6.4MMJun 4
Beyond Generative Decoding: Discriminative Hidden-State Readout from a Native Omni-Modal LLM for Multimodal Sentiment AnalysisBin Wen, Tien-Ping Tan
Multimodal sentiment analysis (MSA) infers human affect from language, acoustic, and visual signals. Recent methods increasingly adapt large multimodal models (LMMs) via generative readout: prompting the model to emit a sentiment score as a text string. While convenient, this ties continuous regression to discrete autoregressive decoding, incurring unmeasured costs. We revisit this readout mechanism and propose a discriminative formulation built on the Thinker module of a native omni-modal LLM (Qwen2.5-Omni-7B). Instead of text decoding, we map the final-layer hidden state of the last non-padding token to a continuous score via a lightweight regression head in a single forward pass. Using 4-bit quantization and low-rank adaptation (QLoRA), the entire 7B pipeline -- including video and audio processing -- trains on a single consumer GPU (RTX 5090, 32 GB) with 10-21 GB peak memory and 1.14% trainable parameters. Through a controlled comparison fixing the backbone, data, and LoRA configuration, we isolate the impact of the readout. On CMU-MOSI and CMU-MOSEI, our discriminative readout reaches state-of-the-art accuracy without task-specific feature engineering (MOSI: MAE 0.551, Corr 0.888; MOSEI: MAE 0.506, Corr 0.790) and exhibits strong multi-seed stability. In contrast, the generative readout -- even after equivalent supervised training -- more than doubles the mean absolute error, yields unparsable or out-of-range outputs (2.8% zero-shot), and suffers from higher latency. Modality ablations reveal a text-dominant regime on CMU-MOSI. Our findings indicate that how an LMM is read out is as consequential as how it is trained, demonstrating that a discriminative readout offers a more accurate, efficient, and reliable alternative for continuous MSA.
SDAug 20, 2025
EffiFusion-GAN: Efficient Fusion Generative Adversarial Network for Speech EnhancementBin Wen, Tien-Ping Tan
We introduce EffiFusion-GAN (Efficient Fusion Generative Adversarial Network), a lightweight yet powerful model for speech enhancement. The model integrates depthwise separable convolutions within a multi-scale block to capture diverse acoustic features efficiently. An enhanced attention mechanism with dual normalization and residual refinement further improves training stability and convergence. Additionally, dynamic pruning is applied to reduce model size while maintaining performance, making the framework suitable for resource-constrained environments. Experimental evaluation on the public VoiceBank+DEMAND dataset shows that EffiFusion-GAN achieves a PESQ score of 3.45, outperforming existing models under the same parameter settings.
LGAug 20, 2025
PGF-Net: A Progressive Gated-Fusion Framework for Efficient Multimodal Sentiment AnalysisBin Wen, Tien-Ping Tan
We introduce PGF-Net (Progressive Gated-Fusion Network), a novel deep learning framework designed for efficient and interpretable multimodal sentiment analysis. Our framework incorporates three primary innovations. Firstly, we propose a Progressive Intra-Layer Fusion paradigm, where a Cross-Attention mechanism empowers the textual representation to dynamically query and integrate non-linguistic features from audio and visual streams within the deep layers of a Transformer encoder. This enables a deeper, context-dependent fusion process. Secondly, the model incorporates an Adaptive Gated Arbitration mechanism, which acts as a dynamic controller to balance the original linguistic information against the newly fused multimodal context, ensuring stable and meaningful integration while preventing noise from overwhelming the signal. Lastly, a hybrid Parameter-Efficient Fine-Tuning (PEFT) strategy is employed, synergistically combining global adaptation via LoRA with local refinement through Post-Fusion Adapters. This significantly reduces trainable parameters, making the model lightweight and suitable for resource-limited scenarios. These innovations are integrated into a hierarchical encoder architecture, enabling PGF-Net to perform deep, dynamic, and interpretable multimodal sentiment analysis while maintaining exceptional parameter efficiency. Experimental results on MOSI dataset demonstrate that our proposed PGF-Net achieves state-of-the-art performance, with a Mean Absolute Error (MAE) of 0.691 and an F1-Score of 86.9%. Notably, our model achieves these results with only 3.09M trainable parameters, showcasing a superior balance between performance and computational efficiency.
CLAug 9, 2025
ESNERA: Empirical and semantic named entity alignment for named entity dataset mergingXiaobo Zhang, Congqing He, Ying He et al.
Named Entity Recognition (NER) is a fundamental task in natural language processing. It remains a research hotspot due to its wide applicability across domains. Although recent advances in deep learning have significantly improved NER performance, they rely heavily on large, high-quality annotated datasets. However, building these datasets is expensive and time-consuming, posing a major bottleneck for further research. Current dataset merging approaches mainly focus on strategies like manual label mapping or constructing label graphs, which lack interpretability and scalability. To address this, we propose an automatic label alignment method based on label similarity. The method combines empirical and semantic similarities, using a greedy pairwise merging strategy to unify label spaces across different datasets. Experiments are conducted in two stages: first, merging three existing NER datasets into a unified corpus with minimal impact on NER performance; second, integrating this corpus with a small-scale, self-built dataset in the financial domain. The results show that our method enables effective dataset merging and enhances NER performance in the low-resource financial domain. This study presents an efficient, interpretable, and scalable solution for integrating multi-source NER corpora.
SPMay 7, 2023
CIT-EmotionNet: CNN Interactive Transformer Network for EEG Emotion RecognitionWei Lu, Hua Ma, Tien-Ping Tan
Emotion recognition using Electroencephalogram (EEG) signals has emerged as a significant research challenge in affective computing and intelligent interaction. However, effectively combining global and local features of EEG signals to improve performance in emotion recognition is still a difficult task. In this study, we propose a novel CNN Interactive Transformer Network for EEG Emotion Recognition, known as CIT-EmotionNet, which efficiently integrates global and local features of EEG signals. Initially, we convert raw EEG signals into spatial-frequency representations, which serve as inputs. Then, we integrate Convolutional Neural Network (CNN) and Transformer within a single framework in a parallel manner. Finally, we design a CNN interactive Transformer module, which facilitates the interaction and fusion of local and global features, thereby enhancing the model's ability to extract both types of features from EEG spatial-frequency representations. The proposed CIT-EmotionNet outperforms state-of-the-art methods, achieving an average recognition accuracy of 98.57\% and 92.09\% on two publicly available datasets, SEED and SEED-IV, respectively.