Xue Sun

h-index11
2papers

2 Papers

AISep 27, 2022
Reinforcement Learning for Cognitive Delay/Disruption Tolerant Network Node Management in an LEO-based Satellite Constellation

Xue Sun, Changhao Li, Lei Yan et al.

In recent years, with the large-scale deployment of space spacecraft entities and the increase of satellite onboard capabilities, delay/disruption tolerant network (DTN) emerged as a more robust communication protocol than TCP/IP in the case of excessive network dynamics. DTN node buffer management is still an active area of research, as the current implementation of the DTN core protocol still relies on the assumption that there is always enough memory available in different network nodes to store and forward bundles. In addition, the classical queuing theory does not apply to the dynamic management of DTN node buffers. Therefore, this paper proposes a centralized approach to automatically manage cognitive DTN nodes in low earth orbit (LEO) satellite constellation scenarios based on the advanced reinforcement learning (RL) strategy advantage actor-critic (A2C). The method aims to explore training a geosynchronous earth orbit intelligent agent to manage all DTN nodes in an LEO satellite constellation scenario. The goal of the A2C agent is to maximize delivery success rate and minimize network resource consumption cost while considering node memory utilization. The intelligent agent can dynamically adjust the radio data rate and perform drop operations based on bundle priority. In order to measure the effectiveness of applying A2C technology to DTN node management issues in LEO satellite constellation scenarios, this paper compares the trained intelligent agent strategy with the other two non-RL policies, including random and standard policies. Experiments show that the A2C strategy balances delivery success rate and cost, and provides the highest reward and the lowest node memory utilization.

CLSep 21, 2025
FlagEval Findings Report: A Preliminary Evaluation of Large Reasoning Models on Automatically Verifiable Textual and Visual Questions

Bowen Qin, Chen Yue, Fang Yin et al.

We conduct a moderate-scale contamination-free (to some extent) evaluation of current large reasoning models (LRMs) with some preliminary findings. We also release ROME, our evaluation benchmark for vision language models intended to test reasoning from visual clues. We attach links to the benchmark, evaluation data, and other updates on this website: https://flageval-baai.github.io/LRM-Eval/