78.0LGMar 19
Collaborative Adaptive Curriculum for Progressive Knowledge DistillationJing Liu, Zhenchao Ma, Han Yu et al.
Recent advances in collaborative knowledge distillation have demonstrated cutting-edge performance for resource-constrained distributed multimedia learning scenarios. However, achieving such competitiveness requires addressing a fundamental mismatch: high-dimensional teacher knowledge complexity versus heterogeneous client learning capacities, which currently prohibits deployment in edge-based visual analytics systems. Drawing inspiration from curriculum learning principles, we introduce Federated Adaptive Progressive Distillation (FAPD), a consensus-driven framework that orchestrates adaptive knowledge transfer. FAPD hierarchically decomposes teacher features via PCA-based structuring, extracting principal components ordered by variance contribution to establish a natural visual knowledge hierarchy. Clients progressively receive knowledge of increasing complexity through dimension-adaptive projection matrices. Meanwhile, the server monitors network-wide learning stability by tracking global accuracy fluctuations across a temporal consensus window, advancing curriculum dimensionality only when collective consensus emerges. Consequently, FAPD provably adapts knowledge transfer pace while achieving superior convergence over fixed-complexity approaches. Extensive experiments on three datasets validate FAPD's effectiveness: it attains 3.64% accuracy improvement over FedAvg on CIFAR-10, demonstrates 2x faster convergence, and maintains robust performance under extreme data heterogeneity (α=0.1), outperforming baselines by over 4.5%.
NIFeb 10, 2025
A Survey on Video Analytics in Cloud-Edge-Terminal Collaborative SystemsLinxiao Gong, Hao Yang, Gaoyun Fang et al.
The explosive growth of video data has driven the development of distributed video analytics in cloud-edge-terminal collaborative (CETC) systems, enabling efficient video processing, real-time inference, and privacy-preserving analysis. Among multiple advantages, CETC systems can distribute video processing tasks and enable adaptive analytics across cloud, edge, and terminal devices, leading to breakthroughs in video surveillance, autonomous driving, and smart cities. In this survey, we first analyze fundamental architectural components, including hierarchical, distributed, and hybrid frameworks, alongside edge computing platforms and resource management mechanisms. Building upon these foundations, edge-centric approaches emphasize on-device processing, edge-assisted offloading, and edge intelligence, while cloud-centric methods leverage powerful computational capabilities for complex video understanding and model training. Our investigation also covers hybrid video analytics incorporating adaptive task offloading and resource-aware scheduling techniques that optimize performance across the entire system. Beyond conventional approaches, recent advances in large language models and multimodal integration reveal both opportunities and challenges in platform scalability, data protection, and system reliability. Future directions also encompass explainable systems, efficient processing mechanisms, and advanced video analytics, offering valuable insights for researchers and practitioners in this dynamic field.
IVSep 10, 2019
U-net super-neural segmentation and similarity calculation to realize vegetation change assessment in satellite imageryChunxue Wu, Bobo Ju, Naixue Xiong et al.
Vegetation is the natural linkage connecting soil, atmosphere and water. It can represent the change of land cover to a certain extent and serve as an indicator for global change research. Methods for measuring coverage can be divided into two types: surface measurement and remote sensing. Because vegetation cover has significant spatial and temporal differentiation characteristics, remote sensing has become an important technical means to estimate vegetation coverage. This paper firstly uses U-net to perform remote sensing image semantic segmentation training, then uses the result of semantic segmentation, and then uses the integral progressive method to calculate the forestland change rate, and finally realizes automated valuation of woodland change rate.