Liye Jia

CV
h-index11
4papers
40citations
Novelty45%
AI Score26

4 Papers

CVAug 30, 2024
NanoMVG: USV-Centric Low-Power Multi-Task Visual Grounding based on Prompt-Guided Camera and 4D mmWave Radar

Runwei Guan, Jianan Liu, Liye Jia et al.

Recently, visual grounding and multi-sensors setting have been incorporated into perception system for terrestrial autonomous driving systems and Unmanned Surface Vehicles (USVs), yet the high complexity of modern learning-based visual grounding model using multi-sensors prevents such model to be deployed on USVs in the real-life. To this end, we design a low-power multi-task model named NanoMVG for waterway embodied perception, guiding both camera and 4D millimeter-wave radar to locate specific object(s) through natural language. NanoMVG can perform both box-level and mask-level visual grounding tasks simultaneously. Compared to other visual grounding models, NanoMVG achieves highly competitive performance on the WaterVG dataset, particularly in harsh environments and boasts ultra-low power consumption for long endurance.

ITDec 3, 2022
Quantify the Causes of Causal Emergence: Critical Conditions of Uncertainty and Asymmetry in Causal Structure

Liye Jia, Fengyufan Yang, Ka Lok Man et al.

Beneficial to advanced computing devices, models with massive parameters are increasingly employed to extract more information to enhance the precision in describing and predicting the patterns of objective systems. This phenomenon is particularly pronounced in research domains associated with deep learning. However, investigations of causal relationships based on statistical and informational theories have posed an interesting and valuable challenge to large-scale models in the recent decade. Macroscopic models with fewer parameters can outperform their microscopic counterparts with more parameters in effectively representing the system. This valuable situation is called "Causal Emergence." This paper introduces a quantification framework, according to the Effective Information and Transition Probability Matrix, for assessing numerical conditions of Causal Emergence as theoretical constraints of its occurrence. Specifically, our results quantitatively prove the cause of Causal Emergence. By a particular coarse-graining strategy, optimizing uncertainty and asymmetry within the model's causal structure is significantly more influential than losing maximum information due to variations in model scales. Moreover, by delving into the potential exhibited by Partial Information Decomposition and Deep Learning networks in the study of Causal Emergence, we discuss potential application scenarios where our quantification framework could play a role in future investigations of Causal Emergence.

CVJan 4, 2025
RadarNeXt: Real-Time and Reliable 3D Object Detector Based On 4D mmWave Imaging Radar

Liye Jia, Runwei Guan, Haocheng Zhao et al.

3D object detection is crucial for Autonomous Driving (AD) and Advanced Driver Assistance Systems (ADAS). However, most 3D detectors prioritize detection accuracy, often overlooking network inference speed in practical applications. In this paper, we propose RadarNeXt, a real-time and reliable 3D object detector based on the 4D mmWave radar point clouds. It leverages the re-parameterizable neural networks to catch multi-scale features, reduce memory cost and accelerate the inference. Moreover, to highlight the irregular foreground features of radar point clouds and suppress background clutter, we propose a Multi-path Deformable Foreground Enhancement Network (MDFEN), ensuring detection accuracy while minimizing the sacrifice of speed and excessive number of parameters. Experimental results on View-of-Delft and TJ4DRadSet datasets validate the exceptional performance and efficiency of RadarNeXt, achieving 50.48 and 32.30 mAPs with the variant using our proposed MDFEN. Notably, our RadarNeXt variants achieve inference speeds of over 67.10 FPS on the RTX A4000 GPU and 28.40 FPS on the Jetson AGX Orin. This research demonstrates that RadarNeXt brings a novel and effective paradigm for 3D perception based on 4D mmWave radar.

CVMar 19, 2024
WaterVG: Waterway Visual Grounding based on Text-Guided Vision and mmWave Radar

Runwei Guan, Liye Jia, Fengyufan Yang et al.

The perception of waterways based on human intent is significant for autonomous navigation and operations of Unmanned Surface Vehicles (USVs) in water environments. Inspired by visual grounding, we introduce WaterVG, the first visual grounding dataset designed for USV-based waterway perception based on human prompts. WaterVG encompasses prompts describing multiple targets, with annotations at the instance level including bounding boxes and masks. Notably, WaterVG includes 11,568 samples with 34,987 referred targets, whose prompts integrates both visual and radar characteristics. The pattern of text-guided two sensors equips a finer granularity of text prompts with visual and radar features of referred targets. Moreover, we propose a low-power visual grounding model, Potamoi, which is a multi-task model with a well-designed Phased Heterogeneous Modality Fusion (PHMF) mode, including Adaptive Radar Weighting (ARW) and Multi-Head Slim Cross Attention (MHSCA). Exactly, ARW extracts required radar features to fuse with vision for prompt alignment. MHSCA is an efficient fusion module with a remarkably small parameter count and FLOPs, elegantly fusing scenario context captured by two sensors with linguistic features, which performs expressively on visual grounding tasks. Comprehensive experiments and evaluations have been conducted on WaterVG, where our Potamoi archives state-of-the-art performances compared with counterparts.