Bui Duc Manh

AI
h-index53
3papers
5citations
Novelty55%
AI Score44

3 Papers

73.8CVMar 16
LLMind: Bio-inspired Training-free Adaptive Visual Representations for Vision-Language Models

Soumyaratna Debnath, Bui Duc Manh, Zinan Liu et al.

Vision-Language Models (VLMs) typically assume a uniform spatial fidelity across the entire field of view of visual inputs, dedicating equal precision to even the uninformative regions. By contrast, human vision is neither uniform nor static; it is adaptive, selective, and resource-efficient. In light of this, we present the first systematic analysis of bio-inspired visual representation methods, providing insights for more efficient and adaptive VLMs. We propose LLMind (Looking Like the Mind), a novel training-free framework that mimics foveated encoding and cortical magnification in human vision to achieve adaptive, efficient representations for VLMs under tight pixel budgets. Our key idea is to explore a Bio-inspired Adaptive Sampling Strategy (BASS), enabling a Mobius-parameterized module that performs non-uniform sampling while preserving global scene structure. On top of BASS, we introduce closed-loop semantic feedback (CSF) via test-time adaptation to align perceptual saliency with textual information from the frozen VLM. We evaluate LLMind against uniform and other sampling baselines across diverse scene-level and region-guided visual question answering benchmarks. The results show dramatic gains, with average improvements of +20% on VQAv2, +38% on Seed-Bench, and +37% on A-OKVQA compared to uniform sampling under tight pixel budgets. More surprisingly, LLMind retains up to 82%, 92%, and 97% of the full-resolution performance using only 1%, 3%, and 5% of the pixels, respectively. Moreover, LLMind is lightweight, plug-and-play, and compatible with existing VLMs without requiring architectural changes.

AISep 11, 2025
Mind Meets Space: Rethinking Agentic Spatial Intelligence from a Neuroscience-inspired Perspective

Bui Duc Manh, Soumyaratna Debnath, Zetong Zhang et al.

Recent advances in agentic AI have led to systems capable of autonomous task execution and language-based reasoning, yet their spatial reasoning abilities remain limited and underexplored, largely constrained to symbolic and sequential processing. In contrast, human spatial intelligence, rooted in integrated multisensory perception, spatial memory, and cognitive maps, enables flexible, context-aware decision-making in unstructured environments. Therefore, bridging this gap is critical for advancing Agentic Spatial Intelligence toward better interaction with the physical 3D world. To this end, we first start from scrutinizing the spatial neural models as studied in computational neuroscience, and accordingly introduce a novel computational framework grounded in neuroscience principles. This framework maps core biological functions to six essential computation modules: bio-inspired multimodal sensing, multi-sensory integration, egocentric-allocentric conversion, an artificial cognitive map, spatial memory, and spatial reasoning. Together, these modules form a perspective landscape for agentic spatial reasoning capability across both virtual and physical environments. On top, we conduct a framework-guided analysis of recent methods, evaluating their relevance to each module and identifying critical gaps that hinder the development of more neuroscience-grounded spatial reasoning modules. We further examine emerging benchmarks and datasets and explore potential application domains ranging from virtual to embodied systems, such as robotics. Finally, we outline potential research directions, emphasizing the promising roadmap that can generalize spatial reasoning across dynamic or unstructured environments. We hope this work will benefit the research community with a neuroscience-grounded perspective and a structured pathway. Our project page can be found at Github.

CRJul 14, 2025
Secure and Efficient UAV-Based Face Detection via Homomorphic Encryption and Edge Computing

Nguyen Van Duc, Bui Duc Manh, Quang-Trung Luu et al.

This paper aims to propose a novel machine learning (ML) approach incorporating Homomorphic Encryption (HE) to address privacy limitations in Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAV)-based face detection. Due to challenges related to distance, altitude, and face orientation, high-resolution imagery and sophisticated neural networks enable accurate face recognition in dynamic environments. However, privacy concerns arise from the extensive surveillance capabilities of UAVs. To resolve this issue, we propose a novel framework that integrates HE with advanced neural networks to secure facial data throughout the inference phase. This method ensures that facial data remains secure with minimal impact on detection accuracy. Specifically, the proposed system leverages the Cheon-Kim-Kim-Song (CKKS) scheme to perform computations directly on encrypted data, optimizing computational efficiency and security. Furthermore, we develop an effective data encoding method specifically designed to preprocess the raw facial data into CKKS form in a Single-Instruction-Multiple-Data (SIMD) manner. Building on this, we design a secure inference algorithm to compute on ciphertext without needing decryption. This approach not only protects data privacy during the processing of facial data but also enhances the efficiency of UAV-based face detection systems. Experimental results demonstrate that our method effectively balances privacy protection and detection performance, making it a viable solution for UAV-based secure face detection. Significantly, our approach (while maintaining data confidentially with HE encryption) can still achieve an accuracy of less than 1% compared to the benchmark without using encryption.