Xiaobin Li

LG
h-index7
9papers
71citations
Novelty54%
AI Score55

9 Papers

42.1SDJun 4Code
SagnacAssisted Enhanced OTDR for Distributed Acoustic Sensing: A Standardized Benchmark and Engineering Evaluation Framework

Weiguang Wang, Fugen Wu, Hailing Wang et al.

Phase-sensitive optical time-domain reflectometry ($ϕ$-OTDR) is widely used in large-scale distributed acoustic sensing (DAS) because it provides distributed spatiotemporal monitoring over long sensing distances. Its field performance can still deteriorate because of polarization-induced fading (PIF), local signal degradation, and strong environmental interference. This study develops a Sagnac-assisted enhanced $ϕ$-OTDR sensing architecture and a standardized benchmark framework for engineering-oriented DAS event recognition. The Sagnac interferometer provides a continuous phase response that supplements fading-prone observations in the $ϕ$-OTDR channel, and heterogeneous signal alignment is achieved using a cross-correlation procedure implemented on an FPGA platform. The benchmark protocol compares conventional feature-engineering methods, probabilistic shallow classifiers, single-branch deep models, and dual-branch fusion models under consistent data partitioning, preprocessing, and metric definitions. Experiments on a 10-km sensing fiber with six representative acoustic event classes show that the dual-branch fusion model provides the most favorable trade-off among the evaluated methods, reaching 89.79\% accuracy, 89.83\% macro-F1, and a nuisance alarm rate of 5.00\% on the balanced test set. The results also show that channel grouping strongly affects dual-branch evaluation, indicating that deployment-oriented conclusions should be based on accuracy, macro-F1, nuisance alarm rate, false negative rate, and latency rather than accuracy alone. This work provides a physically motivated enhancement strategy for $ϕ$-OTDR-based DAS and a reproducible benchmark protocol for future fusion-oriented sensing research. The implementation and scripts for reproducing the DAS event-recognition experiments are publicly available at https://github.com/wawa-abc/das.

LGApr 24, 2023
B2Opt: Learning to Optimize Black-box Optimization with Little Budget

Xiaobin Li, Kai Wu, Xiaoyu Zhang et al.

The core challenge of high-dimensional and expensive black-box optimization (BBO) is how to obtain better performance faster with little function evaluation cost. The essence of the problem is how to design an efficient optimization strategy tailored to the target task. This paper designs a powerful optimization framework to automatically learn the optimization strategies from the target or cheap surrogate task without human intervention. However, current methods are weak for this due to poor representation of optimization strategy. To achieve this, 1) drawing on the mechanism of genetic algorithm, we propose a deep neural network framework called B2Opt, which has a stronger representation of optimization strategies based on survival of the fittest; 2) B2Opt can utilize the cheap surrogate functions of the target task to guide the design of the efficient optimization strategies. Compared to the state-of-the-art BBO baselines, B2Opt can achieve multiple orders of magnitude performance improvement with less function evaluation cost. We validate our proposal on high-dimensional synthetic functions and two real-world applications. We also find that deep B2Opt performs better than shallow ones.

NEApr 19, 2023
DECN: Evolution Inspired Deep Convolution Network for Black-box Optimization

Kai Wu, Xiaobin Li, Penghui Liu et al.

Evolutionary algorithms (EAs) have emerged as a powerful framework for optimization, especially for black-box optimization. Existing evolutionary algorithms struggle to comprehend and effectively utilize task-specific information for adjusting their optimization strategies, leading to subpar performance on target tasks. Moreover, optimization strategies devised by experts tend to be highly biased. These challenges significantly impede the progress of the field of evolutionary computation. Therefore, this paper first introduces the concept of Automated EA: Automated EA exploits structure in the problem of interest to automatically generate update rules (optimization strategies) for generating and selecting potential solutions so that it can move a random population near the optimal solution. However, current EAs cannot achieve this goal due to the poor representation of the optimization strategy and the weak interaction between the optimization strategy and the target task. We design a deep evolutionary convolution network (DECN) to realize the move from hand-designed EAs to automated EAs without manual interventions. DECN has high adaptability to the target task and can obtain better solutions with less computational cost. DECN is also able to effectively utilize the low-fidelity information of the target task to form an efficient optimization strategy. The experiments on nine synthetics and two real-world cases show the advantages of learned optimization strategies over the state-of-the-art human-designed and meta-learning EA baselines. In addition, due to the tensorization of the operations, DECN is friendly to the acceleration provided by GPUs and runs 102 times faster than EA.

6.9LGMay 27
Machine Learning methods for event classification and vertex reconstruction of the 12C + 12C reaction with the MATE-TPC

Minghui Zhang, Xiaobin Li, Jie Chen et al.

In modern nuclear physics experiments, identifying events of interest is challenging for nuclear reaction studies with the active target Time Projection Chamber (TPC). In this work, machine learning techniques are employed to analyze the complex data of the 12C + 12C fusion reaction from a TPC named MATE (multi-purpose active-target time projection chamber for nuclear experiments). Specifically, we successfully applied Residual Neural Network (ResNet-50, ResNet-34 and ResNet-18) and Visual Geometry Group (VGG-19) to classify elastic scattering and fusion reaction events from the 12C + 12C reaction. The classification results of the four models are nearly identical, with accuracies of approximately 97% for the simulated data and 90% for the experimental data. Moreover, these approaches successfully identify some events that are misclassified by traditional methods. These models are also applied to classify events from different fusion reaction channels, with classification accuracies of approximately 95% on simulated data. In addition, a Convolutional Neural Network (CNN) model is developed to reconstruct the reaction vertex, providing an alternative strategy for vertex reconstruction. These results indicate that machine learning techniques can effectively classify reaction events from different channels and reconstruct the reaction vertex, thereby paving the way for future analyses of complex nuclear reaction data.

NEMay 6, 2024Code
Pretrained Optimization Model for Zero-Shot Black Box Optimization

Xiaobin Li, Kai Wu, Yujian Betterest Li et al.

Zero-shot optimization involves optimizing a target task that was not seen during training, aiming to provide the optimal solution without or with minimal adjustments to the optimizer. It is crucial to ensure reliable and robust performance in various applications. Current optimizers often struggle with zero-shot optimization and require intricate hyperparameter tuning to adapt to new tasks. To address this, we propose a Pretrained Optimization Model (POM) that leverages knowledge gained from optimizing diverse tasks, offering efficient solutions to zero-shot optimization through direct application or fine-tuning with few-shot samples. Evaluation on the BBOB benchmark and two robot control tasks demonstrates that POM outperforms state-of-the-art black-box optimization methods, especially for high-dimensional tasks. Fine-tuning POM with a small number of samples and budget yields significant performance improvements. Moreover, POM demonstrates robust generalization across diverse task distributions, dimensions, population sizes, and optimization horizons. For code implementation, see https://github.com/ninja-wm/POM/.

LGJan 23
Understanding and Improving UMAP with Geometric and Topological Priors: The JORC-UMAP Algorithm

Xiaobin Li, Run Zhang

Nonlinear dimensionality reduction techniques, particularly UMAP, are widely used for visualizing high-dimensional data. However, UMAP's local Euclidean distance assumption often fails to capture intrinsic manifold geometry, leading to topological tearing and structural collapse. We identify UMAP's sensitivity to the k-nearest neighbor graph as a key cause. To address this, we introduce Ollivier-Ricci curvature as a geometric prior, reinforcing edges at geometric bottlenecks and reducing redundant links. Since curvature estimation is noise-sensitive, we also incorporate a topological prior using Jaccard similarity to ensure neighborhood consistency. The resulting method, JORC-UMAP, better distinguishes true manifold structure from spurious connections. Experiments on synthetic and real-world datasets show that JORC-UMAP reduces tearing and collapse more effectively than standard UMAP and other DR methods, as measured by SVM accuracy and triplet preservation scores, while maintaining computational efficiency. This work offers a geometry-aware enhancement to UMAP for more faithful data visualization.

CVJun 11, 2025
ELBO-T2IAlign: A Generic ELBO-Based Method for Calibrating Pixel-level Text-Image Alignment in Diffusion Models

Qin Zhou, Zhiyang Zhang, Jinglong Wang et al.

Diffusion models excel at image generation. Recent studies have shown that these models not only generate high-quality images but also encode text-image alignment information through attention maps or loss functions. This information is valuable for various downstream tasks, including segmentation, text-guided image editing, and compositional image generation. However, current methods heavily rely on the assumption of perfect text-image alignment in diffusion models, which is not the case. In this paper, we propose using zero-shot referring image segmentation as a proxy task to evaluate the pixel-level image and class-level text alignment of popular diffusion models. We conduct an in-depth analysis of pixel-text misalignment in diffusion models from the perspective of training data bias. We find that misalignment occurs in images with small sized, occluded, or rare object classes. Therefore, we propose ELBO-T2IAlign, a simple yet effective method to calibrate pixel-text alignment in diffusion models based on the evidence lower bound (ELBO) of likelihood. Our method is training-free and generic, eliminating the need to identify the specific cause of misalignment and works well across various diffusion model architectures. Extensive experiments on commonly used benchmark datasets on image segmentation and generation have verified the effectiveness of our proposed calibration approach.

LGOct 19, 2020
Robustness-aware 2-bit quantization with real-time performance for neural network

Xiaobin Li, Hongxu Jiang, Shuangxi Huang et al.

Quantized neural network (NN) with a reduced bit precision is an effective solution to reduces the computational and memory resource requirements and plays a vital role in machine learning. However, it is still challenging to avoid the significant accuracy degradation due to its numerical approximation and lower redundancy. In this paper, a novel robustness-aware 2-bit quantization scheme is proposed for NN base on binary NN and generative adversarial network(GAN), witch improves the performance by enriching the information of binary NN, efficiently extract the structural information and considering the robustness of the quantized NN. Specifically, using shift addition operation to replace the multiply-accumulate in the quantization process witch can effectively speed the NN. Meanwhile, a structural loss between the original NN and quantized NN is proposed to such that the structural information of data is preserved after quantization. The structural information learned from NN not only plays an important role in improving the performance but also allows for further fine tuning of the quantization network by applying the Lipschitz constraint to the structural loss. In addition, we also for the first time take the robustness of the quantized NN into consideration and propose a non-sensitive perturbation loss function by introducing an extraneous term of spectral norm. The experiments are conducted on CIFAR-10 and ImageNet datasets with popular NN( such as MoblieNetV2, SqueezeNet, ResNet20, etc). The experimental results show that the proposed algorithm is more competitive under 2-bit-precision than the state-of-the-art quantization methods. Meanwhile, the experimental results also demonstrate that the proposed method is robust under the FGSM adversarial samples attack.

CVApr 25, 2019
Learning Discriminative Features Via Weights-biased Softmax Loss

XiaoBin Li, WeiQiang Wang

Loss functions play a key role in training superior deep neural networks. In convolutional neural networks (CNNs), the popular cross entropy loss together with softmax does not explicitly guarantee minimization of intra-class variance or maximization of inter-class variance. In the early studies, there is no theoretical analysis and experiments explicitly indicating how to choose the number of units in fully connected layer. To help CNNs learn features more fast and discriminative, there are two contributions in this paper. First, we determine the minimum number of units in FC layer by rigorous theoretical analysis and extensive experiment, which reduces CNNs' parameter memory and training time. Second, we propose a negative-focused weights-biased softmax (W-Softmax) loss to help CNNs learn more discriminative features. The proposed W-Softmax loss not only theoretically formulates the intraclass compactness and inter-class separability, but also can avoid overfitting by enlarging decision margins. Moreover, the size of decision margins can be flexibly controlled by adjusting a hyperparameter $α$. Extensive experimental results on several benchmark datasets show the superiority of W-Softmax in image classification tasks.