CVMar 29Code
LongCat-Next: Lexicalizing Modalities as Discrete TokensMeituan LongCat Team, Bin Xiao, Chao Wang et al.
The prevailing Next-Token Prediction (NTP) paradigm has driven the success of large language models through discrete autoregressive modeling. However, contemporary multimodal systems remain language-centric, often treating non-linguistic modalities as external attachments, leading to fragmented architectures and suboptimal integration. To transcend this limitation, we introduce Discrete Native Autoregressive (DiNA), a unified framework that represents multimodal information within a shared discrete space, enabling a consistent and principled autoregressive modeling across modalities. A key innovation is the Discrete Native Any-resolution Visual Transformer (dNaViT), which performs tokenization and de-tokenization at arbitrary resolutions, transforming continuous visual signals into hierarchical discrete tokens. Building on this foundation, we develop LongCat-Next, a native multimodal model that processes text, vision, and audio under a single autoregressive objective with minimal modality-specific design. As an industrial-strength foundation model, it excels at seeing, painting, and talking within a single framework, achieving strong performance across a wide range of multimodal benchmarks. In particular, LongCat-Next addresses the long-standing performance ceiling of discrete vision modeling on understanding tasks and provides a unified approach to effectively reconcile the conflict between understanding and generation. As an attempt toward native multimodality, we open-source the LongCat-Next and its tokenizers, hoping to foster further research and development in the community. GitHub: https://github.com/meituan-longcat/LongCat-Next
LGSep 20, 2024
Adaptive Mixture Importance Sampling for Automated Ads Auction TuningYimeng Jia, Kaushal Paneri, Rong Huang et al.
This paper introduces Adaptive Mixture Importance Sampling (AMIS) as a novel approach for optimizing key performance indicators (KPIs) in large-scale recommender systems, such as online ad auctions. Traditional importance sampling (IS) methods face challenges in dynamic environments, particularly in navigating through complexities of multi-modal landscapes and avoiding entrapment in local optima for the optimization task. Instead of updating importance weights and mixing samples across iterations, as in canonical adaptive IS and multiple IS, our AMIS framework leverages a mixture distribution as the proposal distribution and dynamically adjusts both the mixture parameters and their mixing rates at each iteration, thereby enhancing search diversity and efficiency. Through extensive offline simulations, we demonstrate that AMIS significantly outperforms simple Gaussian Importance Sampling (GIS), particularly in noisy environments. Moreover, our approach is validated in real-world scenarios through online A/B experiments on a major search engine, where AMIS consistently identifies optimal tuning points that are more likely to be adopted as mainstream configurations. These findings indicate that AMIS enhances convergence in noisy environments, leading to more accurate and reliable decision-making in the context of importance sampling off-policy estimators.
CVDec 5, 2025
EditThinker: Unlocking Iterative Reasoning for Any Image EditorHongyu Li, Manyuan Zhang, Dian Zheng et al.
Instruction-based image editing has emerged as a prominent research area, which, benefiting from image generation foundation models, have achieved high aesthetic quality, making instruction-following capability the primary challenge. Existing approaches improve instruction adherence via supervised or reinforcement learning, yet single-turn success rates remain limited due to inherent stochasticity and a lack of deliberation. In this work, we propose a deliberative editing framework to 'think' while they edit, which simulates the human cognitive loop by iteratively executing a Think-while-Edit cycle: Critiquing results and Refining instructions , followed by Repeating the generation until satisfactory. Specifically, we train a single MLLM, EditThinker, to act as the reasoning engine of this framework, which jointly produce the critique score, reasoning process, and refined instructions. We employ reinforcement learning to align the EditThinker's thinking with its editing, thereby generating more targeted instruction improvements. Extensive experiments on four benchmarks demonstrate that our approach significantly improves the instruction-following capability of any image editing model by a large margin. We will release our data construction framework, datasets, and models to benefit the community.