Haiming Yao

CV
h-index15
23papers
409citations
Novelty59%
AI Score59

23 Papers

CVMar 10, 2023
Learning Global-Local Correspondence with Semantic Bottleneck for Logical Anomaly Detection

Haiming Yao, Wenyong Yu, Wei Luo et al. · tencent-ai

This paper presents a novel framework, named Global-Local Correspondence Framework (GLCF), for visual anomaly detection with logical constraints. Visual anomaly detection has become an active research area in various real-world applications, such as industrial anomaly detection and medical disease diagnosis. However, most existing methods focus on identifying local structural degeneration anomalies and often fail to detect high-level functional anomalies that involve logical constraints. To address this issue, we propose a two-branch approach that consists of a local branch for detecting structural anomalies and a global branch for detecting logical anomalies. To facilitate local-global feature correspondence, we introduce a novel semantic bottleneck enabled by the visual Transformer. Moreover, we develop feature estimation networks for each branch separately to detect anomalies. Our proposed framework is validated using various benchmarks, including industrial datasets, Mvtec AD, Mvtec Loco AD, and the Retinal-OCT medical dataset. Experimental results show that our method outperforms existing methods, particularly in detecting logical anomalies.

CVMar 24Code
A Feature Shuffling and Restoration Strategy for Universal Unsupervised Anomaly Detection

Wei Luo, Haiming Yao, Zhenfeng Qiang et al.

Unsupervised anomaly detection is vital in industrial fields, with reconstruction-based methods favored for their simplicity and effectiveness. However, reconstruction methods often encounter an identical shortcut issue, where both normal and anomalous regions can be well reconstructed and fail to identify outliers. The severity of this problem increases with the complexity of the normal data distribution. Consequently, existing methods may exhibit excellent detection performance in a specific scenario, but their performance sharply declines when transferred to another scenario. This paper focuses on establishing a universal model applicable to anomaly detection tasks across different settings, termed as universal anomaly detection. In this work, we introduce a novel, straightforward yet efficient framework for universal anomaly detection: \uline{F}eature \uline{S}huffling and \uline{R}estoration (FSR), which can alleviate the identical shortcut issue across different settings. First and foremost, FSR employs multi-scale features with rich semantic information as reconstruction targets, rather than raw image pixels. Subsequently, these multi-scale features are partitioned into non-overlapping feature blocks, which are randomly shuffled and then restored to their original state using a restoration network. This simple paradigm encourages the model to focus more on global contextual information. Additionally, we introduce a novel concept, the shuffling rate, to regulate the complexity of the FSR task, thereby alleviating the identical shortcut across different settings. Furthermore, we provide theoretical explanations for the effectiveness of FSR framework from two perspectives: network structure and mutual information. Extensive experimental results validate the superiority and efficiency of the FSR framework across different settings.Code is available at https://github.com/luow23/FSR.

CVJun 22, 2022
A Feature Memory Rearrangement Network for Visual Inspection of Textured Surface Defects Toward Edge Intelligent Manufacturing

Haiming Yao, Wenyong Yu, Xue Wang

Recent advances in the industrial inspection of textured surfaces-in the form of visual inspection-have made such inspections possible for efficient, flexible manufacturing systems. We propose an unsupervised feature memory rearrangement network (FMR-Net) to accurately detect various textural defects simultaneously. Consistent with mainstream methods, we adopt the idea of background reconstruction; however, we innovatively utilize artificial synthetic defects to enable the model to recognize anomalies, while traditional wisdom relies only on defect-free samples. First, we employ an encoding module to obtain multiscale features of the textured surface. Subsequently, a contrastive-learning-based memory feature module (CMFM) is proposed to obtain discriminative representations and construct a normal feature memory bank in the latent space, which can be employed as a substitute for defects and fast anomaly scores at the patch level. Next, a novel global feature rearrangement module (GFRM) is proposed to further suppress the reconstruction of residual defects. Finally, a decoding module utilizes the restored features to reconstruct the normal texture background. In addition, to improve inspection performance, a two-phase training strategy is utilized for accurate defect restoration refinement, and we exploit a multimodal inspection method to achieve noise-robust defect localization. We verify our method through extensive experiments and test its practical deployment in collaborative edge--cloud intelligent manufacturing scenarios by means of a multilevel detection method, demonstrating that FMR-Net exhibits state-of-the-art inspection accuracy and shows great potential for use in edge-computing-enabled smart industries.

CVNov 18, 2022
Normal Reference Attention and Defective Feature Perception Network for Surface Defect Detection

Wei Luo, Haiming Yao, Wenyong Yu

Visual anomaly detection plays a significant role in the development of industrial automatic product quality inspection. As a result of the utmost imbalance in the amount of normal and abnormal data, growing attention has been given to unsupervised methods for defect detection. Although existing reconstruction-based methods have been widely studied recently, establishing a robust reconstruction model for various textured surface defect detection remains a challenging task due to homogeneous and nonregular surface textures. In this paper, we propose a novel unsupervised reconstruction-based method called the normal reference attention and defective feature perception network (NDP-Net) to accurately inspect a variety of textured defects. Unlike most reconstruction-based methods, our NDP-Net first employs an encoding module that extracts multi scale discriminative features of the surface textures, which is augmented with the defect discriminative ability by the proposed artificial defects and the novel pixel-level defect perception loss. Subsequently, a novel reference-based attention module (RBAM) is proposed to leverage the normal features of the fixed reference image to repair the defective features and restrain the reconstruction of the defects. Next, the repaired features are fed into a decoding module to reconstruct the normal textured background. Finally, the novel multi scale defect segmentation module (MSDSM) is introduced for precise defect detection and segmentation. In addition, a two-stage training strategy is utilized to enhance the inspection performance.

CVMar 24Code
Template-Based Feature Aggregation Network for Industrial Anomaly Detection

Wei Luo, Haiming Yao, Wenyong Yu

Industrial anomaly detection plays a crucial role in ensuring product quality control. Therefore, proposing an effective anomaly detection model is of great significance. While existing feature-reconstruction methods have demonstrated excellent performance, they face challenges with shortcut learning, which can lead to undesirable reconstruction of anomalous features. To address this concern, we present a novel feature-reconstruction model called the \textbf{T}emplate-based \textbf{F}eature \textbf{A}ggregation \textbf{Net}work (TFA-Net) for anomaly detection via template-based feature aggregation. Specifically, TFA-Net first extracts multiple hierarchical features from a pre-trained convolutional neural network for a fixed template image and an input image. Instead of directly reconstructing input features, TFA-Net aggregates them onto the template features, effectively filtering out anomalous features that exhibit low similarity to normal template features. Next, TFA-Net utilizes the template features that have already fused normal features in the input features to refine feature details and obtain the reconstructed feature map. Finally, the defective regions can be located by comparing the differences between the input and reconstructed features. Additionally, a random masking strategy for input features is employed to enhance the overall inspection performance of the model. Our template-based feature aggregation schema yields a nontrivial and meaningful feature reconstruction task. The simple, yet efficient, TFA-Net exhibits state-of-the-art detection performance on various real-world industrial datasets. Additionally, it fulfills the real-time demands of industrial scenarios, rendering it highly suitable for practical applications in the industry. Code is available at https://github.com/luow23/TFA-Net.

CVNov 1, 2022
Siamese Transition Masked Autoencoders as Uniform Unsupervised Visual Anomaly Detector

Haiming Yao, Xue Wang, Wenyong Yu

Unsupervised visual anomaly detection conveys practical significance in many scenarios and is a challenging task due to the unbounded definition of anomalies. Moreover, most previous methods are application-specific, and establishing a unified model for anomalies across application scenarios remains unsolved. This paper proposes a novel hybrid framework termed Siamese Transition Masked Autoencoders(ST-MAE) to handle various visual anomaly detection tasks uniformly via deep feature transition. Concretely, the proposed method first extracts hierarchical semantics features from a pre-trained deep convolutional neural network and then develops a feature decoupling strategy to split the deep features into two disjoint feature patch subsets. Leveraging the decoupled features, the ST-MAE is developed with the Siamese encoders that operate on each subset of feature patches and perform the latent representations transition of two subsets, along with a lightweight decoder that reconstructs the original feature from the transitioned latent representation. Finally, the anomalous attributes can be detected using the semantic deep feature residual. Our deep feature transition scheme yields a nontrivial and semantic self-supervisory task to extract prototypical normal patterns, which allows for learning uniform models that generalize well for different visual anomaly detection tasks. The extensive experiments conducted demonstrate that the proposed ST-MAE method can advance state-of-the-art performance on multiple benchmarks across application scenarios with a superior inference efficiency, which exhibits great potential to be the uniform model for unsupervised visual anomaly detection.

CVNov 22, 2022
Generalizable Industrial Visual Anomaly Detection with Self-Induction Vision Transformer

Haiming Yao, Wenyong Yu

Industrial vision anomaly detection plays a critical role in the advanced intelligent manufacturing process, while some limitations still need to be addressed under such a context. First, existing reconstruction-based methods struggle with the identity mapping of trivial shortcuts where the reconstruction error gap is legible between the normal and abnormal samples, leading to inferior detection capabilities. Then, the previous studies mainly concentrated on the convolutional neural network (CNN) models that capture the local semantics of objects and neglect the global context, also resulting in inferior performance. Moreover, existing studies follow the individual learning fashion where the detection models are only capable of one category of the product while the generalizable detection for multiple categories has not been explored. To tackle the above limitations, we proposed a self-induction vision Transformer(SIVT) for unsupervised generalizable multi-category industrial visual anomaly detection and localization. The proposed SIVT first extracts discriminatory features from pre-trained CNN as property descriptors. Then, the self-induction vision Transformer is proposed to reconstruct the extracted features in a self-supervisory fashion, where the auxiliary induction tokens are additionally introduced to induct the semantics of the original signal. Finally, the abnormal properties can be detected using the semantic feature residual difference. We experimented with the SIVT on existing Mvtec AD benchmarks, the results reveal that the proposed method can advance state-of-the-art detection performance with an improvement of 2.8-6.3 in AUROC, and 3.3-7.6 in AP.

CVMar 24
URA-Net: Uncertainty-Integrated Anomaly Perception and Restoration Attention Network for Unsupervised Anomaly Detection

Wei Luo, Peng Xing, Yunkang Cao et al.

Unsupervised anomaly detection plays a pivotal role in industrial defect inspection and medical image analysis, with most methods relying on the reconstruction framework. However, these methods may suffer from over-generalization, enabling them to reconstruct anomalies well, which leads to poor detection performance. To address this issue, instead of focusing solely on normality reconstruction, we propose an innovative Uncertainty-Integrated Anomaly Perception and Restoration Attention Network (URA-Net), which explicitly restores abnormal patterns to their corresponding normality. First, unlike traditional image reconstruction methods, we utilize a pre-trained convolutional neural network to extract multi-level semantic features as the reconstruction target. To assist the URA-Net learning to restore anomalies, we introduce a novel feature-level artificial anomaly synthesis module to generate anomalous samples for training. Subsequently, a novel uncertainty-integrated anomaly perception module based on Bayesian neural networks is introduced to learn the distributions of anomalous and normal features. This facilitates the estimation of anomalous regions and ambiguous boundaries, laying the foundation for subsequent anomaly restoration. Then, we propose a novel restoration attention mechanism that leverages global normal semantic information to restore detected anomalous regions, thereby obtaining defect-free restored features. Finally, we employ residual maps between input features and restored features for anomaly detection and localization. The comprehensive experimental results on two industrial datasets, MVTec AD and BTAD, along with a medical image dataset, OCT-2017, unequivocally demonstrate the effectiveness and superiority of the proposed method.

CVNov 11, 2023
SCL-VI: Self-supervised Context Learning for Visual Inspection of Industrial Defects

Peng Wang, Haiming Yao, Wenyong Yu

The unsupervised visual inspection of defects in industrial products poses a significant challenge due to substantial variations in product surfaces. Current unsupervised models struggle to strike a balance between detecting texture and object defects, lacking the capacity to discern latent representations and intricate features. In this paper, we present a novel self-supervised learning algorithm designed to derive an optimal encoder by tackling the renowned jigsaw puzzle. Our approach involves dividing the target image into nine patches, tasking the encoder with predicting the relative position relationships between any two patches to extract rich semantics. Subsequently, we introduce an affinity-augmentation method to accentuate differences between normal and abnormal latent representations. Leveraging the classic support vector data description algorithm yields final detection results. Experimental outcomes demonstrate that our proposed method achieves outstanding detection and segmentation performance on the widely used MVTec AD dataset, with rates of 95.8% and 96.8%, respectively, establishing a state-of-the-art benchmark for both texture and object defects. Comprehensive experimentation underscores the effectiveness of our approach in diverse industrial applications.

CVMar 31, 2023
Visual Anomaly Detection via Dual-Attention Transformer and Discriminative Flow

Haiming Yao, Wei Luo, Wenyong Yu

In this paper, we introduce the novel state-of-the-art Dual-attention Transformer and Discriminative Flow (DADF) framework for visual anomaly detection. Based on only normal knowledge, visual anomaly detection has wide applications in industrial scenarios and has attracted significant attention. However, most existing methods fail to meet the requirements. In contrast, the proposed DTDF presents a new paradigm: it firstly leverages a pre-trained network to acquire multi-scale prior embeddings, followed by the development of a vision Transformer with dual attention mechanisms, namely self-attention and memorial-attention, to achieve two-level reconstruction for prior embeddings with the sequential and normality association. Additionally, we propose using normalizing flow to establish discriminative likelihood for the joint distribution of prior and reconstructions at each scale. The DADF achieves 98.3/98.4 of image/pixel AUROC on Mvtec AD; 83.7 of image AUROC and 67.4 of pixel sPRO on Mvtec LOCO AD benchmarks, demonstrating the effectiveness of our proposed approach.

CVDec 16, 2024Code
AMI-Net: Adaptive Mask Inpainting Network for Industrial Anomaly Detection and Localization

Wei Luo, Haiming Yao, Wenyong Yu et al.

Unsupervised visual anomaly detection is crucial for enhancing industrial production quality and efficiency. Among unsupervised methods, reconstruction approaches are popular due to their simplicity and effectiveness. The key aspect of reconstruction methods lies in the restoration of anomalous regions, which current methods have not satisfactorily achieved. To tackle this issue, we introduce a novel \uline{A}daptive \uline{M}ask \uline{I}npainting \uline{Net}work (AMI-Net) from the perspective of adaptive mask-inpainting. In contrast to traditional reconstruction methods that treat non-semantic image pixels as targets, our method uses a pre-trained network to extract multi-scale semantic features as reconstruction targets. Given the multiscale nature of industrial defects, we incorporate a training strategy involving random positional and quantitative masking. Moreover, we propose an innovative adaptive mask generator capable of generating adaptive masks that effectively mask anomalous regions while preserving normal regions. In this manner, the model can leverage the visible normal global contextual information to restore the masked anomalous regions, thereby effectively suppressing the reconstruction of defects. Extensive experimental results on the MVTec AD and BTAD industrial datasets validate the effectiveness of the proposed method. Additionally, AMI-Net exhibits exceptional real-time performance, striking a favorable balance between detection accuracy and speed, rendering it highly suitable for industrial applications. Code is available at: https://github.com/luow23/AMI-Net

CVMar 4, 2025Code
Exploring Intrinsic Normal Prototypes within a Single Image for Universal Anomaly Detection

Wei Luo, Yunkang Cao, Haiming Yao et al.

Anomaly detection (AD) is essential for industrial inspection, yet existing methods typically rely on ``comparing'' test images to normal references from a training set. However, variations in appearance and positioning often complicate the alignment of these references with the test image, limiting detection accuracy. We observe that most anomalies manifest as local variations, meaning that even within anomalous images, valuable normal information remains. We argue that this information is useful and may be more aligned with the anomalies since both the anomalies and the normal information originate from the same image. Therefore, rather than relying on external normality from the training set, we propose INP-Former, a novel method that extracts Intrinsic Normal Prototypes (INPs) directly from the test image. Specifically, we introduce the INP Extractor, which linearly combines normal tokens to represent INPs. We further propose an INP Coherence Loss to ensure INPs can faithfully represent normality for the testing image. These INPs then guide the INP-Guided Decoder to reconstruct only normal tokens, with reconstruction errors serving as anomaly scores. Additionally, we propose a Soft Mining Loss to prioritize hard-to-optimize samples during training. INP-Former achieves state-of-the-art performance in single-class, multi-class, and few-shot AD tasks across MVTec-AD, VisA, and Real-IAD, positioning it as a versatile and universal solution for AD. Remarkably, INP-Former also demonstrates some zero-shot AD capability. Code is available at:https://github.com/luow23/INP-Former.

CVDec 23, 2024Code
VarAD: Lightweight High-Resolution Image Anomaly Detection via Visual Autoregressive Modeling

Yunkang Cao, Haiming Yao, Wei Luo et al.

This paper addresses a practical task: High-Resolution Image Anomaly Detection (HRIAD). In comparison to conventional image anomaly detection for low-resolution images, HRIAD imposes a heavier computational burden and necessitates superior global information capture capacity. To tackle HRIAD, this paper translates image anomaly detection into visual token prediction and proposes VarAD based on visual autoregressive modeling for token prediction. Specifically, VarAD first extracts multi-hierarchy and multi-directional visual token sequences, and then employs an advanced model, Mamba, for visual autoregressive modeling and token prediction. During the prediction process, VarAD effectively exploits information from all preceding tokens to predict the target token. Finally, the discrepancies between predicted tokens and original tokens are utilized to score anomalies. Comprehensive experiments on four publicly available datasets and a real-world button inspection dataset demonstrate that the proposed VarAD achieves superior high-resolution image anomaly detection performance while maintaining lightweight, rendering VarAD a viable solution for HRIAD. Code is available at \href{https://github.com/caoyunkang/VarAD}{\url{https://github.com/caoyunkang/VarAD}}.

CVNov 13, 2025
Anomagic: Crossmodal Prompt-driven Zero-shot Anomaly Generation

Yuxin Jiang, Wei Luo, Hui Zhang et al.

We propose Anomagic, a zero-shot anomaly generation method that produces semantically coherent anomalies without requiring any exemplar anomalies. By unifying both visual and textual cues through a crossmodal prompt encoding scheme, Anomagic leverages rich contextual information to steer an inpainting-based generation pipeline. A subsequent contrastive refinement strategy enforces precise alignment between synthesized anomalies and their masks, thereby bolstering downstream anomaly detection accuracy. To facilitate training, we introduce AnomVerse, a collection of 12,987 anomaly-mask-caption triplets assembled from 13 publicly available datasets, where captions are automatically generated by multimodal large language models using structured visual prompts and template-based textual hints. Extensive experiments demonstrate that Anomagic trained on AnomVerse can synthesize more realistic and varied anomalies than prior methods, yielding superior improvements in downstream anomaly detection. Furthermore, Anomagic can generate anomalies for any normal-category image using user-defined prompts, establishing a versatile foundation model for anomaly generation.

CVMay 23, 2025Code
Center-aware Residual Anomaly Synthesis for Multi-class Industrial Anomaly Detection

Qiyu Chen, Huiyuan Luo, Haiming Yao et al.

Anomaly detection plays a vital role in the inspection of industrial images. Most existing methods require separate models for each category, resulting in multiplied deployment costs. This highlights the challenge of developing a unified model for multi-class anomaly detection. However, the significant increase in inter-class interference leads to severe missed detections. Furthermore, the intra-class overlap between normal and abnormal samples, particularly in synthesis-based methods, cannot be ignored and may lead to over-detection. To tackle these issues, we propose a novel Center-aware Residual Anomaly Synthesis (CRAS) method for multi-class anomaly detection. CRAS leverages center-aware residual learning to couple samples from different categories into a unified center, mitigating the effects of inter-class interference. To further reduce intra-class overlap, CRAS introduces distance-guided anomaly synthesis that adaptively adjusts noise variance based on normal data distribution. Experimental results on diverse datasets and real-world industrial applications demonstrate the superior detection accuracy and competitive inference speed of CRAS. The source code and the newly constructed dataset are publicly available at https://github.com/cqylunlun/CRAS.

CVAug 5, 2025Code
CoPS: Conditional Prompt Synthesis for Zero-Shot Anomaly Detection

Qiyu Chen, Zhen Qu, Wei Luo et al.

Recently, large pre-trained vision-language models have shown remarkable performance in zero-shot anomaly detection (ZSAD). With fine-tuning on a single auxiliary dataset, the model enables cross-category anomaly detection on diverse datasets covering industrial defects and medical lesions. Compared to manually designed prompts, prompt learning eliminates the need for expert knowledge and trial-and-error. However, it still faces the following challenges: (i) static learnable tokens struggle to capture the continuous and diverse patterns of normal and anomalous states, limiting generalization to unseen categories; (ii) fixed textual labels provide overly sparse category information, making the model prone to overfitting to a specific semantic subspace. To address these issues, we propose Conditional Prompt Synthesis (CoPS), a novel framework that synthesizes dynamic prompts conditioned on visual features to enhance ZSAD performance. Specifically, we extract representative normal and anomaly prototypes from fine-grained patch features and explicitly inject them into prompts, enabling adaptive state modeling. Given the sparsity of class labels, we leverage a variational autoencoder to model semantic image features and implicitly fuse varied class tokens into prompts. Additionally, integrated with our spatially-aware alignment mechanism, extensive experiments demonstrate that CoPS surpasses state-of-the-art methods by 2.5% AUROC in both classification and segmentation across 13 industrial and medical datasets. Code will be available at https://github.com/cqylunlun/CoPS.

CVJun 4, 2025
INP-Former++: Advancing Universal Anomaly Detection via Intrinsic Normal Prototypes and Residual Learning

Wei Luo, Haiming Yao, Yunkang Cao et al.

Anomaly detection (AD) is essential for industrial inspection and medical diagnosis, yet existing methods typically rely on ``comparing'' test images to normal references from a training set. However, variations in appearance and positioning often complicate the alignment of these references with the test image, limiting detection accuracy. We observe that most anomalies manifest as local variations, meaning that even within anomalous images, valuable normal information remains. We argue that this information is useful and may be more aligned with the anomalies since both the anomalies and the normal information originate from the same image. Therefore, rather than relying on external normality from the training set, we propose INP-Former, a novel method that extracts Intrinsic Normal Prototypes (INPs) directly from the test image. Specifically, we introduce the INP Extractor, which linearly combines normal tokens to represent INPs. We further propose an INP Coherence Loss to ensure INPs can faithfully represent normality for the testing image. These INPs then guide the INP-guided Decoder to reconstruct only normal tokens, with reconstruction errors serving as anomaly scores. Additionally, we propose a Soft Mining Loss to prioritize hard-to-optimize samples during training. INP-Former achieves state-of-the-art performance in single-class, multi-class, and few-shot AD tasks across MVTec-AD, VisA, and Real-IAD, positioning it as a versatile and universal solution for AD. Remarkably, INP-Former also demonstrates some zero-shot AD capability. Furthermore, we propose a soft version of the INP Coherence Loss and enhance INP-Former by incorporating residual learning, leading to the development of INP-Former++. The proposed method significantly improves detection performance across single-class, multi-class, semi-supervised, few-shot, and zero-shot settings.

CVJul 15, 2025
A Comprehensive Survey for Real-World Industrial Defect Detection: Challenges, Approaches, and Prospects

Yuqi Cheng, Yunkang Cao, Haiming Yao et al.

Industrial defect detection is vital for upholding product quality across contemporary manufacturing systems. As the expectations for precision, automation, and scalability intensify, conventional inspection approaches are increasingly found wanting in addressing real-world demands. Notable progress in computer vision and deep learning has substantially bolstered defect detection capabilities across both 2D and 3D modalities. A significant development has been the pivot from closed-set to open-set defect detection frameworks, which diminishes the necessity for extensive defect annotations and facilitates the recognition of novel anomalies. Despite such strides, a cohesive and contemporary understanding of industrial defect detection remains elusive. Consequently, this survey delivers an in-depth analysis of both closed-set and open-set defect detection strategies within 2D and 3D modalities, charting their evolution in recent years and underscoring the rising prominence of open-set techniques. We distill critical challenges inherent in practical detection environments and illuminate emerging trends, thereby providing a current and comprehensive vista of this swiftly progressing field.

SPDec 28, 2024
Self-Calibrated Dual Contrasting for Annotation-Efficient Bacteria Raman Spectroscopy Clustering and Classification

Haiming Yao, Wei Luo, Tao Zhou et al.

Raman scattering is based on molecular vibration spectroscopy and provides a powerful technology for pathogenic bacteria diagnosis using the unique molecular fingerprint information of a substance. The integration of deep learning technology has significantly improved the efficiency and accuracy of intelligent Raman spectroscopy (RS) recognition. However, the current RS recognition methods based on deep neural networks still require the annotation of a large amount of spectral data, which is labor-intensive. This paper presents a novel annotation-efficient Self-Calibrated Dual Contrasting (SCDC) method for RS recognition that operates effectively with few or no annotation. Our core motivation is to represent the spectrum from two different perspectives in two distinct subspaces: embedding and category. The embedding perspective captures instance-level information, while the category perspective reflects category-level information. Accordingly, we have implemented a dual contrastive learning approach from two perspectives to obtain discriminative representations, which are applicable for Raman spectroscopy recognition under both unsupervised and semi-supervised learning conditions. Furthermore, a self-calibration mechanism is proposed to enhance robustness. Validation of the identification task on three large-scale bacterial Raman spectroscopy datasets demonstrates that our SCDC method achieves robust recognition performance with very few (5$\%$ or 10$\%$) or no annotations, highlighting the potential of the proposed method for biospectral identification in annotation-efficient clinical scenarios.

IVDec 11, 2024
Adversarial Contrastive Domain-Generative Learning for Bacteria Raman Spectrum Joint Denoising and Cross-Domain Identification

Haiming Yao, Wei Luo, Xue Wang

Raman spectroscopy, as a label-free detection technology, has been widely utilized in the clinical diagnosis of pathogenic bacteria. However, Raman signals are naturally weak and sensitive to the condition of the acquisition process. The characteristic spectra of a bacteria can manifest varying signal-to-noise ratios and domain discrepancies under different acquisition conditions. Consequently, existing methods often face challenges when making identification for unobserved acquisition conditions, i.e., the testing acquisition conditions are unavailable during model training. In this article, a generic framework, namely, an adversarial contrastive domain-generative learning framework, is proposed for joint Raman spectroscopy denoising and cross-domain identification. The proposed method is composed of a domain generation module and a domain task module. Through adversarial learning between these two modules, it utilizes only a single available source domain spectral data to generate extended denoised domains that are semantically consistent with the source domain and extracts domain-invariant representations. Comprehensive case studies indicate that the proposed method can simultaneously conduct spectral denoising without necessitating noise-free ground-truth and can achieve improved diagnostic accuracy and robustness under cross-domain unseen spectral acquisition conditions. This suggests that the proposed method holds remarkable potential as a diagnostic tool in real clinical cases.

CVDec 11, 2024
DiffRaman: A Conditional Latent Denoising Diffusion Probabilistic Model for Bacterial Raman Spectroscopy Identification Under Limited Data Conditions

Haiming Yao, Wei Luo, Ang Gao et al.

Raman spectroscopy has attracted significant attention in various biochemical detection fields, especially in the rapid identification of pathogenic bacteria. The integration of this technology with deep learning to facilitate automated bacterial Raman spectroscopy diagnosis has emerged as a key focus in recent research. However, the diagnostic performance of existing deep learning methods largely depends on a sufficient dataset, and in scenarios where there is a limited availability of Raman spectroscopy data, it is inadequate to fully optimize the numerous parameters of deep neural networks. To address these challenges, this paper proposes a data generation method utilizing deep generative models to expand the data volume and enhance the recognition accuracy of bacterial Raman spectra. Specifically, we introduce DiffRaman, a conditional latent denoising diffusion probability model for Raman spectra generation. Experimental results demonstrate that synthetic bacterial Raman spectra generated by DiffRaman can effectively emulate real experimental spectra, thereby enhancing the performance of diagnostic models, especially under conditions of limited data. Furthermore, compared to existing generative models, the proposed DiffRaman offers improvements in both generation quality and computational efficiency. Our DiffRaman approach offers a well-suited solution for automated bacteria Raman spectroscopy diagnosis in data-scarce scenarios, offering new insights into alleviating the labor of spectroscopic measurements and enhancing rare bacteria identification.

CVJun 17, 2024
Prior Normality Prompt Transformer for Multi-class Industrial Image Anomaly Detection

Haiming Yao, Yunkang Cao, Wei Luo et al.

Image anomaly detection plays a pivotal role in industrial inspection. Traditional approaches often demand distinct models for specific categories, resulting in substantial deployment costs. This raises concerns about multi-class anomaly detection, where a unified model is developed for multiple classes. However, applying conventional methods, particularly reconstruction-based models, directly to multi-class scenarios encounters challenges such as identical shortcut learning, hindering effective discrimination between normal and abnormal instances. To tackle this issue, our study introduces the Prior Normality Prompt Transformer (PNPT) method for multi-class image anomaly detection. PNPT strategically incorporates normal semantics prompting to mitigate the "identical mapping" problem. This entails integrating a prior normality prompt into the reconstruction process, yielding a dual-stream model. This innovative architecture combines normal prior semantics with abnormal samples, enabling dual-stream reconstruction grounded in both prior knowledge and intrinsic sample characteristics. PNPT comprises four essential modules: Class-Specific Normality Prompting Pool (CS-NPP), Hierarchical Patch Embedding (HPE), Semantic Alignment Coupling Encoding (SACE), and Contextual Semantic Conditional Decoding (CSCD). Experimental validation on diverse benchmark datasets and real-world industrial applications highlights PNPT's superior performance in multi-class industrial anomaly detection.

CVJun 11, 2024
Global-Regularized Neighborhood Regression for Efficient Zero-Shot Texture Anomaly Detection

Haiming Yao, Wei Luo, Yunkang Cao et al.

Texture surface anomaly detection finds widespread applications in industrial settings. However, existing methods often necessitate gathering numerous samples for model training. Moreover, they predominantly operate within a close-set detection framework, limiting their ability to identify anomalies beyond the training dataset. To tackle these challenges, this paper introduces a novel zero-shot texture anomaly detection method named Global-Regularized Neighborhood Regression (GRNR). Unlike conventional approaches, GRNR can detect anomalies on arbitrary textured surfaces without any training data or cost. Drawing from human visual cognition, GRNR derives two intrinsic prior supports directly from the test texture image: local neighborhood priors characterized by coherent similarities and global normality priors featuring typical normal patterns. The fundamental principle of GRNR involves utilizing the two extracted intrinsic support priors for self-reconstructive regression of the query sample. This process employs the transformation facilitated by local neighbor support while being regularized by global normality support, aiming to not only achieve visually consistent reconstruction results but also preserve normality properties. We validate the effectiveness of GRNR across various industrial scenarios using eight benchmark datasets, demonstrating its superior detection performance without the need for training data. Remarkably, our method is applicable for open-set texture defect detection and can even surpass existing vanilla approaches that require extensive training.