Wenjing Jiang

AR
h-index61
4papers
21citations
Novelty54%
AI Score37

4 Papers

CVDec 10, 2025
Dynamic Facial Expressions Analysis Based Parkinson's Disease Auxiliary Diagnosis

Xiaochen Huang, Xiaochen Bi, Cuihua Lv et al.

Parkinson's disease (PD), a prevalent neurodegenerative disorder, significantly affects patients' daily functioning and social interactions. To facilitate a more efficient and accessible diagnostic approach for PD, we propose a dynamic facial expression analysis-based PD auxiliary diagnosis method. This method targets hypomimia, a characteristic clinical symptom of PD, by analyzing two manifestations: reduced facial expressivity and facial rigidity, thereby facilitating the diagnosis process. We develop a multimodal facial expression analysis network to extract expression intensity features during patients' performance of various facial expressions. This network leverages the CLIP architecture to integrate visual and textual features while preserving the temporal dynamics of facial expressions. Subsequently, the expression intensity features are processed and input into an LSTM-based classification network for PD diagnosis. Our method achieves an accuracy of 93.1%, outperforming other in-vitro PD diagnostic approaches. This technique offers a more convenient detection method for potential PD patients, improving their diagnostic experience.

ARFeb 12, 2024
IR-Aware ECO Timing Optimization Using Reinforcement Learning

Wenjing Jiang, Vidya A. Chhabria, Sachin S. Sapatnekar

Engineering change orders (ECOs) in late stages make minimal design fixes to recover from timing shifts due to excessive IR drops. This paper integrates IR-drop-aware timing analysis and ECO timing optimization using reinforcement learning (RL). The method operates after physical design and power grid synthesis, and rectifies IR-drop-induced timing degradation through gate sizing. It incorporates the Lagrangian relaxation (LR) technique into a novel RL framework, which trains a relational graph convolutional network (R-GCN) agent to sequentially size gates to fix timing violations. The R-GCN agent outperforms a classical LR-only algorithm: in an open 45nm technology, it (a) moves the Pareto front of the delay-power tradeoff curve to the left (b) saves runtime over the prior approaches by running fast inference using trained models, and (c) reduces the perturbation to placement by sizing fewer cells. The RL model is transferable across timing specifications and to unseen designs with fine tuning.

MED-PHNov 4, 2025
High-Resolution Magnetic Particle Imaging System Matrix Recovery Using a Vision Transformer with Residual Feature Network

Abuobaida M. Khair, Wenjing Jiang, Yousuf Babiker M. Osman et al.

This study presents a hybrid deep learning framework, the Vision Transformer with Residual Feature Network (VRF-Net), for recovering high-resolution system matrices in Magnetic Particle Imaging (MPI). MPI resolution often suffers from downsampling and coil sensitivity variations. VRF-Net addresses these challenges by combining transformer-based global attention with residual convolutional refinement, enabling recovery of both large-scale structures and fine details. To reflect realistic MPI conditions, the system matrix is degraded using a dual-stage downsampling strategy. Training employed paired-image super-resolution on the public Open MPI dataset and a simulated dataset incorporating variable coil sensitivity profiles. For system matrix recovery on the Open MPI dataset, VRF-Net achieved nRMSE = 0.403, pSNR = 39.08 dB, and SSIM = 0.835 at 2x scaling, and maintained strong performance even at challenging scale 8x (pSNR = 31.06 dB, SSIM = 0.717). For the simulated dataset, VRF-Net achieved nRMSE = 4.44, pSNR = 28.52 dB, and SSIM = 0.771 at 2x scaling, with stable performance at higher scales. On average, it reduced nRMSE by 88.2%, increased pSNR by 44.7%, and improved SSIM by 34.3% over interpolation and CNN-based methods. In image reconstruction of Open MPI phantoms, VRF-Net further reduced reconstruction error to nRMSE = 1.79 at 2x scaling, while preserving structural fidelity (pSNR = 41.58 dB, SSIM = 0.960), outperforming existing methods. These findings demonstrate that VRF-Net enables sharper, artifact-free system matrix recovery and robust image reconstruction across multiple scales, offering a promising direction for future in vivo applications.

ARMay 11, 2023
A Machine Learning Approach to Improving Timing Consistency between Global Route and Detailed Route

Vidya A. Chhabria, Wenjing Jiang, Andrew B. Kahng et al.

Due to the unavailability of routing information in design stages prior to detailed routing (DR), the tasks of timing prediction and optimization pose major challenges. Inaccurate timing prediction wastes design effort, hurts circuit performance, and may lead to design failure. This work focuses on timing prediction after clock tree synthesis and placement legalization, which is the earliest opportunity to time and optimize a "complete" netlist. The paper first documents that having "oracle knowledge" of the final post-DR parasitics enables post-global routing (GR) optimization to produce improved final timing outcomes. To bridge the gap between GR-based parasitic and timing estimation and post-DR results during post-GR optimization, machine learning (ML)-based models are proposed, including the use of features for macro blockages for accurate predictions for designs with macros. Based on a set of experimental evaluations, it is demonstrated that these models show higher accuracy than GR-based timing estimation. When used during post-GR optimization, the ML-based models show demonstrable improvements in post-DR circuit performance. The methodology is applied to two different tool flows - OpenROAD and a commercial tool flow - and results on 45nm bulk and 12nm FinFET enablements show improvements in post-DR slack metrics without increasing congestion. The models are demonstrated to be generalizable to designs generated under different clock period constraints and are robust to training data with small levels of noise.