Jiacheng Lu

CV
h-index3
8papers
6citations
Novelty55%
AI Score54

8 Papers

68.1CRMay 27
Echoes within the Reasoning: Stealthy and Effective Watermarking via Chain of Thought

Jiacheng Lu, Yiming Li, Tao Song et al.

Large Language Models with Chain-of-Thought reasoning capabilities represent valuable intellectual property, yet existing black-box watermarking methods often trade robustness for reasoning fidelity by perturbing final answers or relying on fragile trigger patterns. We propose BiCoT, a watermarking framework that embeds ownership signals into the internal geometry of reasoning traces by aligning high-saliency structural anchors with a private signature subspace while regularizing ordinary control tokens to preserve semantic capacity. This design couples the watermark with reasoning-relevant representations, making removal difficult without disrupting the features that support coherent reasoning. To enable verification under model theft and representation drift, we introduce Robust Subspace Registration (RSR), a Top- logprob-based black-box verifier that uses sentinel tokens to calibrate systematic shifts in the output distribution. Experiments show that BiCoT preserves reasoning fidelity across diverse complex reasoning tasks while achieving robust detection under fine-tuning, quantization, model-level perturbations, and adaptive output-level attacks across in-domain and out-of-distribution settings.

74.5CVMay 29
Light Interaction: Training-Free Inference Acceleration for Interactive Video World Models

Jiacheng Lu, Haoyi Zhu, Sipei Yi et al.

Interactive video world models generate video chunk by chunk in response to user-controlled camera movements, enabling applications such as real-time game simulation, virtual scene navigation, and embodied AI training. However, scaling to long interactive trajectories is prohibitively expensive due to growing context memory, quadratic attention complexity, and repeated denoising steps. We present Light Interaction, a training-free inference acceleration framework for interactive video world models. Our key insight is that interaction naturally enables trajectory-dependent adaptive computation: retrieved spatial memory can be discarded during novel exploration, temporal context can be adjusted according to local latent dynamics, and early-step model outputs can be reused when the camera revisits familiar regions. Based on this insight, Light Interaction combines adaptive context management, denoising cache acceleration, and hardware-software co-designed 3D block sparse attention with fused Triton kernels. Evaluated on HY-WorldPlay and Matrix-Game-3.0, Light Interaction achieves up to 2.59x speedup without model retraining while maintaining competitive visual quality.

70.3AIMay 27
From Knowing to Doing: A Memory-Controlled Benchmark for LLM Trading Agents on Stock Markets

Taojie Zhu, Wentao Zhao, Rui Sun et al.

Evaluating whether large language model (LLM) agents can profit in capital markets is increasingly framed as end-to-end trading: place an agent in a historical market, let it trade, and measure portfolio returns. This setup is vulnerable to two evaluation failures. First, long backtests often overlap with the knowledge cutoffs of frontier LLMs, allowing memorized tickers, dates, prices, and market narratives to substitute for investment reasoning. Second, raw returns are a noisy proxy for stock-selection ability, since positive performance may come from market beta, style exposure, or favorable regimes rather than genuine alpha. We introduce KTD-Fin (Knowing-To-Doing Financial Benchmark), an end-to-end stock-market trading benchmark that addresses both issues. KTD-Fin uses a data-side masking protocol to anonymize key identifiers and calendar information consistently across prompts and tools, separating historical market memory from investment decision-making. It also incorporates a Barra-style performance attribution framework that decomposes portfolio returns into market, style, and stock-selection alpha components. Across ten frontier LLM agents evaluated on the Chinese CSI300 over a 2024--2026 window, masking substantially changes agent rationales, pushing them towards anonymized factor-based reasoning. Attribution analysis further shows that LLM agents' cumulative returns under leakage-controlled evaluation are largely explained by passive market and style exposure, with limited evidence of persistent stock-selection alpha. These findings suggest that financial LLM benchmarks should evaluate not only whether an agent makes money, but also whether the source of returns reflects transferable investment skill. We release KTD-Fin as a reproducible template for leakage-controlled and attribution-aware evaluation of LLM trading agents.

43.3CVMar 23Code
PGR-Net: Prior-Guided ROI Reasoning Network for Brain Tumor MRI Segmentation

Jiacheng Lu, Hui Ding, Shiyu Zhang et al.

Brain tumor MRI segmentation is essential for clinical diagnosis and treatment planning, enabling accurate lesion detection and radiotherapy target delineation. However, tumor lesions occupy only a small fraction of the volumetric space, resulting in severe spatial sparsity, while existing segmentation networks often overlook clinically observed spatial priors of tumor occurrence, leading to redundant feature computation over extensive background regions. To address this issue, we propose PGR-Net (Prior-Guided ROI Reasoning Network) - an explicit ROI-aware framework that incorporates a data-driven spatial prior set to capture the distribution and scale characteristics of tumor lesions, providing global guidance for more stable segmentation. Leveraging these priors, PGR-Net introduces a hierarchical Top-K ROI decision mechanism that progressively selects the most confident lesion candidate regions across encoder layers to improve localization precision. We further develop the WinGS-ROI (Windowed Gaussian-Spatial Decay ROI) module, which uses multi-window Gaussian templates with a spatial decay function to produce center-enhanced guidance maps, thus directing feature learning throughout the network. With these ROI features, a windowed RetNet backbone is adopted to enhance localization reliability. Experiments on BraTS-2019/2023 and MSD Task01 show that PGR-Net consistently outperforms existing approaches while using only 8.64M Params, achieving Dice scores of 89.02%, 91.82%, and 89.67% on the Whole Tumor region. Code is available at https://github.com/CNU-MedAI-Lab/PGR-Net.

LGJan 8
MLB: A Scenario-Driven Benchmark for Evaluating Large Language Models in Clinical Applications

Qing He, Dongsheng Bi, Jianrong Lu et al.

The proliferation of Large Language Models (LLMs) presents transformative potential for healthcare, yet practical deployment is hindered by the absence of frameworks that assess real-world clinical utility. Existing benchmarks test static knowledge, failing to capture the dynamic, application-oriented capabilities required in clinical practice. To bridge this gap, we introduce a Medical LLM Benchmark MLB, a comprehensive benchmark evaluating LLMs on both foundational knowledge and scenario-based reasoning. MLB is structured around five core dimensions: Medical Knowledge (MedKQA), Safety and Ethics (MedSE), Medical Record Understanding (MedRU), Smart Services (SmartServ), and Smart Healthcare (SmartCare). The benchmark integrates 22 datasets (17 newly curated) from diverse Chinese clinical sources, covering 64 clinical specialties. Its design features a rigorous curation pipeline involving 300 licensed physicians. Besides, we provide a scalable evaluation methodology, centered on a specialized judge model trained via Supervised Fine-Tuning (SFT) on expert annotations. Our comprehensive evaluation of 10 leading models reveals a critical translational gap: while the top-ranked model, Kimi-K2-Instruct (77.3% accuracy overall), excels in structured tasks like information extraction (87.8% accuracy in MedRU), performance plummets in patient-facing scenarios (61.3% in SmartServ). Moreover, the exceptional safety score (90.6% in MedSE) of the much smaller Baichuan-M2-32B highlights that targeted training is equally critical. Our specialized judge model, trained via SFT on a 19k expert-annotated medical dataset, achieves 92.1% accuracy, an F1-score of 94.37%, and a Cohen's Kappa of 81.3% for human-AI consistency, validating a reproducible and expert-aligned evaluation protocol. MLB thus provides a rigorous framework to guide the development of clinically viable LLMs.

MMNov 23, 2024Code
MUFM: A Mamba-Enhanced Feedback Model for Micro Video Popularity Prediction

Jiacheng Lu, Mingyuan Xiao, Weijian Wang et al.

The surge in micro-videos is transforming the concept of popularity. As researchers delve into vast multi-modal datasets, there is a growing interest in understanding the origins of this popularity and the forces driving its rapid expansion. Recent studies suggest that the virality of short videos is not only tied to their inherent multi-modal content but is also heavily influenced by the strength of platform recommendations driven by audience feedback. In this paper, we introduce a framework for capturing long-term dependencies in user feedback and dynamic event interactions, based on the Mamba Hawkes process. Our experiments on the large-scale open-source multi-modal dataset show that our model significantly outperforms state-of-the-art approaches across various metrics by 23.2%. We believe our model's capability to map the relationships within user feedback behavior sequences will not only contribute to the evolution of next-generation recommendation algorithms and platform applications but also enhance our understanding of micro video dissemination and its broader societal impact.

CVJul 28, 2025
M-Net: MRI Brain Tumor Sequential Segmentation Network via Mesh-Cast

Jiacheng Lu, Hui Ding, Shiyu Zhang et al.

MRI tumor segmentation remains a critical challenge in medical imaging, where volumetric analysis faces unique computational demands due to the complexity of 3D data. The spatially sequential arrangement of adjacent MRI slices provides valuable information that enhances segmentation continuity and accuracy, yet this characteristic remains underutilized in many existing models. The spatial correlations between adjacent MRI slices can be regarded as "temporal-like" data, similar to frame sequences in video segmentation tasks. To bridge this gap, we propose M-Net, a flexible framework specifically designed for sequential image segmentation. M-Net introduces the novel Mesh-Cast mechanism, which seamlessly integrates arbitrary sequential models into the processing of both channel and temporal information, thereby systematically capturing the inherent "temporal-like" spatial correlations between MRI slices. Additionally, we define an MRI sequential input pattern and design a Two-Phase Sequential (TPS) training strategy, which first focuses on learning common patterns across sequences before refining slice-specific feature extraction. This approach leverages temporal modeling techniques to preserve volumetric contextual information while avoiding the high computational cost of full 3D convolutions, thereby enhancing the generalizability and robustness of M-Net in sequential segmentation tasks. Experiments on the BraTS2019 and BraTS2023 datasets demonstrate that M-Net outperforms existing methods across all key metrics, establishing itself as a robust solution for temporally-aware MRI tumor segmentation.

LGNov 6, 2024
SEGMN: A Structure-Enhanced Graph Matching Network for Graph Similarity Learning

Wenjun Wang, Jiacheng Lu, Kejia Chen et al.

Graph similarity computation (GSC) aims to quantify the similarity score between two graphs. Although recent GSC methods based on graph neural networks (GNNs) take advantage of intra-graph structures in message passing, few of them fully utilize the structures presented by edges to boost the representation of their connected nodes. Moreover, previous cross-graph node embedding matching lacks the perception of the overall structure of the graph pair, due to the fact that the node representations from GNNs are confined to the intra-graph structure, causing the unreasonable similarity score. Intuitively, the cross-graph structure represented in the assignment graph is helpful to rectify the inappropriate matching. Therefore, we propose a structure-enhanced graph matching network (SEGMN). Equipped with a dual embedding learning module and a structure perception matching module, SEGMN achieves structure enhancement in both embedding learning and cross-graph matching. The dual embedding learning module incorporates adjacent edge representation into each node to achieve a structure-enhanced representation. The structure perception matching module achieves cross-graph structure enhancement through assignment graph convolution. The similarity score of each cross-graph node pair can be rectified by aggregating messages from structurally relevant node pairs. Experimental results on benchmark datasets demonstrate that SEGMN outperforms the state-of-the-art GSC methods in the GED regression task, and the structure perception matching module is plug-and-play, which can further improve the performance of the baselines by up to 25%.