Leiyang Xu

CV
4papers
15citations
Novelty39%
AI Score37

4 Papers

92.5SPMay 28
SpikeWFM: Spiking-Aided Wireless Foundation Model for Robust Channel Prediction

Liwen Jing, Yisha Lu, Tingting Yang et al.

This paper proposes SpikeWFM, a novel hybrid architecture that integrates spiking neural networks (SNNs) with conventional artificial neural network (ANN)-based transformers for wireless foundation models (WFMs). Inspired by the noise-robust and energy-efficient information processing in the human brain, SpikeWFM aims to enhance the resilience of WFMs against noise and interference while maintaining strong generalization capabilities across diverse wireless scenarios. Drawing from the success of large language models, WFMs leverage self-supervised pre-training on large-scale datasets spanning various wireless environments to learn a unified embedding that supports a wide range of downstream tasks, including channel prediction, channel estimation, beam predition, positioning and etc. Such models typically outperform task-specific designs and exhibit superior adaptability to unseen conditions. However, existing WFMs remain vulnerable to realistic noise and interference in practical wireless systems. To address this limitation, we incorporate spiking neurons into the transformer-based WFM architecture. We provide a brief theoretical analysis demonstrating how the SNN-ANN hybrid effectively mitigates noise and interference through temporal sparsity and event-driven processing. Experimental results show that SpikeWFM consistently outperforms conventional ANN-based WFMs in both pre-training convergence and channel prediction accuracy. Additional results on communication and sensing tasks will be presented in the full journal version of this work.

CVJul 20, 2022
An Efficient Framework for Few-shot Skeleton-based Temporal Action Segmentation

Leiyang Xu, Qiang Wang, Xiaotian Lin et al.

Temporal action segmentation (TAS) aims to classify and locate actions in the long untrimmed action sequence. With the success of deep learning, many deep models for action segmentation have emerged. However, few-shot TAS is still a challenging problem. This study proposes an efficient framework for the few-shot skeleton-based TAS, including a data augmentation method and an improved model. The data augmentation approach based on motion interpolation is presented here to solve the problem of insufficient data, and can increase the number of samples significantly by synthesizing action sequences. Besides, we concatenate a Connectionist Temporal Classification (CTC) layer with a network designed for skeleton-based TAS to obtain an optimized model. Leveraging CTC can enhance the temporal alignment between prediction and ground truth and further improve the segment-wise metrics of segmentation results. Extensive experiments on both public and self-constructed datasets, including two small-scale datasets and one large-scale dataset, show the effectiveness of two proposed methods in improving the performance of the few-shot skeleton-based TAS task.

CVJun 30, 2022
Spatial Transformer Network with Transfer Learning for Small-scale Fine-grained Skeleton-based Tai Chi Action Recognition

Lin Yuan, Zhen He, Qiang Wang et al.

Human action recognition is a quite hugely investigated area where most remarkable action recognition networks usually use large-scale coarse-grained action datasets of daily human actions as inputs to state the superiority of their networks. We intend to recognize our small-scale fine-grained Tai Chi action dataset using neural networks and propose a transfer-learning method using NTU RGB+D dataset to pre-train our network. More specifically, the proposed method first uses a large-scale NTU RGB+D dataset to pre-train the Transformer-based network for action recognition to extract common features among human motion. Then we freeze the network weights except for the fully connected (FC) layer and take our Tai Chi actions as inputs only to train the initialized FC weights. Experimental results show that our general model pipeline can reach a high accuracy of small-scale fine-grained Tai Chi action recognition with even few inputs and demonstrate that our method achieves the state-of-the-art performance compared with previous Tai Chi action recognition methods.

CVJul 16, 2022
Automatic dataset generation for specific object detection

Xiaotian Lin, Leiyang Xu, Qiang Wang

In the past decade, object detection tasks are defined mostly by large public datasets. However, building object detection datasets is not scalable due to inefficient image collecting and labeling. Furthermore, most labels are still in the form of bounding boxes, which provide much less information than the real human visual system. In this paper, we present a method to synthesize object-in-scene images, which can preserve the objects' detailed features without bringing irrelevant information. In brief, given a set of images containing a target object, our algorithm first trains a model to find an approximate center of the object as an anchor, then makes an outline regression to estimate its boundary, and finally blends the object into a new scene. Our result shows that in the synthesized image, the boundaries of objects blend very well with the background. Experiments also show that SOTA segmentation models work well with our synthesized data.