Lixing Zhu

CL
h-index24
16papers
3,935citations
Novelty53%
AI Score53

16 Papers

CLFeb 28, 2023
PANACEA: An Automated Misinformation Detection System on COVID-19

Runcong Zhao, Miguel Arana-Catania, Lixing Zhu et al.

In this demo, we introduce a web-based misinformation detection system PANACEA on COVID-19 related claims, which has two modules, fact-checking and rumour detection. Our fact-checking module, which is supported by novel natural language inference methods with a self-attention network, outperforms state-of-the-art approaches. It is also able to give automated veracity assessment and ranked supporting evidence with the stance towards the claim to be checked. In addition, PANACEA adapts the bi-directional graph convolutional networks model, which is able to detect rumours based on comment networks of related tweets, instead of relying on the knowledge base. This rumour detection module assists by warning the users in the early stages when a knowledge base may not be available.

CLMay 6, 2022
Disentangled Learning of Stance and Aspect Topics for Vaccine Attitude Detection in Social Media

Lixing Zhu, Zheng Fang, Gabriele Pergola et al.

Building models to detect vaccine attitudes on social media is challenging because of the composite, often intricate aspects involved, and the limited availability of annotated data. Existing approaches have relied heavily on supervised training that requires abundant annotations and pre-defined aspect categories. Instead, with the aim of leveraging the large amount of unannotated data now available on vaccination, we propose a novel semi-supervised approach for vaccine attitude detection, called VADet. A variational autoencoding architecture based on language models is employed to learn from unlabelled data the topical information of the domain. Then, the model is fine-tuned with a few manually annotated examples of user attitudes. We validate the effectiveness of VADet on our annotated data and also on an existing vaccination corpus annotated with opinions on vaccines. Our results show that VADet is able to learn disentangled stance and aspect topics, and outperforms existing aspect-based sentiment analysis models on both stance detection and tweet clustering.

CVAug 30, 2023
Can Prompt Learning Benefit Radiology Report Generation?

Jun Wang, Lixing Zhu, Abhir Bhalerao et al.

Radiology report generation aims to automatically provide clinically meaningful descriptions of radiology images such as MRI and X-ray. Although great success has been achieved in natural scene image captioning tasks, radiology report generation remains challenging and requires prior medical knowledge. In this paper, we propose PromptRRG, a method that utilizes prompt learning to activate a pretrained model and incorporate prior knowledge. Since prompt learning for radiology report generation has not been explored before, we begin with investigating prompt designs and categorise them based on varying levels of knowledge: common, domain-specific and disease-enriched prompts. Additionally, we propose an automatic prompt learning mechanism to alleviate the burden of manual prompt engineering. This is the first work to systematically examine the effectiveness of prompt learning for radiology report generation. Experimental results on the largest radiology report generation benchmark, MIMIC-CXR, demonstrate that our proposed method achieves state-of-the-art performance. Code will be available upon the acceptance.

CLOct 2, 2023
NarrativePlay: Interactive Narrative Understanding

Runcong Zhao, Wenjia Zhang, Jiazheng Li et al.

In this paper, we introduce NarrativePlay, a novel system that allows users to role-play a fictional character and interact with other characters in narratives such as novels in an immersive environment. We leverage Large Language Models (LLMs) to generate human-like responses, guided by personality traits extracted from narratives. The system incorporates auto-generated visual display of narrative settings, character portraits, and character speech, greatly enhancing user experience. Our approach eschews predefined sandboxes, focusing instead on main storyline events extracted from narratives from the perspective of a user-selected character. NarrativePlay has been evaluated on two types of narratives, detective and adventure stories, where users can either explore the world or improve their favorability with the narrative characters through conversations.

CLOct 28, 2023
Are NLP Models Good at Tracing Thoughts: An Overview of Narrative Understanding

Lixing Zhu, Runcong Zhao, Lin Gui et al.

Narrative understanding involves capturing the author's cognitive processes, providing insights into their knowledge, intentions, beliefs, and desires. Although large language models (LLMs) excel in generating grammatically coherent text, their ability to comprehend the author's thoughts remains uncertain. This limitation hinders the practical applications of narrative understanding. In this paper, we conduct a comprehensive survey of narrative understanding tasks, thoroughly examining their key features, definitions, taxonomy, associated datasets, training objectives, evaluation metrics, and limitations. Furthermore, we explore the potential of expanding the capabilities of modularized LLMs to address novel narrative understanding tasks. By framing narrative understanding as the retrieval of the author's imaginative cues that outline the narrative structure, our study introduces a fresh perspective on enhancing narrative comprehension.

MLAug 22, 2024
Distributed quasi-Newton robust estimation under differential privacy

Chuhan Wang, Lixing Zhu, Xuehu Zhu

For distributed computing with Byzantine machines under Privacy Protection (PP) constraints, this paper develops a robust PP distributed quasi-Newton estimation, which only requires the node machines to transmit five vectors to the central processor with high asymptotic relative efficiency. Compared with the gradient descent strategy which requires more rounds of transmission and the Newton iteration strategy which requires the entire Hessian matrix to be transmitted, the novel quasi-Newton iteration has advantages in reducing privacy budgeting and transmission cost. Moreover, our PP algorithm does not depend on the boundedness of gradients and second-order derivatives. When gradients and second-order derivatives follow sub-exponential distributions, we offer a mechanism that can ensure PP with a sufficiently high probability. Furthermore, this novel estimator can achieve the optimal convergence rate and the asymptotic normality. The numerical studies on synthetic and real data sets evaluate the performance of the proposed algorithm.

MLJan 28
Empirical Likelihood-Based Fairness Auditing: Distribution-Free Certification and Flagging

Jie Tang, Chuanlong Xie, Xianli Zeng et al.

Machine learning models in high-stakes applications, such as recidivism prediction and automated personnel selection, often exhibit systematic performance disparities across sensitive subpopulations, raising critical concerns regarding algorithmic bias. Fairness auditing addresses these risks through two primary functions: certification, which verifies adherence to fairness constraints; and flagging, which isolates specific demographic groups experiencing disparate treatment. However, existing auditing techniques are frequently limited by restrictive distributional assumptions or prohibitive computational overhead. We propose a novel empirical likelihood-based (EL) framework that constructs robust statistical measures for model performance disparities. Unlike traditional methods, our approach is non-parametric; the proposed disparity statistics follow asymptotically chi-square or mixed chi-square distributions, ensuring valid inference without assuming underlying data distributions. This framework uses a constrained optimization profile that admits stable numerical solutions, facilitating both large-scale certification and efficient subpopulation discovery. Empirically, the EL methods outperform bootstrap-based approaches, yielding coverage rates closer to nominal levels while reducing computational latency by several orders of magnitude. We demonstrate the practical utility of this framework on the COMPAS dataset, where it successfully flags intersectional biases, specifically identifying a significantly higher positive prediction rate for African-American males under 25 and a systemic under-prediction for Caucasian females relative to the population mean.

AIFeb 8, 2024
OpenToM: A Comprehensive Benchmark for Evaluating Theory-of-Mind Reasoning Capabilities of Large Language Models

Hainiu Xu, Runcong Zhao, Lixing Zhu et al.

Neural Theory-of-Mind (N-ToM), machine's ability to understand and keep track of the mental states of others, is pivotal in developing socially intelligent agents. However, prevalent N-ToM benchmarks have several shortcomings, including the presence of ambiguous and artificial narratives, absence of personality traits and preferences, a lack of questions addressing characters' psychological mental states, and limited diversity in the questions posed. In response to these issues, we construct OpenToM, a new benchmark for assessing N-ToM with (1) longer and clearer narrative stories, (2) characters with explicit personality traits, (3) actions that are triggered by character intentions, and (4) questions designed to challenge LLMs' capabilities of modeling characters' mental states of both the physical and psychological world. Using OpenToM, we reveal that state-of-the-art LLMs thrive at modeling certain aspects of mental states in the physical world but fall short when tracking characters' mental states in the psychological world.

CVMar 8, 2024
Scene Graph Aided Radiology Report Generation

Jun Wang, Lixing Zhu, Abhir Bhalerao et al.

Radiology report generation (RRG) methods often lack sufficient medical knowledge to produce clinically accurate reports. The scene graph contains rich information to describe the objects in an image. We explore enriching the medical knowledge for RRG via a scene graph, which has not been done in the current RRG literature. To this end, we propose the Scene Graph aided RRG (SGRRG) network, a framework that generates region-level visual features, predicts anatomical attributes, and leverages an automatically generated scene graph, thus achieving medical knowledge distillation in an end-to-end manner. SGRRG is composed of a dedicated scene graph encoder responsible for translating the scene graph, and a scene graph-aided decoder that takes advantage of both patch-level and region-level visual information. A fine-grained, sentence-level attention method is designed to better dis-till the scene graph information. Extensive experiments demonstrate that SGRRG outperforms previous state-of-the-art methods in report generation and can better capture abnormal findings.

MLAug 12, 2025
In-Context Learning as Nonparametric Conditional Probability Estimation: Risk Bounds and Optimality

Chenrui Liu, Falong Tan, Chuanlong Xie et al.

This paper investigates the expected excess risk of in-context learning (ICL) for multiclass classification. We formalize each task as a sequence of labeled examples followed by a query input; a pretrained model then estimates the query's conditional class probabilities. The expected excess risk is defined as the average truncated Kullback-Leibler (KL) divergence between the predicted and true conditional class distributions over a specified family of tasks. We establish a new oracle inequality for this risk, based on KL divergence, in multiclass classification. This yields tight upper and lower bounds for transformer-based models, showing that the ICL estimator achieves the minimax optimal rate (up to logarithmic factors) for conditional probability estimation. From a technical standpoint, our results introduce a novel method for controlling generalization error via uniform empirical entropy. We further demonstrate that multilayer perceptrons (MLPs) can also perform ICL and attain the same optimal rate (up to logarithmic factors) under suitable assumptions, suggesting that effective ICL need not be exclusive to transformer architectures.

MEAug 10, 2025
Statistical Theory of Multi-stage Newton Iteration Algorithm for Online Continual Learning

Xinjia Lu, Chuhan Wang, Qian Zhao et al.

We focus on the critical challenge of handling non-stationary data streams in online continual learning environments, where constrained storage capacity prevents complete retention of historical data, leading to catastrophic forgetting during sequential task training. To more effectively analyze and address the problem of catastrophic forgetting in continual learning, we propose a novel continual learning framework from a statistical perspective. Our approach incorporates random effects across all model parameters and allows the dimension of parameters to diverge to infinity, offering a general formulation for continual learning problems. To efficiently process streaming data, we develop a Multi-step Newton Iteration algorithm that significantly reduces computational costs in certain scenarios by alleviating the burden of matrix inversion. Theoretically, we derive the asymptotic normality of the estimator, enabling subsequent statistical inference. Comprehensive validation through synthetic data experiments and two real datasets analyses demonstrates the effectiveness of our proposed method.

CVJun 12, 2025
Improving Medical Visual Representation Learning with Pathological-level Cross-Modal Alignment and Correlation Exploration

Jun Wang, Lixing Zhu, Xiaohan Yu et al.

Learning medical visual representations from image-report pairs through joint learning has garnered increasing research attention due to its potential to alleviate the data scarcity problem in the medical domain. The primary challenges stem from the lengthy reports that feature complex discourse relations and semantic pathologies. Previous works have predominantly focused on instance-wise or token-wise cross-modal alignment, often neglecting the importance of pathological-level consistency. This paper presents a novel framework PLACE that promotes the Pathological-Level Alignment and enriches the fine-grained details via Correlation Exploration without additional human annotations. Specifically, we propose a novel pathological-level cross-modal alignment (PCMA) approach to maximize the consistency of pathology observations from both images and reports. To facilitate this, a Visual Pathology Observation Extractor is introduced to extract visual pathological observation representations from localized tokens. The PCMA module operates independently of any external disease annotations, enhancing the generalizability and robustness of our methods. Furthermore, we design a proxy task that enforces the model to identify correlations among image patches, thereby enriching the fine-grained details crucial for various downstream tasks. Experimental results demonstrate that our proposed framework achieves new state-of-the-art performance on multiple downstream tasks, including classification, image-to-text retrieval, semantic segmentation, object detection and report generation.

STOct 29, 2021
Optimal prediction for kernel-based semi-functional linear regression

Keli Guo, Jun Fan, Lixing Zhu

In this paper, we establish minimax optimal rates of convergence for prediction in a semi-functional linear model that consists of a functional component and a less smooth nonparametric component. Our results reveal that the smoother functional component can be learned with the minimax rate as if the nonparametric component were known. More specifically, a double-penalized least squares method is adopted to estimate both the functional and nonparametric components within the framework of reproducing kernel Hilbert spaces. By virtue of the representer theorem, an efficient algorithm that requires no iterations is proposed to solve the corresponding optimization problem, where the regularization parameters are selected by the generalized cross validation criterion. Numerical studies are provided to demonstrate the effectiveness of the method and to verify the theoretical analysis.

CLJun 2, 2021
Topic-Driven and Knowledge-Aware Transformer for Dialogue Emotion Detection

Lixing Zhu, Gabriele Pergola, Lin Gui et al.

Emotion detection in dialogues is challenging as it often requires the identification of thematic topics underlying a conversation, the relevant commonsense knowledge, and the intricate transition patterns between the affective states. In this paper, we propose a Topic-Driven Knowledge-Aware Transformer to handle the challenges above. We firstly design a topic-augmented language model (LM) with an additional layer specialized for topic detection. The topic-augmented LM is then combined with commonsense statements derived from a knowledge base based on the dialogue contextual information. Finally, a transformer-based encoder-decoder architecture fuses the topical and commonsense information, and performs the emotion label sequence prediction. The model has been experimented on four datasets in dialogue emotion detection, demonstrating its superiority empirically over the existing state-of-the-art approaches. Quantitative and qualitative results show that the model can discover topics which help in distinguishing emotion categories.

CLAug 11, 2020
A Neural Generative Model for Joint Learning Topics and Topic-Specific Word Embeddings

Lixing Zhu, Yulan He, Deyu Zhou

We propose a novel generative model to explore both local and global context for joint learning topics and topic-specific word embeddings. In particular, we assume that global latent topics are shared across documents, a word is generated by a hidden semantic vector encoding its contextual semantic meaning, and its context words are generated conditional on both the hidden semantic vector and global latent topics. Topics are trained jointly with the word embeddings. The trained model maps words to topic-dependent embeddings, which naturally addresses the issue of word polysemy. Experimental results show that the proposed model outperforms the word-level embedding methods in both word similarity evaluation and word sense disambiguation. Furthermore, the model also extracts more coherent topics compared with existing neural topic models or other models for joint learning of topics and word embeddings. Finally, the model can be easily integrated with existing deep contextualized word embedding learning methods to further improve the performance of downstream tasks such as sentiment classification.

SIMay 27, 2020
Neural Temporal Opinion Modelling for Opinion Prediction on Twitter

Lixing Zhu, Yulan He, Deyu Zhou

Opinion prediction on Twitter is challenging due to the transient nature of tweet content and neighbourhood context. In this paper, we model users' tweet posting behaviour as a temporal point process to jointly predict the posting time and the stance label of the next tweet given a user's historical tweet sequence and tweets posted by their neighbours. We design a topic-driven attention mechanism to capture the dynamic topic shifts in the neighbourhood context. Experimental results show that the proposed model predicts both the posting time and the stance labels of future tweets more accurately compared to a number of competitive baselines.