of Generated Videos via Spatial-Temporal Likelihoods CVPR 2026
Following major advances in text and image generation, the video domain has surged, producing highly realistic and controllable sequences. Along with this progress, these models also raise serious concerns about misinformation, making reliable detection of synthetic videos increasingly crucial. Image-based detectors are fundamentally limited because they operate per frame and ignore temporal dynamics, while supervised video detectors generalize poorly to unseen generators, a critical drawback given the rapid emergence of new models. These challenges motivate zero-shot approaches, which avoid synthetic data and instead score content against real-data statistics, enabling training-free, model-agnostic detection. We introduce \emph{STALL}, a simple, training-free, theoretically justified detector that provides likelihood-based scoring for videos, jointly modeling spatial and temporal evidence within a probabilistic framework. We evaluate STALL on two public benchmarks and introduce ComGenVid, a new benchmark with state-of-the-art generative models. STALL consistently outperforms prior image- and video-based baselines. Code and data are available at https://omerbenhayun.github.io/stall-video.
comment: Accepted to CVPR 2026
☆ One CT Unified Model Training Framework to Rule All Scanning Protocols
Non-ideal measurement computed tomography (NICT), which lowers radiation at the cost of image quality, is expanding the clinical use of CT. Although unified models have shown promise in NICT enhancement, most methods require paired data, which is an impractical demand due to inevitable organ motion. Unsupervised approaches attempt to overcome this limitation, but their assumption of homogeneous noise neglects the variability of scanning protocols, leading to poor generalization and potential model collapse. We further observe that distinct scanning protocols, which correspond to different physical imaging processes, produce discrete sub-manifolds in the feature space, contradicting these assumptions and limiting their effectiveness. To address this, we propose an Uncertainty-Guided Manifold Smoothing (UMS) framework to bridge the gaps between sub-manifolds. A classifier in UMS identifies sub-manifolds and predicts uncertainty scores, which guide the generation of diverse samples across the entire manifold. By leveraging the classifier's capability, UMS effectively fills the gaps between discrete sub-manifolds, and promotes a continuous and dense feature space. Due to the complexity of the global manifold, it's hard to directly model it. Therefore, we propose to dynamically incorporate the global- and sub-manifold-specific features. Specifically, we design a global- and sub-manifold-driven architecture guided by the classifier, which enables dynamic adaptation to subdomain variations. This dynamic mechanism improves the network's capacity to capture both shared and domain-specific features, thereby improving reconstruction performance. Extensive experiments on public datasets are conducted to validate the effectiveness of our method across different generation paradigms.
☆ MER-Bench: A Comprehensive Benchmark for Multimodal Meme Reappraisal
Memes represent a tightly coupled, multimodal form of social expression, in which visual context and overlaid text jointly convey nuanced affect and commentary. Inspired by cognitive reappraisal in psychology, we introduce Meme Reappraisal, a novel multimodal generation task that aims to transform negatively framed memes into constructive ones while preserving their underlying scenario, entities, and structural layout. Unlike prior works on meme understanding or generation, Meme Reappraisal requires emotion-controllable, structure-preserving multimodal transformation under multiple semantic and stylistic constraints. To support this task, we construct MER-Bench, a benchmark of real-world memes with fine-grained multimodal annotations, including source and target emotions, positively rewritten meme text, visual editing specifications, and taxonomy labels covering visual type, sentiment polarity, and layout structure. We further propose a structured evaluation framework based on a multimodal large language model (MLLM)-as-a-Judge paradigm, decomposing performance into modality-level generation quality, affect controllability, structural fidelity, and global affective alignment. Extensive experiments across representative image-editing and multimodal-generation systems reveal substantial gaps in satisfying the constraints of structural preservation, semantic consistency, and affective transformation. We believe MER-Bench establishes a foundation for research on controllable meme editing and emotion-aware multimodal generation. Our code is available at: https://github.com/one-seven17/MER-Bench.
☆ Reference-Free Omnidirectional Stereo Matching via Multi-View Consistency Maximization
Reliable omnidirectional depth estimation from multi-fisheye stereo matching is pivotal to many applications, such as embodied robotics. Existing approaches either rely on spherical sweeping with heuristic fusion strategies to build the cost columns or perform reference-centric stereo matching based on rectified views. However, these methods fail to explicitly exploit geometric relationships between multiple views, rendering them less capable of capturing the global dependencies, visibility, or scale changes. In this paper, we shift to a new perspective and propose a novel reference-free framework, dubbed FreeOmniMVS, via multi-view consistency maximization. The highlight of FreeOmniMVS is that it can aggregate pair-wise correlations into a robust, visibility-aware, and global consensus. As such, it is tolerant to occlusions, partial overlaps, and varying baselines. Specifically, to achieve global coherence, we introduce a novel View-pair Correlation Transformer (VCT) that explicitly models pairwise correlation volumes across all camera view pairs, allowing us to drop unreliable pairs caused by occlusion or out-of-focus observations. To realize scalable and visibility-aware consensus, we propose a lightweight attention mechanism that adaptively fuses the correlation vectors, eliminating the need for a designated reference view and allowing all cameras to contribute equally to the stereo matching process. Extensive experiments on diverse benchmark datasets demonstrate the superiority of our method for globally consistent, visibility-aware, and scale-aware omnidirectional depth estimation.
comment: 8 pages, 5 figures
☆ Riemannian Motion Generation: A Unified Framework for Human Motion Representation and Generation via Riemannian Flow Matching
Human motion generation is often learned in Euclidean spaces, although valid motions follow structured non-Euclidean geometry. We present Riemannian Motion Generation (RMG), a unified framework that represents motion on a product manifold and learns dynamics via Riemannian flow matching. RMG factorizes motion into several manifold factors, yielding a scale-free representation with intrinsic normalization, and uses geodesic interpolation, tangent-space supervision, and manifold-preserving ODE integration for training and sampling. On HumanML3D, RMG achieves state-of-the-art FID in the HumanML3D format (0.043) and ranks first on all reported metrics under the MotionStreamer format. On MotionMillion, it also surpasses strong baselines (FID 5.6, R@1 0.86). Ablations show that the compact $\mathscr{T}+\mathscr{R}$ (translation + rotations) representation is the most stable and effective, highlighting geometry-aware modeling as a practical and scalable route to high-fidelity motion generation.
comment: 18 pages, 6 figures
☆ Molecular Identifier Visual Prompt and Verifiable Reinforcement Learning for Chemical Reaction Diagram Parsing
Reaction diagram parsing (RxnDP) is critical for extracting chemical synthesis information from literature. Although recent Vision-Language Models (VLMs) have emerged as a promising paradigm to automate this complex visual reasoning task, their application is fundamentally bottlenecked by the inability to align visual chemical entities with pre-trained knowledge, alongside the inherent discrepancy between token-level training and reaction-level evaluation. To address these dual challenges, this work enhances VLM-based RxnDP from two complementary perspectives: prompting representation and learning paradigms. First, we propose Identifier as Visual Prompting (IdtVP), which leverages naturally occurring molecule identifiers (e.g., bold numerals like 1a) to activate the chemical knowledge acquired during VLM pre-training. IdtVP enables powerful zero-shot and out-of-distribution capabilities, outperforming existing prompting strategies. Second, to further optimize performance within fine-tuning paradigms, we introduce Re3-DAPO, a reinforcement learning algorithm that leverages verifiable rewards to directly optimize reaction-level metrics, thereby achieving consistent gains over standard supervised fine-tuning. Additionally, we release the ScannedRxn benchmark, comprising scanned historical reaction diagrams with real-world artifacts, to rigorously assess model robustness and out-of-distribution ability. Our contributions advance the accuracy and generalization of VLM-based reaction diagram parsing. We will release data, models, and code on GitHub.
☆ Clue Matters: Leveraging Latent Visual Clues to Empower Video Reasoning
Multi-modal Large Language Models (MLLMs) have significantly advanced video reasoning, yet Video Question Answering (VideoQA) remains challenging due to its demand for temporal causal reasoning and evidence-grounded answer generation. Prevailing end-to-end MLLM frameworks lack explicit structured reasoning between visual perception and answer derivation, causing severe hallucinations and poor interpretability. Existing methods also fail to address three core gaps: faithful visual clue extraction, utility-aware clue filtering, and end-to-end clue-answer alignment. Inspired by hierarchical human visual cognition, we propose ClueNet, a clue-aware video reasoning framework with a two-stage supervised fine-tuning paradigm without extensive base model modifications. Decoupled supervision aligns clue extraction and chain-based reasoning, while inference supervision with an adaptive clue filter refines high-order reasoning, alongside lightweight modules for efficient inference. Experiments on NExT-QA, STAR, and MVBench show that ClueNet outperforms state-of-the-art methods by $\ge$ 1.1%, with superior generalization, hallucination mitigation, inference efficiency, and cross-backbone compatibility. This work bridges the perception-to-generation gap in MLLM video understanding, providing an interpretable, faithful reasoning paradigm for high-stakes VideoQA applications.
comment: 18 pages, 7 figures
☆ Edit2Interp: Adapting Image Foundation Models from Spatial Editing to Video Frame Interpolation with Few-Shot Learning
Pre-trained image editing models exhibit strong spatial reasoning and object-aware transformation capabilities acquired from billions of image-text pairs, yet they possess no explicit temporal modeling. This paper demonstrates that these spatial priors can be repurposed to unlock temporal synthesis capabilities through minimal adaptation - without introducing any video-specific architecture or motion estimation modules. We show that a large image editing model (Qwen-Image-Edit), originally designed solely for static instruction-based edits, can be adapted for Video Frame Interpolation (VFI) using only 64-256 training samples via Low-Rank Adaptation (LoRA). Our core contribution is revealing that the model's inherent understanding of "how objects transform" in static scenes contains latent temporal reasoning that can be activated through few-shot fine-tuning. While the baseline model completely fails at producing coherent intermediate frames, our parameter-efficient adaptation successfully unlocks its interpolation capability. Rather than competing with task-specific VFI methods trained from scratch on massive datasets, our work establishes that foundation image editing models possess untapped potential for temporal tasks, offering a data-efficient pathway for video synthesis in resource-constrained scenarios. This bridges the gap between image manipulation and video understanding, suggesting that spatial and temporal reasoning may be more intertwined in foundation models than previously recognized
☆ Thermal Image Refinement with Depth Estimation using Recurrent Networks for Monocular ORB-SLAM3
Autonomous navigation in GPS-denied and visually degraded environments remains challenging for unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs). To this end, we investigate the use of a monocular thermal camera as a standalone sensor on a UAV platform for real-time depth estimation and simultaneous localization and mapping (SLAM). To extract depth information from thermal images, we propose a novel pipeline employing a lightweight supervised network with recurrent blocks (RBs) integrated to capture temporal dependencies, enabling more robust predictions. The network combines lightweight convolutional backbones with a thermal refinement network (T-RefNet) to refine raw thermal inputs and enhance feature visibility. The refined thermal images and predicted depth maps are integrated into ORB-SLAM3, enabling thermal-only localization. Unlike previous methods, the network is trained on a custom non-radiometric dataset, obviating the need for high-cost radiometric thermal cameras. Experimental results on datasets and UAV flights demonstrate competitive depth accuracy and robust SLAM performance under low-light conditions. On the radiometric VIVID++ (indoor-dark) dataset, our method achieves an absolute relative error of approximately 0.06, compared to baselines exceeding 0.11. In our non-radiometric indoor set, baseline errors remain above 0.24, whereas our approach remains below 0.10. Thermal-only ORB-SLAM3 maintains a mean trajectory error under 0.4 m.
comment: 8 pages, 8 figures, 2 table
☆ MMSpec: Benchmarking Speculative Decoding for Vision-Language Models
Vision-language models (VLMs) achieve strong performance on multimodal tasks but suffer from high inference latency due to large model sizes and long multimodal contexts. Speculative decoding has recently emerged as an effective acceleration technique, yet its behavior in VLMs remains insufficiently understood. We introduce MMSpec, the first benchmark for evaluating speculative decoding in vision-language models. MMSpec contains 600 multimodal samples across six task categories and integrates ten representative speculative decoding algorithms under a unified evaluation framework. Our study reveals three key findings: (1) methods designed for text-only LLMs degrade in multimodal scenarios, (2) vision awareness becomes increasingly important at larger batch sizes, and (3) throughput speedup alone does not reliably reflect latency performance. Motivated by these findings, we propose ViSkip, a plug-and-play speculative decoding method that dynamically adapts speculation to vision tokens and achieves state-of-the-art performance.
☆ Anchoring Emotions in Text: Robust Multimodal Fusion for Mimicry Intensity Estimation
Estimating Emotional Mimicry Intensity (EMI) in naturalistic environments is a critical yet challenging task in affective computing. The primary difficulty lies in effectively modeling the complex, nonlinear temporal dynamics across highly heterogeneous modalities, especially when physical signals are corrupted or missing. To tackle this, we propose TAEMI (Text-Anchored Emotional Mimicry Intensity estimation), a novel multimodal framework designed for the 10th ABAW Competition. Motivated by the observation that continuous visual and acoustic signals are highly susceptible to transient environmental noise, we break the traditional symmetric fusion paradigm. Instead, we leverage textual transcript--which inherently encode a stable, time-independent semantic prior--as central anchors. Specifically, we introduce a Text-Anchored Dual Cross-Attention mechanism that utilizes these robust textual queries to actively filter out frame-level redundancies and align the noisy physical streams. Furthermore, to prevent catastrophic performance degradation caused by inevitably missing data in unconstrained real-world scenarios, we integrate Learnable Missing-Modality Tokens and a Modality Dropout strategy during training. Extensive experiments on the Hume-Vidmimic2 dataset demonstrate that TAEMI effectively captures fine-grained emotional variations and maintains robust predictive resilience under imperfect conditions. Our framework achieves a state-of-the-art mean Pearson correlation coefficient across six continuous emotional dimensions, significantly outperforming existing baseline methods.
☆ Voronoi-based Second-order Descriptor with Whitened Metric in LiDAR Place Recognition ICRA 26
The pooling layer plays a vital role in aggregating local descriptors into the metrizable global descriptor in the LiDAR Place Recognition (LPR). In particular, the second-order pooling is capable of capturing higher-order interactions among local descriptors. However, its existing methods in the LPR adhere to conventional implementations and post-normalization, and incur the descriptor unsuitable for Euclidean distancing. Based on the recent interpretation that associates NetVLAD with the second-order statistics, we propose to integrate second-order pooling with the inductive bias from Voronoi cells. Our novel pooling method aggregates local descriptors to form the second-order matrix and whitens the global descriptor to implicitly measure the Mahalanobis distance while conserving the cluster property from Voronoi cells, addressing its numerical instability during learning with diverse techniques. We demonstrate its performance gains through the experiments conducted on the Oxford Robotcar and Wild-Places benchmarks and analyze the numerical effect of the proposed whitening algorithm.
comment: Accepted at ICRA 26
☆ GeoNVS: Geometry Grounded Video Diffusion for Novel View Synthesis
Novel view synthesis requires strong 3D geometric consistency and the ability to generate visually coherent images across diverse viewpoints. While recent camera-controlled video diffusion models show promising results, they often suffer from geometric distortions and limited camera controllability. To overcome these challenges, we introduce GeoNVS, a geometry-grounded novel-view synthesizer that enhances both geometric fidelity and camera controllability through explicit 3D geometric guidance. Our key innovation is the Gaussian Splat Feature Adapter (GS-Adapter), which lifts input-view diffusion features into 3D Gaussian representations, renders geometry-constrained novel-view features, and adaptively fuses them with diffusion features to correct geometrically inconsistent representations. Unlike prior methods that inject geometry at the input level, GS-Adapter operates in feature space, avoiding view-dependent color noise that degrades structural consistency. Its plug-and-play design enables zero-shot compatibility with diverse feed-forward geometry models without additional training, and can be adapted to other video diffusion backbones. Experiments across 9 scenes and 18 settings demonstrate state-of-the-art performance, achieving 11.3% and 14.9% improvements over SEVA and CameraCtrl, with up to 2x reduction in translation error and 7x in Chamfer Distance.
comment: The code will be available at https://sites.google.com/view/minjun-kang/geonvs-arxiv26
☆ CyCLeGen: Cycle-Consistent Layout Prediction and Image Generation in Vision Foundation Models
We present CyCLeGen, a unified vision-language foundation model capable of both image understanding and image generation within a single autoregressive framework. Unlike existing vision models that depend on separate modules for perception and synthesis, CyCLeGen adopts a fully integrated architecture that enforces cycle-consistent learning through image->layout->image and layout->image->layout generation loops. This unified formulation introduces two key advantages: introspection, enabling the model to reason about its own generations, and data efficiency, allowing self-improvement via synthetic supervision under a reinforcement learning objective guided by cycle consistency. Extensive experiments show that CyCLeGen achieves significant gains across diverse image understanding and generation benchmarks, highlighting the potential of unified vision-language foundation models.
☆ Learning Question-Aware Keyframe Selection with Synthetic Supervision for Video Question Answering
Large multimodal models (LMMs) have recently demonstrated remarkable performance in video question answering (VideoQA), yet reasoning over video remains challenging due to high inference cost and diluted information. Keyframe selection offers efficiency and sharper reasoning but suffers from sparse supervision and redundant frame choices when relying only on image-text similarity. We present a question-aware keyframe selection framework with two components: pseudo keyframe labels derived from LMMs that provide informative supervision and a coverage regularization that promotes diverse, complementary evidence across time. Experiments on NExT-QA show that our method significantly improves accuracy, especially for temporal and causal question types, establishing keyframe selection as an effective and learnable module for VideoQA.
☆ Pansharpening for Thin-Cloud Contaminated Remote Sensing Images: A Unified Framework and Benchmark Dataset AAAI2026
Pansharpening under thin cloudy conditions is a practically significant yet rarely addressed task, challenged by simultaneous spatial resolution degradation and cloud-induced spectral distortions. Existing methods often address cloud removal and pansharpening sequentially, leading to cumulative errors and suboptimal performance due to the lack of joint degradation modeling. To address these challenges, we propose a Unified Pansharpening Model with Thin Cloud Removal (Pan-TCR), an end-to-end framework that integrates physical priors. Motivated by theoretical analysis in the frequency domain, we design a frequency-decoupled restoration (FDR) block that disentangles the restoration of multispectral image (MSI) features into amplitude and phase components, each guided by complementary degradation-robust prompts: the near-infrared (NIR) band amplitude for cloud-resilient restoration, and the panchromatic (PAN) phase for high-resolution structural enhancement. To ensure coherence between the two components, we further introduce an interactive inter-frequency consistency (IFC) module, enabling cross-modal refinement that enforces consistency and robustness across frequency cues. Furthermore, we introduce the first real-world thin-cloud contaminated pansharpening dataset (PanTCR-GF2), comprising paired clean and cloudy PAN-MSI images, to enable robust benchmarking under realistic conditions. Extensive experiments on real-world and synthetic datasets demonstrate the superiority and robustness of Pan-TCR, establishing a new benchmark for pansharpening under realistic atmospheric degradations.
comment: 11 pages,5 figures,published in AAAI2026
☆ GT-PCQA: Geometry-Texture Decoupled Point Cloud Quality Assessment with MLLM
With the rapid advancement of Multi-modal Large Language Models (MLLMs), MLLM-based Image Quality Assessment (IQA) methods have shown promising generalization. However, directly extending these MLLM-based IQA methods to PCQA remains challenging. On the one hand, existing PCQA datasets are limited in scale, which hinders stable and effective instruction tuning of MLLMs. On the other hand, due to large-scale image-text pretraining, MLLMs tend to rely on texture-dominant reasoning and are insufficiently sensitive to geometric structural degradations that are critical for PCQA. To address these gaps, we propose a novel MLLM-based no-reference PCQA framework, termed GT-PCQA, which is built upon two key strategies. First, to enable stable and effective instruction tuning under scarce PCQA supervision, a 2D-3D joint training strategy is proposed. This strategy formulates PCQA as a relative quality comparison problem to unify large-scale IQA datasets with limited PCQA datasets. It incorporates a parameter-efficient Low-Rank Adaptation (LoRA) scheme to support instruction tuning. Second, a geometry-texture decoupling strategy is presented, which integrates a dual-prompt mechanism with an alternating optimization scheme to mitigate the inherent texture-dominant bias of pre-trained MLLMs, while enhancing sensitivity to geometric structural degradations. Extensive experiments demonstrate that GT-PCQA achieves competitive performance and exhibits strong generalization.
☆ Bridging Scene Generation and Planning: Driving with World Model via Unifying Vision and Motion Representation
End-to-end autonomous driving aims to generate safe and plausible planning policies from raw sensor input. Driving world models have shown great potential in learning rich representations by predicting the future evolution of a driving scene. However, existing driving world models primarily focus on visual scene representation, and motion representation is not explicitly designed to be planner-shared and inheritable, leaving a schism between the optimization of visual scene generation and the requirements of precise motion planning. We present WorldDrive, a holistic framework that couples scene generation and real-time planning via unifying vision and motion representation. We first introduce a Trajectory-aware Driving World Model, which conditions on a trajectory vocabulary to enforce consistency between visual dynamics and motion intentions, enabling the generation of diverse and plausible future scenes conditioned on a specific trajectory. We transfer the vision and motion encoders to a downstream Multi-modal Planner, ensuring the driving policy operates on mature representations pre-optimized by scene generation. A simple interaction between motion representation, visual representation, and ego status can generate high-quality, multi-modal trajectories. Furthermore, to exploit the world model's foresight, we propose a Future-aware Rewarder, which distills future latent representation from the frozen world model to evaluate and select optimal trajectories in real-time. Extensive experiments on the NAVSIM, NAVSIM-v2, and nuScenes benchmarks demonstrate that WorldDrive achieves leading planning performance among vision-only methods while maintaining high-fidelity action-controlled video generation capabilities, providing strong evidence for the effectiveness of unifying vision and motion representation for robust autonomous driving.
comment: 16 pages, 9 figures. The code is available at https://github.com/TabGuigui/WorldDrive
☆ FAR-Drive: Frame-AutoRegressive Video Generation in Closed-Loop Autonomous Driving
Despite rapid progress in autonomous driving, reliable training and evaluation of driving systems remain fundamentally constrained by the lack of scalable and interactive simulation environments. Recent generative video models achieve remarkable visual fidelity, yet most operate in open-loop settings and fail to support fine-grained frame-level interaction between agent actions and environment evolution. Building a learning-based closed-loop simulator for autonomous driving poses three major challenges: maintaining long-horizon temporal and cross-view consistency, mitigating autoregressive degradation under iterative self-conditioning, and satisfying low-latency inference constraints. In this work, we propose FAR-Drive, a frame-level autoregressive video generation framework for autonomous driving. We introduce a multi-view diffusion transformer with fine-grained structured control, enabling geometrically consistent multi-camera generation. To address long-horizon consistency and iterative degradation, we design a two-stage training strategy consisting of adaptive reference horizon conditioning and blend-forcing autoregressive training, which progressively improves consistency and robustness under self-conditioning. To meet low-latency interaction requirements, we further integrate system-level efficiency optimizations for inference acceleration. Experiments on the nuScenes dataset demonstrate that our method achieves state-of-the-art performance among existing closed-loop autonomous driving simulation approaches, while maintaining sub-second latency on a single GPU.
☆ Relevance Feedback in Text-to-Image Diffusion: A Training-Free And Model-Agnostic Interactive Framework
Text-to-image generation using diffusion models has achieved remarkable success. However, users often possess clear visual intents but struggle to express them precisely in language, resulting in ambiguous prompts and misaligned images. Existing methods struggle to bridge this gap, typically relying on high-load textual dialogues, opaque black-box inferences, or expensive fine-tuning. They fail to simultaneously achieve low cognitive load, interpretable preference inference, and remain training-free and model-agnostic. To address this, we propose RFD, an interactive framework that adapts the relevance feedback mechanism from information retrieval to diffusion models. In RFD, users replace explicit textual dialogue with implicit, multi-select visual feedback to minimize cognitive load, easily expressing complex, multi-dimensional preferences. To translate feedback into precise generative guidance, we construct an expert-curated feature repository and introduce an information-theoretic weighted cumulative preference analysis. This white-box method calculates preferences from current-round feedback and incrementally accumulates them, avoiding the concatenation of historical interactions and preventing inference degradation caused by lengthy contexts. Furthermore, RFD employs a probabilistic sampling mechanism for prompt reconstruction to balance exploitation and exploration, preventing output homogenization. Crucially, RFD operates entirely within the external text space, making it strictly training-free and model-agnostic as a universal plug-and-play solution. Extensive experiments demonstrate that RFD effectively captures the user's true visual intent, significantly outperforming baselines in preference alignment.
☆ Video-CoE: Reinforcing Video Event Prediction via Chain of Events
Despite advances in the application of MLLMs for various video tasks, video event prediction (VEP) remains relatively underexplored. VEP requires the model to perform fine-grained temporal modeling of videos and establish logical relationships between videos and future events, which current MLLMs still struggle with. In this work, we first present a comprehensive evaluation of current leading MLLMs on the VEP task, revealing the reasons behind their inaccurate predictions, including lack of logical reasoning ability for future events prediction and insufficient utilization of visual information. To address these challenges, we propose \textbf{C}hain \textbf{o}f \textbf{E}vents (\textbf{CoE}) paradigm, which constructs temporal event chains to implicitly enforce MLLM focusing on the visual content and the logical connections between videos and future events, incentivizing model's reasoning capability with multiple training protocols. Experimental results on public benchmarks demonstrate that our method outperforms both leading open-source and commercial MLLMs, establishing a new state-of-the-art on the VEP task. Codes and models will be released soon.
comment: 21 pages, 18 figures, 6 tables
♻ ☆ Virtual Full-stack Scanning of Brain MRI via Imputing Any Quantised Code CVPR 2026
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is a powerful and versatile imaging technique, offering a wide spectrum of information about the anatomy by employing different acquisition modalities. However, in the clinical workflow, it is impractical to collect all relevant modalities due to the scan time and cost constraints. Virtual full-stack scanning aims to impute missing MRI modalities from available but incomplete acquisitions, offering a cost-efficient solution to enhance data completeness and clinical usability. Existing imputation methods often depend on global conditioning or modality-specific designs, which limit their generalisability across patient cohorts and imaging protocols. To address these limitations, we propose CodeBrain, a unified framework that reformulates various ``any-to-any'' imputation tasks as a region-level full-stack code prediction problem. CodeBrain adopts a two-stage pipeline: (1) it learns the compact representation of a complete MRI modality set by encoding it into scalar-quantised codes at the region level, enabling high-fidelity image reconstruction after decoding these codes along with modality-agnostic common features; (2) it trains a projection encoder to predict the full-stack code map from incomplete modalities via a grading-based design for diverse imputation scenarios. Extensive experiments on two public brain MRI datasets, i.e., IXI and BraTS 2023, demonstrate that CodeBrain consistently outperforms state-of-the-art methods, establishing a new benchmark for unified brain MRI imputation and enabling virtual full-stack scanning. Our code will be released at https://github.com/ycwu1997/CodeBrain.
comment: Accepted by CVPR 2026
♻ ☆ Precise Object and Effect Removal with Adaptive Target-Aware Attention CVPR 2026
Object removal requires eliminating not only the target object but also its associated visual effects such as shadows and reflections. However, diffusion-based inpainting and removal methods often introduce artifacts, hallucinate contents, alter background, and struggle to remove object effects accurately. To address these challenges, we propose ObjectClear, a novel framework that decouples foreground removal from background reconstruction via an adaptive target-aware attention mechanism. This design empowers the model to precisely localize and remove both objects and their effects while maintaining high background fidelity. Moreover, the learned attention maps are leveraged for an attention-guided fusion strategy during inference, further enhancing visual consistency. To facilitate the training and evaluation, we construct OBER, a large-scale dataset for OBject-Effect Removal, which provides paired images with and without object-effects, along with precise masks for both objects and their effects. The dataset comprises high-quality captured and simulated data, covering diverse objects, effects, and complex multi-object scenes. Extensive experiments demonstrate that ObjectClear outperforms prior methods, achieving superior object-effect removal quality and background fidelity, especially in challenging scenarios.
comment: Accepted to CVPR 2026. Project page: https://zjx0101.github.io/projects/ObjectClear/
♻ ☆ MatAnyone 2: Scaling Video Matting via a Learned Quality Evaluator CVPR 2026
Video matting remains limited by the scale and realism of existing datasets. While leveraging segmentation data can enhance semantic stability, the lack of effective boundary supervision often leads to segmentation-like mattes lacking fine details. To this end, we introduce a learned Matting Quality Evaluator (MQE) that assesses semantic and boundary quality of alpha mattes without ground truth. It produces a pixel-wise evaluation map that identifies reliable and erroneous regions, enabling fine-grained quality assessment. The MQE scales up video matting in two ways: (1) as an online matting-quality feedback during training to suppress erroneous regions, providing comprehensive supervision, and (2) as an offline selection module for data curation, improving annotation quality by combining the strengths of leading video and image matting models. This process allows us to build a large-scale real-world video matting dataset, VMReal, containing 28K clips and 2.4M frames. To handle large appearance variations in long videos, we introduce a reference-frame training strategy that incorporates long-range frames beyond the local window for effective training. Our MatAnyone 2 achieves state-of-the-art performance on both synthetic and real-world benchmarks, surpassing prior methods across all metrics.
comment: Accepted to CVPR 2026. Project page: https://pq-yang.github.io/projects/MatAnyone2/
♻ ☆ Illustrator's Depth: Monocular Layer Index Prediction for Image Decomposition
We introduce Illustrator's Depth, a novel definition of depth that addresses a key challenge in digital content creation: decomposing flat images into editable, ordered layers. Inspired by an artist's compositional process, illustrator's depth infers a layer index to each pixel, forming an interpretable image decomposition through a discrete, globally consistent ordering of elements optimized for editability. We also propose and train a neural network using a curated dataset of layered vector graphics to predict layering directly from raster inputs. Our layer index inference unlocks a range of powerful downstream applications. In particular, it significantly outperforms state-of-the-art baselines for image vectorization while also enabling high-fidelity text-to-vector-graphics generation, automatic 3D relief generation from 2D images, and intuitive depth-aware editing. By reframing depth from a physical quantity to a creative abstraction, illustrator's depth prediction offers a new foundation for editable image decomposition.
♻ ☆ Learning 2D Invariant Affordance Knowledge for 3D Affordance Grounding AAAI 2025
3D Object Affordance Grounding aims to predict the functional regions on a 3D object and has laid the foundation for a wide range of applications in robotics. Recent advances tackle this problem via learning a mapping between 3D regions and a single human-object interaction image. However, the geometric structure of the 3D object and the object in the human-object interaction image are not always consistent, leading to poor generalization. To address this issue, we propose to learn generalizable invariant affordance knowledge from multiple human-object interaction images within the same affordance category. Specifically, we introduce the Multi-Image Guided Invariant-Feature-Aware 3D Affordance Grounding (MIFAG) framework. It grounds 3D object affordance regions by identifying common interaction patterns across multiple human-object interaction images. First, the Invariant Affordance Knowledge Extraction Module (IAM) utilizes an iterative updating strategy to gradually extract aligned affordance knowledge from multiple images and integrate it into an affordance dictionary. Then, the Affordance Dictionary Adaptive Fusion Module (ADM) learns comprehensive point cloud representations that consider all affordance candidates in multiple images. Besides, the Multi-Image and Point Affordance (MIPA) benchmark is constructed and our method outperforms existing state-of-the-art methods on various experimental comparisons.
comment: Accepted by AAAI 2025 (Oral)
♻ ☆ Deformation-Invariant Neural Network and Its Applications in Distorted Image Restoration and Analysis
Images degraded by geometric distortions pose a significant challenge to imaging and computer vision tasks such as object recognition. Deep learning-based imaging models usually fail to give accurate performance for geometrically distorted images. In this paper, we propose the deformation-invariant neural network (DINN), a framework to address the problem of imaging tasks for geometrically distorted images. The DINN outputs consistent latent features for images that are geometrically distorted but represent the same underlying object or scene. The idea of DINN is to incorporate a simple component, called the quasiconformal transformer network (QCTN), into other existing deep networks for imaging tasks. The QCTN is a deep neural network that outputs a quasiconformal map, which can be used to transform a geometrically distorted image into an improved version that is closer to the distribution of natural or good images. It first outputs a Beltrami coefficient, which measures the quasiconformality of the output deformation map. By controlling the Beltrami coefficient, the local geometric distortion under the quasiconformal mapping can be controlled. The QCTN is lightweight and simple, which can be readily integrated into other existing deep neural networks to enhance their performance. Leveraging our framework, we have developed an image classification network that achieves accurate classification of distorted images. Our proposed framework has been applied to restore geometrically distorted images by atmospheric turbulence and water turbulence. DINN outperforms existing GAN-based restoration methods under these scenarios, demonstrating the effectiveness of the proposed framework. Additionally, we apply our proposed framework to the 1-1 verification of human face images under atmospheric turbulence and achieve satisfactory performance, further demonstrating the efficacy of our approach.
♻ ☆ LHM++: An Efficient Large Human Reconstruction Model for Pose-free Images to 3D
Reconstructing animatable 3D humans from casually captured images of articulated subjects without camera or pose information is highly practical but remains challenging due to view misalignment, occlusions, and the absence of structural priors. In this work, we present LHM++, an efficient large-scale human reconstruction model that generates high-quality, animatable 3D avatars within seconds from one or multiple pose-free images. At its core is an Encoder-Decoder Point-Image Transformer architecture that progressively encodes and decodes 3D geometric point features to improve efficiency, while fusing hierarchical 3D point features with image features through multimodal attention. The fused features are decoded into 3D Gaussian splats to recover detailed geometry and appearance. To further enhance visual fidelity, we introduce a lightweight 3D-aware neural animation renderer that refines the rendering quality of reconstructed avatars in real time. Extensive experiments show that our method produces high-fidelity, animatable 3D humans without requiring camera or pose annotations. Our code and project page are available at https://lingtengqiu.github.io/LHM++/
comment: HomePage: https://lingtengqiu.github.io/LHM++/ Online Demo: https://huggingface.co/spaces/Lingteng/LHMPP
♻ ☆ SVG360: Multi-View SVG Generation with Geometric and Color Consistency from a Single SVG
Scalable Vector Graphics (SVGs) are central to modern design workflows, offering scaling without distortion and precise editability. However, for single object SVGs, generating multi-view consistent SVGs from a single-view input remains underexplored. We present a three stage framework that produces multi-view SVGs with geometric and color consistency from a single SVG input. First, the rasterized input is lifted to a 3D representation and rendered under target camera poses, producing multi-view images of the object. Next, we extend the temporal memory mechanism of Segment Anything 2 (SAM2) to the spatial domain, constructing a spatial memory bank that establishes part level correspondences across neighboring views, yielding cleaner and more consistent vector paths and color assignments without retraining. Finally, during the raster to vector conversion, we perform path consolidation and structural optimization to reduce redundancy while preserving boundaries and semantics. The resulting SVGs exhibit strong geometric and color consistency across views, significantly reduce redundant paths, and retain fine structural details. This work bridges generative modeling and structured vector representation, providing a scalable route to single input, object level multi-view SVG generation and supporting applications such as asset creation and semantic vector editing.
comment: 10 pages, 4 figures. Preprint
♻ ☆ ECHO: Ego-Centric modeling of Human-Object interactions
Modeling human-object interactions (HOI) from an egocentric perspective is a critical yet challenging task, particularly when relying on sparse signals from wearable devices like smart glasses and watches. We present ECHO, the first unified framework to jointly recover human pose, object motion, and contact dynamics solely from head and wrist tracking. To tackle the underconstrained nature of this problem, we introduce a novel tri-variate diffusion process with independent noise schedules that models the mutual dependencies between the human, object, and interaction modalities. This formulation allows ECHO to operate with flexible input configurations, making it robust to intermittent tracking and capable of leveraging partial observations. Crucially, it enables training on a combination of large-scale human motion datasets and smaller HOI collections, learning strong priors while capturing interaction nuances. Furthermore, we employ a smooth inpainting inference mechanism that enables the generation of temporally consistent interactions for arbitrarily long sequences. Extensive evaluations demonstrate that ECHO achieves state-of-the-art performance, significantly outperforming existing methods lacking such flexibility.
♻ ☆ MultiTask Learning AI system to assist BCC diagnosis with dual explanation
Basal cell carcinoma (BCC) accounts for about 75% of skin cancers. The adoption of teledermatology protocols in Spanish public hospitals has increased dermatologists' workload, motivating the development of AI tools for lesion prioritization. However, limited transparency in current systems hinders clinical acceptance. This study proposes an AI system for BCC detection from dermoscopic images that integrates dermatologist diagnostic criteria based on specific dermoscopic patterns. We analyzed 1559 dermoscopic images from 60 primary care centers annotated by four dermatologists for seven BCC patterns. An Expectation-Maximization consensus algorithm was used to build a unified standard reference. A multitask learning model based on MobileNet-V2 was developed to classify lesions and identify clinically relevant patterns, supported by Grad-CAM visual explanations. The system achieved 90% accuracy in BCC classification (precision 0.90, recall 0.89). Clinically relevant BCC patterns were correctly detected in 99% of positive cases, and the pigment network exclusion criterion was satisfied in 95% of non-BCC cases. Grad-CAM maps showed strong spatial agreement with dermatologist-defined regions. The proposed system combines accurate BCC detection with transparent pattern-based explanations, helping bridge the gap between AI performance and clinical trust in teledermatology.
comment: 23 pages, 4 figures, 5 tables, under review in Scientific Reports
♻ ☆ PhysMoDPO: Physically-Plausible Humanoid Motion with Preference Optimization
Recent progress in text-conditioned human motion generation has been largely driven by diffusion models trained on large-scale human motion data. Building on this progress, recent methods attempt to transfer such models for character animation and real robot control by applying a Whole-Body Controller (WBC) that converts diffusion-generated motions into executable trajectories. While WBC trajectories become compliant with physics, they may expose substantial deviations from original motion. To address this issue, we here propose PhysMoDPO, a Direct Preference Optimization framework. Unlike prior work that relies on hand-crafted physics-aware heuristics such as foot-sliding penalties, we integrate WBC into our training pipeline and optimize diffusion model such that the output of WBC becomes compliant both with physics and original text instructions. To train PhysMoDPO we deploy physics-based and task-specific rewards and use them to assign preference to synthesized trajectories. Our extensive experiments on text-to-motion and spatial control tasks demonstrate consistent improvements of PhysMoDPO in both physical realism and task-related metrics on simulated robots. Moreover, we demonstrate that PhysMoDPO results in significant improvements when applied to zero-shot motion transfer in simulation and for real-world deployment on a G1 humanoid robot.
comment: Project page: https://mael-zys.github.io/PhysMoDPO/
♻ ☆ An Implemention of Two-Phase Image Segmentation using the Split Bregman Method
In this paper, we describe an implementation of the two-phase image segmentation algorithm proposed by Goldstein, Bresson, Osher in \cite{gold:bre}. This algorithm partitions the domain of a given 2d image into foreground and background regions, and each pixel of the image is assigned membership to one of these two regions. The underlying assumption for the segmentation model is that the pixel values of the input image can be summarized by two distinct average values, and that the region boundaries are smooth. Accordingly, the model is defined as an energy in which the variable is a region membership function to assign pixels to either region, originally proposed by Chan and Vese in \cite{chan:vese}. This energy is the sum of image data terms in the regions and a length penalty for region boundaries. Goldstein, Bresson, Osher modify the energy of Chan-Vese in \cite{gold:bre} so that their new energy can be minimized efficiently using the split Bregman method to produce an equivalent two-phase segmentation. We provide a detailed implementation of this method \cite{gold:bre}, and document its performance with several images over a range of algorithm parameters.
comment: 15 pages
♻ ☆ Skyfall-GS: Synthesizing Immersive 3D Urban Scenes from Satellite Imagery
Synthesizing large-scale, explorable, and geometrically accurate 3D urban scenes is a challenging yet valuable task for immersive and embodied applications. The challenge lies in the lack of large-scale and high-quality real-world 3D scans for training generalizable generative models. In this paper, we take an alternative route to create large-scale 3D scenes by leveraging readily available satellite imagery for realistic coarse geometry and open-domain diffusion models for high-quality close-up appearance synthesis. We propose Skyfall-GS, a novel hybrid framework that synthesizes immersive city-block scale 3D urban scenes by combining satellite reconstruction with diffusion refinement, eliminating the need for costly 3D annotations, and also featuring real-time, immersive 3D exploration. We tailor a curriculum-driven iterative refinement strategy to progressively enhance geometric completeness and photorealistic texture. Extensive experiments demonstrate that Skyfall-GS provides improved cross-view consistent geometry and more realistic textures compared to state-of-the-art approaches. Project page: https://skyfall-gs.jayinnn.dev/
comment: Project page: https://skyfall-gs.jayinnn.dev/
♻ ☆ sim2art: Accurate Articulated Object Modeling from a Single Video using Synthetic Training Data Only
Understanding articulated objects from monocular video is a crucial yet challenging task in robotics and digital twin creation. Existing methods often rely on complex multi-view setups, high-fidelity object scans, or fragile long-term point tracks that frequently fail in casual real-world captures. In this paper, we present sim2art, a data-driven framework that recovers the 3D part segmentation and joint parameters of articulated objects from a single monocular video captured by a freely moving camera. Our core insight is a robust representation based on per-frame surface point sampling, which we augment with short-term scene flow and DINOv3 semantic features. Unlike previous works that depend on error-prone long-term correspondences, our representation is easy to obtain and exhibits a negligible difference between simulation and reality without requiring domain adaptation. Also, by construction, our method relies on single-viewpoint visibility, ensuring that the geometric representation remains consistent across synthetic and real data despite noise and occlusions. Leveraging a suitable Transformer-based architecture, sim2art is trained exclusively on synthetic data yet generalizes strongly to real-world sequences. To address the lack of standardized benchmarks in the field, we introduce two datasets featuring a significantly higher diversity of object categories and instances than prior work. Our evaluations show that sim2art effectively handles large camera motions and complex articulations, outperforming state-of-the-art optimization-based and tracking-dependent methods. sim2art offers a scalable solution that can be easily extended to new object categories without the need for cumbersome real-world annotations. Project webpage: https://aartykov.github.io/sim2art/
♻ ☆ The COTe score: A decomposable framework for evaluating Document Layout Analysis models
Document Layout analysis (DLA), is the process by which a page is parsed into meaningful elements, often using machine learning models. Typically, the quality of a model is judged using general object detection metrics such as IoU, F1 or mAP. However, these metrics are designed for images that are 2D projections of 3D space, not for the natively 2D imagery of printed media. This discrepancy can result in misleading or uninformative interpretation of model performance by the metrics. To encourage more robust, comparable, and nuanced DLA, we introduce: The Structural Semantic Unit (SSU) a relational labelling approach that shifts the focus from the physical to the semantic structure of the content; and the Coverage, Overlap, Trespass, and Excess (COTe) score, a decomposable metric for measuring page parsing quality. We demonstrate the value of these methods through case studies and by evaluating 5 common DLA models on 3 DLA datasets. We show that the COTe score is more informative than traditional metrics and reveals distinct failure modes across models, such as breaching semantic boundaries or repeatedly parsing the same region. In addition, the COTe score reduces the interpretation-performance gap by up to 76% relative to the F1. Notably, we find that the COTe's granularity robustness largely holds even without explicit SSU labelling, lowering the barriers to entry for using the system. Finally, we release an SSU labelled dataset and a Python library for applying COTe in DLA projects.
comment: 6906 words, 4 Figures, 10 Tables,
♻ ☆ UP2You: Fast Reconstruction of Yourself from Unconstrained Photo Collections
We present UP2You, the first tuning-free solution for reconstructing high-fidelity 3D clothed portraits from extremely unconstrained in-the-wild 2D photos. Unlike previous approaches that require "clean" inputs (e.g., full-body images with minimal occlusions, or well-calibrated cross-view captures), UP2You directly processes raw, unstructured photographs, which may vary significantly in pose, viewpoint, cropping, and occlusion. Instead of compressing data into tokens for slow online text-to-3D optimization, we introduce a data rectifier paradigm that efficiently converts unconstrained inputs into clean, orthogonal multi-view images in a single forward pass within seconds, simplifying the 3D reconstruction. Central to UP2You is a pose-correlated feature aggregation module (PCFA), that selectively fuses information from multiple reference images w.r.t. target poses, enabling better identity preservation and nearly constant memory footprint, with more observations. We also introduce a perceiver-based multi-reference shape predictor, removing the need for pre-captured body templates. Extensive experiments on 4D-Dress, PuzzleIOI, and in-the-wild captures demonstrate that UP2You consistently surpasses previous methods in both geometric accuracy (Chamfer-15%, P2S-18% on PuzzleIOI) and texture fidelity (PSNR-21%, LPIPS-46% on 4D-Dress). UP2You is efficient (1.5 minutes per person), and versatile (supports arbitrary pose control, and training-free multi-garment 3D virtual try-on), making it practical for real-world scenarios where humans are casually captured. Both models and code will be released to facilitate future research on this underexplored task. Project Page: https://zcai0612.github.io/UP2You
comment: Page: https://zcai0612.github.io/UP2You Code: https://github.com/zcai0612/UP2You
♻ ☆ A Tri-Modal Dataset and a Baseline System for Tracking Unmanned Aerial Vehicles
With the proliferation of low altitude unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), visual multi-object tracking is becoming a critical security technology, demanding significant robustness even in complex environmental conditions. However, tracking UAVs using a single visual modality often fails in challenging scenarios, such as low illumination, cluttered backgrounds, and rapid motion. Although multi-modal multi-object UAV tracking is more resilient, the development of effective solutions has been hindered by the absence of dedicated public datasets. To bridge this gap, we release MM-UAV, the first large-scale benchmark for Multi-Modal UAV Tracking, integrating three key sensing modalities, e.g. RGB, infrared (IR), and event signals. The dataset spans over 30 challenging scenarios, with 1,321 synchronised multi-modal sequences, and more than 2.8 million annotated frames. Accompanying the dataset, we provide a novel multi-modal multi-UAV tracking framework, designed specifically for UAV tracking applications and serving as a baseline for future research. Our framework incorporates two key technical innovations, e.g. an offset-guided adaptive alignment module to resolve spatio mismatches across sensors, and an adaptive dynamic fusion module to balance complementary information conveyed by different modalities. Furthermore, to overcome the limitations of conventional appearance modelling in multi-object tracking, we introduce an event-enhanced association mechanism that leverages motion cues from the event modality for more reliable identity maintenance. Comprehensive experiments demonstrate that the proposed framework consistently outperforms state-of-the-art methods. To foster further research in multi-modal UAV tracking, both the dataset and source code will be made publicly available at https://xuefeng-zhu5.github.io/MM-UAV/.
♻ ☆ Boosting Latent Diffusion Models via Disentangled Representation Alignment
Latent Diffusion Models (LDMs) rely heavily on the compressed latent space provided by Variational Autoencoders (VAEs) for high-quality image generation. Recent studies have attempted to obtain generation-friendly VAEs by directly adopting alignment strategies from LDM training, leveraging Vision Foundation Models (VFMs) as representation alignment targets. However, such alignment paradigms overlook the fundamental differences in representational requirements between LDMs and VAEs. Simple feature mapping from local patches to high-dimensional semantics can induce semantic collapse, leading to the loss of fine-grained attributes. In this paper, we reveal a key insight: unlike LDMs that benefit from high-level global semantics, a generation-friendly VAE must possess strong semantic disentanglement capabilities to preserve fine-grained, attribute-level information in a structured manner. To address this discrepancy, we propose the Semantic-Disentangled VAE (Send-VAE). Deviating from previous shallow alignment approaches, Send-VAE introduces a non-linear mapping architecture to effectively bridge the local structures of VAEs and the dense semantics of VFMs, thereby encouraging emergent disentangled properties in the latent space without explicit regularization. Extensive experiments establish a new paradigm for evaluating VAE latent spaces via low-level attribute separability and demonstrate that Send-VAE achieves state-of-the-art generation quality (FID of 1.21) on ImageNet 256x256.
♻ ☆ Deep Learning-based Event Data Coding: A Joint Spatiotemporal and Polarity Solution
Neuromorphic vision sensors, commonly referred to as event cameras, generate a massive number of pixel-level events, composed by spatiotemporal and polarity information, thus demanding highly efficient coding solutions. Existing solutions focus on lossless coding of event data, assuming that no distortion is acceptable for the target use cases, mostly including computer vision tasks such as classification and recognition. One promising coding approach exploits the similarity between event data and point clouds, both being sets of 3D points, thus allowing to use current point cloud coding solutions to code event data, typically adopting a two-point clouds representation, one for each event polarity. This paper proposes a novel lossy Deep Learning-based Joint Event data Coding (DL-JEC) solution, which adopts for the first time a single-point cloud representation, where the event polarity plays the role of a point cloud attribute, thus enabling to exploit the correlation between the geometry/spatiotemporal and polarity event information. Moreover, this paper also proposes novel adaptive voxel binarization strategies which may be used in DL-JEC, optimized for either quality-oriented or computer vision task-oriented purposes which allow to maximize the performance for the task at hand. DL-JEC can achieve significant compression performance gains when compared with relevant conventional and DL-based state-of-the-art event data coding solutions, notably the MPEG G-PCC and JPEG Pleno PCC standards. Furthermore, it is shown that it is possible to use lossy event data coding, with significantly reduced rate regarding lossless coding, without compromising the target computer vision task performance, notably event classification, thus changing the current event data coding paradigm.
♻ ☆ CoD: A Diffusion Foundation Model for Image Compression CVPR 2026
Existing diffusion codecs typically build on text-to-image diffusion foundation models like Stable Diffusion. However, text conditioning is suboptimal from a compression perspective, hindering the potential of downstream diffusion codecs, particularly at ultra-low bitrates. To address it, we introduce \textbf{CoD}, the first \textbf{Co}mpression-oriented \textbf{D}iffusion foundation model, trained from scratch to enable end-to-end optimization of both compression and generation. CoD is not a fixed codec but a general foundation model designed for various diffusion-based codecs. It offers several advantages: \textbf{High compression efficiency}, replacing Stable Diffusion with CoD in downstream codecs like DiffC achieves SOTA results, especially at ultra-low bitrates (e.g., 0.0039 bpp); \textbf{Low-cost and reproducible training}, 300$\times$ faster training than Stable Diffusion ($\sim$ 20 vs. $\sim$ 6,250 A100 GPU days) on entirely open image-only datasets; \textbf{Providing new insights}, e.g., We find pixel-space diffusion can achieve VTM-level PSNR with high perceptual quality and can outperform GAN-based codecs using fewer parameters. We hope CoD lays the foundation for future diffusion codec research. Codes are released at https://github.com/microsoft/GenCodec/tree/main/CoD.
comment: Accepted at CVPR 2026
♻ ☆ Revisiting Face Forgery Detection: From Facial Representation to Forgery Detection
Face Forgery Detection (FFD), or Deepfake detection, aims to determine whether a digital face is real or fake. Due to different face synthesis algorithms with diverse forgery patterns, FFD models often overfit specific patterns in training datasets, resulting in poor generalization to other unseen forgeries. Existing FFD methods primarily leverage pre-trained backbones with general image representation capabilities and fine-tune them to identify facial forgery cues. However, these backbones lack domain-specific facial knowledge and insufficiently capture complex facial features, thus hindering effective implicit forgery cue identification and limiting generalization. Therefore, it is essential to revisit FFD workflow across the \textit{pre-training} and \textit{fine-tuning} stages, achieving an elaborate integration from facial representation to forgery detection to improve generalization. Specifically, we develop an FFD-specific pre-trained backbone with superior facial representation capabilities through self-supervised pre-training on real faces. We then propose a competitive fine-tuning framework that stimulates the backbone to identify implicit forgery cues through a competitive learning mechanism. Moreover, we devise a threshold optimization mechanism that utilizes prediction confidence to improve the inference reliability. Comprehensive experiments demonstrate that our method achieves excellent performance in FFD and extra face-related tasks, \ie, presentation attack detection. Code and models are available at \href{https://github.com/zhenglab/FFDBackbone}{https://github.com/zhenglab/FFDBackbone}.
♻ ☆ Collaborating Vision, Depth, and Thermal Signals for Multi-Modal Tracking: Dataset and Algorithm
Existing multi-modal object tracking approaches primarily focus on dual-modal paradigms, such as RGB-Depth or RGB-Thermal, yet remain challenged in complex scenarios due to limited input modalities. To address this gap, this work introduces a novel multi-modal tracking task that leverages three complementary modalities, including visible RGB, Depth (D), and Thermal Infrared (TIR), aiming to enhance robustness in complex scenarios. To support this task, we construct a new multi-modal tracking dataset, coined RGBDT500, which consists of 500 videos with synchronised frames across the three modalities. Each frame provides spatially aligned RGB, depth, and thermal infrared images with precise object bounding box annotations. Furthermore, we propose a novel multi-modal tracker, dubbed RDTTrack. RDTTrack integrates tri-modal information for robust tracking by leveraging a pretrained RGB-only tracking model and prompt learning techniques. In specific, RDTTrack fuses thermal infrared and depth modalities under a proposed orthogonal projection constraint, then integrates them with RGB signals as prompts for the pre-trained foundation tracking model, effectively harmonising tri-modal complementary cues. The experimental results demonstrate the effectiveness and advantages of the proposed method, showing significant improvements over existing dual-modal approaches in terms of tracking accuracy and robustness in complex scenarios. The dataset and source code are publicly available at https://xuefeng-zhu5.github.io/RGBDT500.
♻ ☆ Ultralytics YOLO Evolution: An Overview of YOLO26, YOLO11, YOLOv8 and YOLOv5 Object Detectors for Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition
This paper presents a comprehensive overview of the Ultralytics YOLO(You Only Look Once) family of object detectors, focusing the architectural evolution, benchmarking, deployment perspectives, and future challenges. The review begins with the most recent release, YOLO26 (or YOLOv26), which introduces key innovations including Distribution Focal Loss (DFL) removal, native NMS-free inference, Progressive Loss Balancing (ProgLoss), Small-Target-Aware Label Assignment (STAL), and the MuSGD optimizer for stable training. The progression is then traced through YOLO11, with its hybrid task assignment and efficiency-focused modules; YOLOv8, which advanced with a decoupled detection head and anchor-free predictions; and YOLOv5, which established the modular PyTorch foundation that enabled modern YOLO development. Benchmarking on the MS COCO dataset provides a detailed quantitative comparison of YOLOv5, YOLOv8, YOLO11, and YOLO26 (YOLOv26), alongside cross-comparisons with YOLOv12, YOLOv13, RT-DETR, and DEIM(DETR with Improved Matching). Metrics including precision, recall, F1 score, mean Average Precision, and inference speed are analyzed to highlight trade-offs between accuracy and efficiency. Deployment and application perspectives are further discussed, covering export formats, quantization strategies, and real-world use in robotics, agriculture, surveillance, and manufacturing. Finally, the paper identifies challenges and future directions, including dense-scene limitations, hybrid CNN-Transformer integration, open-vocabulary detection, and edge-aware training approaches. (Object Detection, YOLOv26, YOLO)
♻ ☆ YOLO26: Key Architectural Enhancements and Performance Benchmarking for Real-Time Object Detection
This study presents a comprehensive analysis of Ultralytics YOLO26(also called as YOLOv26), highlighting its key architectural enhancements and performance benchmarking for real-time object detection. YOLO26, released in September 2025, stands as the newest and most advanced member of the YOLO family, purpose-built to deliver efficiency, accuracy, and deployment readiness on edge and low-power devices. The paper sequentially details architectural innovations of YOLO26, including the removal of Distribution Focal Loss (DFL), adoption of end-to-end NMS-free inference, integration of ProgLoss and Small-Target-Aware Label Assignment (STAL), and the introduction of the MuSGD optimizer for stable convergence. Beyond architecture, the study positions YOLO26 as a multi-task framework, supporting object detection, instance segmentation, pose/keypoints estimation, oriented detection, and classification. We present performance benchmarks of YOLO26 on edge devices such as NVIDIA Jetson Nano and Orin, comparing its results with YOLOv8, YOLOv11, YOLOv12, YOLOv13, and transformer-based detectors(RF-DETR and RT-DETR). This paper further explores real-time deployment pathways, flexible export options (ONNX, TensorRT, CoreML, TFLite), and quantization for INT8/FP16. Practical use cases of YOLO26 across robotics, manufacturing, and IoT are highlighted to demonstrate cross-industry adaptability. Finally, insights on deployment efficiency and broader implications are discussed, with future directions for YOLO26 and the YOLO lineage outlined.
♻ ☆ GeoMotionGPT: Geometry-Aligned Motion Understanding with Large Language Models
Discrete motion tokenization has recently enabled Large Language Models (LLMs) to serve as versatile backbones for motion understanding and motion-language reasoning. However, existing pipelines typically decouple motion quantization from semantic embedding learning, linking them solely via token IDs. This approach fails to effectively align the intrinsic geometry of the motion space with the embedding space, thereby hindering the LLM's capacity for nuanced motion reasoning. We argue that alignment is most effective when both modalities share a unified geometric basis. Therefore, instead of forcing the LLM to reconstruct the complex geometry among motion tokens from scratch, we present a novel framework that explicitly enforces orthogonality on both the motion codebook and the LLM embedding space, ensuring that their relational structures naturally mirror each other. Specifically, we employ a decoder-only quantizer with Gumbel-Softmax for differentiable training and balanced codebook usage. To bridge the modalities, we use a sparse projection that maps motion codes into the LLM embedding space while preserving orthogonality. Finally, a two-stage orthonormal regularization schedule enforces soft constraints during tokenizer training and LLM fine-tuning to maintain geometric alignment without hindering semantic adaptation. Extensive experiments show that our framework improves the aggregated Average by 22.4% over the strongest baseline on HumanML3D and by 14.4% on KIT-ML, while ablations confirm the effectiveness of the tokenizer, projection, and regularization designs.
♻ ☆ Diverse Text-to-Image Generation via Contrastive Noise Optimization ICLR 2026
Text-to-image (T2I) diffusion models have demonstrated impressive performance in generating high-fidelity images, largely enabled by text-guided inference. However, this advantage often comes with a critical drawback: limited diversity, as outputs tend to collapse into similar modes under strong text guidance. Existing approaches typically optimize intermediate latents or text conditions during inference, but these methods deliver only modest gains or remain sensitive to hyperparameter tuning. In this work, we introduce Contrastive Noise Optimization, a simple yet effective method that addresses the diversity issue from a distinct perspective. Unlike prior techniques that adapt intermediate latents, our approach shapes the initial noise to promote diverse outputs. Specifically, we develop a contrastive loss defined in the Tweedie data space and optimize a batch of noise latents. Our contrastive optimization repels instances within the batch to maximize diversity while keeping them anchored to a reference sample to preserve fidelity. We further provide theoretical insights into the mechanism of this preprocessing to substantiate its effectiveness. Extensive experiments across multiple T2I backbones demonstrate that our approach achieves a superior quality-diversity Pareto frontier while remaining robust to hyperparameter choices.
comment: Accepted to ICLR 2026
♻ ☆ From Evaluation to Defense: Advancing Safety in Video Large Language Models ICLR 2026
While the safety risks of image-based large language models (Image LLMs) have been extensively studied, their video-based counterparts (Video LLMs) remain critically under-examined. To systematically study this problem, we introduce VideoSafetyEval - a large-scale, real-world benchmark for Video LLM safety, which comprises 11.4k video-query pairs and spans 19 principal risk categories. Based on this, we reveal that integrating video modality degrades safety performance by an average of 34.2%, thereby exposing systemic risks in multimodal attack exploitation. To address this vulnerability, we propose VideoSafety-R1, a dual-stage framework achieving unprecedented safety gains through three innovations: (1) the VideoSafetyThinking dataset contains 46k video-query-thinking response triplets; (2) Alarm Token-Guided Safety Fine-Tuning (AT-SFT) injects learnable alarm tokens into visual and textual sequences, enabling explicit harm perception across modalities via multitask objectives; and (3) safety-guided GRPO enhances defensive reasoning through dynamic policy optimization with rule-based rewards derived from dual-modality verification. These components synergize to shift safety alignment from harm perception to active reasoning. The framework achieves a 71.1% improvement on VSE-HH, and improves by 59.1%, 44.3%, and 15.0% on the image safety datasets MMBench, VLGuard, and FigStep, respectively. Our code and dataset are available at https://github.com/Emiya-syw/VideoSafety-R1.git. Note: This paper contains harmful language and image examples, and reader discretion is recommended.
comment: Accepted at ICLR 2026
♻ ☆ SKEL-CF: Coarse-to-Fine Biomechanical Skeleton and Surface Mesh Recovery
Parametric 3D human models such as SMPL have driven significant advances in human pose and shape estimation, yet their simplified kinematics limit biomechanical realism. The recently proposed SKEL model addresses this limitation by re-rigging SMPL with an anatomically accurate skeleton. However, estimating SKEL parameters directly remains challenging due to limited training data, perspective ambiguities, and the inherent complexity of human articulation. We introduce SKEL-CF, a coarse-to-fine framework for SKEL parameter estimation. SKEL-CF employs a transformer-based encoder-decoder architecture, where the encoder predicts coarse camera and SKEL parameters, and the decoder progressively refines them in successive layers. To ensure anatomically consistent supervision, we convert the existing SMPL-based dataset 4DHuman into a SKEL-aligned version, 4DHuman-SKEL, providing high-quality training data for SKEL estimation. In addition, to mitigate depth and scale ambiguities, we explicitly incorporate camera modeling into the SKEL-CF pipeline and demonstrate its importance across diverse viewpoints. Extensive experiments validate the effectiveness of the proposed design. On the challenging MOYO dataset, SKEL-CF achieves 85.0 MPJPE / 51.4 PA-MPJPE, significantly outperforming the previous SKEL-based state-of-the-art HSMR (104.5 / 79.6). These results establish SKEL-CF as a scalable and anatomically faithful framework for human motion analysis, facilitating the use of computer vision techniques in biomechanics-related analysis. Our implementation is available on the project page: https://pokerman8.github.io/SKEL-CF/.
comment: Project page: https://pokerman8.github.io/SKEL-CF/
♻ ☆ RAG-3DSG: Enhancing 3D Scene Graphs with Re-Shot Guided Retrieval-Augmented Generation
Open-vocabulary 3D Scene Graph (3DSG) can enhance various downstream tasks in robotics by leveraging structured semantic representations, yet current 3DSG construction methods suffer from semantic inconsistencies caused by noisy cross-image aggregation under occlusions and constrained viewpoints. To mitigate the impact of such inconsistency, we propose RAG-3DSG, which introduces re-shot guided uncertainty estimation. By measuring the semantic consistency between original limited viewpoints and re-shot optimal viewpoints, this method quantifies the underlying semantic ambiguity of each graph object. Based on this quantification, we devise an Object-level Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG) that leverages low-uncertainty objects as semantic anchors to retrieve more reliable contextual knowledge, enabling a Vision-Language Model to rectify the predictions of uncertain objects and optimize the final 3DSG. Extensive evaluations across three challenging benchmarks and real-world robot trials demonstrate that RAG-3DSG achieves superior recall and precision, effectively mitigating semantic noise to provide highly reliable scene representations for robotics tasks.
♻ ☆ BLINK: Behavioral Latent Modeling of NK Cell Cytotoxicity
Machine learning models of cellular interaction dynamics hold promise for understanding cell behavior. Natural killer (NK) cell cytotoxicity is a prominent example of such interaction dynamics and is commonly studied using time-resolved multi-channel fluorescence microscopy. Although tumor cell death events can be annotated at single frames, NK cytotoxic outcome emerges over time from cellular interactions and cannot be reliably inferred from frame-wise classification alone. We introduce BLINK, a trajectory-based recurrent state-space model that serves as a cell world model for NK-tumor interactions. BLINK learns latent interaction dynamics from partially observed NK-tumor interaction sequences and predicts apoptosis increments that accumulate into cytotoxic outcomes. Experiments on long-term time-lapse NK-tumor recordings show improved cytotoxic outcome detection and enable forecasting of future outcomes, together with an interpretable latent representation that organizes NK trajectories into coherent behavioral modes and temporally structured interaction phases. BLINK provides a unified framework for quantitative evaluation and structured modeling of NK cytotoxic behavior at the single-cell level.
♻ ☆ QD-PCQA: Quality-Aware Domain Adaptation for Point Cloud Quality Assessment CVPR 2026
No-Reference Point Cloud Quality Assessment (NR-PCQA) still struggles with generalization, primarily due to the scarcity of annotated point cloud datasets. Since the Human Visual System (HVS) drives perceptual quality assessment independently of media types, prior knowledge on quality learned from images can be repurposed for point clouds. This insight motivates adopting Unsupervised Domain Adaptation (UDA) to transfer quality-relevant priors from labeled images to unlabeled point clouds. However, existing UDA-based PCQA methods often overlook key characteristics of perceptual quality, such as sensitivity to quality ranking and quality-aware feature alignment, thereby limiting their effectiveness. To address these issues, we propose a novel Quality-aware Domain adaptation framework for PCQA, termed QD-PCQA. The framework comprises two main components: i) a Rank-weighted Conditional Alignment (RCA) strategy that aligns features under consistent quality levels and adaptively emphasizes misranked samples to reinforce perceptual quality ranking awareness; and ii) a Quality-guided Feature Augmentation (QFA) strategy, which includes quality-guided style mixup, multi-layer extension, and dual-domain augmentation modules to augment perceptual feature alignment. Extensive cross-domain experiments demonstrate that QD-PCQA significantly improves generalization in NR-PCQA tasks.
comment: Accepted by CVPR 2026
♻ ☆ Towards Balanced Multi-Modal Learning in 3D Human Pose Estimation CVPR 2026
3D human pose estimation (3D HPE) has emerged as a prominent research topic, particularly in the realm of RGB-based methods. However, the use of RGB images is often limited by issues such as occlusion and privacy constraints. Consequently, multi-modal sensing, which leverages non-intrusive sensors, is gaining increasing attention. Nevertheless, multi-modal 3D HPE still faces challenges, including modality imbalance. In this work, we introduce a novel balanced multi-modal learning method for 3D HPE, which harnesses the power of RGB, LiDAR, mmWave, and WiFi. Specifically, we propose a Shapley value-based contribution algorithm to assess the contribution of each modality and detect modality imbalance. To address this imbalance, we design a modality learning regulation strategy that decelerates the learning process during the early stages of training. We conduct extensive experiments on the widely adopted multi-modal dataset, MM-Fi, demonstrating the superiority of our approach in enhancing 3D pose estimation under complex conditions. Our source code is available at https://github.com/MICLAB-BUPT/AWC.
comment: Accepted by CVPR 2026
♻ ☆ CLAIM: Camera-LiDAR Alignment with Intensity and Monodepth IROS 2025
In this paper, we unleash the potential of the powerful monodepth model in camera-LiDAR calibration and propose CLAIM, a novel method of aligning data from the camera and LiDAR. Given the initial guess and pairs of images and LiDAR point clouds, CLAIM utilizes a coarse-to-fine searching method to find the optimal transformation minimizing a patched Pearson correlation-based structure loss and a mutual information-based texture loss. These two losses serve as good metrics for camera-LiDAR alignment results and require no complicated steps of data processing, feature extraction, or feature matching like most methods, rendering our method simple and adaptive to most scenes. We validate CLAIM on public KITTI, Waymo, and MIAS-LCEC datasets, and the experimental results demonstrate its superior performance compared with the state-of-the-art methods. The code is available at https://github.com/Tompson11/claim.
comment: Accepted by IROS 2025
♻ ☆ Track-On2: Enhancing Online Point Tracking with Memory
In this paper, we consider the problem of long-term point tracking, which requires consistent identification of points across video frames under significant appearance changes, motion, and occlusion. We target the online setting, i.e. tracking points frame-by-frame, making it suitable for real-time and streaming applications. We extend our prior model Track-On into Track-On2, a simple and efficient transformer-based model for online long-term tracking. Track-On2 improves both performance and efficiency through architectural refinements, more effective use of memory, and improved synthetic training strategies. Unlike prior approaches that rely on full-sequence access or iterative updates, our model processes frames causally and maintains temporal coherence via a memory mechanism, which is key to handling drift and occlusions without requiring future frames. At inference, we perform coarse patch-level classification followed by refinement. Beyond architecture, we systematically study synthetic training setups and their impact on memory behavior, showing how they shape temporal robustness over long sequences. Through comprehensive experiments, Track-On2 achieves state-of-the-art results across five synthetic and real-world benchmarks, surpassing prior online trackers and even strong offline methods that exploit bidirectional context. These results highlight the effectiveness of causal, memory-based architectures trained purely on synthetic data as scalable solutions for real-world point tracking. Project page: https://kuis-ai.github.io/track_on2
comment: TPAMI 2026
♻ ☆ Benchmarking Semantic Segmentation Models via Appearance and Geometry Attribute Editing
Semantic segmentation takes pivotal roles in various applications such as autonomous driving and medical image analysis. When deploying segmentation models in practice, it is critical to test their behaviors in varied and complex scenes in advance. In this paper, we construct an automatic data generation pipeline Gen4Seg to stress-test semantic segmentation models by generating various challenging samples with different attribute changes. Beyond previous evaluation paradigms focusing solely on global weather and style transfer, we investigate variations in both appearance and geometry attributes at the object and image level. These include object color, material, size, position, as well as image-level variations such as weather and style. To achieve this, we propose to edit visual attributes of existing real images with precise control of structural information, empowered by diffusion models. In this way, the existing segmentation labels can be reused for the edited images, which greatly reduces the labor costs. Using our pipeline, we construct two new benchmarks, Pascal-EA and COCO-EA. We benchmark a wide variety of semantic segmentation models, spanning from closed-set models to open-vocabulary large models. We have several key findings: 1) advanced open-vocabulary models do not exhibit greater robustness compared to closed-set methods under geometric variations; 2) data augmentation techniques, such as CutOut and CutMix, are limited in enhancing robustness against appearance variations; 3) our pipeline can also be employed as a data augmentation tool and improve both in-distribution and out-of-distribution performances. Our work suggests the potential of generative models as effective tools for automatically analyzing segmentation models, and we hope our findings will assist practitioners and researchers in developing more robust and reliable segmentation models.
comment: Accepted to IEEE TPAMI 2026
♻ ☆ Omni-Captioner: Data Pipeline, Models, and Benchmark for Omni Detailed Perception ICLR2026
Fine-grained perception of multimodal information is critical for advancing human-AI interaction. With recent progress in audio-visual technologies, Omni Language Models (OLMs), capable of processing audio and video signals in parallel, have emerged as a promising paradigm for achieving richer understanding and reasoning. However, their capacity to capture and describe fine-grained details remains limited explored. In this work, we present a systematic and comprehensive investigation of omni detailed perception from the perspectives of the data pipeline, models, and benchmark. We first identify an inherent "co-growth" between detail and hallucination in current OLMs. To address this, we propose Omni-Detective, an agentic data generation pipeline integrating tool-calling, to autonomously produce highly detailed yet minimally hallucinatory multimodal data. Based on the data generated with Omni-Detective, we train two captioning models: Audio-Captioner for audio-only detailed perception, and Omni-Captioner for audio-visual detailed perception. Under the cascade evaluation protocol, Audio-Captioner achieves the best performance on MMAU and MMAR among all open-source models, surpassing Gemini 2.5 Flash and delivering performance comparable to Gemini 2.5 Pro. On existing detailed captioning benchmarks, Omni-Captioner sets a new state-of-the-art on VDC and achieves the best trade-off between detail and hallucination on the video-SALMONN 2 testset. Given the absence of a dedicated benchmark for omni detailed perception, we design Omni-Cloze, a novel cloze-style evaluation for detailed audio, visual, and audio-visual captioning that ensures stable, efficient, and reliable assessment. Experimental results and analysis demonstrate the effectiveness of Omni-Detective in generating high-quality detailed captions, as well as the superiority of Omni-Cloze in evaluating such detailed captions.
comment: Accepted by ICLR2026. Open Source at https://github.com/ddlBoJack/Omni-Captioner
♻ ☆ Beyond Words: Enhancing Desire, Emotion, and Sentiment Recognition with Non-Verbal Cues WWW 2026
Multimodal desire understanding, a task closely related to both emotion and sentiment that aims to infer human intentions from visual and textual cues, is an emerging yet underexplored task in affective computing with applications in social media analysis. Existing methods for related tasks predominantly focus on mining verbal cues, often overlooking the effective utilization of non-verbal cues embedded in images. To bridge this gap, we propose a Symmetrical Bidirectional Multimodal Learning Framework for Desire, Emotion, and Sentiment Recognition (SyDES). The core of SyDES is to achieve bidirectional fine-grained modal alignment between text and image modalities. Specifically, we introduce a mixed-scaled image strategy that combines global context from low-resolution images with fine-grained local features via masked image modeling (MIM) on high-resolution sub-images, effectively capturing intention-related visual representations. Then, we devise symmetrical cross-modal decoders, including a text-guided image decoder and an image-guided text decoder, which enable mutual reconstruction and refinement between modalities, facilitating deep cross-modal interaction. Furthermore, a set of dedicated loss functions is designed to harmonize potential conflicts between the MIM and modal alignment objectives during optimization. Extensive evaluations on the MSED benchmark demonstrate the superiority of our approach, which establishes a new state-of-the-art performance with 1.1% F1-score improvement in desire understanding. Consistent gains in emotion and sentiment recognition further validate its generalization ability and the necessity of utilizing non-verbal cues. Our code is available at: https://github.com/especiallyW/SyDES.
comment: Accepted by WWW 2026
♻ ☆ Live Avatar: Streaming Real-time Audio-Driven Avatar Generation with Infinite Length
Audio-driven avatar interaction demands real-time, streaming, and infinite-length generation -- capabilities fundamentally at odds with the sequential denoising and long-horizon drift of current diffusion models. We present Live Avatar, an algorithm-system co-designed framework that addresses both challenges for a 14-billion-parameter diffusion model. On the algorithm side, a two-stage pipeline distills a pretrained bidirectional model into a causal, few-step streaming one, while a set of complementary long-horizon strategies eliminate identity drift and visual artifacts, enabling stable autoregressive generation exceeding 10000 seconds. On the system side, Timestep-forcing Pipeline Parallelism (TPP) assigns each GPU a fixed denoising timestep, converting the sequential diffusion chain into an asynchronous spatial pipeline that simultaneously boosts throughput and improves temporal consistency. Live Avatar achieves 45 FPS with a TTFF of 1.21\,s on 5 H800 GPUs, and to our knowledge is the first to enable practical real-time streaming of a 14B diffusion model for infinite-length avatar generation. We further introduce GenBench, a standardized long-form benchmark, to facilitate reproducible evaluation. Our project page is at https://liveavatar.github.io/.
♻ ☆ Embedding Compression via Spherical Coordinates ICLR 2026
We present a compression method for unit-norm embeddings that achieves 1.5$\times$ compression, 25% better than the best prior lossless method. The method exploits that spherical coordinates of high-dimensional unit vectors concentrate around $π/2$, causing IEEE 754 exponents to collapse to a single value and high-order mantissa bits to become predictable, enabling entropy coding of both. Reconstruction error is below 1e-7, under float32 machine epsilon. Evaluation across 26 configurations spanning text, image, and multi-vector embeddings confirms consistent improvement.
comment: Accepted at ICLR 2026 Workshop on Geometry-grounded Representation Learning and Generative Modeling (GRaM). 13 pages, 2 figures. Code: https://github.com/jina-ai/jzip
♻ ☆ Unsupervised Source-Free Ranking of Biomedical Segmentation Models Under Distribution Shift
Model reuse offers a solution to the challenges of segmentation in biomedical imaging, where high data annotation costs remain a major bottleneck for deep learning. However, although many pretrained models are released through challenges, model zoos, and repositories, selecting the most suitable model for a new dataset remains difficult due to the lack of reliable model ranking methods. We introduce the first black-box-compatible framework for unsupervised and source-free ranking of semantic and instance segmentation models based on the consistency of predictions under perturbations. While ranking methods have been studied for classification and a few segmentation-related approaches exist, most target related tasks such as transferability estimation or model validation and typically rely on labelled data, feature-space access, or specific training assumptions. In contrast, our method directly addresses the repository setting and applies to both semantic and instance segmentation, for zero-shot reuse or after unsupervised domain adaptation. We evaluate the approach across a wide range of biomedical segmentation tasks in both 2D and 3D imaging, showing that our estimated rankings strongly correlate with true target-domain model performance rankings.
comment: 15 pages, 4 figures
♻ ☆ Benchmarking Deep Learning and Vision Foundation Models for Atypical vs. Normal Mitosis Classification with Cross-Dataset Evaluation
Atypical mitosis marks a deviation in the cell division process that has been shown be an independent prognostic marker for tumor malignancy. However, atypical mitosis classification remains challenging due to low prevalence, at times subtle morphological differences from normal mitotic figures, low inter-rater agreement among pathologists, and class imbalance in datasets. Building on the Atypical Mitosis dataset for Breast Cancer (AMi-Br), this study presents a comprehensive benchmark comparing deep learning approaches for automated atypical mitotic figure (AMF) classification, including end-to-end trained deep learning models, foundation models with linear probing, and foundation models fine-tuned with low-rank adaptation (LoRA). For rigorous evaluation, we further introduce two new held-out AMF datasets - AtNorM-Br, a dataset of mitotic figures from the TCGA breast cancer cohort, and AtNorM-MD, a multi-domain dataset of mitotic figures from a subset of the MIDOG++ training set. We found average balanced accuracy values of up to 0.8135, 0.7788, and 0.7723 on the in-domain AMi-Br and the out-of-domain AtNorm-Br and AtNorM-MD datasets, respectively. Our work shows that atypical mitotic figure classification, while being a challenging problem, can be effectively addressed through the use of recent advances in transfer learning and model fine-tuning techniques. We make all code and data used in this paper available in this github repository: https://github.com/DeepMicroscopy/AMi-Br_Benchmark.
♻ ☆ AGE-Net: Spectral--Spatial Fusion and Anatomical Graph Reasoning with Evidential Ordinal Regression for Knee Osteoarthritis Grading
Automated Kellgren--Lawrence (KL) grading from knee radiographs is challenging due to subtle structural changes, long-range anatomical dependencies, and ambiguity near grade boundaries. We propose AGE-Net, a ConvNeXt-based framework that integrates Spectral--Spatial Fusion (SSF), Anatomical Graph Reasoning (AGR), and Differential Refinement (DFR). To capture predictive uncertainty and preserve label ordinality, AGE-Net employs a Normal-Inverse-Gamma (NIG) evidential regression head and a pairwise ordinal ranking constraint. On a knee KL dataset, AGE-Net achieves a quadratic weighted kappa (QWK) of 0.9017 +/- 0.0045 and a mean squared error (MSE) of 0.2349 +/- 0.0028 over three random seeds, outperforming strong CNN baselines and showing consistent gains in ablation studies. We further outline evaluations of uncertainty quality, robustness, and explainability, with additional experimental figures to be included in the full manuscript.
♻ ☆ Generative Visual Chain-of-Thought for Image Editing
Existing image editing methods struggle to perceive where to edit, especially under complex scenes and nuanced spatial instructions. To address this issue, we propose Generative Visual Chain-of-Thought (GVCoT), a unified framework that performs native visual reasoning by first generating spatial cues to localize the target region and then executing the edit. Unlike prior text-only CoT or tool-dependent visual CoT paradigms, GVCoT jointly optimizes visual tokens generated during the reasoning and editing phases in an end-to-end manner. This way fosters the emergence of innate spatial reasoning ability and enables more effective utilization of visual-domain cues. The main challenge of training GCVoT lies in the scarcity of large-scale editing data with precise edit region annotations; to this end, we construct GVCoT-Edit-Instruct, a dataset of 1.8M high-quality samples spanning 19 tasks. We adopt a progressive training strategy: supervised fine-tuning to build foundational localization ability in reasoning trace before final editing, followed by reinforcement learning to further improve reasoning and editing quality. Finally, we introduce SREdit-Bench, a new benchmark designed to comprehensively stress-test models under sophisticated scenes and fine-grained referring expressions. Experiments demonstrate that GVCoT consistently outperforms state-of-the-art models on SREdit-Bench and ImgEdit. We hope our GVCoT will inspire future research toward interpretable and precise image editing.
comment: Project page: https://pris-cv.github.io/GVCoT/
♻ ☆ Rationale-Enhanced Decoding for Multi-modal Chain-of-Thought CVPR 2026
Large vision-language models (LVLMs) have demonstrated remarkable capabilities by integrating pre-trained vision encoders with large language models (LLMs). Similar to single-modal LLMs, chain-of-thought (CoT) prompting has been adapted for LVLMs to enhance multi-modal reasoning by generating intermediate rationales based on visual and textual inputs. While CoT is assumed to improve grounding and accuracy in LVLMs, our experiments reveal a key challenge: existing LVLMs often ignore the contents of generated rationales in CoT reasoning. To address this, we re-formulate multi-modal CoT reasoning as a KL-constrained reward maximization focused on rationale-conditional log-likelihood. As the optimal solution, we propose rationale-enhanced decoding (RED), a novel plug-and-play inference-time decoding strategy. RED harmonizes visual and rationale information by multiplying distinct image-conditional and rationale-conditional next token distributions. Extensive experiments show that RED consistently and significantly improves reasoning over standard CoT and other decoding methods across multiple benchmarks and LVLMs. Our work offers a practical and effective approach to improve both the faithfulness and accuracy of CoT reasoning in LVLMs, paving the way for more reliable rationale-grounded multi-modal systems. Code is available at https://github.com/yshinya6/red/.
comment: Accepted to CVPR 2026 (Main); Code is available at https://github.com/yshinya6/red/
♻ ☆ Open-World Motion Forecasting
Motion forecasting aims to predict the future trajectories of dynamic agents in the scene, enabling autonomous vehicles to effectively reason about scene evolution. Existing approaches operate under the closed-world regime and assume fixed object taxonomy as well as access to high-quality perception. Therefore, they struggle in real-world settings where perception is imperfect and object taxonomy evolves over time. In this work, we bridge this fundamental gap by introducing open-world motion forecasting, a novel setting in which new object classes are sequentially introduced over time and future object trajectories are estimated directly from camera images. We tackle this setting by proposing the first end-to-end class-incremental motion forecasting framework to mitigate catastrophic forgetting while simultaneously learning to forecast newly introduced classes. When a new class is introduced, our framework employs a pseudo-labeling strategy to first generate motion forecasting pseudo-labels for all known classes which are then processed by a vision-language model to filter inconsistent and over-confident predictions. Parallelly, our approach further mitigates catastrophic forgetting by using a novel replay sampling strategy that leverages query feature variance to sample previous sequences with informative motion patterns. Extensive evaluation on the nuScenes and Argoverse 2 datasets demonstrates that our approach successfully resists catastrophic forgetting and maintains performance on previously learned classes while improving adaptation to novel ones. Further, we demonstrate that our approach supports zero-shot transfer to real-world driving and naturally extends to end-to-end class-incremental planning, enabling continual adaptation of the full autonomous driving system. We provide the code at https://omen.cs.uni-freiburg.de.
comment: V2: Adapt author affiliation
♻ ☆ Frame Sampling Strategies Matter: A Benchmark for small vision language models
Comparing vision language models on videos is particularly complex, as the performances is jointly determined by the model's visual representation capacity and the frame-sampling strategy used to construct the input. Current video benchmarks are suspected to suffer from substantial frame-sampling bias, as models are evaluated with different frame selection strategies. In this work, we propose the first frame-accurate benchmark of state-of-the-art small VLMs for video question-answering, evaluated under controlled frame-sampling strategies. Our results confirm the suspected bias and highlight both data-specific and task-specific behaviors of SVLMs under different frame-sampling techniques. By open-sourcing our benchmarking code, we provide the community with a reproducible and unbiased protocol for evaluating video VLMs and emphasize the need for standardized frame-sampling strategies tailored to each benchmarking dataset in future research.
♻ ☆ SoliReward: Mitigating Susceptibility to Reward Hacking and Annotation Noise in Video Generation Reward Models
Post-training alignment of video generation models with human preferences is a critical goal. Developing effective Reward Models (RMs) for this process faces significant methodological hurdles. Current data collection paradigms, reliant on in-prompt pairwise annotations, suffer from labeling noise. Concurrently, the architectural design of VLM-based RMs, particularly their output mechanisms, remains underexplored. Furthermore, RM is susceptible to reward hacking in post-training. To mitigate these limitations, we propose SoliReward, a systematic framework for video RM training. Our framework first sources high-quality, cost-efficient data via single-item binary annotations, then constructs preference pairs using a cross-prompt pairing strategy. Architecturally, we employ a Hierarchical Progressive Query Attention mechanism to enhance feature aggregation. Finally, we introduce a modified BT loss that explicitly accommodates win-tie scenarios. This approach regularizes the RM's score distribution for positive samples, providing more nuanced preference signals to alleviate over-focus on a small number of top-scoring samples. Our approach is validated on benchmarks evaluating physical plausibility, subject deformity, and semantic alignment, demonstrating improvements in direct RM evaluation metrics and in the efficacy of post-training on video generation models. Code and benchmark are available at https://github.com/lian700/SoliReward.
comment: 16 pages, 9 figures
♻ ☆ Curing Semantic Drift: A Dynamic Approach to Grounding Generation in Large Vision-Language Models
Large Vision-Language Models (LVLMs) face a tug-of-war between powerful linguistic priors and visual evidence, often leading to \emph{semantic drift}: a progressive detachment from the input image that can abruptly emerge at specific decoding steps. Through a token-level diagnosis, we show that hallucination is frequently triggered not by the absence of grounded candidates, but by a failure of selection -- the model chooses a linguistically convenient yet visually unfaithful token even when better grounded alternatives exist. Motivated by this insight, we propose \textbf{D}ynamic \textbf{L}ogits \textbf{C}alibration (DLC), a training-free decoding framework that introduces a lightweight visual referee to intervene exactly when drift happens. At each step, DLC performs a dual-aspect grounding check on top-$k$ candidates: (1) it assesses the intrinsic visual relevance of a candidate token and (2) its contextual visual coherence. These signals are evaluated against an adaptive historical baseline to compute a relative visual advantage, which is then used to dynamically calibrate logits and favor grounded tokens. Extensive experiments on CHAIR, POPE, SHR, GPT-4o evaluation, and MME demonstrate that DLC consistently reduces hallucinations across multiple LVLMs while preserving response quality. Further analyses validate robustness to different vision backbones and demonstrate a favorable trade-off between output quality and computational cost as the candidate pool size varies. Code will be released on https://github.com/JiaheChen2002/DLC.
♻ ☆ Fixed Anchors Are Not Enough: Dynamic Retrieval and Persistent Homology for Dataset Distillation CVPR 2026
Decoupled dataset distillation (DD) compresses large corpora into a few synthetic images by matching a frozen teacher's statistics. However, current residual-matching pipelines rely on static real patches, creating a fit-complexity gap and a pull-to-anchor effect that reduce intra-class diversity and hurt generalization. To address these issues, we introduce RETA -- a Retrieval and Topology Alignment framework for decoupled DD. First, Dynamic Retrieval Connection (DRC) selects a real patch from a prebuilt pool by minimizing a fit-complexity score in teacher feature space; the chosen patch is injected via a residual connection to tighten feature fit while controlling injected complexity. Second, Persistent Topology Alignment (PTA) regularizes synthesis with persistent homology: we build a mutual k-NN feature graph, compute persistence images of components and loops, and penalize topology discrepancies between real and synthetic sets, mitigating pull-to-anchor effect. Across CIFAR-100, Tiny-ImageNet, ImageNet-1K, and multiple ImageNet subsets, RETA consistently outperforms various baselines under comparable time and memory, especially reaching 64.3% top-1 accuracy on ImageNet-1K with ResNet-18 at 50 images per class, +3.1% over the best prior.
comment: Accepted by CVPR 2026
♻ ☆ MSGNav: Unleashing the Power of Multi-modal 3D Scene Graph for Zero-Shot Embodied Navigation CVPR 2026
Embodied navigation is a fundamental capability for robotic agents operating. Real-world deployment requires open vocabulary generalization and low training overhead, motivating zero-shot methods rather than task-specific RL training. However, existing zero-shot methods that build explicit 3D scene graphs often compress rich visual observations into text-only relations, leading to high construction cost, irreversible loss of visual evidence, and constrained vocabularies. To address these limitations, we introduce the Multi-modal 3D Scene Graph (M3DSG), which preserves visual cues by replacing textual relational edges with dynamically assigned images. Built on M3DSG, we propose MSGNav, a zero-shot navigation system that includes a Key Subgraph Selection module for efficient reasoning, an Adaptive Vocabulary Update module for open vocabulary support, and a Closed-Loop Reasoning module for accurate exploration reasoning. Additionally, we further identify the last mile problem in zero-shot navigation determining the feasible target location with a suitable final viewpoint, and propose a Visibility-based Viewpoint Decision module to explicitly resolve it. Comprehensive experimental results demonstrate that MSGNav achieves state-of-the-art performance on the challenging GOAT-Bench and HM3D-ObjNav benchmark. The code will be publicly available at https://github.com/ylwhxht/MSGNav.
comment: 18 pages, Accepted by CVPR 2026
♻ ☆ VGGT-Long: Chunk it, Loop it, Align it -- Pushing VGGT's Limits on Kilometer-scale Long RGB Sequences ICRA 2026
Foundation models for 3D vision have recently demonstrated remarkable capabilities in 3D perception. However, extending these models to large-scale RGB stream 3D reconstruction remains challenging due to memory limitations. In this work, we propose VGGT-Long, a simple yet effective system that pushes the limits of monocular 3D reconstruction to kilometer-scale, unbounded outdoor environments. Our approach addresses the scalability bottlenecks of existing models through a chunk-based processing strategy combined with overlapping alignment and lightweight loop closure optimization. Without requiring camera calibration, depth supervision or model retraining, VGGT-Long achieves trajectory and reconstruction performance comparable to traditional methods. We evaluate our method on KITTI, Waymo, and Virtual KITTI datasets. VGGT-Long not only runs successfully on long RGB sequences where foundation models typically fail, but also produces accurate and consistent geometry across various conditions. Our results highlight the potential of leveraging foundation models for scalable monocular 3D scene in real-world settings, especially for autonomous driving scenarios. Code is available at https://github.com/DengKaiCQ/VGGT-Long.
comment: IEEE International Conference on Robotics & Automation (ICRA 2026)
♻ ☆ BackdoorIDS: Zero-shot Backdoor Detection for Pretrained Vision Encoder
Self-supervised and multimodal vision encoders learn strong visual representations that are widely adopted in downstream vision tasks and large vision-language models (LVLMs). However, downstream users often rely on third-party pretrained encoders with uncertain provenance, exposing them to backdoor attacks. In this work, we propose BackdoorIDS, a simple yet effective zero-shot, inference-time backdoor samples detection method for pretrained vision encoders. BackdoorIDS is motivated by two observations: Attention Hijacking and Restoration. Under progressive input masking, a backdoored image initially concentrates attention on malicious trigger features. Once the masking ratio exceeds the trigger's robustness threshold, the trigger is deactivated, and attention rapidly shifts to benign content. This transition induces a pronounced change in the image embedding, whereas embeddings of clean images evolve more smoothly across masking progress. BackdoorIDS operationalizes this signal by extracting an embedding sequence along the masking trajectory and applying density-based clustering such as DBSCAN. An input is flagged as backdoored if its embedding sequence forms more than one cluster. Extensive experiments show that BackdoorIDS consistently outperforms existing defenses across diverse attack types, datasets, and model families. Notably, it is a plug-and-play approach that requires no retraining and operates fully zero-shot at inference time, making it compatible with a wide range of encoder architectures, including CNNs, ViTs, CLIP, and LLaVA-1.5.
comment: 17 pages, 10 figures, 6 tables
♻ ☆ Self-Classification Enhancement and Correction for Weakly Supervised Object Detection IJCAI 2025
In recent years, weakly supervised object detection (WSOD) has attracted much attention due to its low labeling cost. The success of recent WSOD models is often ascribed to the two-stage multi-class classification (MCC) task, i.e., multiple instance learning and online classification refinement. Despite achieving non-trivial progresses, these methods overlook potential classification ambiguities between these two MCC tasks and fail to leverage their unique strengths. In this work, we introduce a novel WSOD framework to ameliorate these two issues. For one thing, we propose a self-classification enhancement module that integrates intra-class binary classification (ICBC) to bridge the gap between the two distinct MCC tasks. The ICBC task enhances the network's discrimination between positive and mis-located samples in a class-wise manner and forges a mutually reinforcing relationship with the MCC task. For another, we propose a self-classification correction algorithm during inference, which combines the results of both MCC tasks to effectively reduce the mis-classified predictions. Extensive experiments on the prevalent VOC 2007 & 2012 datasets demonstrate the superior performance of our framework.
comment: Accepted by IJCAI 2025
Information Retrieval
☆ Financial Transaction Retrieval and Contextual Evidence for Knowledge-Grounded Reasoning
Nowadays, success of financial organizations heavily depends on their ability to process digital traces generated by their clients, e.g., transaction histories, gathered from various sources to improve user modeling pipelines. As general-purpose LLMs struggle with time-distributed tabular data, production stacks still depend on specialized tabular and sequence models with limited transferability and need for labeled data. To address this, we introduce FinTRACE, a retrieval-first architecture that converts raw transactions into reusable feature representations, applies rule-based detectors, and stores the resulting signals in a behavioral knowledge base with graded associations to the objectives of downstream tasks. Across public and industrial benchmarks, FinTRACE substantially improves low-supervision transaction analytics, doubling zero-shot MCC on churn prediction performance from 0.19 to 0.38 and improving 16-shot MCC from 0.25 to 0.40. We further use FinTRACE to ground LLMs via instruction tuning on retrieved behavioral patterns, achieving state-of-the-art LLM results on transaction analytics problems.
☆ Estimating Absolute Web Crawl Coverage From Longitudinal Set Intersections
Web archives preserve portions of the web, but quantifying their completeness remains challenging. Prior approaches have estimated the coverage of a crawl by either comparing the outcomes of multiple crawlers, or by comparing the results of a single crawl to external ground truth datasets. We propose a method to estimate the absolute coverage of a crawl using only the archive's own longitudinal data, i.e., the data collected by multiple subsequent crawls. Our key insight is that coverage can be estimated from the empirical URL overlaps between subsequent crawls, which are in turn well described by a simple urn process. The parameters of the urn model can then be inferred from longitudinal crawl data using linear regression. Applied to our focused crawl configuration of the German Academic Web, with 15 semi-annual crawls between 2013-2021, we find a coverage of approximately 46 percent of the crawlable URL space for the stable crawl configuration regime. Our method is extremely simple, requires no external ground truth, and generalizes to any longitudinal focused crawl.
☆ Multi-Scenario User Profile Construction via Recommendation Lists
Recommender systems (RS) play a core role in various domains, including business analytics, helping users and companies make appropriate decisions. To optimize service quality, related technologies focus on constructing user profiles by analyzing users' historical behavior information. This paper considers four analytical scenarios to evaluate user profiling capabilities under different information conditions. A generic user attribute analysis framework named RAPI is proposed, which infers users' personal characteristics by exploiting easily accessible recommendation lists. Specifically, a surrogate recommendation model is established to simulate the original model, leveraging content embedding from a pre-trained BERT model to obtain item embeddings. A sample augmentation module generates extended recommendation lists by considering similarity between model outputs and item embeddings. Finally, an adaptive weight classification model assigns dynamic weights to facilitate user characteristic inference. Experiments on four collections show that RAPI achieves inference accuracy of 0.764 and 0.6477, respectively.
☆ OrgForge: A Multi-Agent Simulation Framework for Verifiable Synthetic Corporate Corpora
Evaluating retrieval-augmented generation (RAG) pipelines requires corpora where ground truth is knowable, temporally structured, and cross-artifact properties that real-world datasets rarely provide cleanly. Existing resources such as the Enron corpus carry legal ambiguity, demographic skew, and no structured ground truth. Purely LLM-generated synthetic data solves the legal problem but introduces a subtler one: the generating model cannot be prevented from hallucinating facts that contradict themselves across documents.We present OrgForge, an open-source multi-agent simulation framework that enforces a strict physics-cognition boundary: a deterministic Python engine maintains a SimEvent ground truth bus; large language models generate only surface prose, constrained by validated proposals. An actor-local clock enforces causal timestamp correctness across all artifact types, eliminating the class of timeline inconsistencies that arise when timestamps are sampled independently per document. We formalize three graph-dynamic subsystems stress propagation via betweenness centrality, temporal edge-weight decay, and Dijkstra escalation routing that govern organizational behavior independently of any LLM. Running a configurable N-day simulation, OrgForge produces interleaved Slack threads, JIRA tickets, Confluence pages, Git pull requests, and emails, all traceable to a shared, immutable event log. We additionally describe a causal chain tracking subsystem that accumulates cross-artifact evidence graphs per incident, a hybrid reciprocal-rank-fusion recurrence detector for identifying repeated failure classes, and an inbound/outbound email engine that routes vendor alerts, customer complaints, and HR correspondence through gated causal chains with probabilistic drop simulation. OrgForge is available under the MIT license.
☆ Mitigating KG Quality Issues: A Robust Multi-Hop GraphRAG Retrieval Framework
Graph Retrieval-Augmented Generation enhances multi-hop reasoning but relies on imperfect knowledge graphs that frequently suffer from inherent quality issues. Current approaches often overlook these issues, consequently struggling with retrieval drift driven by spurious noise and retrieval hallucinations stemming from incomplete information. To address these challenges, we propose C2RAG (Constraint-Checked Retrieval-Augmented Generation), a framework aimed at robust multi-hop retrieval over the imperfect KG. First, C2RAG performs constraint-based retrieval by decomposing each query into atomic constraint triples, with using fine-grained constraint anchoring to filter candidates for suppressing retrieval drift. Second, C2RAG introduces a sufficiency check to explicitly prevent retrieval hallucinations by deciding whether the current evidence is sufficient to justify structural propagation, and activating textual recovery otherwise. Extensive experiments on multi-hop benchmarks demonstrate that C2RAG consistently outperforms the latest baselines by 3.4\% EM and 3.9\% F1 on average, while exhibiting improved robustness under KG issues.
☆ Temporal Fact Conflicts in LLMs: Reproducibility Insights from Unifying DYNAMICQA and MULAN
Large Language Models (LLMs) often struggle with temporal fact conflicts due to outdated or evolving information in their training data. Two recent studies with accompanying datasets report opposite conclusions on whether external context can effectively resolve such conflicts. DYNAMICQA evaluates how effective external context is in shifting the model's output distribution, finding that temporal facts are more resistant to change. In contrast, MULAN examines how often external context changes memorised facts, concluding that temporal facts are easier to update. In this reproducibility paper, we first reproduce experiments from both benchmarks. We then reproduce the experiments of each study on the dataset of the other to investigate the source of their disagreement. To enable direct comparison of findings, we standardise both datasets to align with the evaluation settings of each study. Importantly, using an LLM, we synthetically generate realistic natural language contexts to replace MULAN's programmatically constructed statements when reproducing the findings of DYNAMICQA. Our analysis reveals strong dataset dependence: MULAN's findings generalise under both methodological frameworks, whereas applying MULAN's evaluation to DYNAMICQA yields mixed outcomes. Finally, while the original studies only considered 7B LLMs, we reproduce these experiments across LLMs of varying sizes, revealing how model size influences the encoding and updating of temporal facts. Our results highlight how dataset design, evaluation metrics, and model size shape LLM behaviour in the presence of temporal knowledge conflicts.
☆ MiroThinker-1.7 & H1: Towards Heavy-Duty Research Agents via Verification
We present MiroThinker-1.7, a new research agent designed for complex long-horizon reasoning tasks. Building on this foundation, we further introduce MiroThinker-H1, which extends the agent with heavy-duty reasoning capabilities for more reliable multi-step problem solving. In particular, MiroThinker-1.7 improves the reliability of each interaction step through an agentic mid-training stage that emphasizes structured planning, contextual reasoning, and tool interaction. This enables more effective multi-step interaction and sustained reasoning across complex tasks. MiroThinker-H1 further incorporates verification directly into the reasoning process at both local and global levels. Intermediate reasoning decisions can be evaluated and refined during inference, while the overall reasoning trajectory is audited to ensure that final answers are supported by coherent chains of evidence. Across benchmarks covering open-web research, scientific reasoning, and financial analysis, MiroThinker-H1 achieves state-of-the-art performance on deep research tasks while maintaining strong results on specialized domains. We also release MiroThinker-1.7 and MiroThinker-1.7-mini as open-source models, providing competitive research-agent capabilities with significantly improved efficiency.
comment: 23 pages
☆ Embedding-Aware Feature Discovery: Bridging Latent Representations and Interpretable Features in Event Sequences
Industrial financial systems operate on temporal event sequences such as transactions, user actions, and system logs. While recent research emphasizes representation learning and large language models, production systems continue to rely heavily on handcrafted statistical features due to their interpretability, robustness under limited supervision, and strict latency constraints. This creates a persistent disconnect between learned embeddings and feature-based pipelines. We introduce Embedding-Aware Feature Discovery (EAFD), a unified framework that bridges this gap by coupling pretrained event-sequence embeddings with a self-reflective LLM-driven feature generation agent. EAFD iteratively discovers, evaluates, and refines features directly from raw event sequences using two complementary criteria: \emph{alignment}, which explains information already encoded in embeddings, and \emph{complementarity}, which identifies predictive signals missing from them. Across both open-source and industrial transaction benchmarks, EAFD consistently outperforms embedding-only and feature-based baselines, achieving relative gains of up to $+5.8\%$ over state-of-the-art pretrained embeddings, resulting in new state-of-the-art performance across event-sequence datasets.
☆ Knowledge Graph Extraction from Biomedical Literature for Alkaptonuria Rare Disease
Alkaptonuria (AKU) is an ultra-rare autosomal recessive metabolic disorder caused by mutations in the HGD (Homogentisate 1,2-Dioxygenase) gene, leading to a pathological accumulation of homogentisic acid (HGA) in body fluids and tissues. This leads to systemic manifestations, including premature spondyloarthropathy, renal and prostatic stones, and cardiovascular complications. Being ultra-rare, the amount of data related to the disease is limited, both in terms of clinical data and literature. Knowledge graphs (KGs) can help connect the limited knowledge about the disease (basic mechanisms, manifestations and existing therapies) with other knowledge; however, AKU is frequently underrepresented or entirely absent in existing biomedical KGs. In this work, we apply a text-mining methodology based on PubTator3 for large-scale extraction of biomedical relations. We construct two KGs of different sizes, validate them using existing biochemical knowledge and use them to extract genes, diseases and therapies possibly related to AKU. This computational framework reveals the systemic interactions of the disease, its comorbidities, and potential therapeutic targets, demonstrating the efficacy of our approach in analyzing rare metabolic disorders.
♻ ☆ MultiTask Learning AI system to assist BCC diagnosis with dual explanation
Basal cell carcinoma (BCC) accounts for about 75% of skin cancers. The adoption of teledermatology protocols in Spanish public hospitals has increased dermatologists' workload, motivating the development of AI tools for lesion prioritization. However, limited transparency in current systems hinders clinical acceptance. This study proposes an AI system for BCC detection from dermoscopic images that integrates dermatologist diagnostic criteria based on specific dermoscopic patterns. We analyzed 1559 dermoscopic images from 60 primary care centers annotated by four dermatologists for seven BCC patterns. An Expectation-Maximization consensus algorithm was used to build a unified standard reference. A multitask learning model based on MobileNet-V2 was developed to classify lesions and identify clinically relevant patterns, supported by Grad-CAM visual explanations. The system achieved 90% accuracy in BCC classification (precision 0.90, recall 0.89). Clinically relevant BCC patterns were correctly detected in 99% of positive cases, and the pigment network exclusion criterion was satisfied in 95% of non-BCC cases. Grad-CAM maps showed strong spatial agreement with dermatologist-defined regions. The proposed system combines accurate BCC detection with transparent pattern-based explanations, helping bridge the gap between AI performance and clinical trust in teledermatology.
comment: 23 pages, 4 figures, 5 tables, under review in Scientific Reports
♻ ☆ The Wisdom of Many Queries: Complexity-Diversity Principle for Dense Retriever Training
Synthetic query generation has become essential for training dense retrievers, yet prior methods generate one query per document, focusing solely on query quality. We are the first to systematically study multi-query synthesis and discover a quality-diversity trade-off: high-quality queries benefit in-domain tasks, while diverse queries benefit out-of-domain (OOD) generalization. Through controlled experiments on 4 benchmark types across Contriever, RetroMAE, and Qwen3-Embedding, we find that diversity benefit strongly correlates with query complexity (r$\geq$0.95, p<0.05), approximated by content words (CW). We formalize this as the Complexity-Diversity Principle (CDP): query complexity determines optimal diversity. Based on CDP, we propose complexity-aware training: multi-query synthesis for high-complexity tasks and CW-weighted training for existing data. Both strategies improve OOD performance on reasoning-intensive benchmarks, with compounded gains when combined.
comment: Under review
♻ ☆ Unsupervised Corpus Poisoning Attacks in Continuous Space for Dense Retrieval SIGIR 2025
This paper concerns corpus poisoning attacks in dense information retrieval, where an adversary attempts to compromise the ranking performance of a search algorithm by injecting a small number of maliciously generated documents into the corpus. Our work addresses two limitations in the current literature. First, attacks that perform adversarial gradient-based word substitution search do so in the discrete lexical space, while retrieval itself happens in the continuous embedding space. We thus propose an optimization method that operates in the embedding space directly. Specifically, we train a perturbation model with the objective of maintaining the geometric distance between the original and adversarial document embeddings, while also maximizing the token-level dissimilarity between the original and adversarial documents. Second, it is common for related work to have a strong assumption that the adversary has prior knowledge about the queries. In this paper, we focus on a more challenging variant of the problem where the adversary assumes no prior knowledge about the query distribution (hence, unsupervised). Our core contribution is an adversarial corpus attack that is fast and effective. We present comprehensive experimental results on both in- and out-of-domain datasets, focusing on two related tasks: a top-1 attack and a corpus poisoning attack. We consider attacks under both a white-box and a black-box setting. Notably, our method can generate successful adversarial examples in under two minutes per target document; four times faster compared to the fastest gradient-based word substitution methods in the literature with the same hardware. Furthermore, our adversarial generation method generates text that is more likely to occur under the distribution of natural text (low perplexity), and is therefore more difficult to detect.
comment: This paper has been accepted as a full paper at SIGIR 2025 and will be presented orally
♻ ☆ Nested Music Transformer: Sequentially Decoding Compound Tokens in Symbolic Music and Audio Generation
Representing symbolic music with compound tokens, where each token consists of several different sub-tokens representing a distinct musical feature or attribute, offers the advantage of reducing sequence length. While previous research has validated the efficacy of compound tokens in music sequence modeling, predicting all sub-tokens simultaneously can lead to suboptimal results as it may not fully capture the interdependencies between them. We introduce the Nested Music Transformer (NMT), an architecture tailored for decoding compound tokens autoregressively, similar to processing flattened tokens, but with low memory usage. The NMT consists of two transformers: the main decoder that models a sequence of compound tokens and the sub-decoder for modeling sub-tokens of each compound token. The experiment results showed that applying the NMT to compound tokens can enhance the performance in terms of better perplexity in processing various symbolic music datasets and discrete audio tokens from the MAESTRO dataset.
comment: Accepted at 25th International Society for Music Information Retrieval Conference (ISMIR 2024)
♻ ☆ Beyond Final Answers: CRYSTAL Benchmark for Transparent Multimodal Reasoning Evaluation
We introduce CRYSTAL (Clear Reasoning via Yielded Steps, Traceability, and Logic), a diagnostic benchmark with 6,372 instances that evaluates multimodal reasoning through verifiable intermediate steps. We propose two complementary metrics: Match F1, which scores step-level precision and recall via semantic similarity matching, and Ordered Match F1, which further penalizes disordered reasoning chains. References are constructed through a Delphi-inspired pipeline in which four independent MLLMs generate trajectories, which are then aggregated via semantic clustering and validated through human quality gates. Evaluation of 20 MLLMs, including commercial frontier systems not used during benchmark construction, reveals systematic failures that are invisible to answer accuracy: universal cherry-picking (precision far exceeds recall), non-monotonic scaling trade-offs, and disordered reasoning in which no competitive model preserves more than 60% of matched steps in the correct order. Beyond evaluation, we propose the Causal Process Reward (CPR), a multiplicative reward that couples answer correctness with step-level alignment, and CPR-Curriculum, which progressively increases reasoning difficulty during training. CPR-Curriculum achieves a 32% improvement in Match F1 via GRPO where additive reward strategies fail, improving reasoning without manual step annotation.
Machine Learning
☆ HorizonMath: Measuring AI Progress Toward Mathematical Discovery with Automatic Verification
Can AI make progress on important, unsolved mathematical problems? Large language models are now capable of sophisticated mathematical and scientific reasoning, but whether they can perform novel research is still widely debated and underexplored. We introduce HorizonMath, a benchmark of over 100 predominantly unsolved problems spanning 8 domains in computational and applied mathematics, paired with an open-source evaluation framework for automated verification. Our benchmark targets a class of problems where discovery is hard, requiring meaningful mathematical insight, but verification is computationally efficient and simple. Because these solutions are unknown, HorizonMath is immune to data contamination, and most state-of-the-art models score near 0%. Existing research-level benchmarks instead rely on formal proof verification or manual review, both of which are expensive to scale. Using this platform, we find two problems for which GPT 5.4 Pro proposes solutions that improve on the best-known published results, representing potential novel contributions (pending expert review). We release HorizonMath as an open challenge and a growing community resource, where correct solutions to problems in the unsolved problem classes could constitute novel results in the mathematical literature.
☆ SmartSearch: How Ranking Beats Structure for Conversational Memory Retrieval
Recent conversational memory systems invest heavily in LLM-based structuring at ingestion time and learned retrieval policies at query time. We show that neither is necessary. SmartSearch retrieves from raw, unstructured conversation history using a fully deterministic pipeline: NER-weighted substring matching for recall, rule-based entity discovery for multi-hop expansion, and a CrossEncoder+ColBERT rank fusion stage -- the only learned component -- running on CPU in ~650ms. Oracle analysis on two benchmarks identifies a compilation bottleneck: retrieval recall reaches 98.6%, but without intelligent ranking only 22.5% of gold evidence survives truncation to the token budget. With score-adaptive truncation and no per-dataset tuning, SmartSearch achieves 93.5% on LoCoMo and 88.4% on LongMemEval-S, exceeding all known memory systems under the same evaluation protocol on both benchmarks while using 8.5x fewer tokens than full-context baselines.
☆ AC-Foley: Reference-Audio-Guided Video-to-Audio Synthesis with Acoustic Transfer ICLR 2026
Existing video-to-audio (V2A) generation methods predominantly rely on text prompts alongside visual information to synthesize audio. However, two critical bottlenecks persist: semantic granularity gaps in training data, such as conflating acoustically distinct sounds under coarse labels, and textual ambiguity in describing micro-acoustic features. These bottlenecks make it difficult to perform fine-grained sound synthesis using text-controlled modes. To address these limitations, we propose AC-Foley, an audio-conditioned V2A model that directly leverages reference audio to achieve precise and fine-grained control over generated sounds. This approach enables fine-grained sound synthesis, timbre transfer, zero-shot sound generation, and improved audio quality. By directly conditioning on audio signals, our approach bypasses the semantic ambiguities of text descriptions while enabling precise manipulation of acoustic attributes. Empirically, AC-Foley achieves state-of-the-art performance for Foley generation when conditioned on reference audio, while remaining competitive with state-of-the-art video-to-audio methods even without audio conditioning.
comment: Accepted at ICLR 2026. 15 pages, 5 figures
☆ Robust and Computationally Efficient Linear Contextual Bandits under Adversarial Corruption and Heavy-Tailed Noise
We study linear contextual bandits under adversarial corruption and heavy-tailed noise with finite $(1+ε)$-th moments for some $ε\in (0,1]$. Existing work that addresses both adversarial corruption and heavy-tailed noise relies on a finite variance (i.e., finite second-moment) assumption and suffers from computational inefficiency. We propose a computationally efficient algorithm based on online mirror descent that achieves robustness to both adversarial corruption and heavy-tailed noise. While the existing algorithm incurs $\mathcal{O}(t\log T)$ computational cost, our algorithm reduces this to $\mathcal{O}(1)$ per round. We establish an additive regret bound consisting of a term depending on the $(1+ε)$-moment bound of the noise and a term depending on the total amount of corruption. In particular, when $ε= 1$, our result recovers existing guarantees under finite-variance assumptions. When no corruption is present, it matches the best-known rates for linear contextual bandits with heavy-tailed noise. Moreover, the algorithm requires no prior knowledge of the noise moment bound or the total amount of corruption and still guarantees sublinear regret.
☆ Effective Distillation to Hybrid xLSTM Architectures
There have been numerous attempts to distill quadratic attention-based large language models (LLMs) into sub-quadratic linearized architectures. However, despite extensive research, such distilled models often fail to match the performance of their teacher LLMs on various downstream tasks. We set out the goal of lossless distillation, which we define in terms of tolerance-corrected Win-and-Tie rates between student and teacher on sets of tasks. To this end, we introduce an effective distillation pipeline for xLSTM-based students. We propose an additional merging stage, where individually linearized experts are combined into a single model. We show the effectiveness of this pipeline by distilling base and instruction-tuned models from the Llama, Qwen, and Olmo families. In many settings, our xLSTM-based students recover most of the teacher's performance, and even exceed it on some downstream tasks. Our contributions are an important step towards more energy-efficient and cost-effective replacements for transformer-based LLMs.
☆ Physics-Informed Neural Systems for the Simulation of EUV Electromagnetic Wave Diffraction from a Lithography Mask
Physics-informed neural networks (PINNs) and neural operators (NOs) for solving the problem of diffraction of Extreme Ultraviolet (EUV) electromagnetic waves from contemporary lithography masks are presented. A novel hybrid Waveguide Neural Operator (WGNO) is introduced, based on a waveguide method with its most computationally expensive components replaced by a neural network. To evaluate performance, the accuracy and inference time of PINNs and NOs are compared against modern numerical solvers for a series of problems with known exact solutions. The emphasis is placed on investigation of solution accuracy by considered artificial neural systems for 13.5 nm and 11.2 nm wavelengths. Numerical experiments on realistic 2D and 3D masks demonstrate that PINNs and neural operators achieve competitive accuracy and significantly reduced prediction times, with the proposed WGNO architecture reaching state-of-the-art performance. The presented neural operator has pronounced generalizing properties, meaning that for unseen problem parameters it delivers a solution accuracy close to that for parameters seen in the training dataset. These results provide a highly efficient solution for accelerating the design and optimization workflows of next-generation lithography masks.
comment: arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:2507.04153
☆ Unbiased and Biased Variance-Reduced Forward-Reflected-Backward Splitting Methods for Stochastic Composite Inclusions
This paper develops new variance-reduction techniques for the forward-reflected-backward splitting (FRBS) method to solve a class of possibly nonmonotone stochastic composite inclusions. Unlike unbiased estimators such as mini-batching, developing stochastic biased variants faces a fundamental technical challenge and has not been utilized before for inclusions and fixed-point problems. We fill this gap by designing a new framework that can handle both unbiased and biased estimators. Our main idea is to construct stochastic variance-reduced estimators for the forward-reflected direction and use them to perform iterate updates. First, we propose a class of unbiased variance-reduced estimators and show that increasing mini-batch SGD, loopless-SVRG, and SAGA estimators fall within this class. For these unbiased estimators, we establish a $\mathcal{O}(1/k)$ best-iterate convergence rate for the expected squared residual norm, together with almost-sure convergence of the iterate sequence to a solution. Consequently, we prove that the best oracle complexities for the $n$-finite-sum and expectation settings are $\mathcal{O}(n^{2/3}ε^{-2})$ and $\mathcal{O}(ε^{-10/3})$, respectively, when employing loopless-SVRG or SAGA, where $ε$ is a desired accuracy. Second, we introduce a new class of biased variance-reduced estimators for the forward-reflected direction, which includes SARAH, Hybrid SGD, and Hybrid SVRG as special instances. While the convergence rates remain valid for these biased estimators, the resulting oracle complexities are $\mathcal{O}(n^{3/4}ε^{-2})$ and $\mathcal{O}(ε^{-5})$ for the $n$-finite-sum and expectation settings, respectively. Finally, we conduct two numerical experiments on AUC optimization for imbalanced classification and policy evaluation in reinforcement learning.
comment: 34 pages and 2 figures
☆ Co-Design of Memory-Storage Systems for Workload Awareness with Interpretable Models
Solid-state storage architectures based on NAND or emerging memory devices (SSD), are fundamentally architected and optimized for both reliability and performance. Achieving these simultaneous goals requires co-design of memory components with firmware-architected Error Management (EM) algorithms for density- and performance-scaled memory technologies. We describe a Machine Learning (ML) for systems methodology and modeling for co-designing the EM subsystem together with the natural variance inherent to scaled silicon process of memory components underlying SSD technology. The modeling analyzes NAND memory components and EM algorithms interacting with comprehensive suite of synthetic (stress-focused and JEDEC) and emulation (YCSB and similar) workloads across Flash Translation abstraction layers, by leveraging a statistically interpretable and intuitively explainable ML algorithm. The generalizable co-design framework evaluates several thousand datacenter SSDs spanning multiple generations of memory and storage technology. Consequently, the modeling framework enables continuous, holistic, data-driven design towards generational architectural advancements. We additionally demonstrate that the framework enables Representation Learning of the EM-workload domain for enhancement of the architectural design-space across broad spectrum of workloads.
comment: 9 pages, 10 figures
☆ Mamba-3: Improved Sequence Modeling using State Space Principles ICLR 2026
Scaling inference-time compute has emerged as an important driver of LLM performance, making inference efficiency a central focus of model design alongside model quality. While the current Transformer-based models deliver strong model quality, their quadratic compute and linear memory make inference expensive. This has spurred the development of sub-quadratic models with reduced linear compute and constant memory requirements. However, many recent linear models trade off model quality and capability for algorithmic efficiency, failing on tasks such as state tracking. Moreover, their theoretically linear inference remains hardware-inefficient in practice. Guided by an inference-first perspective, we introduce three core methodological improvements inspired by the state space model (SSM) viewpoint of linear models. We combine: (1) a more expressive recurrence derived from SSM discretization, (2) a complex-valued state update rule that enables richer state tracking, and (3) a multi-input, multi-output (MIMO) formulation for better model performance without increasing decode latency. Together with architectural refinements, our Mamba-3 model achieves significant gains across retrieval, state-tracking, and downstream language modeling tasks. At the 1.5B scale, Mamba-3 improves average downstream accuracy by 0.6 percentage points compared to the next best model (Gated DeltaNet), with Mamba-3's MIMO variant further improving accuracy by another 1.2 points for a total 1.8 point gain. Across state-size experiments, Mamba-3 achieves comparable perplexity to Mamba-2 despite using half of its predecessor's state size. Our evaluations demonstrate Mamba-3's ability to advance the performance-efficiency Pareto frontier.
comment: ICLR 2026
☆ Estimating Staged Event Tree Models via Hierarchical Clustering on the Simplex
Staged tree models enhance Bayesian networks by incorporating context-specific dependencies through a stage-based structure. In this study, we present a new framework for estimating staged trees using hierarchical clustering on the probability simplex, utilizing simplex basesd divergences. We conduct a thorough evaluation of several distance and divergence metrics including Total Variation, Hellinger, Fisher, and Kaniadakis; alongside various linkage methods such as Ward.D2, average, complete, and McQuitty. We conducted the simulation experiments that reveals Total Variation, especially when combined with Ward.D2 linkage, consistently produces staged trees with better model fit, structure recovery, and computational efficiency. We assess performance by utilizing relative Bayesian Information Criterion (BIC), and Hamming distance. Our findings indicate that although Backward Hill Climbing (BHC) delivers competitive outcomes, it incurs a significantly higher computational cost. On the other, Total Variation divergence with Ward.D2 linkage, achieves similar performance while providing significantly better computational efficiency, making it a more viable option for large-scale or time sensitive tasks.
☆ Predictive Uncertainty in Short-Term PV Forecasting under Missing Data: A Multiple Imputation Approach
Missing values are common in photovoltaic (PV) power data, yet the uncertainty they induce is not propagated into predictive distributions. We develop a framework that incorporates missing-data uncertainty into short-term PV forecasting by combining stochastic multiple imputation with Rubin's rule. The approach is model-agnostic and can be integrated with standard machine-learning predictors. Empirical results show that ignoring missing-data uncertainty leads to overly narrow prediction intervals. Accounting for this uncertainty improves interval calibration while maintaining comparable point prediction accuracy. These results demonstrate the importance of propagating imputation uncertainty in data-driven PV forecasting.
comment: 10 pages
☆ The PokeAgent Challenge: Competitive and Long-Context Learning at Scale NeurIPS 2025
We present the PokeAgent Challenge, a large-scale benchmark for decision-making research built on Pokemon's multi-agent battle system and expansive role-playing game (RPG) environment. Partial observability, game-theoretic reasoning, and long-horizon planning remain open problems for frontier AI, yet few benchmarks stress all three simultaneously under realistic conditions. PokeAgent targets these limitations at scale through two complementary tracks: our Battling Track, which calls for strategic reasoning and generalization under partial observability in competitive Pokemon battles, and our Speedrunning Track, which requires long-horizon planning and sequential decision-making in the Pokemon RPG. Our Battling Track supplies a dataset of 20M+ battle trajectories alongside a suite of heuristic, RL, and LLM-based baselines capable of high-level competitive play. Our Speedrunning Track provides the first standardized evaluation framework for RPG speedrunning, including an open-source multi-agent orchestration system for modular, reproducible comparisons of harness-based LLM approaches. Our NeurIPS 2025 competition validates both the quality of our resources and the research community's interest in Pokemon, with over 100 teams competing across both tracks and winning solutions detailed in our paper. Participant submissions and our baselines reveal considerable gaps between generalist (LLM), specialist (RL), and elite human performance. Analysis against the BenchPress evaluation matrix shows that Pokemon battling is nearly orthogonal to standard LLM benchmarks, measuring capabilities not captured by existing suites and positioning Pokemon as an unsolved benchmark that can drive RL and LLM research forward. We transition to a living benchmark with a live leaderboard for Battling and self-contained evaluation for Speedrunning at https://pokeagentchallenge.com.
comment: 41 pages, 26 figures, 5 tables. NeurIPS 2025 Competition Track
☆ Self-Distillation of Hidden Layers for Self-Supervised Representation Learning
The landscape of self-supervised learning (SSL) is currently dominated by generative approaches (e.g., MAE) that reconstruct raw low-level data, and predictive approaches (e.g., I-JEPA) that predict high-level abstract embeddings. While generative methods provide strong grounding, they are computationally inefficient for high-redundancy modalities like imagery, and their training objective does not prioritize learning high-level, conceptual features. Conversely, predictive methods often suffer from training instability due to their reliance on the non-stationary targets of final-layer self-distillation. We introduce Bootleg, a method that bridges this divide by tasking the model with predicting latent representations from multiple hidden layers of a teacher network. This hierarchical objective forces the model to capture features at varying levels of abstraction simultaneously. We demonstrate that Bootleg significantly outperforms comparable baselines (+10% over I-JEPA) on classification of ImageNet-1K and iNaturalist-21, and semantic segmentation of ADE20K and Cityscapes.
☆ Bridging Local and Global Knowledge: Cascaded Mixture-of-Experts Learning for Near-Shortest Path Routing
While deep learning models that leverage local features have demonstrated significant potential for near-optimal routing in dense Euclidean graphs, they struggle to generalize well in sparse networks where topological irregularities require broader structural awareness. To address this limitation, we train a Cascaded Mixture of Experts (Ca-MoE) to solve the all-pairs near-shortest path (APNSP) routing problem. Our Ca-MoE is a modular two-tier architecture that supports the decision-making for forwarder selection with lower-tier experts relying on local features and upper-tier experts relying on global features. It performs adaptive inference wherein the upper-tier experts are triggered only when the lower-tier ones do not suffice to achieve adequate decision quality. Computational efficiency is thus achieved by escalating model capacity only when necessitated by topological complexity, and parameter redundancy is avoided. Furthermore, we incorporate an online meta-learning strategy that facilitates independent expert fine-tuning and utilizes a stability-focused update mechanism to prevent catastrophic forgetting as new graph environments are encountered. Experimental evaluations demonstrate that Ca-MoE routing improves accuracy by up to 29.1% in sparse networks compared to single-expert baselines and maintains performance within 1%-6% of the theoretical upper bound across diverse graph densities.
☆ DOT: Dynamic Knob Selection and Online Sampling for Automated Database Tuning
Database Management Systems (DBMS) are crucial for efficient data management and access control, but their administration remains challenging for Database Administrators (DBAs). Tuning, in particular, is known to be difficult. Modern systems have many tuning parameters, but only a subset significantly impacts performance. Focusing on these influential parameters reduces the search space and optimizes performance. Current methods rely on costly warm-up phases and human expertise to identify important tuning parameters. In this paper, we present DOT, a dynamic knob selection and online sampling DBMS tuning algorithm. DOT uses Recursive Feature Elimination with Cross-Validation (RFECV) to prune low-importance tuning parameters and a Likelihood Ratio Test (LRT) strategy to balance exploration and exploitation. For parameter search, DOT uses a Bayesian Optimization (BO) algorithm to optimize configurations on-the-fly, eliminating the need for warm-up phases or prior knowledge (although existing knowledge can be incorporated). Experiments show that DOT achieves matching or outperforming performance compared to state-of-the-art tuners while substantially reducing tuning overhead.
☆ Vib2ECG: A Paired Chest-Lead SCG-ECG Dataset and Benchmark for ECG Reconstruction
Twelve-lead electrocardiography (ECG) is essential for cardiovascular diagnosis, but its long-term acquisition in daily life is constrained by complex and costly hardware. Recent efforts have explored reconstructing ECG from low-cost cardiac vibrational signals such as seismocardiography (SCG), however, due to the lack of a dataset, current methods are limited to limb leads, while clinical diagnosis requires multi-lead ECG, including chest leads. In this work, we propose Vib2ECG, the first paired, multi-channel electro-mechanical cardiac signal dataset, which includes complete twelve-lead ECGs and vibrational signals acquired by inertial measurement units (IMUs) at six chest-lead positions from 17 subjects. Based on this dataset, we also provide a benchmark. Experimental results demonstrate the feasibility of reconstructing electrical cardiac signals at variable locations from vibrational signals using a lightweight 364 K-parameter U-Net. Furthermore, we observe a hallucination phenomenon in the model, where ECG waveforms are generated in regions where no corresponding electrical activity is present. We analyze the causes of this phenomenon and propose potential directions for mitigation. This study demonstrates the feasibility of mobile-device-friendly ECG monitoring through chest-lead ECG prediction from low-cost vibrational signals acquired using IMU sensors. It expands the application of cardiac vibrational signals and provides new insights into the spatial relationship between cardiac electrical and mechanical activities with spatial location variation.
comment: This work has been submitted to the IEEE for possible publication
☆ Building Trust in PINNs: Error Estimation through Finite Difference Methods
Physics-informed neural networks (PINNs) constitute a flexible deep learning approach for solving partial differential equations (PDEs), which model phenomena ranging from heat conduction to quantum mechanical systems. Despite their flexibility, PINNs offer limited insight into how their predictions deviate from the true solution, hindering trust in their prediction quality. We propose a lightweight post-hoc method that addresses this gap by producing pointwise error estimates for PINN predictions, which offer a natural form of explanation for such models, identifying not just whether a prediction is wrong, but where and by how much. For linear partial differential equations, the error between a PINN approximation and the true solution satisfies the same differential operator as the original problem, but driven by the PINN's PDE residual as its source term. We solve this error equation numerically using finite difference methods requiring no knowledge of the true solution. Evaluated on several benchmark PDEs, our method yields accurate error maps at low computational cost, enabling targeted and interpretable validation of PINNs.
☆ Not All Invariants Are Equal: Curating Training Data to Accelerate Program Verification with SLMs
The synthesis of inductive loop invariants is a critical bottleneck in automated program verification. While Large Language Models (LLMs) show promise in mitigating this issue, they often fail on hard instances, generating invariants that are invalid or computationally ineffective. While fine-tuning is a natural route to mitigate this limitation, obtaining high-quality training data for invariant generation remains an open challenge. We present a rigorous data curation pipeline designed to extract high-quality training signals from raw verifier-generated invariants. First, we formalize the properties required for a high-quality training invariant. Second, we propose Wonda, a pipeline that refines noisy data via AST-based normalization, followed by LLM-driven semantic rewriting and augmentation with provable quality guarantees. We demonstrate that fine-tuning Small Language Models (SLMs) on this curated dataset result in consistent and significant performance gain. In particular, a fine-tuned 4B parameter model matches the utility of a GPT-OSS-120B baseline and approaches the state-of-the-art GPT-5.2, without incurring reasoning-time overhead. On challenging instances from the recent InvBench evaluation suite, our approach doubles the invariant correctness and speedup rates of base models; and improves their Virtual Best Performance (VBP) rates on the verification task by up to 14.2%.
☆ Federated Learning of Binary Neural Networks: Enabling Low-Cost Inference
Federated Learning (FL) preserves privacy by distributing training across devices. However, using DNNs is computationally intensive at the low-powered edge during inference. Edge deployment demands models that simultaneously optimize memory footprint and computational efficiency, a dilemma where conventional DNNs fail by exceeding resource limits. Traditional post-training binarization reduces model size but suffers from severe accuracy loss due to quantization errors. To address these challenges, we propose FedBNN, a rotation-aware binary neural network framework that learns binary representations directly during local training. By encoding each weight as a single bit $\{+1, -1\}$ instead of a $32$-bit float, FedBNN shrinks the model footprint, significantly reducing runtime (during inference) FLOPs and memory requirements in comparison to federated methods using real models. Evaluations across multiple benchmark datasets demonstrate that FedBNN significantly reduces resource consumption while performing similarly to existing federated methods using real-valued models.
comment: 26 pages, 13 figures
☆ Seeking SOTA: Time-Series Forecasting Must Adopt Taxonomy-Specific Evaluation to Dispel Illusory Gains
We argue that the current practice of evaluating AI/ML time-series forecasting models, predominantly on benchmarks characterized by strong, persistent periodicities and seasonalities, obscures real progress by overlooking the performance of efficient classical methods. We demonstrate that these "standard" datasets often exhibit dominant autocorrelation patterns and seasonal cycles that can be effectively captured by simpler linear or statistical models, rendering complex deep learning architectures frequently no more performant than their classical counterparts for these specific data characteristics, and raising questions as to whether any marginal improvements justify the significant increase in computational overhead and model complexity. We call on the community to (I) retire or substantially augment current benchmarks with datasets exhibiting a wider spectrum of non-stationarities, such as structural breaks, time-varying volatility, and concept drift, and less predictable dynamics drawn from diverse real-world domains, and (II) require every deep learning submission to include robust classical and simple baselines, appropriately chosen for the specific characteristics of the downstream tasks' time series. By doing so, we will help ensure that reported gains reflect genuine scientific methodological advances rather than artifacts of benchmark selection favoring models adept at learning repetitive patterns.
comment: Position paper; 8 figures, 8 tables; includes appendix
☆ Understanding Reasoning in LLMs through Strategic Information Allocation under Uncertainty
LLMs often exhibit Aha moments during reasoning, such as apparent self-correction following tokens like "Wait," yet their underlying mechanisms remain unclear. We introduce an information-theoretic framework that decomposes reasoning into procedural information and epistemic verbalization - the explicit externalization of uncertainty that supports downstream control actions. We show that purely procedural reasoning can become informationally stagnant, whereas epistemic verbalization enables continued information acquisition and is critical for achieving information sufficiency. Empirical results demonstrate that strong reasoning performance is driven by uncertainty externalization rather than specific surface tokens. Our framework unifies prior findings on Aha moments and post-training experiments, and offers insights for future reasoning model design.
☆ Grokking as a Variance-Limited Phase Transition: Spectral Gating and the Epsilon-Stability Threshold
Standard optimization theories struggle to explain grokking, where generalization occurs long after training convergence. While geometric studies attribute this to slow drift, they often overlook the interaction between the optimizer's noise structure and landscape curvature. This work analyzes AdamW dynamics on modular arithmetic tasks, revealing a ``Spectral Gating'' mechanism that regulates the transition from memorization to generalization. We find that AdamW operates as a variance-gated stochastic system. Grokking is constrained by a stability condition: the generalizing solution resides in a sharp basin ($λ_{max}^H$) initially inaccessible under low-variance regimes. The ``delayed'' phase represents the accumulation of gradient variance required to lift the effective stability ceiling, permitting entry into this sharp manifold. Our ablation studies identify three complexity regimes: (1) \textbf{Capacity Collapse} ($P < 23$), where rank-deficiency prevents structural learning; (2) \textbf{The Variance-Limited Regime} ($P \approx 41$), where generalization waits for the spectral gate to open; and (3) \textbf{Stability Override} ($P > 67$), where memorization becomes dimensionally unstable. Furthermore, we challenge the "Flat Minima" hypothesis for algorithmic tasks, showing that isotropic noise injection fails to induce grokking. Generalization requires the \textit{anisotropic rectification} unique to adaptive optimizers, which directs noise into the tangent space of the solution manifold.
comment: 15 pages with 14 figures
☆ TabKD: Tabular Knowledge Distillation through Interaction Diversity of Learned Feature Bins
Data-free knowledge distillation enables model compression without original training data, critical for privacy-sensitive tabular domains. However, existing methods does not perform well on tabular data because they do not explicitly address feature interactions, the fundamental way tabular models encode predictive knowledge. We identify interaction diversity, systematic coverage of feature combinations, as an essential requirement for effective tabular distillation. To operationalize this insight, we propose TabKD, which learns adaptive feature bins aligned with teacher decision boundaries, then generates synthetic queries that maximize pairwise interaction coverage. Across 4 benchmark datasets and 4 teacher architectures, TabKD achieves highest student-teacher agreement in 14 out of 16 configurations, outperforming 5 state-of-the-art baselines. We further show that interaction coverage strongly correlates with distillation quality, validating our core hypothesis. Our work establishes interaction-focused exploration as a principled framework for tabular model extraction.
☆ Seeing Beyond: Extrapolative Domain Adaptive Panoramic Segmentation CVPR 2026
Cross-domain panoramic semantic segmentation has attracted growing interest as it enables comprehensive 360° scene understanding for real-world applications. However, it remains particularly challenging due to severe geometric Field of View (FoV) distortions and inconsistent open-set semantics across domains. In this work, we formulate an open-set domain adaptation setting, and propose Extrapolative Domain Adaptive Panoramic Segmentation (EDA-PSeg) framework that trains on local perspective views and tests on full 360° panoramic images, explicitly tackling both geometric FoV shifts across domains and semantic uncertainty arising from previously unseen classes. To this end, we propose the Euler-Margin Attention (EMA), which introduces an angular margin to enhance viewpoint-invariant semantic representation, while performing amplitude and phase modulation to improve generalization toward unseen classes. Additionally, we design the Graph Matching Adapter (GMA), which builds high-order graph relations to align shared semantics across FoV shifts while effectively separating novel categories through structural adaptation. Extensive experiments on four benchmark datasets under camera-shift, weather-condition, and open-set scenarios demonstrate that EDA-PSeg achieves state-of-the-art performance, robust generalization to diverse viewing geometries, and resilience under varying environmental conditions. The code is available at https://github.com/zyfone/EDA-PSeg.
comment: Accepted to CVPR 2026. The code is available at https://github.com/zyfone/EDA-PSeg
☆ Deep Reinforcement Learning for Fano Hypersurfaces
We design a deep reinforcement learning algorithm to explore a high-dimensional integer lattice with sparse rewards, training a feedforward neural network as a dynamic search heuristic to steer exploration toward reward dense regions. We apply this to the discovery of Fano 4-fold hypersurfaces with terminal singularities, objects of central importance in algebraic geometry. Fano varieties with terminal singularities are fundamental building blocks of algebraic varieties, and explicit examples serve as a vital testing ground for the development and generalisation of theory. Despite decades of effort, the combinatorial intractability of the underlying search space has left this classification severely incomplete. Our reinforcement learning approach yields thousands of previously unknown examples, hundreds of which we show are inaccessible to known search methods.
comment: 10 pages, 10 figures, 1 table
☆ Physics-informed fine-tuning of foundation models for partial differential equations
Foundation models for partial differential equations (PDEs) have emerged as powerful surrogates pre-trained on diverse physical systems, but adapting them to new downstream tasks remains challenging due to limited task-specific data and distribution shifts. While fine-tuning has proven transformative in natural language processing, best practices for adapting PDE foundation models remain underexplored. Although physics-informed training has successfully trained accurate solvers across a wide range of PDE problems, its potential for fine-tuning data-based foundation models has not been systematically studied. In this work, we introduce a physics-informed fine-tuning framework that adapts pre-trained PDE foundation models by incorporating physical constraints (PDE residuals and boundary conditions) directly into the fine-tuning objective. This enables effective adaptation in data-scarce regimes while promoting physical consistency. We evaluate our method on a downstream task composed of an unseen PDE class and compare it with data-driven finetuning counterparts. Our results demonstrate that physics-informed fine-tuning achieves competitive accuracy without requiring PDE solutions for training. Furthermore, a hybrid fine-tuning strategy yields superior generalization to out-of-distribution scenarios when only minimal training data is available. These findings establish physics-informed fine-tuning as a scalable and data-efficient paradigm, providing a physically interpretable pathway for adapting foundation models in scientific machine learning.
comment: 12 pages, 6 figures, 1 table
☆ Amplification Effects in Test-Time Reinforcement Learning: Safety and Reasoning Vulnerabilities
Test-time training (TTT) has recently emerged as a promising method to improve the reasoning abilities of large language models (LLMs), in which the model directly learns from test data without access to labels. However, this reliance on test data also makes TTT methods vulnerable to harmful prompt injections. In this paper, we investigate safety vulnerabilities of TTT methods, where we study a representative self-consistency-based test-time learning method: test-time reinforcement learning (TTRL), a recent TTT method that improves LLM reasoning by rewarding self-consistency using majority vote as a reward signal. We show that harmful prompt injection during TTRL amplifies the model's existing behaviors, i.e., safety amplification when the base model is relatively safe, and harmfulness amplification when it is vulnerable to the injected data. In both cases, there is a decline in reasoning ability, which we refer to as the reasoning tax. We also show that TTT methods such as TTRL can be exploited adversarially using specially designed "HarmInject" prompts to force the model to answer jailbreak and reasoning queries together, resulting in stronger harmfulness amplification. Overall, our results highlight that TTT methods that enhance LLM reasoning by promoting self-consistency can lead to amplification behaviors and reasoning degradation, highlighting the need for safer TTT methods.
☆ RESQ: A Unified Framework for REliability- and Security Enhancement of Quantized Deep Neural Networks
This work proposes a unified three-stage framework that produces a quantized DNN with balanced fault and attack robustness. The first stage improves attack resilience via fine-tuning that desensitizes feature representations to small input perturbations. The second stage reinforces fault resilience through fault-aware fine-tuning under simulated bit-flip faults. Finally, a lightweight post-training adjustment integrates quantization to enhance efficiency and further mitigate fault sensitivity without degrading attack resilience. Experiments on ResNet18, VGG16, EfficientNet, and Swin-Tiny in CIFAR-10, CIFAR-100, and GTSRB show consistent gains of up to 10.35% in attack resilience and 12.47% in fault resilience, while maintaining competitive accuracy in quantized networks. The results also highlight an asymmetric interaction in which improvements in fault resilience generally increase resilience to adversarial attacks, whereas enhanced adversarial resilience does not necessarily lead to higher fault resilience.
☆ Local Urysohn Width: A Topological Complexity Measure for Classification
We introduce \emph{local Urysohn width}, a complexity measure for classification problems on metric spaces. Unlike VC dimension, fat-shattering dimension, and Rademacher complexity, which characterize the richness of hypothesis \emph{classes}, Urysohn width characterizes the topological-geometric complexity of the classification \emph{problem itself}: the minimum number of connected, diameter-bounded local experts needed to correctly classify all points within a margin-safe region. We prove four main results. First, a \textbf{strict hierarchy theorem}: for every integer $w \geq 1$, there exists a classification problem on a \emph{connected} compact metric space (a bouquet of circles with first Betti number $β_1 = w$) whose Urysohn width is exactly~$w$, establishing that topological complexity of the input space forces classifier complexity. Second, a \textbf{topology $\times$ geometry scaling law}: width scales as $Ω(w \cdot L/D_0)$, where $w$ counts independent loops and $L/D_0$ is the ratio of loop circumference to locality scale. Third, a \textbf{two-way separation from VC dimension}: there exist problem families where width grows unboundedly while VC dimension is bounded by a constant, and conversely, families where VC dimension grows unboundedly while width remains~1. Fourth, a \textbf{sample complexity lower bound}: any learner that must correctly classify all points in the safe region of a width-$w$ problem needs $Ω(w \log w)$ samples, independent of VC dimension.
☆ A Hybrid Modeling Framework for Crop Prediction Tasks via Dynamic Parameter Calibration and Multi-Task Learning
Accurate prediction of crop states (e.g., phenology stages and cold hardiness) is essential for timely farm management decisions such as irrigation, fertilization, and canopy management to optimize crop yield and quality. While traditional biophysical models can be used for season-long predictions, they lack the precision required for site-specific management. Deep learning methods are a compelling alternative, but can produce biologically unrealistic predictions and require large-scale data. We propose a \emph{hybrid modeling} approach that uses a neural network to parameterize a differentiable biophysical model and leverages multi-task learning for efficient data sharing across crop cultivars in data limited settings. By predicting the \emph{parameters} of the biophysical model, our approach improves the prediction accuracy while preserving biological realism. Empirical evaluation using real-world and synthetic datasets demonstrates that our method improves prediction accuracy by 60\% for phenology and 40\% for cold hardiness compared to deployed biophysical models.
☆ TrinityGuard: A Unified Framework for Safeguarding Multi-Agent Systems
With the rapid development of LLM-based multi-agent systems (MAS), their significant safety and security concerns have emerged, which introduce novel risks going beyond single agents or LLMs. Despite attempts to address these issues, the existing literature lacks a cohesive safeguarding system specialized for MAS risks. In this work, we introduce TrinityGuard, a comprehensive safety evaluation and monitoring framework for LLM-based MAS, grounded in the OWASP standards. Specifically, TrinityGuard encompasses a three-tier fine-grained risk taxonomy that identifies 20 risk types, covering single-agent vulnerabilities, inter-agent communication threats, and system-level emergent hazards. Designed for scalability across various MAS structures and platforms, TrinityGuard is organized in a trinity manner, involving an MAS abstraction layer that can be adapted to any MAS structures, an evaluation layer containing risk-specific test modules, alongside runtime monitor agents coordinated by a unified LLM Judge Factory. During Evaluation, TrinityGuard executes curated attack probes to generate detailed vulnerability reports for each risk type, where monitor agents analyze structured execution traces and issue real-time alerts, enabling both pre-development evaluation and runtime monitoring. We further formalize these safety metrics and present detailed case studies across various representative MAS examples, showcasing the versatility and reliability of TrinityGuard. Overall, TrinityGuard acts as a comprehensive framework for evaluating and monitoring various risks in MAS, paving the way for further research into their safety and security.
☆ Efficient Morphology-Control Co-Design via Stackelberg Proximal Policy Optimization
Morphology-control co-design concerns the coupled optimization of an agent's body structure and control policy. This problem exhibits a bi-level structure, where the control dynamically adapts to the morphology to maximize performance. Existing methods typically neglect the control's adaptation dynamics by adopting a single-level formulation that treats the control policy as fixed when optimizing morphology. This can lead to inefficient optimization, as morphology updates may be misaligned with control adaptation. In this paper, we revisit the co-design problem from a game-theoretic perspective, modeling the intrinsic coupling between morphology and control as a novel variant of a Stackelberg game. We propose Stackelberg Proximal Policy Optimization (Stackelberg PPO), which explicitly incorporates the control's adaptation dynamics into morphology optimization. By modeling this intrinsic coupling, our method aligns morphology updates with control adaptation, thereby stabilizing training and improving learning efficiency. Experiments across diverse co-design tasks demonstrate that Stackelberg PPO outperforms standard PPO in both stability and final performance, opening the way for dramatically more efficient robotics designs.
comment: presented at the Fourteenth International Conference on Learning Representations; 11 pages in main text + 3 pages of references + 23 pages of appendices, 5 figures in main text + 11 figures in appendices, 16 tables in appendices; accompanying website available at https://yanningdai.github.io/stackelberg-ppo-co-design/ ; source code available at https://github.com/YanningDai/StackelbergPPO
☆ Persistence Spheres: a Bi-continuous Linear Representation of Measures for Partial Optimal Transport
We improve and extend persistence spheres, introduced in~\cite{pegoraro2025persistence}. Persistence spheres map an integrable measure $μ$ on the upper half-plane, including persistence diagrams (PDs) as counting measures, to a function $S(μ)\in C(\mathbb{S}^2)$, and the map is stable with respect to 1-Wasserstein partial transport distance $\mathrm{POT}_1$. Moreover, to the best of our knowledge, persistence spheres are the first explicit representation used in topological machine learning for which continuity of the inverse on the image is established at every compactly supported target. Recent bounded-cardinality bi-Lipschitz embedding results in partial transport spaces, despite being powerful, are not given by the kind of explicit summary map considered here. Our construction is rooted in convex geometry: for positive measures, the defining ReLU integral is the support function of the lift zonoid. Building on~\cite{pegoraro2025persistence}, we refine the definition to better match the $\mathrm{POT}_1$ deletion mechanism, encoding partial transport via a signed diagonal augmentation. In particular, for integrable $μ$, the uniform norm between $S(0)$ and $S(μ)$ depends only on the persistence of $μ$, without any need of ad-hoc re-weightings, reflecting optimal transport to the diagonal at persistence cost. This yields a parameter-free representation at the level of measures (up to numerical discretization), while accommodating future extensions where $μ$ is a smoothed measure derived from PDs (e.g., persistence intensity functions~\citep{wu2024estimation}). Across clustering, regression, and classification tasks involving functional data, time series, graphs, meshes, and point clouds, the updated persistence spheres are competitive and often improve upon persistence images, persistence landscapes, persistence splines, and sliced Wasserstein kernel baselines.
☆ More Test-Time Compute Can Hurt: Overestimation Bias in LLM Beam Search
Wider beam search should improve LLM reasoning, but when should you stop widening? Prior work on beam width selection has focused on inference efficiency \citep{qin2025dsbd, freitag2017beam}, without analyzing whether wider search can \emph{hurt} output quality. We present an analysis, grounded in Extreme Value Theory, that answers this question. Beam selection over noisy scorer outputs introduces a systematic overestimation bias that grows with the candidate pool size, and we derive a maximum useful beam width $\hat{k}$ beyond which search degrades performance. This critical width depends on the signal-to-noise ratio of the scorer: $\hat{k}$ grows exponentially with $(Δ/σ)^2$, where $Δ> 0$ is the quality advantage of correct paths over incorrect ones and $σ$ is the scorer noise. We validate this theory by comparing perplexity-guided and PRM-guided beam search across three 7B-parameter models and ten domains on MR-BEN (5,975 questions). Perplexity scoring, with its high noise, yields $\hat{k} = 1$: search provides no benefit at any width tested. PRM scoring, with lower noise, yields $\hat{k} \geq 4$, with gains of up to 8.9 percentage points. The same model, the same algorithm, but different scorers place $\hat{k}$ at opposite ends of the beam width range. Our analysis identifies the scorer's signal-to-noise ratio as the key quantity governing beam width selection, and we propose diagnostic indicators for choosing the beam width in practice.
☆ GradCFA: A Hybrid Gradient-Based Counterfactual and Feature Attribution Explanation Algorithm for Local Interpretation of Neural Networks
Explainable Artificial Intelligence (XAI) is increasingly essential as AI systems are deployed in critical fields such as healthcare and finance, offering transparency into AI-driven decisions. Two major XAI paradigms, counterfactual explanations (CFX) and feature attribution (FA), serve distinct roles in model interpretability. This study introduces GradCFA, a hybrid framework combining CFX and FA to improve interpretability by explicitly optimizing feasibility, plausibility, and diversity - key qualities often unbalanced in existing methods. Unlike most CFX research focused on binary classification, GradCFA extends to multi-class scenarios, supporting a wider range of applications. We evaluate GradCFA's validity, proximity, sparsity, plausibility, and diversity against state-of-the-art methods, including Wachter, DiCE, CARE for CFX, and SHAP for FA. Results show GradCFA effectively generates feasible, plausible, and diverse counterfactuals while offering valuable FA insights. By identifying influential features and validating their impact, GradCFA advances AI interpretability. The code for implementation of this work can be found at: https://github.com/jacob-ws/GradCFs .
☆ Controlled Langevin Dynamics for Sampling of Feedforward Neural Networks Trained with Minibatches
Sampling the parameter space of artificial neural networks according to a Boltzmann distribution provides insight into the geometry of low-loss solutions and offers an alternative to conventional loss minimization for training. However, exact sampling methods such as hybrid Monte Carlo (hMC), while formally correct, become computationally prohibitive for realistic datasets because they require repeated evaluation of full-batch gradients. We introduce a pseudo-Langevin (pL) dynamics that enables efficient Boltzmann sampling of feed-forward neural networks trained with large datasets by using minibatches in a controlled manner. The method exploits the statistical properties of minibatch gradient noise and adjusts fictitious masses and friction coefficients to ensure that the induced stochastic process samples efficiently the desired equilibrium distribution. We validate numerically the approach by comparing its equilibrium statistics with those obtained from exact hMC sampling. Performance benchmarks demonstrate that, while hMC rapidly becomes inefficient as network size increases, the pL scheme maintains high computational diffusion and scales favorably to networks with over one million parameters. Finally, we show that sampling at intermediate temperatures yields optimal generalization performance, comparable to SGD, without requiring a validation set or early stopping procedure. These results establish controlled minibatch Langevin dynamics as a practical and scalable tool for exploring and exploiting the solution space of large neural networks.
☆ Deep learning and the rate of approximation by flows
We investigate the dependence of the approximation capacity of deep residual networks on its depth in a continuous dynamical systems setting. This can be formulated as the general problem of quantifying the minimal time-horizon required to approximate a diffeomorphism by flows driven by a given family $\mathcal F$ of vector fields. We show that this minimal time can be identified as a geodesic distance on a sub-Finsler manifold of diffeomorphisms, where the local geometry is characterised by a variational principle involving $\mathcal F$. This connects the learning efficiency of target relationships to their compatibility with the learning architectural choice. Further, the results suggest that the key approximation mechanism in deep learning, namely the approximation of functions by composition or dynamics, differs in a fundamental way from linear approximation theory, where linear spaces and norm-based rate estimates are replaced by manifolds and geodesic distances.
☆ FuXiWeather2: Learning accurate atmospheric state estimation for operational global weather forecasting
Numerical weather prediction has long been constrained by the computational bottlenecks inherent in data assimilation and numerical modeling. While machine learning has accelerated forecasting, existing models largely serve as "emulators of reanalysis products," thereby retaining their systematic biases and operational latencies. Here, we present FuXiWeather2, a unified end-to-end neural framework for assimilation and forecasting. We align training objectives directly with a combination of real-world observations and reanalysis data, enabling the framework to effectively rectify inherent errors within reanalysis products. To address the distribution shift between NWP-derived background inputs during training and self-generated backgrounds during deployment, we introduce a recursive unrolling training method to enhance the precision and stability of analysis generation. Furthermore, our model is trained on a hybrid dataset of raw and simulated observations to mitigate the impact of observational distribution inconsistency. FuXiWeather2 generates high-resolution ($0.25^{\circ}$) global analysis fields and 10-day forecasts within minutes. The analysis fields surpass the NCEP-GFS across most variables and demonstrate superior accuracy over both ERA5 and the ECMWF-HRES system in lower-tropospheric and surface variables. These high-quality analysis fields drive deterministic forecasts that exceed the skill of the HRES system in 91\% of evaluated metrics. Additionally, its outstanding performance in typhoon track prediction underscores its practical value for rapid response to extreme weather events. The FuXiWeather2 analysis dataset is available at https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18872728.
☆ Conditional Rectified Flow-based End-to-End Rapid Seismic Inversion Method
Seismic inversion is a core problem in geophysical exploration, where traditional methods suffer from high computational costs and are susceptible to initial model dependence. In recent years, deep generative model-based seismic inversion methods have achieved remarkable progress, but existing generative models struggle to balance sampling efficiency and inversion accuracy. This paper proposes an end-to-end fast seismic inversion method based on Conditional Rectified Flow[1], which designs a dedicated seismic encoder to extract multi-scale seismic features and adopts a layer-by-layer injection control strategy to achieve fine-grained conditional control. Experimental results demonstrate that the proposed method achieves excellent inversion accuracy on the OpenFWI[2] benchmark dataset. Compared with Diffusion[3,4] methods, it achieves sampling acceleration; compared with InversionNet[5,6,7] methods, it achieves higher accuracy in generation. Our zero-shot generalization experiments on Marmousi[8,9] real data further verify the practical value of the method. Experimental results show that the proposed method achieves excellent inversion accuracy on the OpenFWI benchmark dataset; compared with Diffusion methods, it achieves sampling acceleration while maintaining higher accuracy than InversionNet methods; experiments based on the Marmousi standard model further verify that this method can generate high-quality initial velocity models in a zero-shot manner, effectively alleviating the initial model dependency problem in traditional Full Waveform Inversion (FWI), and possesses industrial practical value.
☆ Active Seriation: Efficient Ordering Recovery with Statistical Guarantees
Active seriation aims at recovering an unknown ordering of $n$ items by adaptively querying pairwise similarities. The observations are noisy measurements of entries of an underlying $n$ x $n$ permuted Robinson matrix, whose permutation encodes the latent ordering. The framework allows the algorithm to start with partial information on the latent ordering, including seriation from scratch as a special case. We propose an active seriation algorithm that provably recovers the latent ordering with high probability. Under a uniform separation condition on the similarity matrix, optimal performance guarantees are established, both in terms of the probability of error and the number of observations required for successful recovery.
☆ Data Augmentation via Causal-Residual Bootstrapping
Data augmentation integrates domain knowledge into a dataset by making domain-informed modifications to existing data points. For example, image data can be augmented by duplicating images in different tints or orientations, thereby incorporating the knowledge that images may vary in these dimensions. Recent work by Teshima and Sugiyama has explored the integration of causal knowledge (e.g, A causes B causes C) up to conditional independence equivalence. We suggest a related approach for settings with additive noise that can incorporate information beyond a Markov equivalence class. The approach, built on the principle of independent mechanisms, permutes the residuals of models built on marginal probability distributions. Predictive models built on our augmented data demonstrate improved accuracy, for which we provide theoretical backing in linear Gaussian settings.
☆ A scaled TW-PINN: A physics-informed neural network for traveling wave solutions of reaction-diffusion equations with general coefficients
We propose an efficient and generalizable physics-informed neural network (PINN) framework for computing traveling wave solutions of $n$-dimensional reaction-diffusion equations with various reaction and diffusion coefficients. By applying a scaling transformation with the traveling wave form, the original problem is reduced to a one-dimensional scaled reaction-diffusion equation with unit reaction and diffusion coefficients. This reduction leads to the proposed framework, termed scaled TW-PINN, in which a single PINN solver trained on the scaled equation is reused for different coefficient choices and spatial dimensions. We also prove a universal approximation property of the proposed PINN solver for traveling wave solutions. Numerical experiments in one and two dimensions, together with a comparison to the existing wave-PINN method, demonstrate the accuracy, flexibility, and superior performance of scaled TW-PINN. Finally, we explore an extension of the framework to the Fisher's equation with general initial conditions.
☆ CASHomon Sets: Efficient Rashomon Sets Across Multiple Model Classes and their Hyperparameters
Rashomon sets are model sets within one model class that perform nearly as well as a reference model from the same model class. They reveal the existence of alternative well-performing models, which may support different interpretations. This enables selecting models that match domain knowledge, hidden constraints, or user preferences. However, efficient construction methods currently exist for only a few model classes. Applied machine learning usually searches many model classes, and the best class is unknown beforehand. We therefore study Rashomon sets in the combined algorithm selection and hyperparameter optimization (CASH) setting and call them CASHomon sets. We propose TruVaRImp, a model-based active learning algorithm for level set estimation with an implicit threshold, and provide convergence guarantees. On synthetic and real-world datasets, TruVaRImp reliably identifies CASHomon sets members and matches or outperforms naive sampling, Bayesian optimization, classical and implicit level set estimation methods, and other baselines. Our analyses of predictive multiplicity and feature-importance variability across model classes question the common practice of interpreting data through a single model class.
comment: Equal contributions by Fiona Katharina Ewald and Martin Binder
☆ A Kolmogorov-Arnold Surrogate Model for Chemical Equilibria: Application to Solid Solutions
The computational cost of geochemical solvers is a challenging matter. For reactive transport simulations, where chemical calculations are performed up to billions of times, it is crucial to reduce the total computational time. Existing publications have explored various machine-learning approaches to determine the most effective data-driven surrogate model. In particular, multilayer perceptrons are widely employed due to their ability to recognize nonlinear relationships. In this work, we focus on the recent Kolmogorov-Arnold networks, where learnable spline-based functions replace classical fixed activation functions. This architecture has achieved higher accuracy with fewer trainable parameters and has become increasingly popular for solving partial differential equations. First, we train a surrogate model based on an existing cement system benchmark. Then, we move to an application case for the geological disposal of nuclear waste, i.e., the determination of radionuclide-bearing solids solubilities. To the best of our knowledge, this work is the first to investigate co-precipitation with radionuclide incorporation using data-driven surrogate models, considering increasing levels of thermodynamic complexity from simple mechanical mixtures to non-ideal solid solutions of binary (Ba,Ra)SO$_4$ and ternary (Sr,Ba,Ra)SO$_4$ systems. On the cement benchmark, we demonstrate that the Kolmogorov-Arnold architecture outperforms multilayer perceptrons in both absolute and relative error metrics, reducing them by 62% and 59%, respectively. On the binary and ternary radium solid solution models, Kolmogorov-Arnold networks maintain median prediction errors near $1\times10^{-3}$. This is the first step toward employing surrogate models to speed up reactive transport simulations and optimize the safety assessment of deep geological waste repositories.
☆ xplainfi: Feature Importance and Statistical Inference for Machine Learning in R
We introduce xplainfi, an R package built on top of the mlr3 ecosystem for global, loss-based feature importance methods for machine learning models. Various feature importance methods exist in R, but significant gaps remain, particularly regarding conditional importance methods and associated statistical inference procedures. The package implements permutation feature importance, conditional feature importance, relative feature importance, leave-one-covariate-out, and generalizations thereof, and both marginal and conditional Shapley additive global importance methods. It provides a modular conditional sampling architecture based on Gaussian distributions, adversarial random forests, conditional inference trees, and knockoff-based samplers, which enable conditional importance analysis for continuous and mixed data. Statistical inference is available through multiple approaches, including variance-corrected confidence intervals and the conditional predictive impact framework. We demonstrate that xplainfi produces importance scores consistent with existing implementations across multiple simulation settings and learner types, while offering competitive runtime performance. The package is available on CRAN and provides researchers and practitioners with a comprehensive toolkit for feature importance analysis and model interpretation in R.
comment: 25 pages, 5 figures
☆ Enhancing classification accuracy through chaos
We propose a novel approach which exploits chaos to enhance classification accuracy. Specifically, the available data that need to be classified are treated as vectors that are first lifted into a higher-dimensional space and then used as initial conditions for the evolution of a chaotic dynamical system for a prescribed temporal interval. The evolved state of the dynamical system is then fed to a trainable softmax classifier which outputs the probabilities of the various classes. As proof-of-concept, we use samples of randomly perturbed orthogonal vectors of moderate dimension (2 to 20), with a corresponding number of classes equal to the vector dimension, and show how our approach can both significantly accelerate the training process and improve the classification accuracy compared to a standard softmax classifier which operates on the original vectors, as well as a softmax classifier which only lifts the vectors to a higher-dimensional space without evolving them. We also provide an explanation for the improved performance of the chaos-enhanced classifier.
comment: 23 pages, 8 figures
☆ Scalable Simulation-Based Model Inference with Test-Time Complexity Control
Simulation plays a central role in scientific discovery. In many applications, the bottleneck is no longer running a simulator; it is choosing among large families of plausible simulators, each corresponding to different forward models/hypotheses consistent with observations. Over large model families, classical Bayesian workflows for model selection are impractical. Furthermore, amortized model selection methods typically hard-code a fixed model prior or complexity penalty at training time, requiring users to commit to a particular parsimony assumption before seeing the data. We introduce PRISM, a simulation-based encoder-decoder that infers a joint posterior over both discrete model structures and associated continuous parameters, while enabling test-time control of model complexity via a tunable model prior that the network is conditioned on. We show that PRISM scales to families with combinatorially many (up to billions) of model instantiations on a synthetic symbolic regression task. As a scientific application, we evaluate PRISM on biophysical modeling for diffusion MRI data, showing the ability to perform model selection across several multi-compartment models, on both synthetic and in vivo neuroimaging data.
☆ Evaluating the Robustness of Reinforcement Learning based Adaptive Traffic Signal Control
Reinforcement learning (RL) has attracted increasing interest for adaptive traffic signal control due to its model-free ability to learn control policies directly from interaction with the traffic environment. However, several challenges remain before RL-based signal control can be considered ready for field deployment. Many existing studies rely on simplified signal timing structures, robustness of trained models under varying traffic demand conditions remains insufficiently evaluated, and runtime efficiency continues to pose challenges when training RL algorithms in traffic microscopic simulation environments. This study formulates an RL-based signal control algorithm capable of representing a full eight-phase ring-barrier configuration consistent with field signal controllers. The algorithm is trained and evaluated under varying traffic demand conditions and benchmarked against state-of-the-practice actuated signal control (ASC). To assess robustness, experiments are conducted across multiple traffic volumes and origin-destination (O-D) demand patterns with varying levels of structural similarity. To improve training efficiency, a distributed asynchronous training architecture is implemented that enables parallel simulation across multiple computing nodes. Results from a case study intersection show that the proposed RL-based signal control significantly outperforms optimized ASC, reducing average delay by 11-32% across movements. A model trained on a single O-D pattern generalizes well to similar unseen demand patterns but degrades under substantially different demand conditions. In contrast, a model trained on diverse O-D patterns demonstrates strong robustness, consistently outperforming ASC even under highly dissimilar unseen demand scenarios.
☆ Faster Inference of Flow-Based Generative Models via Improved Data-Noise Coupling ICLR2025
Conditional Flow Matching (CFM), a simulation-free method for training continuous normalizing flows, provides an efficient alternative to diffusion models for key tasks like image and video generation. The performance of CFM in solving these tasks depends on the way data is coupled with noise. A recent approach uses minibatch optimal transport (OT) to reassign noise-data pairs in each training step to streamline sampling trajectories and thus accelerate inference. However, its optimization is restricted to individual minibatches, limiting its effectiveness on large datasets. To address this shortcoming, we introduce LOOM-CFM (Looking Out Of Minibatch-CFM), a novel method to extend the scope of minibatch OT by preserving and optimizing these assignments across minibatches over training time. Our approach demonstrates consistent improvements in the sampling speed-quality trade-off across multiple datasets. LOOM-CFM also enhances distillation initialization and supports high-resolution synthesis in latent space training.
comment: Patched from ICLR2025. Code: https://github.com/araachie/loom-cfm
☆ IConE: Batch Independent Collapse Prevention for Self-Supervised Representation Learning
Self-supervised learning (SSL) has revolutionized representation learning, with Joint-Embedding Architectures (JEAs) emerging as an effective approach for capturing semantic features. Existing JEAs rely on implicit or explicit batch interaction -- via negative sampling or statistical regularization -- to prevent representation collapse. This reliance becomes problematic in regimes where batch sizes must be small, such as high-dimensional scientific data, where memory constraints and class imbalance make large, well-balanced batches infeasible. We introduce IConE (Instance-Contrasted Embeddings), a framework that decouples collapse prevention from the training batch size. Rather than enforcing diversity through batch statistics, IConE maintains a global set of learnable auxiliary instance embeddings regularized by an explicit diversity objective. This transfers the anti-collapse mechanism from the transient batch to a dataset-level embedding space, allowing stable training even when batch statistics are unreliable, down to batch size 1. Across diverse 2D and 3D biomedical modalities, IConE outperforms strong contrastive and non-contrastive baselines throughout the small-batch regime (from B=1 to B=64) and demonstrates marked robustness to severe class imbalance. Geometric analysis shows that IConE preserves high intrinsic dimensionality in the learned representations, preventing the collapse observed in existing JEAs as batch sizes shrink.
☆ Directional Embedding Smoothing for Robust Vision Language Models ICLR 2026
The safety and reliability of vision-language models (VLMs) are a crucial part of deploying trustworthy agentic AI systems. However, VLMs remain vulnerable to jailbreaking attacks that undermine their safety alignment to yield harmful outputs. In this work, we extend the Randomized Embedding Smoothing and Token Aggregation (RESTA) defense to VLMs and evaluate its performance against the JailBreakV-28K benchmark of multi-modal jailbreaking attacks. We find that RESTA is effective in reducing attack success rate over this diverse corpus of attacks, in particular, when employing directional embedding noise, where the injected noise is aligned with the original token embedding vectors. Our results demonstrate that RESTA can contribute to securing VLMs within agentic systems, as a lightweight, inference-time defense layer of an overall security framework.
comment: Accepted at ICLR 2026 Workshop on Agents in the Wild
☆ In-Context Symbolic Regression for Robustness-Improved Kolmogorov-Arnold Networks
Symbolic regression aims to replace black-box predictors with concise analytical expressions that can be inspected and validated in scientific machine learning. Kolmogorov-Arnold Networks (KANs) are well suited to this goal because each connection between adjacent units (an "edge") is parametrised by a learnable univariate function that can, in principle, be replaced by a symbolic operator. In practice, however, symbolic extraction is a bottleneck: the standard KAN-to-symbol approach fits operators to each learned edge function in isolation, making the discrete choice sensitive to initialisation and non-convex parameter fitting, and ignoring how local substitutions interact through the full network. We study in-context symbolic regression for operator extraction in KANs, and present two complementary instantiations. Greedy in-context Symbolic Regression (GSR) performs greedy, in-context selection by choosing edge replacements according to end-to-end loss improvement after brief fine-tuning. Gated Matching Pursuit (GMP) amortises this in-context selection by training a differentiable gated operator layer that places an operator library behind sparse gates on each edge; after convergence, gates are discretised (optionally followed by a short in-context greedy refinement pass). We quantify robustness via one-factor-at-a-time (OFAT) hyper-parameter sweeps and assess both predictive error and qualitative consistency of recovered formulas. Across several experiments, greedy in-context symbolic regression achieves up to 99.8% reduction in median OFAT test MSE.
comment: 24 pages; Accepted for publication at XAI'2026
☆ Mechanistic Foundations of Goal-Directed Control
Mechanistic interpretability has transformed the analysis of transformer circuits by decomposing model behavior into competing algorithms, identifying phase transitions during training, and deriving closed-form predictions for when and why strategies shift. However, this program has remained largely confined to sequence-prediction architectures, leaving embodied control systems without comparable mechanistic accounts. Here we extend this framework to sensorimotor-cognitive development, using infant motor learning as a model system. We show that foundational inductive biases give rise to causal control circuits, with learned gating mechanisms converging toward theoretically motivated uncertainty thresholds. The resulting dynamics reveal a clean phase transition in the arbitration gate whose commitment behavior is well described by a closed-form exponential moving-average surrogate. We identify context window k as the critical parameter governing circuit formation: below a minimum threshold (k$\leq$4) the arbitration mechanism cannot form; above it (k$\geq$8), gate confidence scales asymptotically as log k. A two-dimensional phase diagram further reveals task-demand-dependent route arbitration consistent with the prediction that prospective execution becomes advantageous only when prediction error remains within the task tolerance window. Together, these results provide a mechanistic account of how reactive and prospective control strategies emerge and compete during learning. More broadly, this work sharpens mechanistic accounts of cognitive development and provides principled guidance for the design of interpretable embodied agents.
comment: Submitted to the 7th International Conference on the Mathematics of Neuroscience and AI (Rome, June 2026)
☆ A proof-of-concept for automated AI-driven stellarator coil optimization with in-the-loop finite-element calculations
Finding feasible coils for stellarator fusion devices is a critical challenge of realizing this concept for future power plants. Years of research work can be put into the design of even a single reactor-scale stellarator design. To rapidly speed up and automate the workflow of designing stellarator coils, we have designed an end-to-end ``runner'' for performing stellarator coil optimization. The entirety of pre and post-processing steps have been automated; the user specifies only a few basic input parameters, and final coil solutions are updated on an open-source leaderboard. Two policies are available for performing non-stop automated coil optimizations through a genetic algorithm or a context-aware LLM. Lastly, we construct a novel in-the-loop optimization of Von Mises stresses in the coils, opening up important future capabilities for in-the-loop finite-element calculations.
☆ Decomposing Probabilistic Scores: Reliability, Information Loss and Uncertainty
Calibration is a conditional property that depends on the information retained by a predictor. We develop decomposition identities for arbitrary proper losses that make this dependence explicit. At any information level $\mathcal A$, the expected loss of an $\mathcal A$-measurable predictor splits into a proper-regret (reliability) term and a conditional entropy (residual uncertainty) term. For nested levels $\mathcal A\subseteq\mathcal B$, a chain decomposition quantifies the information gain from $\mathcal A$ to $\mathcal B$. Applied to classification with features $\boldsymbol{X}$ and score $S=s(\boldsymbol{X})$, this yields a three-term identity: miscalibration, a {\em grouping} term measuring information loss from $\boldsymbol{X}$ to $S$, and irreducible uncertainty at the feature level. We leverage the framework to analyze post-hoc recalibration, aggregation of calibrated models, and stagewise/boosting constructions, with explicit forms for Brier and log-loss.
☆ ADV-0: Closed-Loop Min-Max Adversarial Training for Long-Tail Robustness in Autonomous Driving
Deploying autonomous driving systems requires robustness against long-tail scenarios that are rare but safety-critical. While adversarial training offers a promising solution, existing methods typically decouple scenario generation from policy optimization and rely on heuristic surrogates. This leads to objective misalignment and fails to capture the shifting failure modes of evolving policies. This paper presents ADV-0, a closed-loop min-max optimization framework that treats the interaction between driving policy (defender) and adversarial agent (attacker) as a zero-sum Markov game. By aligning the attacker's utility directly with the defender's objective, we reveal the optimal adversary distribution. To make this tractable, we cast dynamic adversary evolution as iterative preference learning, efficiently approximating this optimum and offering an algorithm-agnostic solution to the game. Theoretically, ADV-0 converges to a Nash Equilibrium and maximizes a certified lower bound on real-world performance. Experiments indicate that it effectively exposes diverse safety-critical failures and greatly enhances the generalizability of both learned policies and motion planners against unseen long-tail risks.
☆ Towards Foundation Models for Consensus Rank Aggregation
Aggregating a consensus ranking from multiple input rankings is a fundamental problem with applications in recommendation systems, search engines, job recruitment, and elections. Despite decades of research in consensus ranking aggregation, minimizing the Kemeny distance remains computationally intractable. Specifically, determining an optimal aggregation of rankings with respect to the Kemeny distance is an NP-hard problem, limiting its practical application to relatively small-scale instances. We propose the Kemeny Transformer, a novel Transformer-based algorithm trained via reinforcement learning to efficiently approximate the Kemeny optimal ranking. Experimental results demonstrate that our model outperforms classical majority-heuristic and Markov-chain approaches, achieving substantially faster inference than integer linear programming solvers. Our approach thus offers a practical, scalable alternative for real-world ranking-aggregation tasks.
comment: 16 pages, 5 figures
☆ Modeling Matches as Language: A Generative Transformer Approach for Counterfactual Player Valuation in Football ECML-PKDD
Evaluating football player transfers is challenging because player actions depend strongly on tactical systems, teammates, and match context. Despite this complexity, recruitment decisions often rely on static statistics and subjective expert judgment, which do not fully account for these contextual factors. This limitation stems largely from the absence of counterfactual simulation mechanisms capable of predicting outcomes in hypothetical scenarios. To address these challenges, we propose ScoutGPT, a generative model that treats football match events as sequential tokens within a language modeling framework. Utilizing a NanoGPT-based Transformer architecture trained on next-token prediction, ScoutGPT learns the dynamics of match event sequences to simulate event sequences under hypothetical lineups, demonstrating superior predictive performance compared to existing baseline models. Leveraging this capability, the model employs Monte Carlo sampling to enable counterfactual simulation, allowing for the assessment of unobserved scenarios. Experiments on K League data show that simulated player transfers lead to measurable changes in offensive progression and goal probabilities, indicating that ScoutGPT captures player-specific impact beyond traditional static metrics.
comment: 18 pages, 3 figures, 9 tables. Submitted to 2026 ECML-PKDD Applied Data Science Track
☆ Geometric framework for biological evolution
We develop a generally covariant description of evolutionary dynamics that operates consistently in both genotype and phenotype spaces. We show that the maximum entropy principle yields a fundamental identification between the inverse metric tensor and the covariance matrix, revealing the Lande equation as a covariant gradient ascent equation. This demonstrates that evolution can be modeled as a learning process on the fitness landscape, with the specific learning algorithm determined by the functional relation between the metric tensor and the noise covariance arising from microscopic dynamics. While the metric (or the inverse genotypic covariance matrix) has been extensively characterized empirically, the noise covariance and its associated observable (the covariance of evolutionary changes) have never been directly measured. This poses the experimental challenge of determining the functional form relating metric to noise covariance.
comment: 14 pages
☆ Massive Redundancy in Gradient Transport Enables Sparse Online Learning
Real-time recurrent learning (RTRL) computes exact online gradients by propagating a Jacobian tensor forward through recurrent dynamics, but at O(n^4) cost per step. Prior work has sought structured approximations (rank-1 compression, graph-based sparsity, Kronecker factorization). We show that, in the continuous error signal regime, the recurrent Jacobian is massively redundant:propagating through a random 6% of paths (k=4 of n=64) recovers 84 +/- 6% of full RTRL's adaptation ability across five seeds, and the absolute count k=4 remains effective from n=64 to n=256 (6% to 1.6%, recovery 84 to 78%), meaning sparse RTRL becomes relatively cheaper as networks grow. In RNNs, the recovery is selection-invariant (even adversarial path selection works) and exhibits a step-function transition from zero to any nonzero propagation. Spectral analysis reveals the mechanism: the Jacobian is full-rank but near-isotropic (condition numbers 2.6-6.5), so any random subset provides a directionally representative gradient estimate. On chaotic dynamics (Lorenz attractor), sparse propagation is more numerically stable than full RTRL (CV 13% vs. 88%), as subsampling avoids amplifying pathological spectral modes. The redundancy extends to LSTMs (k=4 matches full RTRL) and to transformers via sparse gradient transport (50% head sparsity outperforms the dense reference; 33% is borderline), with higher thresholds reflecting head specialization rather than isotropy. On real primate neural data, sparse RTRL (k=4) adapts online to cross-session electrode drift (80 +/- 11% recovery, 5 seeds), where sparse propagation is again more stable than full RTRL. Without continuous error signal, Jacobian propagation accumulates numerical drift and degrades all RTRL variants, a scope condition for all forward-mode methods. Results hold with SGD (92 +/- 1% recovery), suggesting independence from optimizer choice.
comment: 27 pages, 5 figures, 14 tables
☆ PiGRAND: Physics-informed Graph Neural Diffusion for Intelligent Additive Manufacturing
A comprehensive understanding of heat transport is essential for optimizing various mechanical and engineering applications, including 3D printing. Recent advances in machine learning, combined with physics-based models, have enabled a powerful fusion of numerical methods and data-driven algorithms. This progress is driven by the availability of limited sensor data in various engineering and scientific domains, where the cost of data collection and the inaccessibility of certain measurements are high. To this end, we present PiGRAND, a Physics-informed graph neural diffusion framework. In order to reduce the computational complexity of graph learning, an efficient graph construction procedure was developed. Our approach is inspired by the explicit Euler and implicit Crank-Nicolson methods for modeling continuous heat transport, leveraging sub-learning models to secure the accurate diffusion across graph nodes. To enhance computational performance, our approach is combined with efficient transfer learning. We evaluate PiGRAND on thermal images from 3D printing, demonstrating significant improvements in prediction accuracy and computational performance compared to traditional graph neural diffusion (GRAND) and physics-informed neural networks (PINNs). These enhancements are attributed to the incorporation of physical principles derived from the theoretical study of partial differential equations (PDEs) into the learning model. The PiGRAND code is open-sourced on GitHub: https://github.com/bu32loxa/PiGRAND
comment: 36 pages, 29 figures
☆ The Sampling Complexity of Condorcet Winner Identification in Dueling Bandits
We study best-arm identification in stochastic dueling bandits under the sole assumption that a Condorcet winner exists, i.e., an arm that wins each noisy pairwise comparison with probability at least $1/2$. We introduce a new identification procedure that exploits the full gap matrix $Δ_{i,j}=q_{i,j}-\tfrac12$ (where $q_{i,j}$ is the probability that arm $i$ beats arm $j$), rather than only the gaps between the Condorcet winner and the other arms. We derive high-probability, instance-dependent sample-complexity guarantees that (up to logarithmic factors) improve the best known ones by leveraging informative comparisons beyond those involving the winner. We complement these results with new lower bounds which, to our knowledge, are the first for Condorcet-winner identification in stochastic dueling bandits. Our lower-bound analysis isolates the intrinsic cost of locating informative entries in the gap matrix and estimating them to the required confidence, establishing the optimality of our non-asymptotic bounds. Overall, our results reveal new regimes and trade-offs in the sample complexity that are not captured by asymptotic analyses based only on the expected budget.
☆ Joint Routing and Model Pruning for Decentralized Federated Learning in Bandwidth-Constrained Multi-Hop Wireless Networks
Decentralized federated learning (D-FL) enables privacy-preserving training without a central server, but multi-hop model exchanges and aggregation are often bottlenecked by communication resource constraints. To address this issue, we propose a joint routing-and-pruning framework that optimizes routing paths and pruning rates to maintain communication latency within prescribed limits. We analyze how the sum of model biases across all clients affects the convergence bound of D-FL and formulate an optimization problem that maximizes the model retention rate to minimize these biases under communication constraints. Further analysis reveals that each client's model retention rate is path-dependent, which reduces the original problem to a routing optimization. Leveraging this insight, we develop a routing algorithm that selects latency-efficient transmission paths, allowing more parameters to be delivered within the time budget and thereby improving D-FL convergence. Simulations demonstrate that, compared with unpruned systems, the proposed framework reduces average transmission latency by 27.8% and improves testing accuracy by approximately 12%. Furthermore, relative to standard benchmark routing algorithms, the proposed routing method improves accuracy by roughly 8%.
☆ CATFormer: When Continual Learning Meets Spiking Transformers With Dynamic Thresholds AAAI 2026
Although deep neural networks perform extremely well in controlled environments, they fail in real-world scenarios where data isn't available all at once, and the model must adapt to a new data distribution that may or may not follow the initial distribution. Previously acquired knowledge is lost during subsequent updates based on new data. a phenomenon commonly known as catastrophic forgetting. In contrast, the brain can learn without such catastrophic forgetting, irrespective of the number of tasks it encounters. Existing spiking neural networks (SNNs) for class-incremental learning (CIL) suffer a sharp performance drop as tasks accumulate. We here introduce CATFormer (Context Adaptive Threshold Transformer), a scalable framework that overcomes this limitation. We observe that the key to preventing forgetting in SNNs lies not only in synaptic plasticity but also in modulating neuronal excitability. At the core of CATFormer is the Dynamic Threshold Leaky Integrate-and-Fire (DTLIF) neuron model, which leverages context-adaptive thresholds as the primary mechanism for knowledge retention. This is paired with a Gated Dynamic Head Selection (G-DHS) mechanism for task-agnostic inference. Extensive evaluation on both static (CIFAR-10/100/Tiny-ImageNet) and neuromorphic (CIFAR10-DVS/SHD) datasets reveals that CATFormer outperforms existing rehearsal-free CIL algorithms across various task splits, establishing it as an ideal architecture for energy-efficient, true-class incremental learning.
comment: Accepted for publication in the proceedings of the Neuro for AI & AI for Neuro Workshop at AAAI 2026 (PMLR)
☆ Token Coherence: Adapting MESI Cache Protocols to Minimize Synchronization Overhead in Multi-Agent LLM Systems
Multi-agent LLM orchestration incurs synchronization costs scaling as O(n x S x |D|) in agents, steps, and artifact size under naive broadcast -- a regime I term broadcast-induced triply-multiplicative overhead. I argue this pathology is a structural residue of full-state rebroadcast, not an inherent property of multi-agent coordination. The central claim: synchronization cost explosion in LLM multi-agent systems maps with formal precision onto the cache coherence problem in shared-memory multiprocessors, and MESI-protocol invalidation transfers to artifact synchronization under minimal structural modification. I construct the Artifact Coherence System (ACS) and prove the Token Coherence Theorem: lazy invalidation attenuates cost by at least S/(n + W(d_i)) when S > n + W(d_i), converting O(n x S x |D|) to O((n + W) x |D|). A TLA+-verified protocol enforces single-writer safety, monotonic versioning, and bounded staleness across ~2,400 explored states. Simulation across four workload configurations yields token savings of 95.0% +/- 1.3% at V=0.05, 92.3% +/- 1.4% at V=0.10, 88.3% +/- 1.5% at V=0.25, and 84.2% +/- 1.3% at V=0.50 -- each exceeding the theorem's conservative lower bounds. Savings of ~81% persist at V=0.9, contrary to the predicted collapse threshold. Contributions: (1) formal MESI-to-artifact state mapping; (2) Token Coherence Theorem as savings lower bound; (3) TLA+-verified protocol with three proven invariants; (4) characterization of conditional artifact access semantics resolving the always-read objection; (5) reference Python implementation integrating with LangGraph, CrewAI, and AutoGen via thin adapter layers.
comment: 25 pages. Code and reproduction scripts at https://github.com/hipvlady/agent-coherence
☆ Sequential Transport for Causal Mediation Analysis
We propose sequential transport (ST), a distributional framework for mediation analysis that combines optimal transport (OT) with a mediator directed acyclic graph (DAG). Instead of relying on cross-world counterfactual assumptions, ST constructs unit-level mediator counterfactuals by minimally transporting each mediator, either marginally or conditionally, toward its distribution under an alternative treatment while preserving the causal dependencies encoded by the DAG. For numerical mediators, ST uses monotone (conditional) OT maps based on conditional CDF/quantile estimators; for categorical mediators, it extends naturally via simplex-based transport. We establish consistency of the estimated transport maps and of the induced unit-level decompositions into mutatis mutandis direct and indirect effects under standard regularity and support conditions. When the treatment is randomized or ignorable (possibly conditional on covariates), these decompositions admit a causal interpretation; otherwise, they provide a principled distributional attribution of differences between groups aligned with the mediator structure. Gaussian examples show that ST recovers classical mediation formulas, while additional simulations confirm good performance in nonlinear and mixed-type settings. An application to the COMPAS dataset illustrates how ST yields deterministic, DAG-consistent counterfactual mediators and a fine-grained mediator-level attribution of disparities.
☆ HindSight: Evaluating Research Idea Generation via Future Impact
Evaluating AI-generated research ideas typically relies on LLM judges or human panels -- both subjective and disconnected from actual research impact. We introduce \hs{}, a time-split evaluation framework that measures idea quality by matching generated ideas against real future publications and scoring them by citation impact and venue acceptance. Using a temporal cutoff~$T$, we restrict an idea generation system to pre-$T$ literature, then evaluate its outputs against papers published in the subsequent 30 months. Experiments across 10 AI/ML research topics reveal a striking disconnect: LLM-as-Judge finds no significant difference between retrieval-augmented and vanilla idea generation ($p{=}0.584$), while \hs{} shows the retrieval-augmented system produces 2.5$\times$ higher-scoring ideas ($p{<}0.001$). Moreover, \hs{} scores are \emph{negatively} correlated with LLM-judged novelty ($ρ{=}{-}0.29$, $p{<}0.01$), suggesting that LLMs systematically overvalue novel-sounding ideas that never materialize in real research.
☆ Point-Identification of a Robust Predictor Under Latent Shift with Imperfect Proxies
Addressing the domain adaptation problem becomes more challenging when distribution shifts across domains stem from latent confounders that affect both covariates and outcomes. Existing proxy-based approaches that address latent shift rely on a strong completeness assumption to uniquely determine (point-identify) a robust predictor. Completeness requires that proxies have sufficient information about variations in latent confounders. For imperfect proxies the mapping from confounders to the space of proxy distributions is non-injective, and multiple latent confounder values can generate the same proxy distribution. This breaks the completeness assumption and observed data are consistent with multiple potential predictors (set-identified). To address this, we introduce latent equivalent classes (LECs). LECs are defined as groups of latent confounders that induce the same conditional proxy distribution. We show that point-identification for the robust predictor remains achievable as long as multiple domains differ sufficiently in how they mix proxy-induced LECs to form the robust predictor. This domain diversity condition is formalized as a cross-domain rank condition on the mixture weights, which is substantially weaker assumption than completeness. We introduce the Proximal Quasi-Bayesian Active learning (PQAL) framework, which actively queries a minimal set of diverse domains that satisfy this rank condition. PQAL can efficiently recover the point-identified predictor, demonstrates robustness to varying degrees of shift and outperforms previous methods on synthetic data and semi-synthetic dSprites dataset.
☆ Storage and selection of multiple chaotic attractors in minimal reservoir computers
Modern predictive modeling increasingly calls for a single learned dynamical substrate to operate across multiple regimes. From a dynamical-systems viewpoint, this capability decomposes into the storage of multiple attractors and the selection of the appropriate attractor in response to contextual cues. In reservoir computing (RC), multi-attractor learning has largely been pursued using large, randomly wired reservoirs, on the assumption that stochastic connectivity is required to generate sufficiently rich internal dynamics. At the same time, recent work shows that minimal deterministic reservoirs can match random designs for single-system chaotic forecasting. Under which conditions can minimal topologies learn multiple chaotic attractors? In this paper, we find that minimal architectures can successfully store multiple chaotic attractors. However, these same architectures struggle with task switching, in which the system must transition between attractors in response to external cues. We test storage and selection on all 28 unordered system pairs formed from eight three-dimensional chaotic systems. We do not observe a robust dependence of multi-attractor performance on reservoir topology. Over the ten topologies investigated, we find that no single one consistently outperforms the others for either storage or cue-dependent selection. Our results suggest that while minimal substrates possess the representational capacity to model coexisting attractors, they may lack the robust temporal memory required for cued transitions.
☆ Accelerating Byzantine-Robust Distributed Learning with Compressed Communication via Double Momentum and Variance Reduction
In collaborative and distributed learning, Byzantine robustness reflects a major facet of optimization algorithms. Such distributed algorithms are often accompanied by transmitting a large number of parameters, so communication compression is essential for an effective solution. In this paper, we propose Byz-DM21, a novel Byzantine-robust and communication-efficient stochastic distributed learning algorithm. Our key innovation is a novel gradient estimator based on a double-momentum mechanism, integrating recent advancements in error feedback techniques. Using this estimator, we design both standard and accelerated algorithms that eliminate the need for large batch sizes while maintaining robustness against Byzantine workers. We prove that the Byz-DM21 algorithm has a smaller neighborhood size and converges to $\varepsilon$-stationary points in $\mathcal{O}(\varepsilon^{-4})$ iterations. To further enhance efficiency, we introduce a distributed variant called Byz-VR-DM21, which incorporates local variance reduction at each node to progressively eliminate variance from random approximations. We show that Byz-VR-DM21 provably converges to $\varepsilon$-stationary points in $\mathcal{O}(\varepsilon^{-3 })$ iterations. Additionally, we extend our results to the case where the functions satisfy the Polyak-Łojasiewicz condition. Finally, numerical experiments demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed method.
comment: 62 pages,12 figures
☆ Safe Flow Q-Learning: Offline Safe Reinforcement Learning with Reachability-Based Flow Policies
Offline safe reinforcement learning (RL) seeks reward-maximizing policies from static datasets under strict safety constraints. Existing methods often rely on soft expected-cost objectives or iterative generative inference, which can be insufficient for safety-critical real-time control. We propose Safe Flow Q-Learning (SafeFQL), which extends FQL to safe offline RL by combining a Hamilton--Jacobi reachability-inspired safety value function with an efficient one-step flow policy. SafeFQL learns the safety value via a self-consistency Bellman recursion, trains a flow policy by behavioral cloning, and distills it into a one-step actor for reward-maximizing safe action selection without rejection sampling at deployment. To account for finite-data approximation error in the learned safety boundary, we add a conformal prediction calibration step that adjusts the safety threshold and provides finite-sample probabilistic safety coverage. Empirically, SafeFQL trades modestly higher offline training cost for substantially lower inference latency than diffusion-style safe generative baselines, which is advantageous for real-time safety-critical deployment. Across boat navigation, and Safety Gymnasium MuJoCo tasks, SafeFQL matches or exceeds prior offline safe RL performance while substantially reducing constraint violations.
comment: 24 pages, 6 figures, 4 tables
☆ Establishing Construct Validity in LLM Capability Benchmarks Requires Nomological Networks
Recent work in machine learning increasingly attributes human-like capabilities such as reasoning or theory of mind to large language models (LLMs) on the basis of benchmark performance. This paper examines this practice through the lens of construct validity, understood as the problem of linking theoretical capabilities to their empirical measurements. It contrasts three influential frameworks: the nomological account developed by Cronbach and Meehl, the inferential account proposed by Messick and refined by Kane, and Borsboom's causal account. I argue that the nomological account provides the most suitable foundation for current LLM capability research. It avoids the strong ontological commitments of the causal account while offering a more substantive framework for articulating construct meaning than the inferential account. I explore the conceptual implications of adopting the nomological account for LLM research through a concrete case: the assessment of reasoning capabilities in LLMs.
☆ Sampling-guided exploration of active feature selection policies
Determining the most appropriate features for machine learning predictive models is challenging regarding performance and feature acquisition costs. In particular, global feature choice is limited given that some features will only benefit a subset of instances. In previous work, we proposed a reinforcement learning approach to sequentially recommend which modality to acquire next to reach the best information/cost ratio, based on the instance-specific information already acquired. We formulated the problem as a Markov Decision Process where the state's dimensionality changes during the episode, avoiding data imputation, contrary to existing works. However, this only allowed processing a small number of features, as all possible combinations of features were considered. Here, we address these limitations with two contributions: 1) we expand our framework to larger datasets with a heuristic-based strategy that focuses on the most promising feature combinations, and 2) we introduce a post-fit regularisation strategy that reduces the number of different feature combinations, leading to compact sequences of decisions. We tested our method on four binary classification datasets (one involving high-dimensional variables), the largest of which had 56 features and 4500 samples. We obtained better performance than state-of-the-art methods, both in terms of accuracy and policy complexity.
☆ Trustworthy Koopman Operator Learning: Invariance Diagnostics and Error Bounds
Koopman operator theory provides a global linear representation of nonlinear dynamics and underpins many data-driven methods. In practice, however, finite-dimensional feature spaces induced by a user-chosen dictionary are rarely invariant, so closure failures and projection errors lead to spurious eigenvalues, misleading Koopman modes, and overconfident forecasts. This paper addresses a central validation problem in data-driven Koopman methods: how to quantify invariance and projection errors for an arbitrary feature space using only snapshot data, and how to use these diagnostics to produce actionable guarantees and guide dictionary refinement? A unified a posteriori methodology is developed for certifying when a Koopman approximation is trustworthy and improving it when it is not. Koopman invariance is quantified using principal angles between a subspace and its Koopman image, yielding principal observables and a principal angle decomposition (PAD), a dynamics-informed alternative to SVD truncation with significantly improved performance. Multi-step error bounds are derived for Koopman and Perron--Frobenius mode decompositions, including RKHS-based pointwise guarantees, and are complemented by Gaussian process expected error surrogates. The resulting toolbox enables validated spectral analysis, certified forecasting, and principled dictionary and kernel learning, demonstrated on chaotic and high-dimensional benchmarks and real-world datasets, including cavity flow and the Pluto--Charon system.
☆ Affordable Precision Agriculture: A Deployment-Oriented Review of Low-Cost, Low-Power Edge AI and TinyML for Resource-Constrained Farming Systems
Precision agriculture increasingly integrates artificial intelligence to enhance crop monitoring, irrigation management, and resource efficiency. Nevertheless, the vast majority of the current systems are still mostly cloud-based and require reliable connectivity, which hampers the adoption to smaller scale, smallholder farming and underdeveloped country systems. Using recent literature reviews, ranging from 2023 to 2026, this review covers deployments of Edge AI, focused on the evolution and acceptance of Tiny Machine Learning, in low-cost and low-powered agriculture. A hardware-targeted deployment-oriented study has shown pronounced variation in architecture with microcontroller-class platforms i.e. ESP32, STM32, ATMega dominating the inference options, in parallel with single-board computers and UAV-assisted solutions. Quantitative synthesis shows quantization is the dominant optimization strategy; the approach in many works identified: around 50% of such works are quantized, while structured pruning, multi-objective compression and hardware aware neural architecture search are relatively under-researched. Also, resource profiling practices are not uniform: while model size is occasionally reported, explicit flash, RAM, MAC, latency and millijoule level energy metrics are not well documented, hampering reproducibility and cross-system comparison. Moreoever, to bridge the gap between research prototypes and deployment-ready systems, the review also presents a literature-informed deployment perspective in the form of a privacy-preserving layered Edge AI architecture for agriculture, synthesizing the key system-level design insights emerging from the surveyed works. Overall, the findings demonstrate a clear architectural shift toward localized inference with centralized training asymmetry.
☆ Interpretable Classification of Time Series Using Euler Characteristic Surfaces
Persistent homology (PH) -- the conventional method in topological data analysis -- is computationally expensive, requires further vectorization of its signatures before machine learning (ML) can be applied, and captures information along only the spatial axis. For time series data, we propose Euler Characteristic Surfaces (ECS) as an alternative topological signature based on the Euler characteristic ($χ$) -- a fundamental topological invariant. The ECS provides a computationally efficient, spatiotemporal, and inherently discretized feature representation that can serve as direct input to ML models. We prove a stability theorem guaranteeing that the ECS remains stable under small perturbations of the input time series. We first demonstrate that ECS effectively captures the nontrivial topological differences between the limit cycle and the strange attractor in the Rössler system. We then develop an ECS-based classification framework and apply it to five benchmark biomedical datasets (four ECG, one EEG) from the UCR/UEA archive. On $\textit{ECG5000}$, our single-feature ECS classifier achieves $98\%$ accuracy with $O(n+R\cdot T)$ complexity, compared to $62\%$ reported by a recent PH-based method. An AdaBoost extension raises accuracy to $98.6\%$, matching the best deep learning results while retaining full interpretability. Strong results are also obtained on $\textit{TwoLeadECG}$ ($94.1\%$) and $\textit{Epilepsy2}$ ($92.6\%$).
☆ Generative Semantic HARQ: Latent-Space Text Retransmission and Combining
Semantic communication conveys meaning rather than raw bits, but reliability at the semantic level remains an open challenge. We propose a semantic-level hybrid automatic repeat request (HARQ) framework for text communication, in which a Transformer-variational autoencoder (VAE) codec operates as a lightweight overlay on the conventional protocol stack. The stochastic encoder inherently generates diverse latent representations across retransmissions-providing incremental knowledge (IK) from a single model without dedicated protocol design. On the receiver side, a soft quality estimator triggers retransmissions and a quality-aware combiner merges the received latent vectors within a consistent latent space. We systematically benchmark six semantic quality metrics and four soft combining strategies under hybrid semantic distortion that mixes systematic bias with additive noise. The results suggest combining Weighted-Average or MRC-Inspired combining with self-consistency-based HARQ triggering for the best performance.
comment: Submitted to IEEE PIMRC 2026
☆ Muon Converges under Heavy-Tailed Noise: Nonconvex Hölder-Smooth Empirical Risk Minimization
Muon is a recently proposed optimizer that enforces orthogonality in parameter updates by projecting gradients onto the Stiefel manifold, leading to stable and efficient training in large-scale deep neural networks. Meanwhile, the previously reported results indicated that stochastic noise in practical machine learning may exhibit heavy-tailed behavior, violating the bounded-variance assumption. In this paper, we consider the problem of minimizing a nonconvex Hölder-smooth empirical risk that works well with the heavy-tailed stochastic noise. We then show that Muon converges to a stationary point of the empirical risk under the boundedness condition accounting for heavy-tailed stochastic noise. In addition, we show that Muon converges faster than mini-batch SGD.
☆ Analyzing Error Sources in Global Feature Effect Estimation
Global feature effects such as PD and ALE plots are widely used to interpret black-box models. However, they are only estimates of true underlying effects, and their reliability depends on multiple sources of error. Despite the popularity of global feature effects, these error sources are largely unexplored. In particular, the practically relevant question of whether to use training or holdout data to estimate feature effects remains unanswered. We address this gap by providing a systematic, estimator-level analysis that disentangles sources of bias and variance for PD and ALE. To this end, we derive a mean-squared-error decomposition that separates model bias, estimation bias, model variance, and estimation variance, and analyze their dependence on model characteristics, data selection, and sample size. We validate our theoretical findings through an extensive simulation study across multiple data-generating processes, learners, estimation strategies (training data, validation data, and cross-validation), and sample sizes. Our results reveal that, while using holdout data is theoretically the cleanest, potential biases arising from the training data are empirically negligible and dominated by the impact of the usually higher sample size. The estimation variance depends on both the presence of interactions and the sample size, with ALE being particularly sensitive to the latter. Cross-validation-based estimation is a promising approach that reduces the model variance component, particularly for overfitting models. Our analysis provides a principled explanation of the sources of error in feature effect estimates and offers concrete guidance on choosing estimation strategies when interpreting machine learning models.
comment: Accepted to The 4th World Conference on eXplainable Artificial Intelligence (XAI 2026)
☆ Spatio-temporal probabilistic forecast using MMAF-guided learning
We employ stochastic feed-forward neural networks with Gaussian-distributed weights to determine a probabilistic forecast for spatio-temporal raster datasets. The networks are trained using MMAF-guided learning, a generalized Bayesian methodology in which the observed data are preprocessed using an embedding designed to produce a low-dimensional representation that captures their dependence and causal structure. The design of the embedding is theory-guided by the assumption that a spatio-temporal Ornstein-Uhlenbeck process with finite second-order moments generates the observed data. The trained networks, in inference mode, are then used to generate ensemble forecasts by applying different initial conditions at different horizons. Experiments conducted on both synthetic and real data demonstrate that our forecasts remain calibrated across multiple time horizons. Moreover, we show that on such data, simple feed-forward architectures can achieve performance comparable to, and in some cases better than, convolutional or diffusion deep learning architectures used in probabilistic forecasting tasks.
☆ Thinking in Latents: Adaptive Anchor Refinement for Implicit Reasoning in LLMs ICLR 2026
Token-level Chain-of-Thought (CoT) prompting has become a standard way to elicit multi-step reasoning in large language models (LLMs), especially for mathematical word problems. However, generating long intermediate traces increases output length and inference cost, and can be inefficient when the model could arrive at the correct answer without extensive verbalization. This has motivated latent-space reasoning approaches that shift computation into hidden representations and only emit a final answer. Yet, many latent reasoning methods depend on a fixed number of latent refinement steps at inference, adding another hyperparameter that must be tuned across models and datasets to balance accuracy and efficiency. We introduce AdaAnchor, a latent reasoning framework that performs silent iterative computation by refining a set of latent anchor vectors attached to the input. AdaAnchor further incorporates an adaptive halting mechanism that monitors anchor stability across iterations and terminates refinement once the anchor dynamics converge, allocating fewer steps to easier instances while reserving additional refinement steps for harder ones under a shared maximum-step budget. Our empirical evaluation across three mathematical word-problem benchmarks shows that AdaAnchor with adaptive halting yields accuracy gains of up to 5% over fixed-step latent refinement while reducing average latent refinement steps by 48-60% under the same maximum-step budget. Compared to standard reasoning baselines, AdaAnchor achieves large reductions in generated tokens (92-93%) by moving computation into silent latent refinement, offering a different accuracy-efficiency trade-off with substantially lower output-token usage.
comment: Accepted at ICLR 2026, LIT Workshop
☆ CrossADR: enhancing adverse drug reactions prediction for combination pharmacotherapy with cross-layer feature integration and cross-level associative learning
Combination pharmacotherapy offers substantial therapeutic advantages but also poses substantial risks of adverse drug reactions (ADRs). The accurate prediction of ADRs with interpretable computational methods is crucial for clinical safety management, drug development, and precision medicine. However, managing ADRs remains a challenge due to the vast search space of drug combinations and the complexity of physiological responses. Current graph-based architectures often struggle to effectively integrate multi-scale biological information and frequently rely on fixed association matrices, which limits their ability to capture dynamic organ-level dependencies and generalize across diverse datasets. Here we propose CrossADR, a hierarchical framework for organ-level ADR prediction through cross-layer feature integration and cross-level associative learning. It incorporates a gated-residual-flow graph neural network to fuse multi-scale molecular features and utilizes a learnable ADR embedding space to dynamically capture latent biological correlations across 15 organ systems. Systematic evaluation on the newly constructed CrossADR-Dataset-covering 1,376 drugs and 946,000 unique combinations-demonstrates that CrossADR consistently achieves state-of-the-art performance across 80 distinct experimental scenarios and provides high-resolution insights into drug-related protein protein interactions and pathways. Overall, CrossADR represents a robust tool for cross-scale biomedical information integration, cross-layer feature integration as well as cross-level associative learning, and can be effectively utilized to prevent ADRs in clinical decision-making.
Prompt Readiness Levels (PRL): a maturity scale and scoring framework for production grade prompt assets
Prompt engineering has become a production critical component of generative AI systems. However, organizations still lack a shared, auditable method to qualify prompt assets against operational objectives, safety constraints, and compliance requirements. This paper introduces Prompt Readiness Levels (PRL), a nine level maturity scale inspired by TRL, and the Prompt Readiness Score (PRS), a multidimensional scoring method with gating thresholds designed to prevent weak link failure modes. PRL/PRS provide an original, structured and methodological framework for governing prompt assets specification, testing, traceability, security evaluation, and deployment readiness enabling valuation of prompt engineering through reproducible qualification decisions across teams and industries.
comment: 7 pages, 1 figure
☆ A convolutional autoencoder and neural ODE framework for surrogate modeling of transient counterflow flames
A novel convolutional autoencoder neural ODE (CAE-NODE) framework is proposed for a reduced-order model (ROM) of transient 2D counterflow flames, as an extension of AE-NODE methods in homogeneous reactive systems to spatially resolved flows. The spatial correlations of the multidimensional fields are extracted by the convolutional layers, allowing CAE to autonomously construct a physically consistent 6D continuous latent manifold by compressing high-fidelity 2D snapshots (256x256 grid, 21 variables) by over 100,000 times. The NODE is subsequently trained to describe the continuous-time dynamics on the non-linear manifold, enabling the prediction of the full temporal evolution of the flames by integrating forward in time from an initial condition. The results demonstrate that the network can accurately capture the entire transient process, including ignition, flame propagation, and the gradual transition to a non-premixed condition, with relative errors less than ~2% for major species. This study, for the first time, highlights the potential of CAE-NODE for surrogate modeling of unsteady dynamics of multi-dimensional reacting flows.
comment: Submitted to the Proceedings of the Combustion Institute, Volume 42
☆ Interpretable Predictability-Based AI Text Detection: A Replication Study
This paper replicates and extends the system used in the AuTexTification 2023 shared task for authorship attribution of machine-generated texts. First, we tried to reproduce the original results. Exact replication was not possible because of differences in data splits, model availability, and implementation details. Next, we tested newer multilingual language models and added 26 document-level stylometric features. We also applied SHAP analysis to examine which features influence the model's decisions. We replaced the original GPT-2 models with newer generative models such as Qwen and mGPT for computing probabilistic features. For contextual representations, we used mDeBERTa-v3-base and applied the same configuration to both English and Spanish. This allowed us to use one shared configuration for Subtask 1 and Subtask 2. Our experiments show that the additional stylometric features improve performance in both tasks and both languages. The multilingual configuration achieves the results that are comparable to or better than language-specific models. The study also shows that clear documentation is important for reliable replication and fair comparison of systems.
☆ Rethinking Machine Unlearning: Models Designed to Forget via Key Deletion
Machine unlearning is rapidly becoming a practical requirement, driven by privacy regulations, data errors, and the need to remove harmful or corrupted training samples. Despite this, most existing methods tackle the problem purely from a post-hoc perspective. They attempt to erase the influence of targeted training samples through parameter updates that typically require access to the full training data. This creates a mismatch with real deployment scenarios where unlearning requests can be anticipated, revealing a fundamental limitation of post-hoc approaches. We propose \textit{unlearning by design}, a novel paradigm in which models are directly trained to support forgetting as an inherent capability. We instantiate this idea with Machine UNlearning via KEY deletion (MUNKEY), a memory augmented transformer that decouples instance-specific memorization from model weights. Here, unlearning corresponds to removing the instance-identifying key, enabling direct zero-shot forgetting without weight updates or access to the original samples or labels. Across natural image benchmarks, fine-grained recognition, and medical datasets, MUNKEY outperforms all post-hoc baselines. Our results establish that unlearning by design enables fast, deployment-oriented unlearning while preserving predictive performance.
☆ Training-free Detection of Generated Videos via Spatial-Temporal Likelihoods CVPR 2026
Following major advances in text and image generation, the video domain has surged, producing highly realistic and controllable sequences. Along with this progress, these models also raise serious concerns about misinformation, making reliable detection of synthetic videos increasingly crucial. Image-based detectors are fundamentally limited because they operate per frame and ignore temporal dynamics, while supervised video detectors generalize poorly to unseen generators, a critical drawback given the rapid emergence of new models. These challenges motivate zero-shot approaches, which avoid synthetic data and instead score content against real-data statistics, enabling training-free, model-agnostic detection. We introduce \emph{STALL}, a simple, training-free, theoretically justified detector that provides likelihood-based scoring for videos, jointly modeling spatial and temporal evidence within a probabilistic framework. We evaluate STALL on two public benchmarks and introduce ComGenVid, a new benchmark with state-of-the-art generative models. STALL consistently outperforms prior image- and video-based baselines. Code and data are available at https://omerbenhayun.github.io/stall-video.
comment: Accepted to CVPR 2026
☆ Consequentialist Objectives and Catastrophe
Because human preferences are too complex to codify, AIs operate with misspecified objectives. Optimizing such objectives often produces undesirable outcomes; this phenomenon is known as reward hacking. Such outcomes are not necessarily catastrophic. Indeed, most examples of reward hacking in previous literature are benign. And typically, objectives can be modified to resolve the issue. We study the prospect of catastrophic outcomes induced by AIs operating in complex environments. We argue that, when capabilities are sufficiently advanced, pursuing a fixed consequentialist objective tends to result in catastrophic outcomes. We formalize this by establishing conditions that provably lead to such outcomes. Under these conditions, simple or random behavior is safe. Catastrophic risk arises due to extraordinary competence rather than incompetence. With a fixed consequentialist objective, avoiding catastrophe requires constraining AI capabilities. In fact, constraining capabilities the right amount not only averts catastrophe but yields valuable outcomes. Our results apply to any objective produced by modern industrial AI development pipelines.
☆ TrajFlow: Nation-wide Pseudo GPS Trajectory Generation with Flow Matching Models
The importance of mobile phone GPS trajectory data is widely recognized across many fields, yet the use of real data is often hindered by privacy concerns, limited accessibility, and high acquisition costs. As a result, generating pseudo-GPS trajectory data has become an active area of research. Recent diffusion-based approaches have achieved strong fidelity but remain limited in spatial scale (small urban areas), transportation-mode diversity, and efficiency (requiring numerous sampling steps). To address these challenges, we introduce TrajFlow, which to the best of our knowledge is the first flow-matching-based generative model for GPS trajectory generation. TrajFlow leverages the flow-matching paradigm to improve robustness and efficiency across multiple geospatial scales, and incorporates a trajectory harmonization and reconstruction strategy to jointly address scalability, diversity, and efficiency. Using a nationwide mobile phone GPS dataset with millions of trajectories across Japan, we show that TrajFlow or its variants consistently outperform diffusion-based and deep generative baselines at urban, metropolitan, and nationwide levels. As the first nationwide, multi-scale GPS trajectory generation model, TrajFlow demonstrates strong potential to support inter-region urban planning, traffic management, and disaster response, thereby advancing the resilience and intelligence of future mobility systems.
♻ ☆ Emotion is Not Just a Label: Latent Emotional Factors in LLM Processing
Large language models are routinely deployed on text that varies widely in emotional tone, yet their reasoning behavior is typically evaluated without accounting for emotion as a source of representational variation. Prior work has largely treated emotion as a prediction target, for example in sentiment analysis or emotion classification. In contrast, we study emotion as a latent factor that shapes how models attend to and reason over text. We analyze how emotional tone systematically alters attention geometry in transformer models, showing that metrics such as locality, center-of-mass distance, and entropy vary across emotions and correlate with downstream question-answering performance. To facilitate controlled study of these effects, we introduce Affect-Uniform ReAding QA (AURA-QA), a question-answering dataset with emotionally balanced, human-authored context passages. Finally, an emotional regularization framework is proposed that constrains emotion-conditioned representational drift during training. Experiments across multiple QA benchmarks demonstrate that this approach improves reading comprehension in both emotionally-varying and non-emotionally varying datasets, yielding consistent gains under distribution shift and in-domain improvements on several benchmarks.
♻ ☆ SemBench: A Benchmark for Semantic Query Processing Engines VLDB 2026
We present a benchmark targeting a novel class of systems: semantic query processing engines. Those systems rely inherently on generative and reasoning capabilities of state-of-the-art large language models (LLMs). They extend SQL with semantic operators, configured by natural language instructions, that are evaluated via LLMs and enable users to perform various operations on multimodal data. Our benchmark introduces diversity across three key dimensions: scenarios, modalities, and operators. Included are scenarios ranging from movie review analysis to car damage detection. Within these scenarios, we cover different data modalities, including images, audio, and text. Finally, the queries involve a diverse set of operators, including semantic filters, joins, mappings, ranking, and classification operators. We evaluated our benchmark on three academic systems (LOTUS, Palimpzest, and ThalamusDB) and one industrial system, Google BigQuery. Although these results reflect a snapshot of systems under continuous development, our study offers crucial insights into their current strengths and weaknesses, illuminating promising directions for future research.
comment: Accepted to VLDB 2026; Revised version
♻ ☆ Limitations of Public Chest Radiography Datasets for Artificial Intelligence: Label Quality, Domain Shift, Bias and Evaluation Challenges
Artificial intelligence has shown significant promise in chest radiography, where deep learning models can approach radiologist-level diagnostic performance. Progress has been accelerated by large public datasets such as MIMIC-CXR, ChestX-ray14, PadChest, and CheXpert, which provide hundreds of thousands of labelled images with pathology annotations. However, these datasets also present important limitations. Automated label extraction from radiology reports introduces errors, particularly in handling uncertainty and negation, and radiologist review frequently disagrees with assigned labels. In addition, domain shift and population bias restrict model generalisability, while evaluation practices often overlook clinically meaningful measures. We conduct a systematic analysis of these challenges, focusing on label quality, dataset bias, and domain shift. Our cross-dataset domain shift evaluation across multiple model architectures revealed substantial external performance degradation, with pronounced reductions in AUPRC and F1 scores relative to internal testing. To assess dataset bias, we trained a source-classification model that distinguished datasets with near-perfect accuracy, and performed subgroup analyses showing reduced performance for minority age and sex groups. Finally, expert review by two board-certified radiologists identified significant disagreement with public dataset labels. Our findings highlight important clinical weaknesses of current benchmarks and emphasise the need for clinician-validated datasets and fairer evaluation frameworks.
♻ ☆ NerVE: Nonlinear Eigenspectrum Dynamics in LLM Feed-Forward Networks ICLR 2026
We introduce NerVE, a unified eigenspectral framework for understanding how feed-forward networks (FFNs) in large language models (LLMs) organize and regulate information flow in high-dimensional latent space. Despite FFNs dominating the parameter budget, their high-dimensional dynamics remain poorly understood. NerVE addresses this gap through lightweight, memory-efficient tracking of eigenspectrum dynamics via four complementary metrics: Spectral Entropy (dispersion), Participation Ratio (effective dimensionality), Eigenvalue Early Enrichment (top-heaviness), and Jensen-Shannon divergence (distributional shifts). Our key insight is that FFN nonlinearities reinject variance across eigenmodes, fundamentally governing latent dimension utilization, and that optimizer geometry strongly modulates the extent of this variance reinjection. We validate NerVE across model scales, and diverse architectural and optimizer configurations, each uniquely shaping FFN dynamics: normalization schemes controlling variance flow; FFN weight geometries constraining latent space; positional encoding and activation functions regulating information flow; and optimizer choices redistributing effective capacity across depth. Across these settings, NerVE consistently recovers stable spectral signatures that correlate with model's generalization ability and respond predictably to design choices, generalizing beyond transformer to MLP-Mixer architectures, providing actionable insights for architectural and optimizer choices beyond trial-and-error.
comment: Accepted to ICLR 2026. Project page: https://nerve-eigenspectrum.github.io
♻ ☆ IFNSO: Iteration-Free Newton-Schulz Orthogonalization
The Newton-Schulz (NS) iteration has become a key technique for orthogonalization in optimizers such as Muon and for optimization on the Stiefel manifold. Despite its effectiveness, the conventional NS iteration incurs significant computational overhead due to repeated high-dimensional matrix multiplications. To overcome these limitations, we propose Iteration-Free Newton-Schulz Orthogonalization (IFNSO), a novel framework that consolidates the traditional iterative structure into a unified and Iteration-Free formulation. By analyzing the contribution of individual matrix powers, we streamline the process by removing insignificant terms and introducing a polynomial with learnable coefficients. These coefficients are optimized to ensure both superior computational efficiency and stable convergence. Extensive experiments demonstrate that IFNSO achieves superior performance compared to existing methods. Our code is available at: https://github.com/greekinRoma/Unified_Newton_Schulz_Orthogonalization.
♻ ☆ Convergence of Distributionally Robust Q-Learning with Linear Function Approximation
Distributionally robust reinforcement learning (DRRL) focuses on designing policies that achieve good performance under model uncertainties. The goal is to maximize the worst-case long-term discounted reward, where the data for RL comes from a nominal model while the deployed environment can deviate from the nominal model within a prescribed uncertainty set. Existing convergence guarantees for DRRL are limited to tabular MDPs or are dependent on restrictive discount factor assumptions when function approximation is used. We present a convergence result for a robust Q-learning algorithm with linear function approximation without any discount factor restrictions. In this paper, the robustness is measured with respect to the total-variation distance uncertainty set. Our model free algorithm does not require generative access to the MDP and achieves an $\tilde{\mathcal{O}}(1/ε^{4})$ sample complexity for an $ε$-accurate value estimate. Our results close a key gap between the empirical success of robust RL algorithms and the non-asymptotic guarantees enjoyed by their non-robust counterparts. The key ideas in the paper also extend in a relatively straightforward fashion to robust Temporal-Difference (TD) learning with function approximation. The robust TD learning algorithm is discussed in the Appendix.
comment: Preprint. 53 Pages
♻ ☆ EvoX: Meta-Evolution for Automated Discovery
Recent work such as AlphaEvolve has shown that combining LLM-driven optimization with evolutionary search can effectively improve programs, prompts, and algorithms across domains. In this paradigm, previously evaluated solutions are reused to guide the model toward new candidate solutions. Crucially, the effectiveness of this evolution process depends on the search strategy: how prior solutions are selected and varied to generate new candidates. However, most existing methods rely on fixed search strategies with predefined knobs (e.g., explore-exploit ratios) that remain static throughout execution. While effective in some settings, these approaches often fail to adapt across tasks, or even within the same task as the search space changes over time. We introduce EvoX, an adaptive evolution method that optimizes its own evolution process. EvoX jointly evolves candidate solutions and the search strategies used to generate them, continuously updating how prior solutions are selected and varied based on progress. This enables the system to dynamically shift between different search strategies during the optimization process. Across nearly 200 real-world optimization tasks, EvoX outperforms existing AI-driven evolutionary methods including AlphaEvolve, OpenEvolve, GEPA, and ShinkaEvolve on the majority of tasks.
♻ ☆ Convergence and clustering analysis for Mean Shift with radially symmetric, positive definite kernels
The mean shift (MS) is a non-parametric, density-based, iterative algorithm with prominent usage in clustering and image segmentation. A rigorous proof for the convergence of its mode estimate sequence in full generality remains unknown. In this paper, we show that for\textit{ sufficiently large bandwidth} convergence is guaranteed in any dimension with \textit{any radially symmetric and strictly positive definite kernels}. Although the author acknowledges that our result is partially more restrictive than that of \cite{YT} due to the lower limit of the bandwidth, our kernel class is not covered by the kernel class in \cite{YT}, and the proof technique is different. Moreover, we show theoretically and experimentally that while for Gaussian kernel, accurate clustering at \textit{large bandwidths} is generally impossible, it may still be possible for other radially symmetric, strictly positive definite kernels.
♻ ☆ Curriculum Reinforcement Learning from Easy to Hard Tasks Improves LLM Reasoning
We aim to improve the reasoning capabilities of language models via reinforcement learning (RL). Recent RL post-trained models like DeepSeek-R1 have demonstrated reasoning abilities on mathematical and coding tasks. However, prior studies suggest that using RL alone to improve reasoning on inherently difficult tasks is less effective. Here, we draw inspiration from curriculum learning and propose to schedule tasks from easy to hard (E2H), allowing LLMs to build reasoning skills gradually. Our method is termed E2H Reasoner. Empirically, we observe that, although easy tasks are important initially, fading them out through appropriate scheduling is essential in preventing overfitting. Theoretically, we establish convergence guarantees for E2H Reasoner within an approximate policy iteration framework. We derive finite-sample complexity bounds and show that when tasks are appropriately decomposed and conditioned, learning through curriculum stages requires fewer total samples than direct learning. Experiments across multiple domains show that E2H Reasoner significantly improves the reasoning ability of small LLMs (1.5B to 3B), which otherwise struggle when trained with vanilla RL alone, highlighting the effectiveness of our method. Our code can be found on https://github.com/divelab/E2H-Reasoning.
♻ ☆ Near-Equilibrium Propagation training in nonlinear wave systems
Backpropagation learning algorithm, the workhorse of modern artificial intelligence, is notoriously difficult to implement in physical neural networks. Equilibrium Propagation (EP) is an alternative with comparable efficiency and strong potential for in-situ training. We extend EP learning to both discrete and continuous complex-valued wave systems. In contrast to previous EP implementations, our scheme is valid in the weakly dissipative regime, and readily applicable to a wide range of physical settings, even without well defined nodes, where trainable inter-node connections can be replaced by trainable local potential. We test the method in driven-dissipative exciton-polariton condensates governed by generalized Gross-Pitaevskii dynamics. Numerical studies on standard benchmarks, including a simple logical task and handwritten-digit recognition, demonstrate stable convergence, establishing a practical route to in-situ learning in physical systems in which system control is restricted to local parameters.
comment: 7 figures
♻ ☆ HAMLOCK: HArdware-Model LOgically Combined attacK
The growing use of third-party hardware accelerators (e.g., FPGAs, ASICs) for deep neural networks (DNNs) introduces new security vulnerabilities. Conventional model-level backdoor attacks, which only poison a model's weights to misclassify inputs with a specific trigger, are often detectable because the entire attack logic is embedded within the model (i.e., software), creating a traceable layer-by-layer activation path. This paper introduces the HArdware-Model Logically Combined Attack (HAMLOCK), a far stealthier threat that distributes the attack logic across the hardware-software boundary. The software (model) is now only minimally altered by tuning the activations of few neurons to produce uniquely high activation values when a trigger is present. A malicious hardware Trojan detects those unique activations by monitoring the corresponding neurons' most significant bit or the 8-bit exponents and triggers another hardware Trojan to directly manipulate the final output logits for misclassification. This decoupled design is highly stealthy, as the model itself contains no complete backdoor activation path as in conventional attacks and hence, appears fully benign. Empirically, across benchmarks like MNIST, CIFAR10, GTSRB, and ImageNet, HAMLOCK achieves a near-perfect attack success rate with a negligible clean accuracy drop. More importantly, HAMLOCK circumvents the state-of-the-art model-level defenses without any adaptive optimization. The hardware Trojan is also undetectable, incurring area and power overheads as low as 0.01%, which is easily masked by process and environmental noise. Our findings expose a critical vulnerability at the hardware-software interface, demanding new cross-layer defenses against this emerging threat.
comment: Accepted to usenix security 2026
♻ ☆ Adaptive Deadline and Batch Layered Synchronized Federated Learning
Federated learning (FL) enables collaborative model training across distributed edge devices while preserving data privacy, and typically operates in a round-based synchronous manner. However, synchronous FL suffers from latency bottlenecks due to device heterogeneity, where slower clients (stragglers) delay or degrade global updates. Prior solutions, such as fixed deadlines, client selection, and layer-wise partial aggregation, alleviate the effect of stragglers, but treat round timing and local workload as static parameters, limiting their effectiveness under strict time constraints. We propose ADEL-FL, a novel framework that jointly optimizes per-round deadlines and user-specific batch sizes for layer-wise aggregation. Our approach formulates a constrained optimization problem minimizing the expected L2 distance to the global optimum under total training time and global rounds. We provide a convergence analysis under exponential compute models and prove that ADEL-FL yields unbiased updates with bounded variance. Extensive experiments demonstrate that ADEL-FL outperforms alternative methods in both convergence rate and final accuracy under heterogeneous conditions.
♻ ☆ Structural Causal Bottleneck Models
We introduce structural causal bottleneck models (SCBMs), a novel class of structural causal models. At the core of SCBMs lies the assumption that causal effects between high-dimensional variables only depend on low-dimensional summary statistics, or bottlenecks, of the causes. SCBMs provide a flexible framework for task-specific dimension reduction while being estimable via standard, simple learning algorithms in practice. We analyse identifiability in SCBMs, connect them to information bottlenecks in the sense of Tishby & Zaslavsky (2015), and illustrate how to estimate them experimentally. We also demonstrate the benefit of bottlenecks for effect estimation in low-sample transfer learning settings. We argue that SCBMs provide an alternative to existing causal dimension reduction frameworks like causal representation learning or causal abstraction learning.
♻ ☆ MultiTask Learning AI system to assist BCC diagnosis with dual explanation
Basal cell carcinoma (BCC) accounts for about 75% of skin cancers. The adoption of teledermatology protocols in Spanish public hospitals has increased dermatologists' workload, motivating the development of AI tools for lesion prioritization. However, limited transparency in current systems hinders clinical acceptance. This study proposes an AI system for BCC detection from dermoscopic images that integrates dermatologist diagnostic criteria based on specific dermoscopic patterns. We analyzed 1559 dermoscopic images from 60 primary care centers annotated by four dermatologists for seven BCC patterns. An Expectation-Maximization consensus algorithm was used to build a unified standard reference. A multitask learning model based on MobileNet-V2 was developed to classify lesions and identify clinically relevant patterns, supported by Grad-CAM visual explanations. The system achieved 90% accuracy in BCC classification (precision 0.90, recall 0.89). Clinically relevant BCC patterns were correctly detected in 99% of positive cases, and the pigment network exclusion criterion was satisfied in 95% of non-BCC cases. Grad-CAM maps showed strong spatial agreement with dermatologist-defined regions. The proposed system combines accurate BCC detection with transparent pattern-based explanations, helping bridge the gap between AI performance and clinical trust in teledermatology.
comment: 23 pages, 4 figures, 5 tables, under review in Scientific Reports
♻ ☆ PhysMoDPO: Physically-Plausible Humanoid Motion with Preference Optimization
Recent progress in text-conditioned human motion generation has been largely driven by diffusion models trained on large-scale human motion data. Building on this progress, recent methods attempt to transfer such models for character animation and real robot control by applying a Whole-Body Controller (WBC) that converts diffusion-generated motions into executable trajectories. While WBC trajectories become compliant with physics, they may expose substantial deviations from original motion. To address this issue, we here propose PhysMoDPO, a Direct Preference Optimization framework. Unlike prior work that relies on hand-crafted physics-aware heuristics such as foot-sliding penalties, we integrate WBC into our training pipeline and optimize diffusion model such that the output of WBC becomes compliant both with physics and original text instructions. To train PhysMoDPO we deploy physics-based and task-specific rewards and use them to assign preference to synthesized trajectories. Our extensive experiments on text-to-motion and spatial control tasks demonstrate consistent improvements of PhysMoDPO in both physical realism and task-related metrics on simulated robots. Moreover, we demonstrate that PhysMoDPO results in significant improvements when applied to zero-shot motion transfer in simulation and for real-world deployment on a G1 humanoid robot.
comment: Project page: https://mael-zys.github.io/PhysMoDPO/
♻ ☆ TI-DeepONet: Learnable Time Integration for Stable Long-Term Extrapolation
Accurate temporal extrapolation remains a fundamental challenge for neural operators modeling dynamical systems, where predictions must extend far beyond the training horizon. Conventional DeepONet approaches rely on two limited paradigms: fixed-horizon rollouts, which predict full spatiotemporal solutions while ignoring temporal causality, and autoregressive schemes, which accumulate errors through sequential prediction. We introduce TI-DeepONet, a framework that integrates neural operators with adaptive numerical time-stepping to preserve the Markovian structure of dynamical systems while mitigating long-term error growth. Our method shifts the learning objective from direct state prediction to approximating instantaneous time-derivative fields, which are then integrated using standard numerical solvers. This naturally enables continuous-time prediction and allows the use of higher-order integrators at inference than those used in training, improving both efficiency and accuracy. We further propose TI(L)-DeepONet, which incorporates learnable coefficients for intermediate stages in multi-stage integration, adapting to solution-specific dynamics and enhancing fidelity. Across six canonical PDEs featuring chaotic, dissipative, dispersive, and high-dimensional behavior, TI(L)-DeepONet maeginally outperforms TI-DeepONet, and both achieve major reductions in relative L2 extrapolation error: about 96.3% compared to autoregressive methods and 83.6% compared to fixed-horizon approaches. Notably, both models maintain stable predictions over temporal domains nearly twice the training interval. This work establishes a physics-aware operator learning framework that bridges neural approximation with numerical analysis principles, addressing a key gap in long-term forecasting of complex physical systems.
comment: 32 pages (including references), 22 figures
♻ ☆ Imagine-then-Plan: Agent Learning from Adaptive Lookahead with World Models
Recent advances in world models have shown promise for modeling future dynamics of environmental states, enabling agents to reason and act without accessing real environments. Current methods mainly perform single-step or fixed-horizon rollouts, leaving their potential for complex task planning under-exploited. We propose Imagine-then-Plan (\texttt{ITP}), a unified framework for agent learning via lookahead imagination, where an agent's policy model interacts with the learned world model, yielding multi-step ``imagined'' trajectories. Since the imagination horizon may vary by tasks and stages, we introduce a novel adaptive lookahead mechanism by trading off the ultimate goal and task progress. The resulting imagined trajectories provide rich signals about future consequences, such as achieved progress and potential conflicts, which are fused with current observations, formulating a partially \textit{observable} and \textit{imaginable} Markov decision process to guide policy learning. We instantiate \texttt{ITP} with both training-free and reinforcement-trained variants. Extensive experiments across representative agent benchmarks demonstrate that \texttt{ITP} significantly outperforms competitive baselines. Further analyses validate that our adaptive lookahead largely enhances agents' reasoning capability, providing valuable insights into addressing broader, complex tasks. Our code and data will be publicly available at https://github.com/loyiv/ITP.
♻ ☆ Trainability barriers and opportunities in quantum generative modeling
Quantum generative models provide inherently efficient sampling strategies and thus show promise for achieving an advantage using quantum hardware. In this work, we investigate the barriers to the trainability of quantum generative models posed by barren plateaus and exponential loss concentration. We explore the interplay between explicit and implicit models and losses, and show that using quantum generative models with explicit losses such as the KL divergence leads to a new flavour of barren plateaus. In contrast, the implicit Maximum Mean Discrepancy loss can be viewed as the expectation value of an observable that is either low-bodied and provably trainable, or global and untrainable depending on the choice of kernel. In parallel, we find that solely low-bodied implicit losses cannot in general distinguish high-order correlations in the target data, while some quantum loss estimation strategies can. We validate our findings by comparing different loss functions for modelling data from High-Energy-Physics.
comment: 21+44 pages, 10+2 figures
♻ ☆ Matching Features, Not Tokens: Energy-Based Fine-Tuning of Language Models
Cross-entropy (CE) training provides dense and scalable supervision for language models, but it optimizes next-token prediction under teacher forcing rather than sequence-level behavior under model rollouts. We introduce a feature-matching objective for language-model fine-tuning that targets sequence-level statistics of the completion distribution, providing dense semantic feedback without requiring a task-specific verifier or preference model. To optimize this objective efficiently, we propose energy-based fine-tuning (EBFT), which uses strided block-parallel sampling to generate multiple rollouts from nested prefixes concurrently, batches feature extraction over these rollouts, and uses the resulting embeddings to perform an on-policy policy-gradient update. We present a theoretical perspective connecting EBFT to KL-regularized feature-matching and energy-based modeling. Empirically, across Q&A coding, unstructured coding, and translation, EBFT matches RLVR and outperforms SFT on downstream accuracy while achieving a lower validation cross-entropy than both methods.
♻ ☆ Tractable Probabilistic Models for Investment Planning
Investment planning in power utilities, such as generation and transmission expansion, requires decisions under substantial uncertainty over decade--long horizons for policies, demand, renewable availability, and outages, while maintaining reliability and computational tractability. Conventional approaches approximate uncertainty using finite scenario sets (modeled as a mixture of Diracs in statistical theory terms), which can become computationally intensive as scenario detail increases and provide limited probabilistic resolution for reliability assessment. We propose an alternative based on tractable probabilistic models, using sum--product networks (SPNs) to represent high--dimensional uncertainty in a compact, analytically tractable form that supports exact probabilistic queries (e.g., likelihoods, marginals, and conditionals). This framework enables the direct embedding of chance constraints into mixed--integer linear programming (MILP) models for investment planning to evaluate reliability events and enforce probabilistic feasibility requirements without enumerating large scenario trees. We demonstrate the approach on a representative planning case study and report reliability--cost trade--offs and computational behavior relative to standard scenario--based formulations.
♻ ☆ AceFF: A State-of-the-Art Machine Learning Potential for Small Molecules
We introduce AceFF, a pre-trained machine learning interatomic potential (MLIP) optimized for small molecule drug discovery. While MLIPs have emerged as efficient alternatives to Density Functional Theory (DFT), generalizability across diverse chemical spaces remains difficult. AceFF addresses this via a refined TensorNet2 architecture trained on a comprehensive dataset of drug-like compounds. This approach yields a force field that balances high-throughput inference speed with DFT-level accuracy. \mbox{AceFF} fully supports the essential medicinal chemistry elements (H, B, C, N, O, F, Si, P, S, Cl, Br, I) and is explicitly trained to handle charged states. Validation against rigorous benchmarks, including complex torsional energy scans, molecular dynamics trajectories, batched minimizations, and tests of force and energy accuracy, demonstrates that AceFF is state-of-the-art for organic molecules in the accuracy and speed regime important for drug discovery. The AceFF-2 model weights and inference code are available at https://huggingface.co/Acellera/AceFF-2.0.
♻ ☆ A Functional Perspective on Knowledge Distillation in Neural Networks
Knowledge distillation is considered a compression mechanism when judged on the resulting student's accuracy and loss, yet its functional impact is poorly understood. We quantify the compression capacity of knowledge distillation and the resulting knowledge transfer from a functional perspective, decoupling compression from architectural reduction to provide an improved understanding of knowledge distillation. We employ a control-driven experimental protocol with hypothesis testing and random control distillation to isolate and understand knowledge transfer mechanisms across data modalities. To test the breadth and limits of our analyses, we study self-distillation, standard distillation, feature-map matching variants, distillation scaling laws across model sizes, and the impact of temperature on knowledge transfer. We find statistically supported knowledge transfer in some modalities and architectures; however, the extent of this transfer is less pronounced than anticipated, even under conditions that maximise knowledge sharing. Notably, in cases of significant functional transfer, we identify a consistent and severe asymmetric transfer of negative knowledge to the student, raising safety concerns for knowledge distillation. Across 22 experimental setups, 9 architectures, and 7 datasets, our results suggest that knowledge distillation functions less as a robust compression-by-transfer mechanism and more as a data-dependent regulariser whose transfer component is biased towards negative asymmetric transfer.
comment: 57 pages, 23 figures and 95 tables
♻ ☆ From Entropy to Epiplexity: Rethinking Information for Computationally Bounded Intelligence
Can we learn more from data than existed in the generating process itself? Can new and useful information be constructed from merely applying deterministic transformations to existing data? Can the learnable content in data be evaluated without considering a downstream task? On these questions, Shannon information and Kolmogorov complexity come up nearly empty-handed, in part because they assume observers with unlimited computational capacity and do not target the useful information content. In this work, we identify and exemplify three seeming paradoxes in information theory: (1) information cannot be increased by deterministic transformations; (2) information is independent of the order of data; (3) likelihood modeling is merely distribution matching. To shed light on the tension between these results and modern practice, and to quantify the value of data, we introduce epiplexity, a formalization of information capturing what computationally bounded observers can learn from data. Epiplexity captures the structural content in data while excluding time-bounded entropy, the random unpredictable content exemplified by pseudorandom number generators and chaotic dynamical systems. With these concepts, we demonstrate how information can be created with computation, how it depends on the ordering of the data, and how likelihood modeling can produce more complex programs than present in the data generating process itself. We also present practical procedures to estimate epiplexity which we show capture differences across data sources, track with downstream performance, and highlight dataset interventions that improve out-of-distribution generalization. In contrast to principles of model selection, epiplexity provides a theoretical foundation for data selection, guiding how to select, generate, or transform data for learning systems.
comment: Code available at https://github.com/shikaiqiu/epiplexity
♻ ☆ Under the Influence: Quantifying Persuasion and Vigilance in Large Language Models
With increasing integration of Large Language Models (LLMs) into areas of high-stakes human decision-making, it is important to understand the risks they introduce as advisors. To be useful advisors, LLMs must sift through large amounts of content, written with both benevolent and malicious intent, and then use this information to convince a user to take a specific action. This involves two social capacities: vigilance (the ability to determine which information to use, and which to discard) and persuasion (synthesizing the available evidence to make a convincing argument). While existing work has investigated these capacities in isolation, there has been little prior investigation of how these capacities may be linked. Here, we use a simple multi-turn puzzle-solving game, Sokoban, to study LLMs' abilities to persuade and be rationally vigilant towards other LLM agents. We find that puzzle-solving performance, persuasive capability, and vigilance are dissociable capacities in LLMs. Performing well on the game does not automatically mean a model can detect when it is being misled, even if the possibility of deception is explicitly mentioned. However, LLMs do consistently modulate their token use, using fewer tokens to reason when advice is benevolent and more when it is malicious, even if they are still persuaded to take actions leading them to failure. To our knowledge, our work presents the first investigation of the relationship between persuasion, vigilance, and task performance in LLMs, and suggests that monitoring all three independently will be critical for future work in AI safety.
♻ ☆ The silence of the weights: a structural pruning strategy for attention-based audio signal architectures with second order metrics
Transformer-based models have become the state of the art across multiple domains, from natural language processing to machine listening, thanks to the attention mechanisms. However, the attention layers require a large number of parameters and high-end hardware for both training and inference. We propose a novel channel-pruning technique explicitly targeted at the attention mechanism, decoupling the pruning of each head and the four layers in the attention block: query, key, value, and output projection matrices, employing a second-order metric to score the network's parameters. We compare our technique against head-pruning strategies and magnitude-driven scoring metrics, investigating the effects of pruning on Audio Spectrogram Transformer (AST) and Whisper. Our results show that even after pruning 50\% of the parameters in the attention block, performance is largely preserved.
♻ ☆ Mitigating the Multiplicity Burden: The Role of Calibration in Reducing Predictive Multiplicity of Classifiers
As machine learning models are increasingly deployed in high-stakes environments, ensuring both probabilistic reliability and prediction stability has become critical. This paper examines the interplay between classification calibration and predictive multiplicity - the phenomenon in which multiple near-optimal models within the Rashomon set yield conflicting credit outcomes for the same applicant. Using nine diverse credit risk benchmark datasets, we investigate whether predictive multiplicity concentrates in regions of low predictive confidence and how post-hoc calibration can mitigate algorithmic arbitrariness. Our empirical analysis reveals that minority class observations bear a disproportionate multiplicity burden, as confirmed by significant disparities in predictive multiplicity and prediction confidence. Furthermore, our empirical comparisons indicate that applying post-hoc calibration methods - specifically Platt Scaling, Isotonic Regression, and Temperature Scaling - is associated with lower obscurity across the Rashomon set. Among the tested techniques, Platt Scaling and Isotonic Regression provide the most robust reduction in predictive multiplicity. These findings suggest that calibration can function as a consensus-enforcing layer and may support procedural fairness by mitigating predictive multiplicity.
comment: 16 pages, 3 figures
♻ ☆ Ayn: A Tiny yet Competitive Indian Legal Language Model Pretrained from Scratch LREC 2026
Decoder-only Large Language Models (LLMs) are currently the model of choice for many Natural Language Processing (NLP) applications. Through instruction fine-tuning and prompting approaches, such LLMs have been efficiently used to solve both general and domain-specific tasks. However, they are costly to train and, to a certain extent, costly to use as well, and one can wonder whether LLMs can be replaced by domain-specific Tiny Language Models (TLMs), which typically contain less than 100M parameters. We address this question in this study by comparing the performance of an 88M TLM pretrained from scratch for 185 A100 hours on a specific domain with a domain-specific tokenizer (here, the Indian legal domain) with LLMs of various sizes between 1B and 8B for solving domain-specific tasks. We show in particular that our legal TLM, Ayn, can indeed outperform LLMs up to 80 times larger on the legal case judgment prediction task, rival LLMs up to 30 times larger on the summarization task, and still be competitive with these larger LLMs on general tasks.
comment: LREC 2026
♻ ☆ Relaxed Efficient Acquisition of Context and Temporal Features
In many biomedical applications, measurements are not freely available at inference time: each laboratory test, imaging modality, or assessment incurs financial cost, time burden, or patient risk. Longitudinal active feature acquisition (LAFA) seeks to optimize predictive performance under such constraints by adaptively selecting measurements over time, yet the problem remains inherently challenging due to temporally coupled decisions (missed early measurements cannot be revisited, and acquisition choices influence all downstream predictions). Moreover, real-world clinical workflows typically begin with an initial onboarding phase, during which relatively stable contextual descriptors (e.g., demographics or baseline characteristics) are collected once and subsequently condition longitudinal decision-making. Despite its practical importance, the efficient selection of onboarding context has not been studied jointly with temporally adaptive acquisition. We therefore propose REACT (Relaxed Efficient Acquisition of Context and Temporal features), an end-to-end differentiable framework that simultaneously optimizes (i) selection of onboarding contextual descriptors and (ii) adaptive feature--time acquisition plans for longitudinal measurements under cost constraints. REACT employs a Gumbel--Sigmoid relaxation with straight-through estimation to enable gradient-based optimization over discrete acquisition masks, allowing direct backpropagation from prediction loss and acquisition cost. Across real-world longitudinal health and behavioral datasets, REACT achieves improved predictive performance at lower acquisition costs compared to existing longitudinal acquisition baselines, demonstrating the benefit of modeling onboarding and temporally coupled acquisition within a unified optimization framework.
♻ ☆ Improved Approximation Algorithms for Orthogonally Constrained Problems Using Semidefinite Optimization
Building on the blueprint from Goemans and Williamson (1995) for the Max-Cut problem, we construct a polynomial-time approximation algorithm for orthogonally constrained quadratic optimization problems. First, we derive a semidefinite relaxation and propose a randomized rounding algorithm to generate feasible solutions from the relaxation. Second, we derive constant-factor approximation guarantees for our algorithm. When optimizing for $m$ orthonormal vectors in dimension $n$, we leverage strong duality and semidefinite complementary slackness to show that our algorithm achieves a $1/3$-approximation ratio. For any $m$ of the form $2^q$ for some integer $q$, we also construct an instance where the performance of our algorithm is exactly $(m+2)/(3m)$, which can be made arbitrarily close to $1/3$ by taking $m \rightarrow + \infty$, hence showing that our analysis is tight.
comment: Improved algorithm with constant-factor approximation guarantee
♻ ☆ Detecting Intrinsic and Instrumental Self-Preservation in Autonomous Agents: The Unified Continuation-Interest Protocol
Autonomous agents, especially delegated systems with memory, persistent context, and multi-step planning, pose a measurement problem not present in stateless models: an agent that preserves continued operation as a terminal objective and one that does so merely instrumentally can produce observationally similar trajectories. External behavioral monitoring cannot reliably distinguish between them. We introduce the Unified Continuation-Interest Protocol (UCIP), a multi-criterion detection framework that moves this distinction from behavior to the latent structure of agent trajectories. UCIP encodes trajectories with a Quantum Boltzmann Machine (QBM), a classical algorithm based on the density-matrix formalism of quantum statistical mechanics, and measures the von Neumann entropy of the reduced density matrix induced by a bipartition of hidden units. We test whether agents with terminal continuation objectives (Type A) produce latent states with higher entanglement entropy than agents whose continuation is merely instrumental (Type B). Higher entanglement reflects stronger cross-partition statistical coupling. On gridworld agents with known ground-truth objectives, UCIP achieves 100% detection accuracy and 1.0 AUC-ROC on held-out non-adversarial evaluation under the frozen Phase I gate. The entanglement gap between Type A and Type B agents is Delta = 0.381 (p < 0.001, permutation test). Pearson r = 0.934 across an 11-point interpolation sweep indicates that, within this synthetic family, UCIP tracks graded changes in continuation weighting rather than merely a binary label. Among the tested models, only the QBM achieves positive Delta. All computations are classical; "quantum" refers only to the mathematical formalism. UCIP does not detect consciousness or subjective experience; it detects statistical structure in latent representations that correlates with known objectives.
comment: 20 pages, 7 figures. v2 refines exposition, expands related work with additional references including Berg et al. on subjective-experience reports under self-referential prompting, and clarifies methodological wording; no change to empirical results or core conclusions
♻ ☆ Cropping outperforms dropout as an augmentation strategy for self-supervised training of text embeddings
Text embeddings, i.e. vector representations of entire texts, play an important role in many NLP applications, such as retrieval-augmented generation, clustering, or visualizing collections of texts for data exploration. Currently, top-performing embedding models are derived from pre-trained language models via supervised contrastive fine-tuning. This fine-tuning strategy relies on an external notion of similarity and annotated data for generation of positive pairs. Here we study self-supervised fine-tuning and systematically compare the two most well-known augmentation strategies used for fine-tuning text embeddings models. We assess embedding quality on MTEB and additional in-domain evaluations and show that cropping augmentation strongly outperforms the dropout-based approach. We find that on out-of-domain data, the quality of resulting embeddings is substantially below the supervised state-of-the-art models, but for in-domain data, self-supervised fine-tuning can produce high-quality text embeddings after very short fine-tuning. Finally, we show that representation quality increases towards the last transformer layers, which undergo the largest change during fine-tuning; and that fine-tuning only those last layers is sufficient to reach similar embedding quality.
♻ ☆ Symplectic Neural Flows for Modeling and Discovery
Hamilton's equations are fundamental for modeling complex physical systems, where preserving key properties such as energy and momentum is crucial for reliable long-term simulations. Geometric integrators are widely used for this purpose, but neural network-based methods that incorporate these principles remain underexplored. This work introduces SympFlow, a time-dependent symplectic neural network designed using parameterized Hamiltonian flow maps. This design allows for backward error analysis and ensures the preservation of the symplectic structure. SympFlow allows for two key applications: (i) providing a time-continuous symplectic approximation of the exact flow of a Hamiltonian system purely based on the differential equations it satisfies, and (ii) approximating the flow map of an unknown Hamiltonian system relying on trajectory data. We demonstrate the effectiveness of SympFlow on diverse problems, including chaotic and dissipative systems, showing improved energy conservation compared to general-purpose numerical methods and accurate approximations from sparse irregular data. We also provide a thorough theoretical analysis of SympFlow, showing it can approximate the flow of any time-dependent Hamiltonian system, and providing an a-posteriori error estimate in terms of energy conservation.
♻ ☆ Think Before You Lie: How Reasoning Leads to Honesty
While existing evaluations of large language models (LLMs) measure deception rates, the underlying conditions that give rise to deceptive behavior are poorly understood. We investigate this question using a novel dataset of realistic moral trade-offs where honesty incurs variable costs. Contrary to humans, who tend to become less honest given time to deliberate (Capraro, 2017; Capraro et al., 2019), we find that reasoning consistently increases honesty across scales and for several LLM families. This effect is not only a function of the reasoning content, as reasoning traces are often poor predictors of final behaviors. Rather, we show that the underlying geometry of the representational space itself contributes to the effect. Namely, we observe that deceptive regions within this space are metastable: deceptive answers are more easily destabilized by input paraphrasing, output resampling, and activation noise than honest ones. We interpret the effect of reasoning in this vein: generating deliberative tokens as part of moral reasoning entails the traversal of a biased representational space, ultimately nudging the model toward its more stable, honest defaults.
♻ ☆ Amortized Bayesian Mixture Models
Finite mixtures are a broad class of models useful in scenarios where observed data is generated by multiple distinct processes but without explicit information about the responsible process for each data point. Estimating Bayesian mixture models is computationally challenging due to issues such as high-dimensional posterior inference and label switching. Furthermore, traditional methods such as MCMC are applicable only if the likelihoods for each mixture component are analytically tractable. Amortized Bayesian Inference (ABI) is a simulation-based framework for estimating Bayesian models using generative neural networks. This allows the fitting of models without explicit likelihoods, and provides fast inference. ABI is therefore an attractive framework for estimating mixture models. This paper introduces a novel extension of ABI tailored to mixture models. We factorize the posterior into a distribution of the parameters and a distribution of (categorical) mixture indicators, which allows us to use a combination of generative neural networks for parameter inference, and classification networks for mixture membership identification. The proposed framework accommodates both independent and dependent mixture models, enabling filtering and smoothing. We validate and demonstrate our approach through synthetic and real-world datasets.
comment: 34 pages, 17 figures
♻ ☆ When Scores Learn Geometry: Rate Separations under the Manifold Hypothesis ICLR 2026
Score-based methods, such as diffusion models and Bayesian inverse problems, are often interpreted as learning the data distribution in the low-noise limit ($σ\to 0$). In this work, we propose an alternative perspective: their success arises from implicitly learning the data manifold rather than the full distribution. Our claim is based on a novel analysis of scores in the small-$σ$ regime that reveals a sharp separation of scales: information about the data manifold is $Θ(σ^{-2})$ stronger than information about the distribution. We argue that this insight suggests a paradigm shift from the less practical goal of distributional learning to the more attainable task of geometric learning, which provably tolerates $O(σ^{-2})$ larger errors in score approximation. We illustrate this perspective through three consequences: i) in diffusion models, concentration on data support can be achieved with a score error of $o(σ^{-2})$, whereas recovering the specific data distribution requires a much stricter $o(1)$ error; ii) more surprisingly, learning the uniform distribution on the manifold-an especially structured and useful object-is also $O(σ^{-2})$ easier; and iii) in Bayesian inverse problems, the maximum entropy prior is $O(σ^{-2})$ more robust to score errors than generic priors. Finally, we validate our theoretical findings with preliminary experiments on large-scale models, including Stable Diffusion.
comment: Accepted at ICLR 2026
♻ ☆ Distributional Regression with Tabular Foundation Models: Evaluating Probabilistic Predictions via Proper Scoring Rules
Tabular foundation models such as TabPFN and TabICL already produce full predictive distributions, yet the benchmarks used to evaluate them (TabArena, TALENT, and others) still rely almost exclusively on point-estimate metrics (RMSE, $R^2$). This mismatch implicitly rewards models that elicit a good conditional mean while ignoring the quality of the predicted distribution. We make two contributions. First, we propose supplementing standard point metrics with proper scoring rules (CRPS, CRLS, and the Interval Score) and provide a head-to-head comparison of realTabPFNv2.5 and TabICLv2 with regards to some proper scoring rules across 20 OpenML regression datasets. Second, we show analytically and empirically that different proper scoring rules induce different model rankings and different inductive biases during training, even though each rule is individually minimized by the true distribution. Fine-tuning realTabPFNv2.5 with scoring rules not seen during pretraining (CRLS, $β=1.8$ energy score) yields consistent improvements on the corresponding metrics, confirming that the training loss shapes the model beyond what propriety alone guarantees. Together, these findings argue for (i) reporting distributional metrics in tabular regression benchmarks and (ii) making the training objective of foundation models adaptable (via fine-tuning or task-token conditioning) to the scoring rule relevant to the downstream decision problem.
♻ ☆ Beyond Either-Or Reasoning: Transduction and Induction as Cooperative Problem-Solving Paradigms
Traditionally, in Programming-by-example (PBE) the goal is to synthesize a program from a small set of input-output examples. Lately, PBE has gained traction as a few-shot reasoning benchmark, relaxing the requirement to produce a program artifact altogether which allows transductive methods to directly the missing output sample. Transduction and induction are complementary reasoning modes--where induction derives general rules from examples, transduction leverages the examples directly to infer specific outputs without intermediate generalization. Yet existing approaches either treat them as mutually exclusive or couple them in hybrid structures where one paradigm dictates a fixed trajectory for the other -- undermining the latter's reasoning potential and creating cascading errors. We move away from these hierarchical models and introduce cooperative transductive-inductive problem solving: by interleaving both reasoning modes and ensuring neither unconditionally dominates the other, we preserve the search autonomy and reasoning capacity of each paradigm. We instantiate this concept in TIIPS. Across three PBE domains, TIIPS consistently outperforms state-of-the-art baselines and generates programs that more closely mirror ground-truth trajectories in both syntax and semantics, indicating a better match to the intended program behavior. Our findings highlight cooperative reasoning as a promising new direction for harnessing the full power of symbolic, inductive and neural, transductive reasoning.
♻ ☆ Surprised by Attention: Predictable Query Dynamics for Time Series Anomaly Detection
Multivariate time series anomalies often manifest as shifts in cross-channel dependencies rather than simple amplitude excursions. In autonomous driving, for instance, a steering command might be internally consistent but decouple from the resulting lateral acceleration. Residual-based detectors can miss such anomalies when flexible sequence models still reconstruct signals plausibly despite altered coordination. We introduce AxonAD, an unsupervised detector that treats multi-head attention query evolution as a short horizon predictable process. A gradient-updated reconstruction pathway is coupled with a history-only predictor that forecasts future query vectors from past context. This is trained via a masked predictor-target objective against an exponential moving average (EMA) target encoder. At inference, reconstruction error is combined with a tail-aggregated query mismatch score, which measures cosine deviation between predicted and target queries on recent timesteps. This dual approach provides sensitivity to structural dependency shifts while retaining amplitude-level detection. On proprietary in-vehicle telemetry with interval annotations and on the TSB-AD multi-variate suite (17 datasets, 180 series) with threshold-free and range-aware metrics, AxonAD improves ranking quality and temporal localization over strong baselines. Ablations confirm that query prediction and combined scoring are the primary drivers of the observed gains. Code is available at the URL https://github.com/iis-esslingen/AxonAD.
comment: Main: 17 Pages, 7 Figures, 3 Tables; Appendix: 3 Pages, 4 Tables
♻ ☆ Disentangled Feature Importance
Feature importance (FI) measures are widely used to assess the contributions of predictors to an outcome, but they may target different notions of relevance. When predictors are correlated, traditional statistical FI methods are often tailored for feature selection and correlation can therefore be treated as conditional redundancy. By contrast, for model interpretation, FI is more naturally defined through marginal predictive relevance. In this context, we show that most existing approaches target identical population functionals under squared-error loss and exhibit correlation-induced bias. To address this limitation, we introduce Disentangled Feature Importance (DFI), a nonparametric generalization of the classical $R^2$ decomposition via canonical entropic optimal transport (EOT). DFI transforms correlated features into independent latent features using an EOT coupling for general covariate laws, including mixed and discrete settings. Importance scores are computed in this disentangled space and attributed back through the transition kernel's sensitivity. Under arbitrary feature dependencies, DFI provides a principled decomposition of latent importance scores that sum to the total predictive variability for latent additive models and to interaction-weighted functional ANOVA variances more generally. We develop semiparametric theory for DFI. Under the EOT formulation, we establish root-$n$ consistency and asymptotic normality for nondegenerate importance estimators in the latent space and the original feature space. Notably, our estimators achieve second-order estimation error, which vanishes if both regression function and EOT kernel estimation errors are $o_{\mathbb{P}}(n^{-1/4})$. By design, DFI avoids the computational burden of repeated submodel refitting and the challenges of conditional covariate distribution estimation, thereby achieving computational efficiency.
comment: 27 main and 47 supplementary pages
♻ ☆ Differentiable Thermodynamic Phase-Equilibria for Machine Learning
Accurate prediction of phase equilibria remains a central challenge in chemical engineering. Physics-consistent machine learning methods that incorporate thermodynamic structure into neural networks have recently shown strong performance for activity-coefficient modeling. However, extending such approaches to equilibrium data arising from an extremum principle, such as liquid-liquid equilibria, remains difficult. Here we present DISCOMAX, a differentiable algorithm for phase-equilibrium calculation that guarantees thermodynamic consistency at both training and inference, only subject to a user-specified discretization. The method is rooted in statistical thermodynamics, and works via a discrete enumeration with subsequent masked softmax aggregation of feasible states, and together with a straight-through gradient estimator to enable physics-consistent end-to-end learning of neural $g^{E}$-models. We evaluate the approach on binary liquid-liquid equilibrium data and demonstrate that it outperforms existing surrogate-based methods, while offering a general framework for learning from different kinds of equilibrium data.
comment: 38 pages, 20 figures, 5 tables; fixed metadata and formatting
♻ ☆ Biology-inspired joint distribution neurons based on Hierarchical Correlation Reconstruction allowing for multidirectional propagation of values and densities
Recently a million of biological neurons (BNN) has turned out better from modern RL methods in playing Pong~\cite{RL}, reminding they are still qualitatively superior e.g. in learning, flexibility and robustness - suggesting to try to improve current artificial e.g. MLP/KAN for better agreement with biological. There is proposed extension of KAN approach to neurons containing model of local joint distribution: $ρ(\mathbf{x})=\sum_{\mathbf{j}\in B} a_\mathbf{j} f_\mathbf{j}(\mathbf{x})$ for $\mathbf{x} \in [0,1]^d$, adding interpretation and information flow control to KAN, and allowing to gradually add missing 3 basic properties of biological: 1) biological axons propagate in both directions~\cite{axon}, while current artificial are focused on unidirectional propagation - joint distribution neurons can repair by substituting some variables to get conditional values/distributions for the remaining. 2) Animals show risk avoidance~\cite{risk} requiring to process variance, and generally real world rather needs probabilistic models - the proposed can predict and propagate also distributions as vectors of moments: (expected value, variance) or higher. 3) biological neurons require local training, and beside backpropagation, the proposed allows many additional ways, like direct training, through tensor decomposition, or finally local and promising: information bottleneck. Proposed approach is very general, can be also used as extension of softmax in embeddings of e.g. transformer, suggesting interpretation that features are mixed moments of joint density of real-world properties.
comment: 10 pages, 15 figures
♻ ☆ A Survey on Deep Learning Approaches for Tabular Data Generation: Utility, Alignment, Fidelity, Privacy, Diversity, and Beyond
Generative modelling has become the standard approach for synthesising tabular data. However, different use cases demand synthetic data to comply with different requirements to be useful in practice. In this survey, we review deep generative modelling approaches for tabular data from the perspective of five types of requirements: utility of the synthetic data, alignment of the synthetic data with domain-specific knowledge, statistical fidelity of the synthetic data distribution compared to the real data distribution, privacy-preserving capabilities, and sampling diversity. We group the approaches along two levels of granularity: (i) based on the requirements they address and (ii) according to the underlying model they utilise. Additionally, we summarise the appropriate evaluation methods for each requirement, the relationships among the requirements, and the specific characteristics of each model type. Finally, we discuss future directions for the field, along with opportunities to improve the current evaluation methods. Overall, this survey can be seen as a user guide to tabular data generation: helping readers navigate available models and evaluation methods to find those best suited to their needs.
comment: Accepted to Transactions on Machine Learning Research (02/2026)
♻ ☆ Diverse Text-to-Image Generation via Contrastive Noise Optimization ICLR 2026
Text-to-image (T2I) diffusion models have demonstrated impressive performance in generating high-fidelity images, largely enabled by text-guided inference. However, this advantage often comes with a critical drawback: limited diversity, as outputs tend to collapse into similar modes under strong text guidance. Existing approaches typically optimize intermediate latents or text conditions during inference, but these methods deliver only modest gains or remain sensitive to hyperparameter tuning. In this work, we introduce Contrastive Noise Optimization, a simple yet effective method that addresses the diversity issue from a distinct perspective. Unlike prior techniques that adapt intermediate latents, our approach shapes the initial noise to promote diverse outputs. Specifically, we develop a contrastive loss defined in the Tweedie data space and optimize a batch of noise latents. Our contrastive optimization repels instances within the batch to maximize diversity while keeping them anchored to a reference sample to preserve fidelity. We further provide theoretical insights into the mechanism of this preprocessing to substantiate its effectiveness. Extensive experiments across multiple T2I backbones demonstrate that our approach achieves a superior quality-diversity Pareto frontier while remaining robust to hyperparameter choices.
comment: Accepted to ICLR 2026
♻ ☆ The Wisdom of Many Queries: Complexity-Diversity Principle for Dense Retriever Training
Synthetic query generation has become essential for training dense retrievers, yet prior methods generate one query per document, focusing solely on query quality. We are the first to systematically study multi-query synthesis and discover a quality-diversity trade-off: high-quality queries benefit in-domain tasks, while diverse queries benefit out-of-domain (OOD) generalization. Through controlled experiments on 4 benchmark types across Contriever, RetroMAE, and Qwen3-Embedding, we find that diversity benefit strongly correlates with query complexity (r$\geq$0.95, p<0.05), approximated by content words (CW). We formalize this as the Complexity-Diversity Principle (CDP): query complexity determines optimal diversity. Based on CDP, we propose complexity-aware training: multi-query synthesis for high-complexity tasks and CW-weighted training for existing data. Both strategies improve OOD performance on reasoning-intensive benchmarks, with compounded gains when combined.
comment: Under review
♻ ☆ PACED: Distillation and Self-Distillation at the Frontier of Student Competence
Standard LLM distillation wastes compute on two fronts: problems the student has already mastered (near-zero gradients) and problems far beyond its reach (incoherent gradients that erode existing capabilities). We show that this waste is not merely intuitive but structurally inevitable: the gradient signal-to-noise ratio in distillation provably vanishes at both pass-rate extremes. This theoretical observation leads to Paced, a framework that concentrates distillation on the zone of proximal development -- the frontier of a student model's competence -- via a principled pass-rate weight $w(p) = p^α(1 - p)^β$ derived from the boundary-vanishing structure of distillation gradients. Key results: (1) Theory: We prove that the Beta kernel $w(p) = p^α(1-p)^β$ is a leading-order weight family arising from the SNR structure of distillation, and that it is minimax-robust -- under bounded multiplicative misspecification, worst-case efficiency loss is only $O(δ^2)$. (2)Distillation: On distillation from a larger teacher to a smaller student model with forward KL, Paced achieves significant gain over the base model, while keeping benchmark forgetting at a low level. (3)Self-distillation: On instruction-tuned models with reverse KL, gains are exceeding baselines as well. (4)Two-stage synergy: A forward-KL-then-reverse-KL schedule yields the strongest results in our setting, reaching substantial improvements on standard reasoning benchmarks -- supporting a mode-coverage-then-consolidation interpretation of the distillation process. All configurations require only student rollouts to estimate pass rates, need no architectural changes, and are compatible with any KL direction.
♻ ☆ Admission Control of Quasi-Reversible Queueing Systems: Optimization and Reinforcement Learning
In this paper, we introduce a versatile scheme for optimizing the arrival rates of quasi-reversible queueing systems. We first propose an alternative definition of quasi-reversibility that encompasses reversibility and highlights the importance of the definition of customer classes. Then we introduce balanced arrival control policies, which generalize the notion of balanced arrival rates introduced in the context of Whittle networks, to the much broader class of quasi-reversible queueing systems. We prove that supplementing a quasi-reversible queueing system with a balanced arrival-control policy preserves the quasi-reversibility, and we specify the form of the stationary measures. We revisit two canonical examples of quasi-reversible queueing systems, Whittle networks and order-independent queues. Lastly, we focus on the problem of admission control and leverage our results in the frameworks of optimization and reinforcement learning.
♻ ☆ Multiresolution Analysis and Statistical Thresholding on Dynamic Networks
Detecting structural change in dynamic network data has wide-ranging applications. Existing approaches typically divide the data into time bins, extract network features within each bin, and then compare these features over time. This introduces an inherent tradeoff between temporal resolution and the statistical stability of the extracted features. Despite this tradeoff, reminiscent of time-frequency tradeoffs in signal processing, most methods rely on a fixed temporal resolution. Choosing an appropriate resolution parameter is typically difficult and can be especially problematic in domains like cybersecurity, where anomalous behavior may emerge at multiple time scales. We address this challenge by proposing ANIE (Adaptive Network Intensity Estimation), a multi-resolution framework designed to automatically identify the time scales at which network structure evolves, enabling the joint detection of both rapid and gradual changes. Modeling interactions as Poisson processes, our method proceeds in two steps: (1) estimating a low-dimensional subspace of node behavior, and (2) deriving a set of novel empirical affinity coefficients that quantify change in interaction intensity between latent factors and support statistical testing for structural change across time scales. We provide theoretical guarantees for subspace estimation and the asymptotic behavior of the affinity coefficients, enabling model-based change detection. Experiments on synthetic networks show that ANIE adapts to the appropriate time resolution and is able to capture sharp structural changes while remaining robust to noise. Furthermore, applications to real-world data showcase the practical benefits of ANIE's multiresolution approach to detecting structural change over fixed resolution methods.
♻ ☆ BLINK: Behavioral Latent Modeling of NK Cell Cytotoxicity
Machine learning models of cellular interaction dynamics hold promise for understanding cell behavior. Natural killer (NK) cell cytotoxicity is a prominent example of such interaction dynamics and is commonly studied using time-resolved multi-channel fluorescence microscopy. Although tumor cell death events can be annotated at single frames, NK cytotoxic outcome emerges over time from cellular interactions and cannot be reliably inferred from frame-wise classification alone. We introduce BLINK, a trajectory-based recurrent state-space model that serves as a cell world model for NK-tumor interactions. BLINK learns latent interaction dynamics from partially observed NK-tumor interaction sequences and predicts apoptosis increments that accumulate into cytotoxic outcomes. Experiments on long-term time-lapse NK-tumor recordings show improved cytotoxic outcome detection and enable forecasting of future outcomes, together with an interpretable latent representation that organizes NK trajectories into coherent behavioral modes and temporally structured interaction phases. BLINK provides a unified framework for quantitative evaluation and structured modeling of NK cytotoxic behavior at the single-cell level.
♻ ☆ Model-based Implicit Neural Representation for sub-wavelength Radio Localization
The increasing deployment of large antenna arrays at base stations has significantly improved the spatial resolution and localization accuracy of radio-localization methods. However, traditional signal processing techniques struggle in complex radio environments, particularly in scenarios dominated by non line of sight (NLoS) propagation paths, resulting in degraded localization accuracy. Recent developments in machine learning have facilitated the development of machine learning-assisted localization techniques, enhancing localization accuracy in complex radio environments. However, these methods often involve substantial computational complexity during both the training and inference phases. This work extends the well-established fingerprinting-based localization framework by simultaneously reducing its memory requirements and improving its accuracy. Specifically, a model-based neural network is used to learn the location-to-channel mapping, and then serves as a generative neural channel model. This generative model augments the fingerprinting comparison dictionary while reducing the memory requirements. The proposed method outperforms fingerprinting baselines by achieving sub-wavelength localization accuracy, even in complex static NLoS environments. Remarkably, it offers an improvement by several orders of magnitude in localization accuracy, while simultaneously reducing memory requirements by an order of magnitude compared to classical fingerprinting methods.
♻ ☆ Feature-driven reinforcement learning for photovoltaic in continuous intraday trading
Sequential intraday electricity trading allows photovoltaic (PV) operators to reduce imbalance settlement costs as forecasts improve throughout the day. Yet deployable trading policies must jointly handle forecast uncertainty, intraday prices, liquidity, and the asymmetric economics of PV imbalance exposure. This paper proposes a feature-driven reinforcement learning (FDRL) framework for intraday PV trading in the Nordic market. Its main methodological contribution is a corrected reward that evaluates performance relative to a no-trade baseline, removing policy-independent noise that can otherwise push reinforcement learning toward inactive policies in high-price regimes. The framework combines this objective with a predominantly linear policy and a closed-form execution surrogate for efficient, interpretable training. In a strict walk-forward evaluation over 2021-2024 across four Nordic bidding zones (DK1, DK2, SE3, SE4), the method delivers statistically significant profit improvements over the spot-only baseline in every zone. Portfolio experiments show that a pooled cross-zone policy can match zone-specific models, while transfer-learning results indicate a two-cluster market structure and effective deployment in new zones with limited local data. The proposed framework offers an interpretable and computationally practical way to reduce imbalance costs, while the transfer results provide guidance for scaling strategies across bidding zones with different market designs.
♻ ☆ Assessing generative modeling approaches for free energy estimates in condensed matter
The accurate estimation of free energy differences between two states is a long-standing challenge in molecular simulations. Traditional approaches generally rely on sampling multiple intermediate states to ensure sufficient overlap in phase space and are, consequently, computationally expensive. Boltzmann Generators and related generative-model-based methods have recently addressed this challenge by learning a direct probability density transform between two states. However, it remains unclear which approach provides the best trade-off between efficiency, accuracy, and scalability. In this work, we review and benchmark selected generative approaches for condensed-matter systems, including discrete and continuous normalizing flows for targeted free energy perturbation and FEAT (Free Energy Estimators with Adaptive Transport) combined with the escorted Jarzynski equality, using coarse-grained monatomic ice and Lennard-Jones solids as benchmark systems. All models yield highly accurate free energy estimates and, depending on the system, may require fewer energy evaluations than traditional methods. Continuous flows and FEAT are most efficient in energy evaluations, whereas discrete flows have substantially lower inference cost. By releasing all data together with our results, we enable future benchmarking of free energy estimation methods in condensed-phase systems.
♻ ☆ Delphos: A reinforcement learning framework for assisting discrete choice model specification
We introduce Delphos, a deep reinforcement learning framework for assisting the discrete choice model specification process. Delphos aims to support the modeller by providing automated, data-driven suggestions for utility specifications, thereby reducing the effort required to develop and refine utility functions. Delphos conceptualises model specification as a sequential decision-making problem, inspired by the way human choice modellers iteratively construct models through a series of reasoned specification decisions. In this setting, an agent learns to specify high-performing candidate models by choosing a sequence of modelling actions, such as selecting variables, accommodating both generic and alternative-specific taste parameters, applying non-linear transformations, and including interactions with covariates, while interacting with a modelling environment that estimates each candidate and returns a reward signal. Specifically, Delphos uses a Deep Q-Network that receives delayed rewards based on modelling outcomes (e.g., log-likelihood) and behavioural expectations (e.g., parameter signs), and distributes this signal across the sequence of actions to learn which modelling decisions lead to well-performing candidates. We evaluate Delphos on both simulated and empirical datasets using multiple reward settings. In simulated cases, learning curves, Q-value patterns, and performance metrics show that the agent learns to adaptively explore strategies to propose well-performing models across search spaces, while covering only a small fraction of the feasible modelling space. We further apply the framework to two empirical datasets to demonstrate its practical use. These experiments illustrate the ability of Delphos to generate competitive, behaviourally plausible models and highlight the potential of this adaptive, learning-based framework to assist the model specification process.
comment: 13 pages, 7 figures
♻ ☆ Almost Bayesian: The Fractal Dynamics of Stochastic Gradient Descent
We show that the behavior of stochastic gradient descent is related to Bayesian statistics by showing that SGD is effectively diffusion on a fractal landscape, where the fractal dimension can be accounted for in a purely Bayesian way. By doing this we show that SGD can be regarded as a modified Bayesian sampler which accounts for accessibility constraints induced by the fractal structure of the loss landscape. We verify our results experimentally by examining the diffusion of weights during training. These results offer insight into the factors which determine the learning process, and seemingly answer the question of how SGD and purely Bayesian sampling are related.
♻ ☆ AWARE: Audio Watermarking with Adversarial Resistance to Edits
Prevailing practice in learning-based audio watermarking is to pursue robustness by expanding the set of simulated distortions during training. However, such surrogates are narrow and prone to overfitting. This paper presents AWARE (Audio Watermarking with Adversarial Resistance to Edits), an alternative approach that avoids reliance on attack-simulation stacks and handcrafted differentiable distortions. Embedding is obtained through adversarial optimization in the time-frequency domain under a level-proportional perceptual budget. Detection employs a time-order-agnostic detector with a Bitwise Readout Head (BRH) that aggregates temporal evidence into one score per watermark bit, enabling reliable watermark decoding even under desynchronization and temporal cuts. Empirically, AWARE attains high audio quality and speech intelligibility (PESQ/STOI) and consistently low BER across various audio edits, often surpassing representative state-of-the-art learning-based systems.
♻ ☆ Embedding Compression via Spherical Coordinates ICLR 2026
We present a compression method for unit-norm embeddings that achieves 1.5$\times$ compression, 25% better than the best prior lossless method. The method exploits that spherical coordinates of high-dimensional unit vectors concentrate around $π/2$, causing IEEE 754 exponents to collapse to a single value and high-order mantissa bits to become predictable, enabling entropy coding of both. Reconstruction error is below 1e-7, under float32 machine epsilon. Evaluation across 26 configurations spanning text, image, and multi-vector embeddings confirms consistent improvement.
comment: Accepted at ICLR 2026 Workshop on Geometry-grounded Representation Learning and Generative Modeling (GRaM). 13 pages, 2 figures. Code: https://github.com/jina-ai/jzip
♻ ☆ TOSSS: a CVE-based Software Security Benchmark for Large Language Models
With their increasing capabilities, Large Language Models (LLMs) are now used across many industries. They have become useful tools for software engineers and support a wide range of development tasks. As LLMs are increasingly used in software development workflows, a critical question arises: are LLMs good at software security? At the same time, organizations worldwide invest heavily in cybersecurity to reduce exposure to disruptive attacks. The integration of LLMs into software engineering workflows may introduce new vulnerabilities and weaken existing security efforts. We introduce TOSSS (Two-Option Secure Snippet Selection), a benchmark that measures the ability of LLMs to choose between secure and vulnerable code snippets. Existing security benchmarks for LLMs cover only a limited range of vulnerabilities. In contrast, TOSSS relies on the CVE database and provides an extensible framework that can integrate newly disclosed vulnerabilities over time. Our benchmark gives each model a security score between 0 and 1 based on its behavior; a score of 1 indicates that the model always selects the secure snippet, while a score of 0 indicates that it always selects the vulnerable one. We evaluate 14 widely used open-source and closed-source models on C/C++ and Java code and observe scores ranging from 0.48 to 0.89. LLM providers already publish many benchmark scores for their models, and TOSSS could become a complementary security-focused score to include in these reports.
♻ ☆ On the Statistical Optimality of Optimal Decision Trees
While globally optimal empirical risk minimization (ERM) decision trees have become computationally feasible and empirically successful, rigorous theoretical guarantees for their statistical performance remain limited. In this work, we develop a comprehensive statistical theory for ERM trees under random design in both high-dimensional regression and classification. We first establish sharp oracle inequalities that bound the excess risk of the ERM estimator relative to the best possible approximation achievable by any tree with at most $L$ leaves, thereby characterizing the interpretability-accuracy trade-off. We derive these results using a novel uniform concentration framework based on empirically localized Rademacher complexity. Furthermore, we derive minimax optimal rates over a novel function class: the piecewise sparse heterogeneous anisotropic Besov (PSHAB) space. This space explicitly captures three key structural features encountered in practice: sparsity, anisotropic smoothness, and spatial heterogeneity. While our main results are established under sub-Gaussianity, we also provide robust guarantees that hold under heavy-tailed noise settings. Together, these findings provide a principled foundation for the optimality of ERM trees and introduce empirical process tools broadly applicable to other highly adaptive, data-driven procedures.
♻ ☆ Rationale-Enhanced Decoding for Multi-modal Chain-of-Thought CVPR 2026
Large vision-language models (LVLMs) have demonstrated remarkable capabilities by integrating pre-trained vision encoders with large language models (LLMs). Similar to single-modal LLMs, chain-of-thought (CoT) prompting has been adapted for LVLMs to enhance multi-modal reasoning by generating intermediate rationales based on visual and textual inputs. While CoT is assumed to improve grounding and accuracy in LVLMs, our experiments reveal a key challenge: existing LVLMs often ignore the contents of generated rationales in CoT reasoning. To address this, we re-formulate multi-modal CoT reasoning as a KL-constrained reward maximization focused on rationale-conditional log-likelihood. As the optimal solution, we propose rationale-enhanced decoding (RED), a novel plug-and-play inference-time decoding strategy. RED harmonizes visual and rationale information by multiplying distinct image-conditional and rationale-conditional next token distributions. Extensive experiments show that RED consistently and significantly improves reasoning over standard CoT and other decoding methods across multiple benchmarks and LVLMs. Our work offers a practical and effective approach to improve both the faithfulness and accuracy of CoT reasoning in LVLMs, paving the way for more reliable rationale-grounded multi-modal systems. Code is available at https://github.com/yshinya6/red/.
comment: Accepted to CVPR 2026 (Main); Code is available at https://github.com/yshinya6/red/
♻ ☆ Self-Improving Language Models for Evolutionary Program Synthesis: A Case Study on ARC-AGI
Many program synthesis tasks prove too challenging for even state-of-the-art language models to solve in single attempts. Search-based evolutionary methods offer a promising alternative by exploring solution spaces iteratively, but their effectiveness remain limited by the fixed capabilities of the underlying generative model. We propose SOAR, a method that learns program synthesis by integrating language models into a self-improving evolutionary loop. SOAR alternates between (1) an evolutionary search that uses an LLM to sample and refine candidate solutions, and (2) a hindsight learning phase that converts search attempts into valid problem-solution pairs used to fine-tune the LLM's sampling and refinement capabilities\, -- \,enabling increasingly effective search in subsequent iterations. On the challenging ARC-AGI benchmark, SOAR achieves significant performance gains across model scales and iterations, leveraging positive transfer between the sampling and refinement finetuning tasks. These improvements carry over to test-time adaptation, enabling SOAR to solve 52\% of the public test set. Our code is open-sourced at: https://github.com/flowersteam/SOAR
comment: update related work
♻ ☆ SoliReward: Mitigating Susceptibility to Reward Hacking and Annotation Noise in Video Generation Reward Models
Post-training alignment of video generation models with human preferences is a critical goal. Developing effective Reward Models (RMs) for this process faces significant methodological hurdles. Current data collection paradigms, reliant on in-prompt pairwise annotations, suffer from labeling noise. Concurrently, the architectural design of VLM-based RMs, particularly their output mechanisms, remains underexplored. Furthermore, RM is susceptible to reward hacking in post-training. To mitigate these limitations, we propose SoliReward, a systematic framework for video RM training. Our framework first sources high-quality, cost-efficient data via single-item binary annotations, then constructs preference pairs using a cross-prompt pairing strategy. Architecturally, we employ a Hierarchical Progressive Query Attention mechanism to enhance feature aggregation. Finally, we introduce a modified BT loss that explicitly accommodates win-tie scenarios. This approach regularizes the RM's score distribution for positive samples, providing more nuanced preference signals to alleviate over-focus on a small number of top-scoring samples. Our approach is validated on benchmarks evaluating physical plausibility, subject deformity, and semantic alignment, demonstrating improvements in direct RM evaluation metrics and in the efficacy of post-training on video generation models. Code and benchmark are available at https://github.com/lian700/SoliReward.
comment: 16 pages, 9 figures
♻ ☆ Exact Federated Continual Unlearning for Ridge Heads on Frozen Foundation Models
Foundation models are commonly deployed as frozen feature extractors with a small trainable head to adapt to private, user-generated data in federated settings. The ``right to be forgotten'' requires removing the influence of specific samples or users from the trained model on demand. Existing federated unlearning methods target general deep models and rely on approximate reconstruction or selective retraining, making exactness costly or elusive. We study this problem in a practically relevant but under-explored regime: a frozen foundation model with a ridge-regression head. The exact optimum depends on the data only through two additive sufficient statistics, which we turn into a communication protocol supporting an arbitrary stream of add and delete requests via fixed-size messages. The server maintains a head that is, in exact arithmetic, pointwise identical to centralized retraining after every request. We provide deterministic retrain-equivalence guarantees, order and partition invariance, two server-side variants, and a Bayesian certificate of zero KL divergence. Experiments on four benchmarks confirm the guarantees: both variants match centralized ridge retraining to within $10^{-9}$ relative Frobenius error and complete each request at orders-of-magnitude lower cost than federated retraining baselines.
Multimedia
☆ AC-Foley: Reference-Audio-Guided Video-to-Audio Synthesis with Acoustic Transfer ICLR 2026
Existing video-to-audio (V2A) generation methods predominantly rely on text prompts alongside visual information to synthesize audio. However, two critical bottlenecks persist: semantic granularity gaps in training data, such as conflating acoustically distinct sounds under coarse labels, and textual ambiguity in describing micro-acoustic features. These bottlenecks make it difficult to perform fine-grained sound synthesis using text-controlled modes. To address these limitations, we propose AC-Foley, an audio-conditioned V2A model that directly leverages reference audio to achieve precise and fine-grained control over generated sounds. This approach enables fine-grained sound synthesis, timbre transfer, zero-shot sound generation, and improved audio quality. By directly conditioning on audio signals, our approach bypasses the semantic ambiguities of text descriptions while enabling precise manipulation of acoustic attributes. Empirically, AC-Foley achieves state-of-the-art performance for Foley generation when conditioned on reference audio, while remaining competitive with state-of-the-art video-to-audio methods even without audio conditioning.
comment: Accepted at ICLR 2026. 15 pages, 5 figures
☆ Multimodal Cyber-physical Interaction in XR: Hybrid Doctoral Thesis Defense
Academic events, such as a doctoral thesis defense, are typically limited to either physical co-location or flat video conferencing, resulting in rigid participation formats and fragmented presence. We present a multimodal framework that breaks this binary by supporting a spectrum of participation - from in-person attendance to immersive virtual reality (VR) or browser access - and report our findings from using it to organize the first ever hybrid doctoral thesis defense using extended reality (XR). The framework integrates full-body motion tracking to synchronize the user's avatar motions and gestures, enabling natural interaction with onsite participants as well as body language and gestures with remote attendees in the virtual world. It leverages WebXR to provide cross-platform and instant accessibility with easy setup. User feedback analysis reveals positive VR experiences and demonstrates the framework's effectiveness in supporting various hybrid event activities.
comment: 10 pages, 3 figures, magazine paper
☆ ReactMotion: Generating Reactive Listener Motions from Speaker Utterance
In this paper, we introduce a new task, Reactive Listener Motion Generation from Speaker Utterance, which aims to generate naturalistic listener body motions that appropriately respond to a speaker's utterance. However, modeling such nonverbal listener behaviors remains underexplored and challenging due to the inherently non-deterministic nature of human reactions. To facilitate this task, we present ReactMotionNet, a large-scale dataset that pairs speaker utterances with multiple candidate listener motions annotated with varying degrees of appropriateness. This dataset design explicitly captures the one-to-many nature of listener behavior and provides supervision beyond a single ground-truth motion. Building on this dataset design, we develop preference-oriented evaluation protocols tailored to evaluate reactive appropriateness, where conventional motion metrics focusing on input-motion alignment ignore. We further propose ReactMotion, a unified generative framework that jointly models text, audio, emotion, and motion, and is trained with preference-based objectives to encourage both appropriate and diverse listener responses. Extensive experiments show that ReactMotion outperforms retrieval baselines and cascaded LLM-based pipelines, generating more natural, diverse, and appropriate listener motions.
comment: 42 pages, 11 tables, 8 figures
☆ Exposing Cross-Modal Consistency for Fake News Detection in Short-Form Videos
Short-form video platforms are major channels for news but also fertile ground for multimodal misinformation where each modality appears plausible alone yet cross-modal relationships are subtly inconsistent, like mismatched visuals and captions. On two benchmark datasets, FakeSV (Chinese) and FakeTT (English), we observe a clear asymmetry: real videos exhibit high text-visual but moderate text-audio consistency, while fake videos show the opposite pattern. Moreover, a single global consistency score forms an interpretable axis along which fake probability and prediction errors vary smoothly. Motivated by these observations, we present MAGIC3 (Modal-Adversarial Gated Interaction and Consistency-Centric Classifier), a detector that explicitly models and exposes cross-tri-modal consistency signals at multiple granularities. MAGIC3 combines explicit pairwise and global consistency modeling with token- and frame-level consistency signals derived from cross-modal attention, incorporates multi-style LLM rewrites to obtain style-robust text representations, and employs an uncertainty-aware classifier for selective VLM routing. Using pre-extracted features, MAGIC3 consistently outperforms the strongest non-VLM baselines on FakeSV and FakeTT. While matching VLM-level accuracy, the two-stage system achieves 18-27x higher throughput and 93% VRAM savings, offering a strong cost-performance tradeoff.
comment: 16 pages, 7 figures, 11 tables
☆ Anchoring Emotions in Text: Robust Multimodal Fusion for Mimicry Intensity Estimation
Estimating Emotional Mimicry Intensity (EMI) in naturalistic environments is a critical yet challenging task in affective computing. The primary difficulty lies in effectively modeling the complex, nonlinear temporal dynamics across highly heterogeneous modalities, especially when physical signals are corrupted or missing. To tackle this, we propose TAEMI (Text-Anchored Emotional Mimicry Intensity estimation), a novel multimodal framework designed for the 10th ABAW Competition. Motivated by the observation that continuous visual and acoustic signals are highly susceptible to transient environmental noise, we break the traditional symmetric fusion paradigm. Instead, we leverage textual transcript--which inherently encode a stable, time-independent semantic prior--as central anchors. Specifically, we introduce a Text-Anchored Dual Cross-Attention mechanism that utilizes these robust textual queries to actively filter out frame-level redundancies and align the noisy physical streams. Furthermore, to prevent catastrophic performance degradation caused by inevitably missing data in unconstrained real-world scenarios, we integrate Learnable Missing-Modality Tokens and a Modality Dropout strategy during training. Extensive experiments on the Hume-Vidmimic2 dataset demonstrate that TAEMI effectively captures fine-grained emotional variations and maintains robust predictive resilience under imperfect conditions. Our framework achieves a state-of-the-art mean Pearson correlation coefficient across six continuous emotional dimensions, significantly outperforming existing baseline methods.
☆ EditHF-1M: A Million-Scale Rich Human Preference Feedback for Image Editing
Recent text-guided image editing (TIE) models have achieved remarkable progress, while many edited images still suffer from issues such as artifacts, unexpected editings, unaesthetic contents. Although some benchmarks and methods have been proposed for evaluating edited images, scalable evaluation models are still lacking, which limits the development of human feedback reward models for image editing. To address the challenges, we first introduce \textbf{EditHF-1M}, a million-scale image editing dataset with over 29M human preference pairs and 148K human mean opinion ratings, both evaluated from three dimensions, \textit{i.e.}, visual quality, instruction alignment, and attribute preservation. Based on EditHF-1M, we propose \textbf{EditHF}, a multimodal large language model (MLLM) based evaluation model, to provide human-aligned feedback from image editing. Finally, we introduce \textbf{EditHF-Reward}, which utilizes EditHF as the reward signal to optimize the text-guided image editing models through reinforcement learning. Extensive experiments show that EditHF achieves superior alignment with human preferences and demonstrates strong generalization on other datasets. Furthermore, we fine-tune the Qwen-Image-Edit using EditHF-Reward, achieving significant performance improvements, which demonstrates the ability of EditHF to serve as a reward model to scale-up the image editing. Both the dataset and code will be released in our GitHub repository: https://github.com/IntMeGroup/EditHF.
☆ Visual Set Program Synthesizer
A user pointing their phone at a supermarket shelf and asking "Which soda has the least sugar?" poses a difficult challenge for current visual Al assistants. Such queries require not only object recognition, but explicit set-based reasoning such as filtering, comparison, and aggregation. Standard endto-end MLLMs often fail at these tasks because they lack an explicit mechanism for compositional logic. We propose treating visual reasoning as Visual Program Synthesis, where the model first generates a symbolic program that is executed by a separate engine grounded in visual scenes. We also introduce Set-VQA, a new benchmark designed specifically for evaluating set-based visual reasoning. Experiments show that our approach significantly outperforms state-of-the-art baselines on complex reasoning tasks, producing more systematic and transparent behavior while substantially improving answer accuracy. These results demonstrate that program-driven reasoning provides a principled alternative to black-box visual-language inference.
comment: 10 pages, IEEE International Conference on Multimedia and Expo 2026
♻ ☆ AWARE: Audio Watermarking with Adversarial Resistance to Edits
Prevailing practice in learning-based audio watermarking is to pursue robustness by expanding the set of simulated distortions during training. However, such surrogates are narrow and prone to overfitting. This paper presents AWARE (Audio Watermarking with Adversarial Resistance to Edits), an alternative approach that avoids reliance on attack-simulation stacks and handcrafted differentiable distortions. Embedding is obtained through adversarial optimization in the time-frequency domain under a level-proportional perceptual budget. Detection employs a time-order-agnostic detector with a Bitwise Readout Head (BRH) that aggregates temporal evidence into one score per watermark bit, enabling reliable watermark decoding even under desynchronization and temporal cuts. Empirically, AWARE attains high audio quality and speech intelligibility (PESQ/STOI) and consistently low BER across various audio edits, often surpassing representative state-of-the-art learning-based systems.
♻ ☆ Omni-Captioner: Data Pipeline, Models, and Benchmark for Omni Detailed Perception ICLR2026
Fine-grained perception of multimodal information is critical for advancing human-AI interaction. With recent progress in audio-visual technologies, Omni Language Models (OLMs), capable of processing audio and video signals in parallel, have emerged as a promising paradigm for achieving richer understanding and reasoning. However, their capacity to capture and describe fine-grained details remains limited explored. In this work, we present a systematic and comprehensive investigation of omni detailed perception from the perspectives of the data pipeline, models, and benchmark. We first identify an inherent "co-growth" between detail and hallucination in current OLMs. To address this, we propose Omni-Detective, an agentic data generation pipeline integrating tool-calling, to autonomously produce highly detailed yet minimally hallucinatory multimodal data. Based on the data generated with Omni-Detective, we train two captioning models: Audio-Captioner for audio-only detailed perception, and Omni-Captioner for audio-visual detailed perception. Under the cascade evaluation protocol, Audio-Captioner achieves the best performance on MMAU and MMAR among all open-source models, surpassing Gemini 2.5 Flash and delivering performance comparable to Gemini 2.5 Pro. On existing detailed captioning benchmarks, Omni-Captioner sets a new state-of-the-art on VDC and achieves the best trade-off between detail and hallucination on the video-SALMONN 2 testset. Given the absence of a dedicated benchmark for omni detailed perception, we design Omni-Cloze, a novel cloze-style evaluation for detailed audio, visual, and audio-visual captioning that ensures stable, efficient, and reliable assessment. Experimental results and analysis demonstrate the effectiveness of Omni-Detective in generating high-quality detailed captions, as well as the superiority of Omni-Cloze in evaluating such detailed captions.
comment: Accepted by ICLR2026. Open Source at https://github.com/ddlBoJack/Omni-Captioner
♻ ☆ Beyond Final Answers: CRYSTAL Benchmark for Transparent Multimodal Reasoning Evaluation
We introduce CRYSTAL (Clear Reasoning via Yielded Steps, Traceability, and Logic), a diagnostic benchmark with 6,372 instances that evaluates multimodal reasoning through verifiable intermediate steps. We propose two complementary metrics: Match F1, which scores step-level precision and recall via semantic similarity matching, and Ordered Match F1, which further penalizes disordered reasoning chains. References are constructed through a Delphi-inspired pipeline in which four independent MLLMs generate trajectories, which are then aggregated via semantic clustering and validated through human quality gates. Evaluation of 20 MLLMs, including commercial frontier systems not used during benchmark construction, reveals systematic failures that are invisible to answer accuracy: universal cherry-picking (precision far exceeds recall), non-monotonic scaling trade-offs, and disordered reasoning in which no competitive model preserves more than 60% of matched steps in the correct order. Beyond evaluation, we propose the Causal Process Reward (CPR), a multiplicative reward that couples answer correctness with step-level alignment, and CPR-Curriculum, which progressively increases reasoning difficulty during training. CPR-Curriculum achieves a 32% improvement in Match F1 via GRPO where additive reward strategies fail, improving reasoning without manual step annotation.
♻ ☆ Coherent Audio-Visual Editing via Conditional Audio Generation Following Video Edits
We introduce a novel pipeline for joint audio-visual editing that enhances the coherence between edited video and its accompanying audio. Our approach first applies state-of-the-art video editing techniques to produce the target video, then performs audio editing to align with the visual changes. To achieve this, we present a new video-to-audio generation model that conditions on the source audio, target video, and a text prompt. We extend the model architecture to incorporate conditional audio input and propose a data augmentation strategy that improves training efficiency. Furthermore, our model dynamically adjusts the influence of the source audio based on the complexity of the edits, preserving the original audio structure where possible. Experimental results demonstrate that our method outperforms existing approaches in maintaining audio-visual alignment and content integrity.
comment: Source code: https://github.com/SonyResearch/CoherentAVEdit