Yunqing Chen

h-index18
2papers

2 Papers

IVJul 15, 2025Code
Latent Space Consistency for Sparse-View CT Reconstruction

Duoyou Chen, Yunqing Chen, Can Zhang et al.

Computed Tomography (CT) is a widely utilized imaging modality in clinical settings. Using densely acquired rotational X-ray arrays, CT can capture 3D spatial features. However, it is confronted with challenged such as significant time consumption and high radiation exposure. CT reconstruction methods based on sparse-view X-ray images have garnered substantial attention from researchers as they present a means to mitigate costs and risks. In recent years, diffusion models, particularly the Latent Diffusion Model (LDM), have demonstrated promising potential in the domain of 3D CT reconstruction. Nonetheless, due to the substantial differences between the 2D latent representation of X-ray modalities and the 3D latent representation of CT modalities, the vanilla LDM is incapable of achieving effective alignment within the latent space. To address this issue, we propose the Consistent Latent Space Diffusion Model (CLS-DM), which incorporates cross-modal feature contrastive learning to efficiently extract latent 3D information from 2D X-ray images and achieve latent space alignment between modalities. Experimental results indicate that CLS-DM outperforms classical and state-of-the-art generative models in terms of standard voxel-level metrics (PSNR, SSIM) on the LIDC-IDRI and CTSpine1K datasets. This methodology not only aids in enhancing the effectiveness and economic viability of sparse X-ray reconstructed CT but can also be generalized to other cross-modal transformation tasks, such as text-to-image synthesis. We have made our code publicly available at https://anonymous.4open.science/r/CLS-DM-50D6/ to facilitate further research and applications in other domains.

CVMay 13, 2021
Model Pruning Based on Quantified Similarity of Feature Maps

Zidu Wang, Xuexin Liu, Long Huang et al.

Convolutional Neural Networks (CNNs) has been applied in numerous Internet of Things (IoT) devices for multifarious downstream tasks. However, with the increasing amount of data on edge devices, CNNs can hardly complete some tasks in time with limited computing and storage resources. Recently, filter pruning has been regarded as an effective technique to compress and accelerate CNNs, but existing methods rarely prune CNNs from the perspective of compressing high-dimensional tensors. In this paper, we propose a novel theory to find redundant information in three-dimensional tensors, namely Quantified Similarity between Feature Maps (QSFM), and utilize this theory to guide the filter pruning procedure. We perform QSFM on datasets (CIFAR-10, CIFAR-100 and ILSVRC-12) and edge devices, demonstrate that the proposed method can find the redundant information in the neural networks effectively with comparable compression and tolerable drop of accuracy. Without any fine-tuning operation, QSFM can compress ResNet-56 on CIFAR-10 significantly (48.7% FLOPs and 57.9% parameters are reduced) with only a loss of 0.54% in the top-1 accuracy. For the practical application of edge devices, QSFM can accelerate MobileNet-V2 inference speed by 1.53 times with only a loss of 1.23% in the ILSVRC-12 top-1 accuracy.