Xinrui Yan

SD
h-index30
7papers
849citations
Novelty41%
AI Score38

7 Papers

AINov 21, 2023
A Survey on Multimodal Large Language Models for Autonomous Driving

Can Cui, Yunsheng Ma, Xu Cao et al.

With the emergence of Large Language Models (LLMs) and Vision Foundation Models (VFMs), multimodal AI systems benefiting from large models have the potential to equally perceive the real world, make decisions, and control tools as humans. In recent months, LLMs have shown widespread attention in autonomous driving and map systems. Despite its immense potential, there is still a lack of a comprehensive understanding of key challenges, opportunities, and future endeavors to apply in LLM driving systems. In this paper, we present a systematic investigation in this field. We first introduce the background of Multimodal Large Language Models (MLLMs), the multimodal models development using LLMs, and the history of autonomous driving. Then, we overview existing MLLM tools for driving, transportation, and map systems together with existing datasets and benchmarks. Moreover, we summarized the works in The 1st WACV Workshop on Large Language and Vision Models for Autonomous Driving (LLVM-AD), which is the first workshop of its kind regarding LLMs in autonomous driving. To further promote the development of this field, we also discuss several important problems regarding using MLLMs in autonomous driving systems that need to be solved by both academia and industry.

SDAug 20, 2022
An Initial Investigation for Detecting Vocoder Fingerprints of Fake Audio

Xinrui Yan, Jiangyan Yi, Jianhua Tao et al.

Many effective attempts have been made for fake audio detection. However, they can only provide detection results but no countermeasures to curb this harm. For many related practical applications, what model or algorithm generated the fake audio also is needed. Therefore, We propose a new problem for detecting vocoder fingerprints of fake audio. Experiments are conducted on the datasets synthesized by eight state-of-the-art vocoders. We have preliminarily explored the features and model architectures. The t-SNE visualization shows that different vocoders generate distinct vocoder fingerprints.

SDAug 21, 2022
Audio Deepfake Attribution: An Initial Dataset and Investigation

Xinrui Yan, Jiangyan Yi, Jianhua Tao et al.

The rapid progress of deep speech synthesis models has posed significant threats to society such as malicious manipulation of content. This has led to an increase in studies aimed at detecting so-called deepfake audio. However, existing works focus on the binary detection of real audio and fake audio. In real-world scenarios such as model copyright protection and digital evidence forensics, binary classification alone is insufficient. It is essential to identify the source of deepfake audio. Therefore, audio deepfake attribution has emerged as a new challenge. To this end, we designed the first deepfake audio dataset for the attribution of audio generation tools, called Audio Deepfake Attribution (ADA), and conducted a comprehensive investigation on system fingerprints. To address the challenges of attribution of continuously emerging unknown audio generation tools in the real world, we propose the Class-Representation Multi-Center Learning (CRML) method for open-set audio deepfake attribution (OSADA). CRML enhances the global directional variation of representations, ensuring the learning of discriminative representations with strong intra-class similarity and inter-class discrepancy among known classes. Finally, the strong class discrimination capability learned from known classes is extended to both known and unknown classes. Experimental results demonstrate that the CRML method effectively addresses open-set risks in real-world scenarios. The dataset is publicly available at: https://zenodo.org/records/13318702, and https://zenodo.org/records/13340666.

SDDec 16, 2024Code
Region-Based Optimization in Continual Learning for Audio Deepfake Detection

Yujie Chen, Jiangyan Yi, Cunhang Fan et al.

Rapid advancements in speech synthesis and voice conversion bring convenience but also new security risks, creating an urgent need for effective audio deepfake detection. Although current models perform well, their effectiveness diminishes when confronted with the diverse and evolving nature of real-world deepfakes. To address this issue, we propose a continual learning method named Region-Based Optimization (RegO) for audio deepfake detection. Specifically, we use the Fisher information matrix to measure important neuron regions for real and fake audio detection, dividing them into four regions. First, we directly fine-tune the less important regions to quickly adapt to new tasks. Next, we apply gradient optimization in parallel for regions important only to real audio detection, and in orthogonal directions for regions important only to fake audio detection. For regions that are important to both, we use sample proportion-based adaptive gradient optimization. This region-adaptive optimization ensures an appropriate trade-off between memory stability and learning plasticity. Additionally, to address the increase of redundant neurons from old tasks, we further introduce the Ebbinghaus forgetting mechanism to release them, thereby promoting the capability of the model to learn more generalized discriminative features. Experimental results show our method achieves a 21.3% improvement in EER over the state-of-the-art continual learning approach RWM for audio deepfake detection. Moreover, the effectiveness of RegO extends beyond the audio deepfake detection domain, showing potential significance in other tasks, such as image recognition. The code is available at https://github.com/cyjie429/RegO

SDDec 2, 2024
Reject Threshold Adaptation for Open-Set Model Attribution of Deepfake Audio

Xinrui Yan, Jiangyan Yi, Jianhua Tao et al.

Open environment oriented open set model attribution of deepfake audio is an emerging research topic, aiming to identify the generation models of deepfake audio. Most previous work requires manually setting a rejection threshold for unknown classes to compare with predicted probabilities. However, models often overfit training instances and generate overly confident predictions. Moreover, thresholds that effectively distinguish unknown categories in the current dataset may not be suitable for identifying known and unknown categories in another data distribution. To address the issues, we propose a novel framework for open set model attribution of deepfake audio with rejection threshold adaptation (ReTA). Specifically, the reconstruction error learning module trains by combining the representation of system fingerprints with labels corresponding to either the target class or a randomly chosen other class label. This process generates matching and non-matching reconstructed samples, establishing the reconstruction error distributions for each class and laying the foundation for the reject threshold calculation module. The reject threshold calculation module utilizes gaussian probability estimation to fit the distributions of matching and non-matching reconstruction errors. It then computes adaptive reject thresholds for all classes through probability minimization criteria. The experimental results demonstrate the effectiveness of ReTA in improving the open set model attributes of deepfake audio.

CVJul 31, 2025
FASTopoWM: Fast-Slow Lane Segment Topology Reasoning with Latent World Models

Yiming Yang, Hongbin Lin, Yueru Luo et al.

Lane segment topology reasoning provides comprehensive bird's-eye view (BEV) road scene understanding, which can serve as a key perception module in planning-oriented end-to-end autonomous driving systems. Existing lane topology reasoning methods often fall short in effectively leveraging temporal information to enhance detection and reasoning performance. Recently, stream-based temporal propagation method has demonstrated promising results by incorporating temporal cues at both the query and BEV levels. However, it remains limited by over-reliance on historical queries, vulnerability to pose estimation failures, and insufficient temporal propagation. To overcome these limitations, we propose FASTopoWM, a novel fast-slow lane segment topology reasoning framework augmented with latent world models. To reduce the impact of pose estimation failures, this unified framework enables parallel supervision of both historical and newly initialized queries, facilitating mutual reinforcement between the fast and slow systems. Furthermore, we introduce latent query and BEV world models conditioned on the action latent to propagate the state representations from past observations to the current timestep. This design substantially improves the performance of temporal perception within the slow pipeline. Extensive experiments on the OpenLane-V2 benchmark demonstrate that FASTopoWM outperforms state-of-the-art methods in both lane segment detection (37.4% v.s. 33.6% on mAP) and centerline perception (46.3% v.s. 41.5% on OLS).

SDFeb 17, 2022
ADD 2022: the First Audio Deep Synthesis Detection Challenge

Jiangyan Yi, Ruibo Fu, Jianhua Tao et al.

Audio deepfake detection is an emerging topic, which was included in the ASVspoof 2021. However, the recent shared tasks have not covered many real-life and challenging scenarios. The first Audio Deep synthesis Detection challenge (ADD) was motivated to fill in the gap. The ADD 2022 includes three tracks: low-quality fake audio detection (LF), partially fake audio detection (PF) and audio fake game (FG). The LF track focuses on dealing with bona fide and fully fake utterances with various real-world noises etc. The PF track aims to distinguish the partially fake audio from the real. The FG track is a rivalry game, which includes two tasks: an audio generation task and an audio fake detection task. In this paper, we describe the datasets, evaluation metrics, and protocols. We also report major findings that reflect the recent advances in audio deepfake detection tasks.