IVApr 11, 2023Code
Computational Pathology: A Survey Review and The Way ForwardMahdi S. Hosseini, Babak Ehteshami Bejnordi, Vincent Quoc-Huy Trinh et al.
Computational Pathology CPath is an interdisciplinary science that augments developments of computational approaches to analyze and model medical histopathology images. The main objective for CPath is to develop infrastructure and workflows of digital diagnostics as an assistive CAD system for clinical pathology, facilitating transformational changes in the diagnosis and treatment of cancer that are mainly address by CPath tools. With evergrowing developments in deep learning and computer vision algorithms, and the ease of the data flow from digital pathology, currently CPath is witnessing a paradigm shift. Despite the sheer volume of engineering and scientific works being introduced for cancer image analysis, there is still a considerable gap of adopting and integrating these algorithms in clinical practice. This raises a significant question regarding the direction and trends that are undertaken in CPath. In this article we provide a comprehensive review of more than 800 papers to address the challenges faced in problem design all-the-way to the application and implementation viewpoints. We have catalogued each paper into a model-card by examining the key works and challenges faced to layout the current landscape in CPath. We hope this helps the community to locate relevant works and facilitate understanding of the field's future directions. In a nutshell, we oversee the CPath developments in cycle of stages which are required to be cohesively linked together to address the challenges associated with such multidisciplinary science. We overview this cycle from different perspectives of data-centric, model-centric, and application-centric problems. We finally sketch remaining challenges and provide directions for future technical developments and clinical integration of CPath (https://github.com/AtlasAnalyticsLab/CPath_Survey).
CVJul 8, 2023Code
End-to-End Supervised Multilabel Contrastive LearningAhmad Sajedi, Samir Khaki, Konstantinos N. Plataniotis et al.
Multilabel representation learning is recognized as a challenging problem that can be associated with either label dependencies between object categories or data-related issues such as the inherent imbalance of positive/negative samples. Recent advances address these challenges from model- and data-centric viewpoints. In model-centric, the label correlation is obtained by an external model designs (e.g., graph CNN) to incorporate an inductive bias for training. However, they fail to design an end-to-end training framework, leading to high computational complexity. On the contrary, in data-centric, the realistic nature of the dataset is considered for improving the classification while ignoring the label dependencies. In this paper, we propose a new end-to-end training framework -- dubbed KMCL (Kernel-based Mutlilabel Contrastive Learning) -- to address the shortcomings of both model- and data-centric designs. The KMCL first transforms the embedded features into a mixture of exponential kernels in Gaussian RKHS. It is then followed by encoding an objective loss that is comprised of (a) reconstruction loss to reconstruct kernel representation, (b) asymmetric classification loss to address the inherent imbalance problem, and (c) contrastive loss to capture label correlation. The KMCL models the uncertainty of the feature encoder while maintaining a low computational footprint. Extensive experiments are conducted on image classification tasks to showcase the consistent improvements of KMCL over the SOTA methods. PyTorch implementation is provided in \url{https://github.com/mahdihosseini/KMCL}.
LGDec 31, 2022Code
Pseudo-Inverted Bottleneck Convolution for DARTS Search SpaceArash Ahmadian, Louis S. P. Liu, Yue Fei et al.
Differentiable Architecture Search (DARTS) has attracted considerable attention as a gradient-based neural architecture search method. Since the introduction of DARTS, there has been little work done on adapting the action space based on state-of-art architecture design principles for CNNs. In this work, we aim to address this gap by incrementally augmenting the DARTS search space with micro-design changes inspired by ConvNeXt and studying the trade-off between accuracy, evaluation layer count, and computational cost. We introduce the Pseudo-Inverted Bottleneck Conv (PIBConv) block intending to reduce the computational footprint of the inverted bottleneck block proposed in ConvNeXt. Our proposed architecture is much less sensitive to evaluation layer count and outperforms a DARTS network with similar size significantly, at layer counts as small as 2. Furthermore, with less layers, not only does it achieve higher accuracy with lower computational footprint (measured in GMACs) and parameter count, GradCAM comparisons show that our network can better detect distinctive features of target objects compared to DARTS. Code is available from https://github.com/mahdihosseini/PIBConv.
CVSep 29, 2023
DataDAM: Efficient Dataset Distillation with Attention MatchingAhmad Sajedi, Samir Khaki, Ehsan Amjadian et al.
Researchers have long tried to minimize training costs in deep learning while maintaining strong generalization across diverse datasets. Emerging research on dataset distillation aims to reduce training costs by creating a small synthetic set that contains the information of a larger real dataset and ultimately achieves test accuracy equivalent to a model trained on the whole dataset. Unfortunately, the synthetic data generated by previous methods are not guaranteed to distribute and discriminate as well as the original training data, and they incur significant computational costs. Despite promising results, there still exists a significant performance gap between models trained on condensed synthetic sets and those trained on the whole dataset. In this paper, we address these challenges using efficient Dataset Distillation with Attention Matching (DataDAM), achieving state-of-the-art performance while reducing training costs. Specifically, we learn synthetic images by matching the spatial attention maps of real and synthetic data generated by different layers within a family of randomly initialized neural networks. Our method outperforms the prior methods on several datasets, including CIFAR10/100, TinyImageNet, ImageNet-1K, and subsets of ImageNet-1K across most of the settings, and achieves improvements of up to 6.5% and 4.1% on CIFAR100 and ImageNet-1K, respectively. We also show that our high-quality distilled images have practical benefits for downstream applications, such as continual learning and neural architecture search.
IVSep 14, 2024Code
Self-Prompting Polyp Segmentation in Colonoscopy using Hybrid Yolo-SAM 2 ModelMobina Mansoori, Sajjad Shahabodini, Jamshid Abouei et al.
Early diagnosis and treatment of polyps during colonoscopy are essential for reducing the incidence and mortality of Colorectal Cancer (CRC). However, the variability in polyp characteristics and the presence of artifacts in colonoscopy images and videos pose significant challenges for accurate and efficient polyp detection and segmentation. This paper presents a novel approach to polyp segmentation by integrating the Segment Anything Model (SAM 2) with the YOLOv8 model. Our method leverages YOLOv8's bounding box predictions to autonomously generate input prompts for SAM 2, thereby reducing the need for manual annotations. We conducted exhaustive tests on five benchmark colonoscopy image datasets and two colonoscopy video datasets, demonstrating that our method exceeds state-of-the-art models in both image and video segmentation tasks. Notably, our approach achieves high segmentation accuracy using only bounding box annotations, significantly reducing annotation time and effort. This advancement holds promise for enhancing the efficiency and scalability of polyp detection in clinical settings https://github.com/sajjad-sh33/YOLO_SAM2.
LGDec 29, 2022
Graph Federated Learning for CIoT Devices in Smart Home ApplicationsArash Rasti-Meymandi, Seyed Mohammad Sheikholeslami, Jamshid Abouei et al.
This paper deals with the problem of statistical and system heterogeneity in a cross-silo Federated Learning (FL) framework where there exist a limited number of Consumer Internet of Things (CIoT) devices in a smart building. We propose a novel Graph Signal Processing (GSP)-inspired aggregation rule based on graph filtering dubbed ``G-Fedfilt''. The proposed aggregator enables a structured flow of information based on the graph's topology. This behavior allows capturing the interconnection of CIoT devices and training domain-specific models. The embedded graph filter is equipped with a tunable parameter which enables a continuous trade-off between domain-agnostic and domain-specific FL. In the case of domain-agnostic, it forces G-Fedfilt to act similar to the conventional Federated Averaging (FedAvg) aggregation rule. The proposed G-Fedfilt also enables an intrinsic smooth clustering based on the graph connectivity without explicitly specified which further boosts the personalization of the models in the framework. In addition, the proposed scheme enjoys a communication-efficient time-scheduling to alleviate the system heterogeneity. This is accomplished by adaptively adjusting the amount of training data samples and sparsity of the models' gradients to reduce communication desynchronization and latency. Simulation results show that the proposed G-Fedfilt achieves up to $3.99\% $ better classification accuracy than the conventional FedAvg when concerning model personalization on the statistically heterogeneous local datasets, while it is capable of yielding up to $2.41\%$ higher accuracy than FedAvg in the case of testing the generalization of the models.
NASep 25, 2017
Finite Differences in Forward and Inverse Imaging Problems--MaxPol DesignMahdi S. Hosseini, Konstantinos N. Plataniotis
A systematic and comprehensive framework for finite impulse response (FIR) lowpass/fullband derivative kernels is introduced in this paper. Closed form solutions of a number of derivative filters are obtained using the maximally flat technique to regulate the Fourier response of undetermined coefficients. The framework includes arbitrary parameter control methods that afford solutions for numerous differential orders, variable polynomial accuracy, centralized/staggered schemes, and arbitrary side-shift nodes for boundary formulation. Using the proposed framework four different derivative matrix operators are introduced and their numerical stability is analyzed by studying their eigenvalues distribution in the complex plane. Their utility is studied by considering two important image processing problems, namely gradient surface reconstruction and image stitching. Experimentation indicates that the new derivative matrices not only outperform commonly used method but provide useful insights to the numerical issues in these two applications.
LGOct 12, 2022
Multi-Content Time-Series Popularity Prediction with Multiple-Model Transformers in MEC NetworksZohreh HajiAkhondi-Meybodi, Arash Mohammadi, Ming Hou et al.
Coded/uncoded content placement in Mobile Edge Caching (MEC) has evolved as an efficient solution to meet the significant growth of global mobile data traffic by boosting the content diversity in the storage of caching nodes. To meet the dynamic nature of the historical request pattern of multimedia contents, the main focus of recent researches has been shifted to develop data-driven and real-time caching schemes. In this regard and with the assumption that users' preferences remain unchanged over a short horizon, the Top-K popular contents are identified as the output of the learning model. Most existing datadriven popularity prediction models, however, are not suitable for the coded/uncoded content placement frameworks. On the one hand, in coded/uncoded content placement, in addition to classifying contents into two groups, i.e., popular and nonpopular, the probability of content request is required to identify which content should be stored partially/completely, where this information is not provided by existing data-driven popularity prediction models. On the other hand, the assumption that users' preferences remain unchanged over a short horizon only works for content with a smooth request pattern. To tackle these challenges, we develop a Multiple-model (hybrid) Transformer-based Edge Caching (MTEC) framework with higher generalization ability, suitable for various types of content with different time-varying behavior, that can be adapted with coded/uncoded content placement frameworks. Simulation results corroborate the effectiveness of the proposed MTEC caching framework in comparison to its counterparts in terms of the cache-hit ratio, classification accuracy, and the transferred byte volume.
NIApr 7, 2022
A Kernel Method to Nonlinear Location Estimation with RSS-based FingerprintPai Chet Ng, Petros Spachos, James She et al.
This paper presents a nonlinear location estimation to infer the position of a user holding a smartphone. We consider a large location with $M$ number of grid points, each grid point is labeled with a unique fingerprint consisting of the received signal strength (RSS) values measured from $N$ number of Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) beacons. Given the fingerprint observed by the smartphone, the user's current location can be estimated by finding the top-k similar fingerprints from the list of fingerprints registered in the database. Besides the environmental factors, the dynamicity in holding the smartphone is another source to the variation in fingerprint measurements, yet there are not many studies addressing the fingerprint variability due to dynamic smartphone positions held by human hands during online detection. To this end, we propose a nonlinear location estimation using the kernel method. Specifically, our proposed method comprises of two steps: 1) a beacon selection strategy to select a subset of beacons that is insensitive to the subtle change of holding positions, and 2) a kernel method to compute the similarity between this subset of observed signals and all the fingerprints registered in the database. The experimental results based on large-scale data collected in a complex building indicate a substantial performance gain of our proposed approach in comparison to state-of-the-art methods. The dataset consisting of the signal information collected from the beacons is available online.
LGOct 27, 2022
ViT-CAT: Parallel Vision Transformers with Cross Attention Fusion for Popularity Prediction in MEC NetworksZohreh HajiAkhondi-Meybodi, Arash Mohammadi, Ming Hou et al.
Mobile Edge Caching (MEC) is a revolutionary technology for the Sixth Generation (6G) of wireless networks with the promise to significantly reduce users' latency via offering storage capacities at the edge of the network. The efficiency of the MEC network, however, critically depends on its ability to dynamically predict/update the storage of caching nodes with the top-K popular contents. Conventional statistical caching schemes are not robust to the time-variant nature of the underlying pattern of content requests, resulting in a surge of interest in using Deep Neural Networks (DNNs) for time-series popularity prediction in MEC networks. However, existing DNN models within the context of MEC fail to simultaneously capture both temporal correlations of historical request patterns and the dependencies between multiple contents. This necessitates an urgent quest to develop and design a new and innovative popularity prediction architecture to tackle this critical challenge. The paper addresses this gap by proposing a novel hybrid caching framework based on the attention mechanism. Referred to as the parallel Vision Transformers with Cross Attention (ViT-CAT) Fusion, the proposed architecture consists of two parallel ViT networks, one for collecting temporal correlation, and the other for capturing dependencies between different contents. Followed by a Cross Attention (CA) module as the Fusion Center (FC), the proposed ViT-CAT is capable of learning the mutual information between temporal and spatial correlations, as well, resulting in improving the classification accuracy, and decreasing the model's complexity about 8 times. Based on the simulation results, the proposed ViT-CAT architecture outperforms its counterparts across the classification accuracy, complexity, and cache-hit ratio.
LGJun 12, 2023
A New Probabilistic Distance Metric With Application In Gaussian Mixture ReductionAhmad Sajedi, Yuri A. Lawryshyn, Konstantinos N. Plataniotis
This paper presents a new distance metric to compare two continuous probability density functions. The main advantage of this metric is that, unlike other statistical measurements, it can provide an analytic, closed-form expression for a mixture of Gaussian distributions while satisfying all metric properties. These characteristics enable fast, stable, and efficient calculations, which are highly desirable in real-world signal processing applications. The application in mind is Gaussian Mixture Reduction (GMR), which is widely used in density estimation, recursive tracking, and belief propagation. To address this problem, we developed a novel algorithm dubbed the Optimization-based Greedy GMR (OGGMR), which employs our metric as a criterion to approximate a high-order Gaussian mixture with a lower order. Experimental results show that the OGGMR algorithm is significantly faster and more efficient than state-of-the-art GMR algorithms while retaining the geometric shape of the original mixture.
LGDec 15, 2022
Active Inference and Reinforcement Learning: A unified inference on continuous state and action spaces under partial observabilityParvin Malekzadeh, Konstantinos N. Plataniotis
Reinforcement learning (RL) has garnered significant attention for developing decision-making agents that aim to maximize rewards, specified by an external supervisor, within fully observable environments. However, many real-world problems involve partial observations, formulated as partially observable Markov decision processes (POMDPs). Previous studies have tackled RL in POMDPs by either incorporating the memory of past actions and observations or by inferring the true state of the environment from observed data. However, aggregating observed data over time becomes impractical in continuous spaces. Moreover, inference-based RL approaches often require many samples to perform well, as they focus solely on reward maximization and neglect uncertainty in the inferred state. Active inference (AIF) is a framework formulated in POMDPs and directs agents to select actions by minimizing a function called expected free energy (EFE). This supplies reward-maximizing (exploitative) behaviour, as in RL, with information-seeking (exploratory) behaviour. Despite this exploratory behaviour of AIF, its usage is limited to discrete spaces due to the computational challenges associated with EFE. In this paper, we propose a unified principle that establishes a theoretical connection between AIF and RL, enabling seamless integration of these two approaches and overcoming their aforementioned limitations in continuous space POMDP settings. We substantiate our findings with theoretical analysis, providing novel perspectives for utilizing AIF in the design of artificial agents. Experimental results demonstrate the superior learning capabilities of our method in solving continuous space partially observable tasks. Notably, our approach harnesses information-seeking exploration, enabling it to effectively solve reward-free problems and rendering explicit task reward design by an external supervisor optional.
LGJul 17, 2022
Subclass Knowledge Distillation with Known Subclass LabelsAhmad Sajedi, Yuri A. Lawryshyn, Konstantinos N. Plataniotis
This work introduces a novel knowledge distillation framework for classification tasks where information on existing subclasses is available and taken into consideration. In classification tasks with a small number of classes or binary detection, the amount of information transferred from the teacher to the student is restricted, thus limiting the utility of knowledge distillation. Performance can be improved by leveraging information of possible subclasses within the classes. To that end, we propose the so-called Subclass Knowledge Distillation (SKD), a process of transferring the knowledge of predicted subclasses from a teacher to a smaller student. Meaningful information that is not in the teacher's class logits but exists in subclass logits (e.g., similarities within classes) will be conveyed to the student through the SKD, which will then boost the student's performance. Analytically, we measure how much extra information the teacher can provide the student via the SKD to demonstrate the efficacy of our work. The framework developed is evaluated in clinical application, namely colorectal polyp binary classification. It is a practical problem with two classes and a number of subclasses per class. In this application, clinician-provided annotations are used to define subclasses based on the annotation label's variability in a curriculum style of learning. A lightweight, low-complexity student trained with the SKD framework achieves an F1-score of 85.05%, an improvement of 1.47%, and a 2.10% gain over the student that is trained with and without conventional knowledge distillation, respectively. The 2.10% F1-score gap between students trained with and without the SKD can be explained by the extra subclass knowledge, i.e., the extra 0.4656 label bits per sample that the teacher can transfer in our experiment.
LGOct 16, 2023
Uncertainty-aware transfer across tasks using hybrid model-based successor feature reinforcement learningParvin Malekzadeh, Ming Hou, Konstantinos N. Plataniotis
Sample efficiency is central to developing practical reinforcement learning (RL) for complex and large-scale decision-making problems. The ability to transfer and generalize knowledge gained from previous experiences to downstream tasks can significantly improve sample efficiency. Recent research indicates that successor feature (SF) RL algorithms enable knowledge generalization between tasks with different rewards but identical transition dynamics. It has recently been hypothesized that combining model-based (MB) methods with SF algorithms can alleviate the limitation of fixed transition dynamics. Furthermore, uncertainty-aware exploration is widely recognized as another appealing approach for improving sample efficiency. Putting together two ideas of hybrid model-based successor feature (MB-SF) and uncertainty leads to an approach to the problem of sample efficient uncertainty-aware knowledge transfer across tasks with different transition dynamics or/and reward functions. In this paper, the uncertainty of the value of each action is approximated by a Kalman filter (KF)-based multiple-model adaptive estimation. This KF-based framework treats the parameters of a model as random variables. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first attempt at formulating a hybrid MB-SF algorithm capable of generalizing knowledge across large or continuous state space tasks with various transition dynamics while requiring less computation at decision time than MB methods. The number of samples required to learn the tasks was compared to recent SF and MB baselines. The results show that our algorithm generalizes its knowledge across different transition dynamics, learns downstream tasks with significantly fewer samples than starting from scratch, and outperforms existing approaches.
LGMar 21, 2023
CLSA: Contrastive Learning-based Survival Analysis for Popularity Prediction in MEC NetworksZohreh Hajiakhondi-Meybodi, Arash Mohammadi, Jamshid Abouei et al.
Mobile Edge Caching (MEC) integrated with Deep Neural Networks (DNNs) is an innovative technology with significant potential for the future generation of wireless networks, resulting in a considerable reduction in users' latency. The MEC network's effectiveness, however, heavily relies on its capacity to predict and dynamically update the storage of caching nodes with the most popular contents. To be effective, a DNN-based popularity prediction model needs to have the ability to understand the historical request patterns of content, including their temporal and spatial correlations. Existing state-of-the-art time-series DNN models capture the latter by simultaneously inputting the sequential request patterns of multiple contents to the network, considerably increasing the size of the input sample. This motivates us to address this challenge by proposing a DNN-based popularity prediction framework based on the idea of contrasting input samples against each other, designed for the Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (UAV)-aided MEC networks. Referred to as the Contrastive Learning-based Survival Analysis (CLSA), the proposed architecture consists of a self-supervised Contrastive Learning (CL) model, where the temporal information of sequential requests is learned using a Long Short Term Memory (LSTM) network as the encoder of the CL architecture. Followed by a Survival Analysis (SA) network, the output of the proposed CLSA architecture is probabilities for each content's future popularity, which are then sorted in descending order to identify the Top-K popular contents. Based on the simulation results, the proposed CLSA architecture outperforms its counterparts across the classification accuracy and cache-hit ratio.
IVAug 12, 2024
Polyp SAM 2: Advancing Zero shot Polyp Segmentation in Colorectal Cancer DetectionMobina Mansoori, Sajjad Shahabodini, Jamshid Abouei et al.
Polyp segmentation plays a crucial role in the early detection and diagnosis of colorectal cancer. However, obtaining accurate segmentations often requires labor-intensive annotations and specialized models. Recently, Meta AI Research released a general Segment Anything Model 2 (SAM 2), which has demonstrated promising performance in several segmentation tasks. In this manuscript, we evaluate the performance of SAM 2 in segmenting polyps under various prompted settings. We hope this report will provide insights to advance the field of polyp segmentation and promote more interesting work in the future. This project is publicly available at https://github.com/ sajjad-sh33/Polyp-SAM-2.
40.0CVMar 22Code
Privacy-Preserving Federated Action Recognition via Differentially Private Selective Tuning and Efficient CommunicationIdris Zakariyya, Pai Chet Ng, Kaushik Bhargav Sivangi et al.
Federated video action recognition enables collaborative model training without sharing raw video data, yet remains vulnerable to two key challenges: \textit{model exposure} and \textit{communication overhead}. Gradients exchanged between clients and the server can leak private motion patterns, while full-model synchronization of high-dimensional video networks causes significant bandwidth and communication costs. To address these issues, we propose \textit{Federated Differential Privacy with Selective Tuning and Efficient Communication for Action Recognition}, namely \textit{FedDP-STECAR}. Our \textit{FedDP-STECAR} framework selectively fine-tunes and perturbs only a small subset of task-relevant layers under Differential Privacy (DP), reducing the surface of information leakage while preserving temporal coherence in video features. By transmitting only the tuned layers during aggregation, communication traffic is reduced by over 99\% compared to full-model updates. Experiments on the UCF-101 dataset using the MViT-B-16x4 transformer show that \textit{FedDP-STECAR} achieves up to \textbf{70.2\% higher accuracy} under strict privacy ($ε=0.65$) in centralized settings and \textbf{48\% faster training} with \textbf{73.1\% accuracy} in federated setups, enabling scalable and privacy-preserving video action recognition. Code available at https://github.com/izakariyya/mvit-federated-videodp
CVNov 30, 2025Code
PanFlow: Decoupled Motion Control for Panoramic Video GenerationCheng Zhang, Hanwen Liang, Donny Y. Chen et al.
Panoramic video generation has attracted growing attention due to its applications in virtual reality and immersive media. However, existing methods lack explicit motion control and struggle to generate scenes with large and complex motions. We propose PanFlow, a novel approach that exploits the spherical nature of panoramas to decouple the highly dynamic camera rotation from the input optical flow condition, enabling more precise control over large and dynamic motions. We further introduce a spherical noise warping strategy to promote loop consistency in motion across panorama boundaries. To support effective training, we curate a large-scale, motion-rich panoramic video dataset with frame-level pose and flow annotations. We also showcase the effectiveness of our method in various applications, including motion transfer and video editing. Extensive experiments demonstrate that PanFlow significantly outperforms prior methods in motion fidelity, visual quality, and temporal coherence. Our code, dataset, and models are available at https://github.com/chengzhag/PanFlow.
LGAug 29, 2024Code
GSTAM: Efficient Graph Distillation with Structural Attention-MatchingArash Rasti-Meymandi, Ahmad Sajedi, Zhaopan Xu et al.
Graph distillation has emerged as a solution for reducing large graph datasets to smaller, more manageable, and informative ones. Existing methods primarily target node classification, involve computationally intensive processes, and fail to capture the true distribution of the full graph dataset. To address these issues, we introduce Graph Distillation with Structural Attention Matching (GSTAM), a novel method for condensing graph classification datasets. GSTAM leverages the attention maps of GNNs to distill structural information from the original dataset into synthetic graphs. The structural attention-matching mechanism exploits the areas of the input graph that GNNs prioritize for classification, effectively distilling such information into the synthetic graphs and improving overall distillation performance. Comprehensive experiments demonstrate GSTAM's superiority over existing methods, achieving 0.45% to 6.5% better performance in extreme condensation ratios, highlighting its potential use in advancing distillation for graph classification tasks (Code available at https://github.com/arashrasti96/GSTAM).
DCSep 14, 2024
Leveraging Foundation Models for Efficient Federated Learning in Resource-restricted Edge NetworksS. Kawa Atapour, S. Jamal SeyedMohammadi, S. Mohammad Sheikholeslami et al.
Recently pre-trained Foundation Models (FMs) have been combined with Federated Learning (FL) to improve training of downstream tasks while preserving privacy. However, deploying FMs over edge networks with resource-constrained Internet of Things (IoT) devices is under-explored. This paper proposes a novel framework, namely, Federated Distilling knowledge to Prompt (FedD2P), for leveraging the robust representation abilities of a vision-language FM without deploying it locally on edge devices. This framework distills the aggregated knowledge of IoT devices to a prompt generator to efficiently adapt the frozen FM for downstream tasks. To eliminate the dependency on a public dataset, our framework leverages perclass local knowledge from IoT devices and linguistic descriptions of classes to train the prompt generator. Our experiments on diverse image classification datasets CIFAR, OxfordPets, SVHN, EuroSAT, and DTD show that FedD2P outperforms the baselines in terms of model performance.
CVJan 15
Difficulty-guided Sampling: Bridging the Target Gap between Dataset Distillation and Downstream TasksMingzhuo Li, Guang Li, Linfeng Ye et al.
In this paper, we propose difficulty-guided sampling (DGS) to bridge the target gap between the distillation objective and the downstream task, therefore improving the performance of dataset distillation. Deep neural networks achieve remarkable performance but have time and storage-consuming training processes. Dataset distillation is proposed to generate compact, high-quality distilled datasets, enabling effective model training while maintaining downstream performance. Existing approaches typically focus on features extracted from the original dataset, overlooking task-specific information, which leads to a target gap between the distillation objective and the downstream task. We propose leveraging characteristics that benefit the downstream training into data distillation to bridge this gap. Focusing on the downstream task of image classification, we introduce the concept of difficulty and propose DGS as a plug-in post-stage sampling module. Following the specific target difficulty distribution, the final distilled dataset is sampled from image pools generated by existing methods. We also propose difficulty-aware guidance (DAG) to explore the effect of difficulty in the generation process. Extensive experiments across multiple settings demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed methods. It also highlights the broader potential of difficulty for diverse downstream tasks.
RMAug 22, 2024
EX-DRL: Hedging Against Heavy Losses with EXtreme Distributional Reinforcement LearningParvin Malekzadeh, Zissis Poulos, Jacky Chen et al.
Recent advancements in Distributional Reinforcement Learning (DRL) for modeling loss distributions have shown promise in developing hedging strategies in derivatives markets. A common approach in DRL involves learning the quantiles of loss distributions at specified levels using Quantile Regression (QR). This method is particularly effective in option hedging due to its direct quantile-based risk assessment, such as Value at Risk (VaR) and Conditional Value at Risk (CVaR). However, these risk measures depend on the accurate estimation of extreme quantiles in the loss distribution's tail, which can be imprecise in QR-based DRL due to the rarity and extremity of tail data, as highlighted in the literature. To address this issue, we propose EXtreme DRL (EX-DRL), which enhances extreme quantile prediction by modeling the tail of the loss distribution with a Generalized Pareto Distribution (GPD). This method introduces supplementary data to mitigate the scarcity of extreme quantile observations, thereby improving estimation accuracy through QR. Comprehensive experiments on gamma hedging options demonstrate that EX-DRL improves existing QR-based models by providing more precise estimates of extreme quantiles, thereby improving the computation and reliability of risk metrics for complex financial risk management.
CVDec 15, 2023Code
Test-Time Domain Adaptation by Learning Domain-Aware Batch NormalizationYanan Wu, Zhixiang Chi, Yang Wang et al.
Test-time domain adaptation aims to adapt the model trained on source domains to unseen target domains using a few unlabeled images. Emerging research has shown that the label and domain information is separately embedded in the weight matrix and batch normalization (BN) layer. Previous works normally update the whole network naively without explicitly decoupling the knowledge between label and domain. As a result, it leads to knowledge interference and defective distribution adaptation. In this work, we propose to reduce such learning interference and elevate the domain knowledge learning by only manipulating the BN layer. However, the normalization step in BN is intrinsically unstable when the statistics are re-estimated from a few samples. We find that ambiguities can be greatly reduced when only updating the two affine parameters in BN while keeping the source domain statistics. To further enhance the domain knowledge extraction from unlabeled data, we construct an auxiliary branch with label-independent self-supervised learning (SSL) to provide supervision. Moreover, we propose a bi-level optimization based on meta-learning to enforce the alignment of two learning objectives of auxiliary and main branches. The goal is to use the auxiliary branch to adapt the domain and benefit main task for subsequent inference. Our method keeps the same computational cost at inference as the auxiliary branch can be thoroughly discarded after adaptation. Extensive experiments show that our method outperforms the prior works on five WILDS real-world domain shift datasets. Our method can also be integrated with methods with label-dependent optimization to further push the performance boundary. Our code is available at https://github.com/ynanwu/MABN.
CVDec 10, 2025
StereoWorld: Geometry-Aware Monocular-to-Stereo Video GenerationKe Xing, Xiaojie Jin, Longfei Li et al.
The growing adoption of XR devices has fueled strong demand for high-quality stereo video, yet its production remains costly and artifact-prone. To address this challenge, we present StereoWorld, an end-to-end framework that repurposes a pretrained video generator for high-fidelity monocular-to-stereo video generation. Our framework jointly conditions the model on the monocular video input while explicitly supervising the generation with a geometry-aware regularization to ensure 3D structural fidelity. A spatio-temporal tiling scheme is further integrated to enable efficient, high-resolution synthesis. To enable large-scale training and evaluation, we curate a high-definition stereo video dataset containing over 11M frames aligned to natural human interpupillary distance (IPD). Extensive experiments demonstrate that StereoWorld substantially outperforms prior methods, generating stereo videos with superior visual fidelity and geometric consistency. The project webpage is available at https://ke-xing.github.io/StereoWorld/.
43.4CVMay 18
SAS: Semantic-aware Sampling for Generative Dataset DistillationMingzhuo Li, Guang Li, Linfeng Ye et al.
Deep neural networks have achieved impressive performance across a wide range of tasks, but this success often comes with substantial computational and storage costs due to large-scale training data. Dataset distillation addresses this challenge by constructing compact yet informative datasets that enable efficient model training while maintaining downstream performance. However, most existing approaches primarily emphasize matching data distributions or downstream training statistics, with limited attention to preserving high-level semantic information in the distilled data. In this work, we introduce a semantic-aware perspective for dataset distillation by leveraging Contrastive Language-Image Pretraining (CLIP) as a semantic prior for post-sampling. Our goal is to obtain distilled datasets that are not only compact but also semantically class-discriminative and diverse. To this end, we design three semantic scoring functions that quantify class relevance, inter-class separability, and intra-set diversity in a pretrained semantic space. Based on image pools generated by existing distillation methods, we further develop a two-stage strategy for effective sampling: the first stage filters semantically discriminative samples to form a reliable candidate set, and the second stage performs a dynamic diversity-aware selection to reduce redundancy while preserving semantic coverage. Extensive experiments across multiple datasets, image pools, and downstream models demonstrate consistent performance gains, highlighting the effectiveness of incorporating semantic information into dataset distillation.
LGJan 5
Normalized Conditional Mutual Information Surrogate Loss for Deep Neural ClassifiersLinfeng Ye, Zhixiang Chi, Konstantinos N. Plataniotis et al.
In this paper, we propose a novel information theoretic surrogate loss; normalized conditional mutual information (NCMI); as a drop in alternative to the de facto cross-entropy (CE) for training deep neural network (DNN) based classifiers. We first observe that the model's NCMI is inversely proportional to its accuracy. Building on this insight, we introduce an alternating algorithm to efficiently minimize the NCMI. Across image recognition and whole-slide imaging (WSI) subtyping benchmarks, NCMI-trained models surpass state of the art losses by substantial margins at a computational cost comparable to that of CE. Notably, on ImageNet, NCMI yields a 2.77% top-1 accuracy improvement with ResNet-50 comparing to the CE; on CAMELYON-17, replacing CE with NCMI improves the macro-F1 by 8.6% over the strongest baseline. Gains are consistent across various architectures and batch sizes, suggesting that NCMI is a practical and competitive alternative to CE.
CVApr 7, 2025Code
Dynamic Vision MambaMengxuan Wu, Zekai Li, Zhiyuan Liang et al.
Mamba-based vision models have gained extensive attention as a result of being computationally more efficient than attention-based models. However, spatial redundancy still exists in these models, represented by token and block redundancy. For token redundancy, we analytically find that early token pruning methods will result in inconsistency between training and inference or introduce extra computation for inference. Therefore, we customize token pruning to fit the Mamba structure by rearranging the pruned sequence before feeding it into the next Mamba block. For block redundancy, we allow each image to select SSM blocks dynamically based on an empirical observation that the inference speed of Mamba-based vision models is largely affected by the number of SSM blocks. Our proposed method, Dynamic Vision Mamba (DyVM), effectively reduces FLOPs with minor performance drops. We achieve a reduction of 35.2\% FLOPs with only a loss of accuracy of 1.7\% on Vim-S. It also generalizes well across different Mamba vision model architectures and different vision tasks. Our code will be made public.
AIJan 12
Yes FLoReNce, I Will Do Better Next Time! Agentic Feedback Reasoning for Humorous Meme DetectionOlivia Shanhong Liu, Pai Chet Ng, De Wen Soh et al.
Humorous memes blend visual and textual cues to convey irony, satire, or social commentary, posing unique challenges for AI systems that must interpret intent rather than surface correlations. Existing multimodal or prompting-based models generate explanations for humor but operate in an open loop,lacking the ability to critique or refine their reasoning once a prediction is made. We propose FLoReNce, an agentic feedback reasoning framework that treats meme understanding as a closed-loop process during learning and an open-loop process during inference. In the closed loop, a reasoning agent is critiqued by a judge; the error and semantic feedback are converted into control signals and stored in a feedback-informed, non-parametric knowledge base. At inference, the model retrieves similar judged experiences from this KB and uses them to modulate its prompt, enabling better, self-aligned reasoning without finetuning. On the PrideMM dataset, FLoReNce improves both predictive performance and explanation quality over static multimodal baselines, showing that feedback-regulated prompting is a viable path to adaptive meme humor understanding.
CVJan 26
ARMOR: Agentic Reasoning for Methods Orchestration and Reparameterization for Robust Adversarial AttacksGabriel Lee Jun Rong, Christos Korgialas, Dion Jia Xu Ho et al.
Existing automated attack suites operate as static ensembles with fixed sequences, lacking strategic adaptation and semantic awareness. This paper introduces the Agentic Reasoning for Methods Orchestration and Reparameterization (ARMOR) framework to address these limitations. ARMOR orchestrates three canonical adversarial primitives, Carlini-Wagner (CW), Jacobian-based Saliency Map Attack (JSMA), and Spatially Transformed Attacks (STA) via Vision Language Models (VLM)-guided agents that collaboratively generate and synthesize perturbations through a shared ``Mixing Desk". Large Language Models (LLMs) adaptively tune and reparameterize parallel attack agents in a real-time, closed-loop system that exploits image-specific semantic vulnerabilities. On standard benchmarks, ARMOR achieves improved cross-architecture transfer and reliably fools both settings, delivering a blended output for blind targets and selecting the best attack or blended attacks for white-box targets using a confidence-and-SSIM score.
LGNov 28, 2021Code
Towards Robust and Automatic Hyper-Parameter TunningMathieu Tuli, Mahdi S. Hosseini, Konstantinos N. Plataniotis
The task of hyper-parameter optimization (HPO) is burdened with heavy computational costs due to the intractability of optimizing both a model's weights and its hyper-parameters simultaneously. In this work, we introduce a new class of HPO method and explore how the low-rank factorization of the convolutional weights of intermediate layers of a convolutional neural network can be used to define an analytical response surface for optimizing hyper-parameters, using only training data. We quantify how this surface behaves as a surrogate to model performance and can be solved using a trust-region search algorithm, which we call autoHyper. The algorithm outperforms state-of-the-art such as Bayesian Optimization and generalizes across model, optimizer, and dataset selection. Our code can be found at \url{https://github.com/MathieuTuli/autoHyper}.
IVJul 24, 2020Code
Stain Style Transfer of Histopathology Images Via Structure-Preserved Generative LearningHanwen Liang, Konstantinos N. Plataniotis, Xingyu Li
Computational histopathology image diagnosis becomes increasingly popular and important, where images are segmented or classified for disease diagnosis by computers. While pathologists do not struggle with color variations in slides, computational solutions usually suffer from this critical issue. To address the issue of color variations in histopathology images, this study proposes two stain style transfer models, SSIM-GAN and DSCSI-GAN, based on the generative adversarial networks. By cooperating structural preservation metrics and feedback of an auxiliary diagnosis net in learning, medical-relevant information presented by image texture, structure, and chroma-contrast features is preserved in color-normalized images. Particularly, the smart treat of chromatic image content in our DSCSI-GAN model helps to achieve noticeable normalization improvement in image regions where stains mix due to histological substances co-localization. Extensive experimentation on public histopathology image sets indicates that our methods outperform prior arts in terms of generating more stain-consistent images, better preserving histological information in images, and obtaining significantly higher learning efficiency. Our python implementation is published on https://github.com/hanwen0529/DSCSI-GAN.
LGJun 11, 2020Code
AdaS: Adaptive Scheduling of Stochastic GradientsMahdi S. Hosseini, Konstantinos N. Plataniotis
The choice of step-size used in Stochastic Gradient Descent (SGD) optimization is empirically selected in most training procedures. Moreover, the use of scheduled learning techniques such as Step-Decaying, Cyclical-Learning, and Warmup to tune the step-size requires extensive practical experience--offering limited insight into how the parameters update--and is not consistent across applications. This work attempts to answer a question of interest to both researchers and practitioners, namely \textit{"how much knowledge is gained in iterative training of deep neural networks?"} Answering this question introduces two useful metrics derived from the singular values of the low-rank factorization of convolution layers in deep neural networks. We introduce the notions of \textit{"knowledge gain"} and \textit{"mapping condition"} and propose a new algorithm called Adaptive Scheduling (AdaS) that utilizes these derived metrics to adapt the SGD learning rate proportionally to the rate of change in knowledge gain over successive iterations. Experimentation reveals that, using the derived metrics, AdaS exhibits: (a) faster convergence and superior generalization over existing adaptive learning methods; and (b) lack of dependence on a validation set to determine when to stop training. Code is available at \url{https://github.com/mahdihosseini/AdaS}.
CVDec 24, 2019Code
A Comprehensive Analysis of Weakly-Supervised Semantic Segmentation in Different Image DomainsLyndon Chan, Mahdi S. Hosseini, Konstantinos N. Plataniotis
Recently proposed methods for weakly-supervised semantic segmentation have achieved impressive performance in predicting pixel classes despite being trained with only image labels which lack positional information. Because image annotations are cheaper and quicker to generate, weak supervision is more practical than full supervision for training segmentation algorithms. These methods have been predominantly developed to solve the background separation and partial segmentation problems presented by natural scene images and it is unclear whether they can be simply transferred to other domains with different characteristics, such as histopathology and satellite images, and still perform well. This paper evaluates state-of-the-art weakly-supervised semantic segmentation methods on natural scene, histopathology, and satellite image datasets and analyzes how to determine which method is most suitable for a given dataset. Our experiments indicate that histopathology and satellite images present a different set of problems for weakly-supervised semantic segmentation than natural scene images, such as ambiguous boundaries and class co-occurrence. Methods perform well for datasets they were developed on, but tend to perform poorly on other datasets. We present some practical techniques for these methods on unseen datasets and argue that more work is needed for a generalizable approach to weakly-supervised semantic segmentation. Our full code implementation is available on GitHub: https://github.com/lyndonchan/wsss-analysis.
CVMar 25, 2024
Comp4D: LLM-Guided Compositional 4D Scene GenerationDejia Xu, Hanwen Liang, Neel P. Bhatt et al.
Recent advancements in diffusion models for 2D and 3D content creation have sparked a surge of interest in generating 4D content. However, the scarcity of 3D scene datasets constrains current methodologies to primarily object-centric generation. To overcome this limitation, we present Comp4D, a novel framework for Compositional 4D Generation. Unlike conventional methods that generate a singular 4D representation of the entire scene, Comp4D innovatively constructs each 4D object within the scene separately. Utilizing Large Language Models (LLMs), the framework begins by decomposing an input text prompt into distinct entities and maps out their trajectories. It then constructs the compositional 4D scene by accurately positioning these objects along their designated paths. To refine the scene, our method employs a compositional score distillation technique guided by the pre-defined trajectories, utilizing pre-trained diffusion models across text-to-image, text-to-video, and text-to-3D domains. Extensive experiments demonstrate our outstanding 4D content creation capability compared to prior arts, showcasing superior visual quality, motion fidelity, and enhanced object interactions.
CVDec 16, 2024
Wonderland: Navigating 3D Scenes from a Single ImageHanwen Liang, Junli Cao, Vidit Goel et al.
How can one efficiently generate high-quality, wide-scope 3D scenes from arbitrary single images? Existing methods suffer several drawbacks, such as requiring multi-view data, time-consuming per-scene optimization, distorted geometry in occluded areas, and low visual quality in backgrounds. Our novel 3D scene reconstruction pipeline overcomes these limitations to tackle the aforesaid challenge. Specifically, we introduce a large-scale reconstruction model that leverages latents from a video diffusion model to predict 3D Gaussian Splattings of scenes in a feed-forward manner. The video diffusion model is designed to create videos precisely following specified camera trajectories, allowing it to generate compressed video latents that encode multi-view information while maintaining 3D consistency. We train the 3D reconstruction model to operate on the video latent space with a progressive learning strategy, enabling the efficient generation of high-quality, wide-scope, and generic 3D scenes. Extensive evaluations across various datasets affirm that our model significantly outperforms existing single-view 3D scene generation methods, especially with out-of-domain images. Thus, we demonstrate for the first time that a 3D reconstruction model can effectively be built upon the latent space of a diffusion model in order to realize efficient 3D scene generation.
LGMar 26, 2024
The Need for Speed: Pruning Transformers with One RecipeSamir Khaki, Konstantinos N. Plataniotis
We introduce the $\textbf{O}$ne-shot $\textbf{P}$runing $\textbf{T}$echnique for $\textbf{I}$nterchangeable $\textbf{N}$etworks ($\textbf{OPTIN}$) framework as a tool to increase the efficiency of pre-trained transformer architectures $\textit{without requiring re-training}$. Recent works have explored improving transformer efficiency, however often incur computationally expensive re-training procedures or depend on architecture-specific characteristics, thus impeding practical wide-scale adoption. To address these shortcomings, the OPTIN framework leverages intermediate feature distillation, capturing the long-range dependencies of model parameters (coined $\textit{trajectory}$), to produce state-of-the-art results on natural language, image classification, transfer learning, and semantic segmentation tasks $\textit{without re-training}$. Given a FLOP constraint, the OPTIN framework will compress the network while maintaining competitive accuracy performance and improved throughput. Particularly, we show a $\leq 2$% accuracy degradation from NLP baselines and a $0.5$% improvement from state-of-the-art methods on image classification at competitive FLOPs reductions. We further demonstrate the generalization of tasks and architecture with comparative performance using Mask2Former for semantic segmentation and cnn-style networks. OPTIN presents one of the first one-shot efficient frameworks for compressing transformer architectures that generalizes well across different class domains, in particular: natural language and image-related tasks, without $\textit{re-training}$.
CVMay 19, 2025
DD-Ranking: Rethinking the Evaluation of Dataset DistillationZekai Li, Xinhao Zhong, Samir Khaki et al.
In recent years, dataset distillation has provided a reliable solution for data compression, where models trained on the resulting smaller synthetic datasets achieve performance comparable to those trained on the original datasets. To further improve the performance of synthetic datasets, various training pipelines and optimization objectives have been proposed, greatly advancing the field of dataset distillation. Recent decoupled dataset distillation methods introduce soft labels and stronger data augmentation during the post-evaluation phase and scale dataset distillation up to larger datasets (e.g., ImageNet-1K). However, this raises a question: Is accuracy still a reliable metric to fairly evaluate dataset distillation methods? Our empirical findings suggest that the performance improvements of these methods often stem from additional techniques rather than the inherent quality of the images themselves, with even randomly sampled images achieving superior results. Such misaligned evaluation settings severely hinder the development of DD. Therefore, we propose DD-Ranking, a unified evaluation framework, along with new general evaluation metrics to uncover the true performance improvements achieved by different methods. By refocusing on the actual information enhancement of distilled datasets, DD-Ranking provides a more comprehensive and fair evaluation standard for future research advancements.
LGFeb 16, 2024
FedD2S: Personalized Data-Free Federated Knowledge DistillationKawa Atapour, S. Jamal Seyedmohammadi, Jamshid Abouei et al.
This paper addresses the challenge of mitigating data heterogeneity among clients within a Federated Learning (FL) framework. The model-drift issue, arising from the noniid nature of client data, often results in suboptimal personalization of a global model compared to locally trained models for each client. To tackle this challenge, we propose a novel approach named FedD2S for Personalized Federated Learning (pFL), leveraging knowledge distillation. FedD2S incorporates a deep-to-shallow layer-dropping mechanism in the data-free knowledge distillation process to enhance local model personalization. Through extensive simulations on diverse image datasets-FEMNIST, CIFAR10, CINIC0, and CIFAR100-we compare FedD2S with state-of-the-art FL baselines. The proposed approach demonstrates superior performance, characterized by accelerated convergence and improved fairness among clients. The introduced layer-dropping technique effectively captures personalized knowledge, resulting in enhanced performance compared to alternative FL models. Moreover, we investigate the impact of key hyperparameters, such as the participation ratio and layer-dropping rate, providing valuable insights into the optimal configuration for FedD2S. The findings demonstrate the efficacy of adaptive layer-dropping in the knowledge distillation process to achieve enhanced personalization and performance across diverse datasets and tasks.
LGJan 5, 2024
A unified uncertainty-aware exploration: Combining epistemic and aleatory uncertaintyParvin Malekzadeh, Ming Hou, Konstantinos N. Plataniotis
Exploration is a significant challenge in practical reinforcement learning (RL), and uncertainty-aware exploration that incorporates the quantification of epistemic and aleatory uncertainty has been recognized as an effective exploration strategy. However, capturing the combined effect of aleatory and epistemic uncertainty for decision-making is difficult. Existing works estimate aleatory and epistemic uncertainty separately and consider the composite uncertainty as an additive combination of the two. Nevertheless, the additive formulation leads to excessive risk-taking behavior, causing instability. In this paper, we propose an algorithm that clarifies the theoretical connection between aleatory and epistemic uncertainty, unifies aleatory and epistemic uncertainty estimation, and quantifies the combined effect of both uncertainties for a risk-sensitive exploration. Our method builds on a novel extension of distributional RL that estimates a parameterized return distribution whose parameters are random variables encoding epistemic uncertainty. Experimental results on tasks with exploration and risk challenges show that our method outperforms alternative approaches.
CVMay 2, 2024
ATOM: Attention Mixer for Efficient Dataset DistillationSamir Khaki, Ahmad Sajedi, Kai Wang et al.
Recent works in dataset distillation seek to minimize training expenses by generating a condensed synthetic dataset that encapsulates the information present in a larger real dataset. These approaches ultimately aim to attain test accuracy levels akin to those achieved by models trained on the entirety of the original dataset. Previous studies in feature and distribution matching have achieved significant results without incurring the costs of bi-level optimization in the distillation process. Despite their convincing efficiency, many of these methods suffer from marginal downstream performance improvements, limited distillation of contextual information, and subpar cross-architecture generalization. To address these challenges in dataset distillation, we propose the ATtentiOn Mixer (ATOM) module to efficiently distill large datasets using a mixture of channel and spatial-wise attention in the feature matching process. Spatial-wise attention helps guide the learning process based on consistent localization of classes in their respective images, allowing for distillation from a broader receptive field. Meanwhile, channel-wise attention captures the contextual information associated with the class itself, thus making the synthetic image more informative for training. By integrating both types of attention, our ATOM module demonstrates superior performance across various computer vision datasets, including CIFAR10/100 and TinyImagenet. Notably, our method significantly improves performance in scenarios with a low number of images per class, thereby enhancing its potential. Furthermore, we maintain the improvement in cross-architectures and applications such as neural architecture search.
LGJan 4, 2024
A Robust Quantile Huber Loss With Interpretable Parameter Adjustment In Distributional Reinforcement LearningParvin Malekzadeh, Konstantinos N. Plataniotis, Zissis Poulos et al.
Distributional Reinforcement Learning (RL) estimates return distribution mainly by learning quantile values via minimizing the quantile Huber loss function, entailing a threshold parameter often selected heuristically or via hyperparameter search, which may not generalize well and can be suboptimal. This paper introduces a generalized quantile Huber loss function derived from Wasserstein distance (WD) calculation between Gaussian distributions, capturing noise in predicted (current) and target (Bellman-updated) quantile values. Compared to the classical quantile Huber loss, this innovative loss function enhances robustness against outliers. Notably, the classical Huber loss function can be seen as an approximation of our proposed loss, enabling parameter adjustment by approximating the amount of noise in the data during the learning process. Empirical tests on Atari games, a common application in distributional RL, and a recent hedging strategy using distributional RL, validate the effectiveness of our proposed loss function and its potential for parameter adjustments in distributional RL. The implementation of the proposed loss function is available here.
CVJan 2, 2024
ProbMCL: Simple Probabilistic Contrastive Learning for Multi-label Visual ClassificationAhmad Sajedi, Samir Khaki, Yuri A. Lawryshyn et al.
Multi-label image classification presents a challenging task in many domains, including computer vision and medical imaging. Recent advancements have introduced graph-based and transformer-based methods to improve performance and capture label dependencies. However, these methods often include complex modules that entail heavy computation and lack interpretability. In this paper, we propose Probabilistic Multi-label Contrastive Learning (ProbMCL), a novel framework to address these challenges in multi-label image classification tasks. Our simple yet effective approach employs supervised contrastive learning, in which samples that share enough labels with an anchor image based on a decision threshold are introduced as a positive set. This structure captures label dependencies by pulling positive pair embeddings together and pushing away negative samples that fall below the threshold. We enhance representation learning by incorporating a mixture density network into contrastive learning and generating Gaussian mixture distributions to explore the epistemic uncertainty of the feature encoder. We validate the effectiveness of our framework through experimentation with datasets from the computer vision and medical imaging domains. Our method outperforms the existing state-of-the-art methods while achieving a low computational footprint on both datasets. Visualization analyses also demonstrate that ProbMCL-learned classifiers maintain a meaningful semantic topology.
CVAug 17, 2025
TiP4GEN: Text to Immersive Panorama 4D Scene GenerationKe Xing, Hanwen Liang, Dejia Xu et al.
With the rapid advancement and widespread adoption of VR/AR technologies, there is a growing demand for the creation of high-quality, immersive dynamic scenes. However, existing generation works predominantly concentrate on the creation of static scenes or narrow perspective-view dynamic scenes, falling short of delivering a truly 360-degree immersive experience from any viewpoint. In this paper, we introduce \textbf{TiP4GEN}, an advanced text-to-dynamic panorama scene generation framework that enables fine-grained content control and synthesizes motion-rich, geometry-consistent panoramic 4D scenes. TiP4GEN integrates panorama video generation and dynamic scene reconstruction to create 360-degree immersive virtual environments. For video generation, we introduce a \textbf{Dual-branch Generation Model} consisting of a panorama branch and a perspective branch, responsible for global and local view generation, respectively. A bidirectional cross-attention mechanism facilitates comprehensive information exchange between the branches. For scene reconstruction, we propose a \textbf{Geometry-aligned Reconstruction Model} based on 3D Gaussian Splatting. By aligning spatial-temporal point clouds using metric depth maps and initializing scene cameras with estimated poses, our method ensures geometric consistency and temporal coherence for the reconstructed scenes. Extensive experiments demonstrate the effectiveness of our proposed designs and the superiority of TiP4GEN in generating visually compelling and motion-coherent dynamic panoramic scenes. Our project page is at https://ke-xing.github.io/TiP4GEN/.
LGJun 19, 2025
SparseLoRA: Accelerating LLM Fine-Tuning with Contextual SparsitySamir Khaki, Xiuyu Li, Junxian Guo et al.
Fine-tuning LLMs is both computationally and memory-intensive. While parameter-efficient fine-tuning methods, such as QLoRA and DoRA, reduce the number of trainable parameters and lower memory usage, they do not decrease computational cost. In some cases, they may even slow down fine-tuning. In this paper, we introduce SparseLoRA, a method that accelerates LLM fine-tuning through contextual sparsity. We propose a lightweight, training-free SVD sparsity estimator that dynamically selects a sparse subset of weights for loss and gradient computation. Also, we systematically analyze and address sensitivity across layers, tokens, and training steps. Our experimental results show that SparseLoRA reduces computational cost by up to 2.2 times and a measured speedup of up to 1.6 times while maintaining accuracy across various downstream tasks, including commonsense and arithmetic reasoning, code generation, and instruction following.
CVNov 19, 2024
Data-to-Model Distillation: Data-Efficient Learning FrameworkAhmad Sajedi, Samir Khaki, Lucy Z. Liu et al.
Dataset distillation aims to distill the knowledge of a large-scale real dataset into small yet informative synthetic data such that a model trained on it performs as well as a model trained on the full dataset. Despite recent progress, existing dataset distillation methods often struggle with computational efficiency, scalability to complex high-resolution datasets, and generalizability to deep architectures. These approaches typically require retraining when the distillation ratio changes, as knowledge is embedded in raw pixels. In this paper, we propose a novel framework called Data-to-Model Distillation (D2M) to distill the real dataset's knowledge into the learnable parameters of a pre-trained generative model by aligning rich representations extracted from real and generated images. The learned generative model can then produce informative training images for different distillation ratios and deep architectures. Extensive experiments on 15 datasets of varying resolutions show D2M's superior performance, re-distillation efficiency, and cross-architecture generalizability. Our method effectively scales up to high-resolution 128x128 ImageNet-1K. Furthermore, we verify D2M's practical benefits for downstream applications in neural architecture search.
CVOct 20, 2025
SparseVILA: Decoupling Visual Sparsity for Efficient VLM InferenceSamir Khaki, Junxian Guo, Jiaming Tang et al. · mit
Vision Language Models (VLMs) have rapidly advanced in integrating visual and textual reasoning, powering applications across high-resolution image understanding, long-video analysis, and multi-turn conversation. However, their scalability remains limited by the growing number of visual tokens that dominate inference latency. We present SparseVILA, a new paradigm for efficient VLM inference that decouples visual sparsity across the prefilling and decoding stages. SparseVILA distributes sparsity across stages by pruning redundant visual tokens during prefill and retrieving only query-relevant tokens during decoding. This decoupled design matches leading prefill pruning methods while preserving multi-turn fidelity by retaining most of the visual cache so that query-aware tokens can be retrieved at each conversation round. Built on an AWQ-optimized inference pipeline, SparseVILA achieves up to 4.0 times faster prefilling, 2.5 times faster decoding, and an overall 2.6 times end-to-end speedup on long-context video tasks -- while improving accuracy on document-understanding and reasoning tasks. By decoupling query-agnostic pruning and query-aware retrieval, SparseVILA establishes a new direction for efficient multimodal inference, offering a training-free, architecture-agnostic framework for accelerating large VLMs without sacrificing capability.
LGJul 7, 2025
Information-Guided Diffusion Sampling for Dataset DistillationLinfeng Ye, Shayan Mohajer Hamidi, Guang Li et al.
Dataset distillation aims to create a compact dataset that retains essential information while maintaining model performance. Diffusion models (DMs) have shown promise for this task but struggle in low images-per-class (IPC) settings, where generated samples lack diversity. In this paper, we address this issue from an information-theoretic perspective by identifying two key types of information that a distilled dataset must preserve: ($i$) prototype information $\mathrm{I}(X;Y)$, which captures label-relevant features; and ($ii$) contextual information $\mathrm{H}(X | Y)$, which preserves intra-class variability. Here, $(X,Y)$ represents the pair of random variables corresponding to the input data and its ground truth label, respectively. Observing that the required contextual information scales with IPC, we propose maximizing $\mathrm{I}(X;Y) + β\mathrm{H}(X | Y)$ during the DM sampling process, where $β$ is IPC-dependent. Since directly computing $\mathrm{I}(X;Y)$ and $\mathrm{H}(X | Y)$ is intractable, we develop variational estimations to tightly lower-bound these quantities via a data-driven approach. Our approach, information-guided diffusion sampling (IGDS), seamlessly integrates with diffusion models and improves dataset distillation across all IPC settings. Experiments on Tiny ImageNet and ImageNet subsets show that IGDS significantly outperforms existing methods, particularly in low-IPC regimes. The code will be released upon acceptance.
CVFeb 15, 2024
NYCTALE: Neuro-Evidence Transformer for Adaptive and Personalized Lung Nodule Invasiveness PredictionSadaf Khademi, Anastasia Oikonomou, Konstantinos N. Plataniotis et al.
Drawing inspiration from the primate brain's intriguing evidence accumulation process, and guided by models from cognitive psychology and neuroscience, the paper introduces the NYCTALE framework, a neuro-inspired and evidence accumulation-based Transformer architecture. The proposed neuro-inspired NYCTALE offers a novel pathway in the domain of Personalized Medicine (PM) for lung cancer diagnosis. In nature, Nyctales are small owls known for their nocturnal behavior, hunting primarily during the darkness of night. The NYCTALE operates in a similarly vigilant manner, i.e., processing data in an evidence-based fashion and making predictions dynamically/adaptively. Distinct from conventional Computed Tomography (CT)-based Deep Learning (DL) models, the NYCTALE performs predictions only when sufficient amount of evidence is accumulated. In other words, instead of processing all or a pre-defined subset of CT slices, for each person, slices are provided one at a time. The NYCTALE framework then computes an evidence vector associated with contribution of each new CT image. A decision is made once the total accumulated evidence surpasses a specific threshold. Preliminary experimental analyses conducted using a challenging in-house dataset comprising 114 subjects. The results are noteworthy, suggesting that NYCTALE outperforms the benchmark accuracy even with approximately 60% less training data on this demanding and small dataset.
CVAug 27, 2025
Plug-in Feedback Self-adaptive Attention in CLIP for Training-free Open-Vocabulary SegmentationZhixiang Chi, Yanan Wu, Li Gu et al.
CLIP exhibits strong visual-textual alignment but struggle with open-vocabulary segmentation due to poor localization. Prior methods enhance spatial coherence by modifying intermediate attention. But, this coherence isn't consistently propagated to the final output due to subsequent operations such as projections. Additionally, intermediate attention lacks direct interaction with text representations, such semantic discrepancy limits the full potential of CLIP. In this work, we propose a training-free, feedback-driven self-adaptive framework that adapts output-based patch-level correspondences back to the intermediate attention. The output predictions, being the culmination of the model's processing, encapsulate the most comprehensive visual and textual semantics about each patch. Our approach enhances semantic consistency between internal representations and final predictions by leveraging the model's outputs as a stronger spatial coherence prior. We design key modules, including attention isolation, confidence-based pruning for sparse adaptation, and adaptation ensemble, to effectively feedback the output coherence cues. Our method functions as a plug-in module, seamlessly integrating into four state-of-the-art approaches with three backbones (ViT-B, ViT-L, ViT-H). We further validate our framework across multiple attention types (Q-K, self-self, and Proxy augmented with MAE, SAM, and DINO). Our approach consistently improves their performance across eight benchmarks.
IVFeb 16, 2024
HistoSegCap: Capsules for Weakly-Supervised Semantic Segmentation of Histological Tissue Type in Whole Slide ImagesMobina Mansoori, Sajjad Shahabodini, Jamshid Abouei et al.
Digital pathology involves converting physical tissue slides into high-resolution Whole Slide Images (WSIs), which pathologists analyze for disease-affected tissues. However, large histology slides with numerous microscopic fields pose challenges for visual search. To aid pathologists, Computer Aided Diagnosis (CAD) systems offer visual assistance in efficiently examining WSIs and identifying diagnostically relevant regions. This paper presents a novel histopathological image analysis method employing Weakly Supervised Semantic Segmentation (WSSS) based on Capsule Networks, the first such application. The proposed model is evaluated using the Atlas of Digital Pathology (ADP) dataset and its performance is compared with other histopathological semantic segmentation methodologies. The findings underscore the potential of Capsule Networks in enhancing the precision and efficiency of histopathological image analysis. Experimental results show that the proposed model outperforms traditional methods in terms of accuracy and the mean Intersection-over-Union (mIoU) metric.