Xu Yao

CV
h-index10
13papers
203citations
Novelty55%
AI Score60

13 Papers

LGMay 26Code
Beyond Holistic Models: Systematic Component-level Benchmarking of Deep Multivariate Time-Series Forecasting

Shuang Liang, Chaochuan Hou, Xu Yao et al.

While previous research in multivariate time series forecasting has focused on developing complex holistic models, this work advocates for a shift toward a granular, component-level understanding of their impacts. We propose TSCOMP, the first large-scale benchmark that systematically deconstructs deep forecasting methods into their core, fine-grained components--spanning series preprocessing, encoding strategies, network architectures including specific and large time-series models, and optimization methods. Using constrained orthogonal experimental design and extensive evaluations, we conduct multi-view analyses that reveal component effectiveness across different backbones, data characteristics, and their interactions. Beyond providing insights, this benchmark establishes a fine-grained performance corpus comprising over 20,000 model-dataset evaluations, which supports the learning of automated component selection, enabling zero-shot model construction on new datasets. Our experiments demonstrate that the corpus-driven approach, despite its simplicity, consistently outperforms state-of-the-art methods, validating the soundness of our evaluation design and confirming that systematic component selection surpasses manually designed complex architectures. All code and the performance corpus are publicly available at https://github.com/SUFE-AILAB/TSCOMP.

LGMay 25Code
Rethinking Weak Supervision in Anomaly Detection: A Comprehensive Benchmark

Xu Yao, Siyuan Zhou, Wu Zhenbo et al.

Weakly supervised anomaly detection (WSAD) has developed in three primary directions: incomplete, inexact, and inaccurate supervision. However, these directions remain isolated, lacking a unified framework to assess whether they address unique challenges or share fundamental mechanics. This paper introduces WSADBench, the first benchmark that unifies evaluation across distinct weakly supervised scenarios, benchmarking diverse approaches from specialized WSAD methods to advanced tabular foundation models. WSADBench establishes standardized protocols to evaluate 36 algorithms across 4 modalities by systematically varying label quantity, granularity, and quality, revealing the performance boundaries of various methods. Based on over 700K experiments, WSADBench reveals four critical insights: (i) Strong intrinsic correlations exist between these weak supervision scenarios, challenging the isolation of current research directions. (ii) Specialized WSAD algorithms excel only in extreme label-scarcity regimes but are quickly dominated by tabular foundation models and general classification methods as supervision increases or in OOD scenarios. (iii) Unlabeled data shows inconsistent utility across settings, with marginal gains compared to label refinement. (iv) Models exhibit asymmetric sensitivity to different types of label noise. We release WSADBench as an open-source benchmark with code and datasets to facilitate future WSAD research: https://github.com/SUFE-AILAB/WSADBench.

IVJul 9, 2022
Video Coding Using Learned Latent GAN Compression

Mustafa Shukor, Bharath Bhushan Damodaran, Xu Yao et al.

We propose in this paper a new paradigm for facial video compression. We leverage the generative capacity of GANs such as StyleGAN to represent and compress a video, including intra and inter compression. Each frame is inverted in the latent space of StyleGAN, from which the optimal compression is learned. To do so, a diffeomorphic latent representation is learned using a normalizing flows model, where an entropy model can be optimized for image coding. In addition, we propose a new perceptual loss that is more efficient than other counterparts. Finally, an entropy model for video inter coding with residual is also learned in the previously constructed latent representation. Our method (SGANC) is simple, faster to train, and achieves better results for image and video coding compared to state-of-the-art codecs such as VTM, AV1, and recent deep learning techniques. In particular, it drastically minimizes perceptual distortion at low bit rates.

CVMar 3Code
An Effective Data Augmentation Method by Asking Questions about Scene Text Images

Xu Yao, Lei Kang

Scene text recognition (STR) and handwritten text recognition (HTR) face significant challenges in accurately transcribing textual content from images into machine-readable formats. Conventional OCR models often predict transcriptions directly, which limits detailed reasoning about text structure. We propose a VQA-inspired data augmentation framework that strengthens OCR training through structured question-answering tasks. For each image-text pair, we generate natural-language questions probing character-level attributes such as presence, position, and frequency, with answers derived from ground-truth text. These auxiliary tasks encourage finer-grained reasoning, and the OCR model aligns visual features with textual queries to jointly reason over images and questions. Experiments on WordArt and Esposalles datasets show consistent improvements over baseline models, with significant reductions in both CER and WER. Our code is publicly available at https://github.com/xuyaooo/DataAugOCR.

CVJun 29, 2022
Semantic Unfolding of StyleGAN Latent Space

Mustafa Shukor, Xu Yao, Bharath Bushan Damodaran et al.

Generative adversarial networks (GANs) have proven to be surprisingly efficient for image editing by inverting and manipulating the latent code corresponding to an input real image. This editing property emerges from the disentangled nature of the latent space. In this paper, we identify that the facial attribute disentanglement is not optimal, thus facial editing relying on linear attribute separation is flawed. We thus propose to improve semantic disentanglement with supervision. Our method consists in learning a proxy latent representation using normalizing flows, and we show that this leads to a more efficient space for face image editing.

LGSep 21, 2025Code
TSGym: Design Choices for Deep Multivariate Time-Series Forecasting

Shuang Liang, Chaochuan Hou, Xu Yao et al.

Recently, deep learning has driven significant advancements in multivariate time series forecasting (MTSF) tasks. However, much of the current research in MTSF tends to evaluate models from a holistic perspective, which obscures the individual contributions and leaves critical issues unaddressed. Adhering to the current modeling paradigms, this work bridges these gaps by systematically decomposing deep MTSF methods into their core, fine-grained components like series-patching tokenization, channel-independent strategy, attention modules, or even Large Language Models and Time-series Foundation Models. Through extensive experiments and component-level analysis, our work offers more profound insights than previous benchmarks that typically discuss models as a whole. Furthermore, we propose a novel automated solution called TSGym for MTSF tasks. Unlike traditional hyperparameter tuning, neural architecture searching or fixed model selection, TSGym performs fine-grained component selection and automated model construction, which enables the creation of more effective solutions tailored to diverse time series data, therefore enhancing model transferability across different data sources and robustness against distribution shifts. Extensive experiments indicate that TSGym significantly outperforms existing state-of-the-art MTSF and AutoML methods. All code is publicly available on https://github.com/SUFE-AILAB/TSGym.

CVFeb 4, 2022Code
Feature-Style Encoder for Style-Based GAN Inversion

Xu Yao, Alasdair Newson, Yann Gousseau et al.

We propose a novel architecture for GAN inversion, which we call Feature-Style encoder. The style encoder is key for the manipulation of the obtained latent codes, while the feature encoder is crucial for optimal image reconstruction. Our model achieves accurate inversion of real images from the latent space of a pre-trained style-based GAN model, obtaining better perceptual quality and lower reconstruction error than existing methods. Thanks to its encoder structure, the model allows fast and accurate image editing. Additionally, we demonstrate that the proposed encoder is especially well-suited for inversion and editing on videos. We conduct extensive experiments for several style-based generators pre-trained on different data domains. Our proposed method yields state-of-the-art results for style-based GAN inversion, significantly outperforming competing approaches. Source codes are available at https://github.com/InterDigitalInc/FeatureStyleEncoder .

CVJun 22, 2021Code
A Latent Transformer for Disentangled Face Editing in Images and Videos

Xu Yao, Alasdair Newson, Yann Gousseau et al.

High quality facial image editing is a challenging problem in the movie post-production industry, requiring a high degree of control and identity preservation. Previous works that attempt to tackle this problem may suffer from the entanglement of facial attributes and the loss of the person's identity. Furthermore, many algorithms are limited to a certain task. To tackle these limitations, we propose to edit facial attributes via the latent space of a StyleGAN generator, by training a dedicated latent transformation network and incorporating explicit disentanglement and identity preservation terms in the loss function. We further introduce a pipeline to generalize our face editing to videos. Our model achieves a disentangled, controllable, and identity-preserving facial attribute editing, even in the challenging case of real (i.e., non-synthetic) images and videos. We conduct extensive experiments on image and video datasets and show that our model outperforms other state-of-the-art methods in visual quality and quantitative evaluation. Source codes are available at https://github.com/InterDigitalInc/latent-transformer.

LGDec 6, 2023
Enhancing Molecular Property Prediction via Mixture of Collaborative Experts

Xu Yao, Shuang Liang, Songqiao Han et al.

Molecular Property Prediction (MPP) task involves predicting biochemical properties based on molecular features, such as molecular graph structures, contributing to the discovery of lead compounds in drug development. To address data scarcity and imbalance in MPP, some studies have adopted Graph Neural Networks (GNN) as an encoder to extract commonalities from molecular graphs. However, these approaches often use a separate predictor for each task, neglecting the shared characteristics among predictors corresponding to different tasks. In response to this limitation, we introduce the GNN-MoCE architecture. It employs the Mixture of Collaborative Experts (MoCE) as predictors, exploiting task commonalities while confronting the homogeneity issue in the expert pool and the decision dominance dilemma within the expert group. To enhance expert diversity for collaboration among all experts, the Expert-Specific Projection method is proposed to assign a unique projection perspective to each expert. To balance decision-making influence for collaboration within the expert group, the Expert-Specific Loss is presented to integrate individual expert loss into the weighted decision loss of the group for more equitable training. Benefiting from the enhancements of MoCE in expert creation, dynamic expert group formation, and experts' collaboration, our model demonstrates superior performance over traditional methods on 24 MPP datasets, especially in tasks with limited data or high imbalance.

CVNov 23, 2025
Zero-Shot Video Deraining with Video Diffusion Models

Tuomas Varanka, Juan Luis Gonzalez, Hyeongwoo Kim et al.

Existing video deraining methods are often trained on paired datasets, either synthetic, which limits their ability to generalize to real-world rain, or captured by static cameras, which restricts their effectiveness in dynamic scenes with background and camera motion. Furthermore, recent works in fine-tuning diffusion models have shown promising results, but the fine-tuning tends to weaken the generative prior, limiting generalization to unseen cases. In this paper, we introduce the first zero-shot video deraining method for complex dynamic scenes that does not require synthetic data nor model fine-tuning, by leveraging a pretrained text-to-video diffusion model that demonstrates strong generalization capabilities. By inverting an input video into the latent space of diffusion models, its reconstruction process can be intervened and pushed away from the model's concept of rain using negative prompting. At the core of our approach is an attention switching mechanism that we found is crucial for maintaining dynamic backgrounds as well as structural consistency between the input and the derained video, mitigating artifacts introduced by naive negative prompting. Our approach is validated through extensive experiments on real-world rain datasets, demonstrating substantial improvements over prior methods and showcasing robust generalization without the need for supervised training.

CVJul 9, 2021
Semantic and Geometric Unfolding of StyleGAN Latent Space

Mustafa Shukor, Xu Yao, Bharath Bhushan Damodaran et al.

Generative adversarial networks (GANs) have proven to be surprisingly efficient for image editing by inverting and manipulating the latent code corresponding to a natural image. This property emerges from the disentangled nature of the latent space. In this paper, we identify two geometric limitations of such latent space: (a) euclidean distances differ from image perceptual distance, and (b) disentanglement is not optimal and facial attribute separation using linear model is a limiting hypothesis. We thus propose a new method to learn a proxy latent representation using normalizing flows to remedy these limitations, and show that this leads to a more efficient space for face image editing.

CVMay 9, 2020
High Resolution Face Age Editing

Xu Yao, Gilles Puy, Alasdair Newson et al.

Face age editing has become a crucial task in film post-production, and is also becoming popular for general purpose photography. Recently, adversarial training has produced some of the most visually impressive results for image manipulation, including the face aging/de-aging task. In spite of considerable progress, current methods often present visual artifacts and can only deal with low-resolution images. In order to achieve aging/de-aging with the high quality and robustness necessary for wider use, these problems need to be addressed. This is the goal of the present work. We present an encoder-decoder architecture for face age editing. The core idea of our network is to create both a latent space containing the face identity, and a feature modulation layer corresponding to the age of the individual. We then combine these two elements to produce an output image of the person with a desired target age. Our architecture is greatly simplified with respect to other approaches, and allows for continuous age editing on high resolution images in a single unified model.

CVMay 9, 2020
Photo style transfer with consistency losses

Xu Yao, Gilles Puy, Patrick Pérez

We address the problem of style transfer between two photos and propose a new way to preserve photorealism. Using the single pair of photos available as input, we train a pair of deep convolution networks (convnets), each of which transfers the style of one photo to the other. To enforce photorealism, we introduce a content preserving mechanism by combining a cycle-consistency loss with a self-consistency loss. Experimental results show that this method does not suffer from typical artifacts observed in methods working in the same settings. We then further analyze some properties of these trained convnets. First, we notice that they can be used to stylize other unseen images with same known style. Second, we show that retraining only a small subset of the network parameters can be sufficient to adapt these convnets to new styles.