LGApr 22, 2022
Dynamic Ensemble Bayesian Filter for Robust Control of a Human Brain-machine InterfaceYu Qi, Xinyun Zhu, Kedi Xu et al.
Objective: Brain-machine interfaces (BMIs) aim to provide direct brain control of devices such as prostheses and computer cursors, which have demonstrated great potential for mobility restoration. One major limitation of current BMIs lies in the unstable performance in online control due to the variability of neural signals, which seriously hinders the clinical availability of BMIs. Method: To deal with the neural variability in online BMI control, we propose a dynamic ensemble Bayesian filter (DyEnsemble). DyEnsemble extends Bayesian filters with a dynamic measurement model, which adjusts its parameters in time adaptively with neural changes. This is achieved by learning a pool of candidate functions and dynamically weighting and assembling them according to neural signals. In this way, DyEnsemble copes with variability in signals and improves the robustness of online control. Results: Online BMI experiments with a human participant demonstrate that, compared with the velocity Kalman filter, DyEnsemble significantly improves the control accuracy (increases the success rate by 13.9% and reduces the reach time by 13.5% in the random target pursuit task) and robustness (performs more stably over different experiment days). Conclusion: Our results demonstrate the superiority of DyEnsemble in online BMI control. Significance: DyEnsemble frames a novel and flexible framework for robust neural decoding, which is beneficial to different neural decoding applications.
AIFeb 3
Risk Awareness Injection: Calibrating Vision-Language Models for Safety without Compromising UtilityMengxuan Wang, Yuxin Chen, Gang Xu et al.
Vision language models (VLMs) extend the reasoning capabilities of large language models (LLMs) to cross-modal settings, yet remain highly vulnerable to multimodal jailbreak attacks. Existing defenses predominantly rely on safety fine-tuning or aggressive token manipulations, incurring substantial training costs or significantly degrading utility. Recent research shows that LLMs inherently recognize unsafe content in text, and the incorporation of visual inputs in VLMs frequently dilutes risk-related signals. Motivated by this, we propose Risk Awareness Injection (RAI), a lightweight and training-free framework for safety calibration that restores LLM-like risk recognition by amplifying unsafe signals in VLMs. Specifically, RAI constructs an Unsafe Prototype Subspace from language embeddings and performs targeted modulation on selected high-risk visual tokens, explicitly activating safety-critical signals within the cross-modal feature space. This modulation restores the model's LLM-like ability to detect unsafe content from visual inputs, while preserving the semantic integrity of original tokens for cross-modal reasoning. Extensive experiments across multiple jailbreak and utility benchmarks demonstrate that RAI substantially reduces attack success rate without compromising task performance.
LGMar 8
Neural Dynamics-Informed Pre-trained Framework for Personalized Brain Functional Network ConstructionHongjie Jiang, Yifei Tang, Shuqiang Wang
Brain activity is intrinsically a neural dynamic process constrained by anatomical space. This leads to significant variations in spatial distribution patterns and correlation patterns of neural activity across variable and heterogeneous scenarios. However, dominant brain functional network construction methods, which relies on pre-defined brain atlases and linear assumptions, fails to precisely capture varying neural activity patterns in heterogeneous scenarios. This limits the consistency and generalizability of the brain functional networks constructed by dominant methods. Here, a neural dynamics-informed pre-trained framework is proposed for personalized brain functional network construction. The proposed framework extracts personalized representations of neural activity patterns in heterogeneous scenarios. Personalized brain functional networks are obtained by utilizing these representations to guide brain parcellation and neural activity correlation estimation. Systematic evaluations were employed on 18 datasets across tasks, such as virtual neural modulation and abnormal neural circuit identification. Experimental results demonstrate that the proposed framework attains superior performance in heterogeneous scenarios. Overall, the proposed framework challenges the dominant brain functional network construction method.
IVJun 13, 2025
Brain Network Analysis Based on Fine-tuned Self-supervised Model for Brain Disease DiagnosisYifei Tang, Hongjie Jiang, Changhong Jing et al.
Functional brain network analysis has become an indispensable tool for brain disease analysis. It is profoundly impacted by deep learning methods, which can characterize complex connections between ROIs. However, the research on foundation models of brain network is limited and constrained to a single dimension, which restricts their extensive application in neuroscience. In this study, we propose a fine-tuned brain network model for brain disease diagnosis. It expands brain region representations across multiple dimensions based on the original brain network model, thereby enhancing its generalizability. Our model consists of two key modules: (1)an adapter module that expands brain region features across different dimensions. (2)a fine-tuned foundation brain network model, based on self-supervised learning and pre-trained on fMRI data from thousands of participants. Specifically, its transformer block is able to effectively extract brain region features and compute the inter-region associations. Moreover, we derive a compact latent representation of the brain network for brain disease diagnosis. Our downstream experiments in this study demonstrate that the proposed model achieves superior performance in brain disease diagnosis, which potentially offers a promising approach in brain network analysis research.