45.4AIJun 2
LAP: An Agent-to-Instrument Protocol for Autonomous ScienceLinwu Zhu, Liqiang Gao, Yan Chen et al.
Autonomous science is moving from demonstration to infrastructure. Large language model agents now plan experiments, and self-driving laboratories execute them. Yet every such system rebuilds the link between the reasoning agent and the physical instrument from scratch, against fragmented vendor SDKs and standards built for deterministic software clients rather than probabilistic, goal-directed agents. Recent agent-interoperability protocols clarify two of the three edges of an agentic ecosystem (Anthropic's Model Context Protocol (MCP) standardizes the agent-to-tool edge, and Google's Agent2Agent (A2A) the agent-to-agent edge), but neither models the agent-to-instrument edge, where operations are stateful, safety-critical, exclusively owned, physically embodied, and produce measurements with units, calibration, and uncertainty. We present the Lab Agent Protocol (LAP), a protocol design that fills this gap. LAP retains A2A's peer-to-peer, discovery-first, task-lifecycle structure and adds four physical-world primitives: (i) the InstrumentCard, a signed capability and physical-limit description; (ii) first-class reservation for exclusive instrument and sample locking; (iii) a safety-fence handshake with operator-confirmation tokens cryptographically bound to a specific task and its parameters, gating hazardous and irreversible operations; and (iv) a MeasurementResult schema that makes every result physically typed (QUDT/UCUM), calibration-anchored, uncertainty-bearing, and reproducible by construction. We specify roles, a six-layer architecture, the JSON-RPC method set, the task and safety state machines, the error model, and cross-laboratory federation, and walk a closed-loop autonomous campaign through the protocol end-to-end. LAP is transport-compatible with the A2A/MCP ecosystem and encapsulates rather than replaces existing device standards such as SiLA 2 and OPC-UA.
IVNov 7, 2022
Efficient and Accurate Quantized Image Super-Resolution on Mobile NPUs, Mobile AI & AIM 2022 challenge: ReportAndrey Ignatov, Radu Timofte, Maurizio Denna et al.
Image super-resolution is a common task on mobile and IoT devices, where one often needs to upscale and enhance low-resolution images and video frames. While numerous solutions have been proposed for this problem in the past, they are usually not compatible with low-power mobile NPUs having many computational and memory constraints. In this Mobile AI challenge, we address this problem and propose the participants to design an efficient quantized image super-resolution solution that can demonstrate a real-time performance on mobile NPUs. The participants were provided with the DIV2K dataset and trained INT8 models to do a high-quality 3X image upscaling. The runtime of all models was evaluated on the Synaptics VS680 Smart Home board with a dedicated edge NPU capable of accelerating quantized neural networks. All proposed solutions are fully compatible with the above NPU, demonstrating an up to 60 FPS rate when reconstructing Full HD resolution images. A detailed description of all models developed in the challenge is provided in this paper.
CVMay 25, 2022
NTIRE 2022 Challenge on High Dynamic Range Imaging: Methods and ResultsEduardo Pérez-Pellitero, Sibi Catley-Chandar, Richard Shaw et al.
This paper reviews the challenge on constrained high dynamic range (HDR) imaging that was part of the New Trends in Image Restoration and Enhancement (NTIRE) workshop, held in conjunction with CVPR 2022. This manuscript focuses on the competition set-up, datasets, the proposed methods and their results. The challenge aims at estimating an HDR image from multiple respective low dynamic range (LDR) observations, which might suffer from under- or over-exposed regions and different sources of noise. The challenge is composed of two tracks with an emphasis on fidelity and complexity constraints: In Track 1, participants are asked to optimize objective fidelity scores while imposing a low-complexity constraint (i.e. solutions can not exceed a given number of operations). In Track 2, participants are asked to minimize the complexity of their solutions while imposing a constraint on fidelity scores (i.e. solutions are required to obtain a higher fidelity score than the prescribed baseline). Both tracks use the same data and metrics: Fidelity is measured by means of PSNR with respect to a ground-truth HDR image (computed both directly and with a canonical tonemapping operation), while complexity metrics include the number of Multiply-Accumulate (MAC) operations and runtime (in seconds).
IVNov 7, 2022
Power Efficient Video Super-Resolution on Mobile NPUs with Deep Learning, Mobile AI & AIM 2022 challenge: ReportAndrey Ignatov, Radu Timofte, Cheng-Ming Chiang et al.
Video super-resolution is one of the most popular tasks on mobile devices, being widely used for an automatic improvement of low-bitrate and low-resolution video streams. While numerous solutions have been proposed for this problem, they are usually quite computationally demanding, demonstrating low FPS rates and power efficiency on mobile devices. In this Mobile AI challenge, we address this problem and propose the participants to design an end-to-end real-time video super-resolution solution for mobile NPUs optimized for low energy consumption. The participants were provided with the REDS training dataset containing video sequences for a 4X video upscaling task. The runtime and power efficiency of all models was evaluated on the powerful MediaTek Dimensity 9000 platform with a dedicated AI processing unit capable of accelerating floating-point and quantized neural networks. All proposed solutions are fully compatible with the above NPU, demonstrating an up to 500 FPS rate and 0.2 [Watt / 30 FPS] power consumption. A detailed description of all models developed in the challenge is provided in this paper.
CVFeb 28, 2023
Valid Information Guidance Network for Compressed Video Quality EnhancementXuan Sun, Ziyue Zhang, Guannan Chen et al.
In recent years deep learning methods have shown great superiority in compressed video quality enhancement tasks. Existing methods generally take the raw video as the ground truth and extract practical information from consecutive frames containing various artifacts. However, they do not fully exploit the valid information of compressed and raw videos to guide the quality enhancement for compressed videos. In this paper, we propose a unique Valid Information Guidance scheme (VIG) to enhance the quality of compressed videos by mining valid information from both compressed videos and raw videos. Specifically, we propose an efficient framework, Compressed Redundancy Filtering (CRF) network, to balance speed and enhancement. After removing the redundancy by filtering the information, CRF can use the valid information of the compressed video to reconstruct the texture. Furthermore, we propose a progressive Truth Guidance Distillation (TGD) strategy, which does not need to design additional teacher models and distillation loss functions. By only using the ground truth as input to guide the model to aggregate the correct spatio-temporal correspondence across the raw frames, TGD can significantly improve the enhancement effect without increasing the extra training cost. Extensive experiments show that our method achieves the state-of-the-art performance of compressed video quality enhancement in terms of accuracy and efficiency.
MLNov 7, 2023
Discordance Minimization-based Imputation Algorithms for Missing Values in Rating DataYoung Woong Park, Jinhak Kim, Dan Zhu
Ratings are frequently used to evaluate and compare subjects in various applications, from education to healthcare, because ratings provide succinct yet credible measures for comparing subjects. However, when multiple rating lists are combined or considered together, subjects often have missing ratings, because most rating lists do not rate every subject in the combined list. In this study, we propose analyses on missing value patterns using six real-world data sets in various applications, as well as the conditions for applicability of imputation algorithms. Based on the special structures and properties derived from the analyses, we propose optimization models and algorithms that minimize the total rating discordance across rating providers to impute missing ratings in the combined rating lists, using only the known rating information. The total rating discordance is defined as the sum of the pairwise discordance metric, which can be written as a quadratic function. Computational experiments based on real-world and synthetic rating data sets show that the proposed methods outperform the state-of-the-art general imputation methods in the literature in terms of imputation accuracy.
SYFeb 5, 2021
Security Assessment and Impact Analysis of Cyberattacks in Integrated T&D Power SystemsIoannis Zografopoulos, Charalambos Konstantinou, Nektarios Georgios Tsoutsos et al.
In this paper, we examine the impact of cyberattacks in an integrated transmission and distribution (T&D) power grid model with distributed energy resource (DER) integration. We adopt the OCTAVE Allegro methodology to identify critical system assets, enumerate potential threats, analyze, and prioritize risks for threat scenarios. Based on the analysis, attack strategies and exploitation scenarios are identified which could lead to system compromise. Specifically, we investigate the impact of data integrity attacks in inverted-based solar PV controllers, control signal blocking attacks in protective switches and breakers, and coordinated monitoring and switching time-delay attacks.
IVJan 1, 2021
Multi-Grid Back-Projection NetworksPablo Navarrete Michelini, Wenbin Chen, Hanwen Liu et al.
Multi-Grid Back-Projection (MGBP) is a fully-convolutional network architecture that can learn to restore images and videos with upscaling artifacts. Using the same strategy of multi-grid partial differential equation (PDE) solvers this multiscale architecture scales computational complexity efficiently with increasing output resolutions. The basic processing block is inspired in the iterative back-projection (IBP) algorithm and constitutes a type of cross-scale residual block with feedback from low resolution references. The architecture performs in par with state-of-the-arts alternatives for regression targets that aim to recover an exact copy of a high resolution image or video from which only a downscale image is known. A perceptual quality target aims to create more realistic outputs by introducing artificial changes that can be different from a high resolution original content as long as they are consistent with the low resolution input. For this target we propose a strategy using noise inputs in different resolution scales to control the amount of artificial details generated in the output. The noise input controls the amount of innovation that the network uses to create artificial realistic details. The effectiveness of this strategy is shown in benchmarks and it is explained as a particular strategy to traverse the perception-distortion plane.
IVSep 27, 2019
MGBPv2: Scaling Up Multi-Grid Back-Projection NetworksPablo Navarrete Michelini, Wenbin Chen, Hanwen Liu et al.
Here, we describe our solution for the AIM-2019 Extreme Super-Resolution Challenge, where we won the 1st place in terms of perceptual quality (MOS) similar to the ground truth and achieved the 5th place in terms of high-fidelity (PSNR). To tackle this challenge, we introduce the second generation of MultiGrid BackProjection networks (MGBPv2) whose major modifications make the system scalable and more general than its predecessor. It combines the scalability of the multigrid algorithm and the performance of iterative backprojections. In its original form, MGBP is limited to a small number of parameters due to a strongly recursive structure. In MGBPv2, we make full use of the multigrid recursion from the beginning of the network; we allow different parameters in every module of the network; we simplify the main modules; and finally, we allow adjustments of the number of network features based on the scale of operation. For inference tasks, we introduce an overlapping patch approach to further allow processing of very large images (e.g. 8K). Our training strategies make use of a multiscale loss, combining distortion and/or perception losses on the output as well as downscaled output images. The final system can balance between high quality and high performance.
IVSep 27, 2018
Multi-Scale Recursive and Perception-Distortion Controllable Image Super-ResolutionPablo Navarrete Michelini, Dan Zhu, Hanwen Liu
We describe our solution for the PIRM Super-Resolution Challenge 2018 where we achieved the 2nd best perceptual quality for average RMSE<=16, 5th best for RMSE<=12.5, and 7th best for RMSE<=11.5. We modify a recently proposed Multi-Grid Back-Projection (MGBP) architecture to work as a generative system with an input parameter that can control the amount of artificial details in the output. We propose a discriminator for adversarial training with the following novel properties: it is multi-scale that resembles a progressive-GAN; it is recursive that balances the architecture of the generator; and it includes a new layer to capture significant statistics of natural images. Finally, we propose a training strategy that avoids conflicts between reconstruction and perceptual losses. Our configuration uses only 281k parameters and upscales each image of the competition in 0.2s in average.
IVSep 25, 2018
Multigrid Backprojection Super-Resolution and Deep Filter VisualizationPablo Navarrete Michelini, Hanwen Liu, Dan Zhu
We introduce a novel deep-learning architecture for image upscaling by large factors (e.g. 4x, 8x) based on examples of pristine high-resolution images. Our target is to reconstruct high-resolution images from their downscale versions. The proposed system performs a multi-level progressive upscaling, starting from small factors (2x) and updating for higher factors (4x and 8x). The system is recursive as it repeats the same procedure at each level. It is also residual since we use the network to update the outputs of a classic upscaler. The network residuals are improved by Iterative Back-Projections (IBP) computed in the features of a convolutional network. To work in multiple levels we extend the standard back-projection algorithm using a recursion analogous to Multi-Grid algorithms commonly used as solvers of large systems of linear equations. We finally show how the network can be interpreted as a standard upsampling-and-filter upscaler with a space-variant filter that adapts to the geometry. This approach allows us to visualize how the network learns to upscale. Finally, our system reaches state of the art quality for models with relatively few number of parameters.