David Pugmire

LG
h-index42
5papers
23citations
Novelty58%
AI Score43

5 Papers

LGJul 15, 2022
Accelerated Probabilistic Marching Cubes by Deep Learning for Time-Varying Scalar Ensembles

Mengjiao Han, Tushar M. Athawale, David Pugmire et al.

Visualizing the uncertainty of ensemble simulations is challenging due to the large size and multivariate and temporal features of ensemble data sets. One popular approach to studying the uncertainty of ensembles is analyzing the positional uncertainty of the level sets. Probabilistic marching cubes is a technique that performs Monte Carlo sampling of multivariate Gaussian noise distributions for positional uncertainty visualization of level sets. However, the technique suffers from high computational time, making interactive visualization and analysis impossible to achieve. This paper introduces a deep-learning-based approach to learning the level-set uncertainty for two-dimensional ensemble data with a multivariate Gaussian noise assumption. We train the model using the first few time steps from time-varying ensemble data in our workflow. We demonstrate that our trained model accurately infers uncertainty in level sets for new time steps and is up to 170X faster than that of the original probabilistic model with serial computation and 10X faster than that of the original parallel computation.

GRAug 12, 2024
Uncertainty-Informed Volume Visualization using Implicit Neural Representation

Shanu Saklani, Chitwan Goel, Shrey Bansal et al.

The increasing adoption of Deep Neural Networks (DNNs) has led to their application in many challenging scientific visualization tasks. While advanced DNNs offer impressive generalization capabilities, understanding factors such as model prediction quality, robustness, and uncertainty is crucial. These insights can enable domain scientists to make informed decisions about their data. However, DNNs inherently lack ability to estimate prediction uncertainty, necessitating new research to construct robust uncertainty-aware visualization techniques tailored for various visualization tasks. In this work, we propose uncertainty-aware implicit neural representations to model scalar field data sets effectively and comprehensively study the efficacy and benefits of estimated uncertainty information for volume visualization tasks. We evaluate the effectiveness of two principled deep uncertainty estimation techniques: (1) Deep Ensemble and (2) Monte Carlo Dropout (MCDropout). These techniques enable uncertainty-informed volume visualization in scalar field data sets. Our extensive exploration across multiple data sets demonstrates that uncertainty-aware models produce informative volume visualization results. Moreover, integrating prediction uncertainty enhances the trustworthiness of our DNN model, making it suitable for robustly analyzing and visualizing real-world scientific volumetric data sets.

HCApr 11
Raiven: LLM-Based Visualization Authoring via Domain-Specific Language Mediation

Alexandra Irger, Ella Hugie, Minghao Guo et al.

Visualization is central to scientific discovery, yet authoring tools remain split between information and scientific visualization, and expertise in one rarely transfers to the other. Large Language Model (LLM) based systems promise to bridge this gap through natural language, but current approaches generate code non-deterministically, with no guarantee of correctness and no protection against silent data fabrication. We present Raiven, a conversational system that mediates visualization authoring through a formally defined domain-specific language. RaivenDSL unifies scientific and information visualization in a single representation spanning 2D, 3D, and tabular data. The LLM produces a compact RaivenDSL specification under schema-guided constraints, and a deterministic compiler translates it to executable D3 or VTK.js code. Because the LLM operates only on dataset metadata, outputs are deterministic, specifications are verifiable before execution, and data fabrication is impossible by construction. In a 100-task benchmark, Raiven achieves 100% compilation, is up to six times faster and six times cheaper than state-of-the-art LLMs, while improving interaction quality, correctness, and data faithfulness. An expert user study shows that Raiven significantly reduces debugging effort and makes it easier to produce correct visualizations.

LGJan 25
REV-INR: Regularized Evidential Implicit Neural Representation for Uncertainty-Aware Volume Visualization

Shanu Saklani, Tushar M. Athawale, Nairita Pal et al.

Applications of Implicit Neural Representations (INRs) have emerged as a promising deep learning approach for compactly representing large volumetric datasets. These models can act as surrogates for volume data, enabling efficient storage and on-demand reconstruction via model predictions. However, conventional deterministic INRs only provide value predictions without insights into the model's prediction uncertainty or the impact of inherent noisiness in the data. This limitation can lead to unreliable data interpretation and visualization due to prediction inaccuracies in the reconstructed volume. Identifying erroneous results extracted from model-predicted data may be infeasible, as raw data may be unavailable due to its large size. To address this challenge, we introduce REV-INR, Regularized Evidential Implicit Neural Representation, which learns to predict data values accurately along with the associated coordinate-level data uncertainty and model uncertainty using only a single forward pass of the trained REV-INR during inference. By comprehensively comparing and contrasting REV-INR with existing well-established deep uncertainty estimation methods, we show that REV-INR achieves the best volume reconstruction quality with robust data (aleatoric) and model (epistemic) uncertainty estimates using the fastest inference time. Consequently, we demonstrate that REV-INR facilitates assessment of the reliability and trustworthiness of the extracted isosurfaces and volume visualization results, enabling analyses to be solely driven by model-predicted data.

LGMay 7, 2025
ORBIT-2: Scaling Exascale Vision Foundation Models for Weather and Climate Downscaling

Xiao Wang, Jong-Youl Choi, Takuya Kurihaya et al.

Sparse observations and coarse-resolution climate models limit effective regional decision-making, underscoring the need for robust downscaling. However, existing AI methods struggle with generalization across variables and geographies and are constrained by the quadratic complexity of Vision Transformer (ViT) self-attention. We introduce ORBIT-2, a scalable foundation model for global, hyper-resolution climate downscaling. ORBIT-2 incorporates two key innovations: (1) Residual Slim ViT (Reslim), a lightweight architecture with residual learning and Bayesian regularization for efficient, robust prediction; and (2) TILES, a tile-wise sequence scaling algorithm that reduces self-attention complexity from quadratic to linear, enabling long-sequence processing and massive parallelism. ORBIT-2 scales to 10 billion parameters across 65,536 GPUs, achieving up to 4.1 exaFLOPS sustained throughput and 74--98% strong scaling efficiency. It supports downscaling to 0.9 km global resolution and processes sequences up to 4.2 billion tokens. On 7 km resolution benchmarks, ORBIT-2 achieves high accuracy with $R^2$ scores in the range of 0.98--0.99 against observational data.