31.3GRMay 19
PolycubeNet: A Dual-latent Diffusion Model for Polycube-Based Hexahedral Mesh GenerationLu He, Qitao Deng, Junjiang Deng et al.
Hexahedral meshes are widely used in simulation pipelines, yet automatic generation remains challenging for complex CAD geometries. Polycube-based hexahedral meshing is a representative approach due to its regular, parameterization-friendly structure, but existing polycube construction methods often rely on intricate surface segmentation and local heuristics, which can produce artifacts or fail on difficult shapes. In this paper, we propose an end-to-end framework for polycube generation based on conditional diffusion models. Given an input geometry represented as a point cloud, our method directly produces a corresponding polycube point cloud, eliminating the need for explicit surface segmentation or predefined polycube templates. At the core of our approach is a dual-latent conditional diffusion architecture that confines computationally expensive self-attention operations to a fixed-capacity, low-dimensional latent space. This design effectively decouples computational complexity from the resolution of both the input geometry and the output polycube, thereby avoiding the quadratic cost typical of point cloud self-attention mechanisms while supporting flexible input and output resolutions. To obtain a hexahedral mesh, the generated polycube is aligned to the input shape via rigid and non-rigid point cloud registration to establish surface correspondence, followed by a polycube-to-hex pipeline. We additionally create and release a paired dataset of CAD meshes and their corresponding polycube meshes, together with the core implementation of our model. Experiments show that PolycubeNet generalizes to complex CAD models with arbitrary genus and produces high-quality polycube structures within seconds, improving robustness and efficiency over prior learning-based approaches.
CRFeb 23
Agentic AI as a Cybersecurity Attack Surface: Threats, Exploits, and Defenses in Runtime Supply ChainsXiaochong Jiang, Shiqi Yang, Wenting Yang et al.
Agentic systems built on large language models (LLMs) extend beyond text generation to autonomously retrieve information and invoke tools. This runtime execution model shifts the attack surface from build-time artifacts to inference-time dependencies, exposing agents to manipulation through untrusted data and probabilistic capability resolution. While prior work has focused on model-level vulnerabilities, security risks emerging from cyclic and interdependent runtime behavior remain fragmented. We systematize these risks within a unified runtime framework, categorizing threats into data supply chain attacks (transient context injection and persistent memory poisoning) and tool supply chain attacks (discovery, implementation, and invocation). We further identify the Viral Agent Loop, in which agents act as vectors for self-propagating generative worms without exploiting code-level flaws. Finally, we advocate a Zero-Trust Runtime Architecture that treats context as untrusted control flow and constrains tool execution through cryptographic provenance rather than semantic inference.
26.8DCMar 31
An AI-Driven Framework for Energy-Efficient Environmental Monitoring in Smart Cities Using Edge IntelligenceYichen Liu, Imam Akintomiwa Akinlade, Xiaochong Jiang et al.
Environmental monitoring is a crucial component of the smart city infrastructure. It enables informed decision making which enhances sustainability, public health and urban planning. However, the large-scale deployments of the smart sensors have raised concerns on excessive energy consumption and redundant data collection as well as limited sensor lifespan. To resolve these issues, we present an AI-driven framework for energy-efficient environmental monitoring in smart cities utilizing edge intelligence. Our proposed framework leverages TinyML-enabled edge devices and context-aware adaptive decision-making in order to dynamically activate the sensors based on the spatiotemporal conditions, environmental statistics and energy constraints. The sensors will be dynamically activated based on a utility function that takes in factors such as real-time environmental conditions, sensor location, and remaining battery lifespan. Our framework will reduce unnecessary sensing and communication while maintaining high coverage for monitoring. We introduce a hierarchical Edge Intelligence architecture to support deployments in city-wide scales. We conducted evaluation using a city-scale simulation driven by real multi-sensor environmental traces, which demonstrates that the proposed mechanism significantly reduces energy consumption and extends sensor lifespan when compared to static, periodic, and UCB-based adaptive sensing strategies. The results highlight the potential of edge intelligence and adaptive AI techniques for building sustainable and efficient smart city monitoring systems.