Zhenhai Gao

CV
4papers
55citations
Novelty51%
AI Score44

4 Papers

LGJun 17, 2022
Holistic Transformer: A Joint Neural Network for Trajectory Prediction and Decision-Making of Autonomous Vehicles

Hongyu Hu, Qi Wang, Zhengguang Zhang et al.

Trajectory prediction and behavioral decision-making are two important tasks for autonomous vehicles that require good understanding of the environmental context; behavioral decisions are better made by referring to the outputs of trajectory predictions. However, most current solutions perform these two tasks separately. Therefore, a joint neural network that combines multiple cues is proposed and named as the holistic transformer to predict trajectories and make behavioral decisions simultaneously. To better explore the intrinsic relationships between cues, the network uses existing knowledge and adopts three kinds of attention mechanisms: the sparse multi-head type for reducing noise impact, feature selection sparse type for optimally using partial prior knowledge, and multi-head with sigmoid activation type for optimally using posteriori knowledge. Compared with other trajectory prediction models, the proposed model has better comprehensive performance and good interpretability. Perceptual noise robustness experiments demonstrate that the proposed model has good noise robustness. Thus, simultaneous trajectory prediction and behavioral decision-making combining multiple cues can reduce computational costs and enhance semantic relationships between scenes and agents.

CVSep 28, 2023
An Enhanced Low-Resolution Image Recognition Method for Traffic Environments

Zongcai Tan, Zhenhai Gao

Currently, low-resolution image recognition is confronted with a significant challenge in the field of intelligent traffic perception. Compared to high-resolution images, low-resolution images suffer from small size, low quality, and lack of detail, leading to a notable decrease in the accuracy of traditional neural network recognition algorithms. The key to low-resolution image recognition lies in effective feature extraction. Therefore, this paper delves into the fundamental dimensions of residual modules and their impact on feature extraction and computational efficiency. Based on experiments, we introduce a dual-branch residual network structure that leverages the basic architecture of residual networks and a common feature subspace algorithm. Additionally, it incorporates the utilization of intermediate-layer features to enhance the accuracy of low-resolution image recognition. Furthermore, we employ knowledge distillation to reduce network parameters and computational overhead. Experimental results validate the effectiveness of this algorithm for low-resolution image recognition in traffic environments.

57.9CVMay 9
VECTOR-Drive: Tightly Coupled Vision-Language and Trajectory Expert Routing for End-to-End Autonomous Driving

Rui Zhao, Jianlin Yu, Zhenhai Gao et al.

End-to-end autonomous driving requires models to understand traffic scenes, infer driving intent, and generate executable motion plans. Recent vision-language-action (VLA) models inherit semantic priors from large-scale vision-language pretraining, yet still face a coupling trade-off: fully shared backbones preserve multimodal interaction but may entangle language reasoning and trajectory prediction, whereas decou pled reasoning-action pipelines reduce task conflict but weaken semantic-motion coupling. We propose VECTOR-DRIVE, a tightly coupled VLA framework built on Qwen2.5-VL-3B. VECTOR-DRIVE keeps all tokens coupled through shared self attention and routes feed-forward computation according to token semantics. Vision and language tokens are processed by a Vision-Language Expert to preserve semantic priors, while target-point, ego-state, and noisy action tokens are routed to a Trajectory Expert for motion-specific computation. On the action-token pathway, a flow-matching planner refines noisy action tokens into future waypoints and speed profiles. This design couples semantic reasoning and motion planning within a single multimodal Transformer while separating task-specific FFN computation. On Bench2Drive, VECTOR-DRIVE achieves 88.91 Driving Score and outperforms representative end-to end and VLA-based baselines. Qualitative results and ablations further validate the benefits of shared attention, semantic-aware expert routing, progressive training, and flow-based action de coding.

60.7CVMay 1
VLADriver-RAG: Retrieval-Augmented Vision-Language-Action Models for Autonomous Driving

Rui Zhao, Haofeng Hu, Zhenhai Gao et al.

Vision-Language-Action (VLA) models have emerged as a promising paradigm for end-to-end autonomous driving, yet their reliance on implicit parametric knowledge limits generalization in long-tail scenarios. While Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG) offers a solution by accessing external expert priors, standard visual retrieval suffers from high latency and semantic ambiguity. To address these challenges, we propose \textbf{VLADriver-RAG}, a framework that grounds planning in explicit, structure-aware historical knowledge. Specifically, we abstract sensory inputs into spatiotemporal semantic graphs via a \textit{Visual-to-Scenario} mechanism, effectively filtering visual noise. To ensure retrieval relevance, we employ a \textit{Scenario-Aligned Embedding Model} that utilizes Graph-DTW metric alignment to prioritize intrinsic topological consistency over superficial visual similarity. These retrieved priors are then fused within a query-based VLA backbone to synthesize precise, disentangled trajectories. Extensive experiments on the Bench2Drive benchmark establish a new state-of-the-art, achieving a Driving Score of 89.12.