Enhancing Text-based Knowledge Graph Completion with Zero-Shot Large Language Models: A Focus on Semantic EnhancementRui Yang, Jiahao Zhu, Jianping Man et al.
The design and development of text-based knowledge graph completion (KGC) methods leveraging textual entity descriptions are at the forefront of research. These methods involve advanced optimization techniques such as soft prompts and contrastive learning to enhance KGC models. The effectiveness of text-based methods largely hinges on the quality and richness of the training data. Large language models (LLMs) can utilize straightforward prompts to alter text data, thereby enabling data augmentation for KGC. Nevertheless, LLMs typically demand substantial computational resources. To address these issues, we introduce a framework termed constrained prompts for KGC (CP-KGC). This CP-KGC framework designs prompts that adapt to different datasets to enhance semantic richness. Additionally, CP-KGC employs a context constraint strategy to effectively identify polysemous entities within KGC datasets. Through extensive experimentation, we have verified the effectiveness of this framework. Even after quantization, the LLM (Qwen-7B-Chat-int4) still enhances the performance of text-based KGC methods \footnote{Code and datasets are available at \href{https://github.com/sjlmg/CP-KGC}{https://github.com/sjlmg/CP-KGC}}. This study extends the performance limits of existing models and promotes further integration of KGC with LLMs.
radarODE: An ODE-Embedded Deep Learning Model for Contactless ECG Reconstruction from Millimeter-Wave RadarYuanyuan Zhang, Runwei Guan, Lingxiao Li et al.
Radar-based contactless cardiac monitoring has become a popular research direction recently, but the fine-grained electrocardiogram (ECG) signal is still hard to reconstruct from millimeter-wave radar signal. The key obstacle is to decouple the cardiac activities in the electrical domain (i.e., ECG) from that in the mechanical domain (i.e., heartbeat), and most existing research only uses pure data-driven methods to map such domain transformation as a black box. Therefore, this work first proposes a signal model for domain transformation, and then a novel deep learning framework called radarODE is designed to fuse the temporal and morphological features extracted from radar signals and generate ECG. In addition, ordinary differential equations are embedded in radarODE as a decoder to provide morphological prior, helping the convergence of the model training and improving the robustness under body movements. After being validated on the dataset, the proposed radarODE achieves better performance compared with the benchmark in terms of missed detection rate, root mean square error, Pearson correlation coefficient with the improvement of 9%, 16% and 19%, respectively. The validation results imply that radarODE is capable of recovering ECG signals from radar signals with high fidelity and can be potentially implemented in real-life scenarios.
UniQA: Unified Vision-Language Pre-training for Image Quality and Aesthetic AssessmentHantao Zhou, Longxiang Tang, Rui Yang et al.
Image Quality Assessment (IQA) and Image Aesthetic Assessment (IAA) aim to simulate human subjective perception of image visual quality and aesthetic appeal. Despite distinct learning objectives, they have underlying interconnectedness due to consistent human assessment perception. In this paper, we propose Unified vision-language pre-training of Quality and Aesthetics (UniQA}), to extract useful and common representations from two tasks, thereby benefiting them simultaneously. However, the lack of text in the IQA datasets and the textual noise in the IAA datasets pose severe challenges for multimodal pre-training. To address this, we (1) utilize multimodal large language models (MLLMs) to generate high-quality text descriptions; (2) use the generated text for IAA as metadata to purify noisy IAA data. To effectively adapt the pre-trained UniQA to downstream tasks, we further propose a lightweight adapter that utilizes versatile cues to fully exploit the extensive knowledge of the pre-trained model. UniQA demonstrates high competitiveness in various image assessment tasks, including classical IQA and IAA tasks, few-label IQA, and other downstream tasks, showing promise as a foundational assessment model. Codes are available at https://github.com/zht8506/UniQA.
Pedestrian Attribute Recognition: A SurveyXiao Wang, Shaofei Zheng, Rui Yang et al.
Recognizing pedestrian attributes is an important task in the computer vision community due to it plays an important role in video surveillance. Many algorithms have been proposed to handle this task. The goal of this paper is to review existing works using traditional methods or based on deep learning networks. Firstly, we introduce the background of pedestrian attribute recognition (PAR, for short), including the fundamental concepts of pedestrian attributes and corresponding challenges. Secondly, we introduce existing benchmarks, including popular datasets and evaluation criteria. Thirdly, we analyze the concept of multi-task learning and multi-label learning and also explain the relations between these two learning algorithms and pedestrian attribute recognition. We also review some popular network architectures which have been widely applied in the deep learning community. Fourthly, we analyze popular solutions for this task, such as attributes group, part-based, etc. Fifthly, we show some applications that take pedestrian attributes into consideration and achieve better performance. Finally, we summarize this paper and give several possible research directions for pedestrian attribute recognition. We continuously update the following GitHub to keep tracking the most cutting-edge related works on pedestrian attribute recognition~\url{https://github.com/wangxiao5791509/Pedestrian-Attribute-Recognition-Paper-List}
3.8LGDec 16, 2023
Spatial-Temporal DAG Convolutional Networks for End-to-End Joint Effective Connectivity Learning and Resting-State fMRI ClassificationRui Yang, Wenrui Dai, Huajun She et al.
Building comprehensive brain connectomes has proved of fundamental importance in resting-state fMRI (rs-fMRI) analysis. Based on the foundation of brain network, spatial-temporal-based graph convolutional networks have dramatically improved the performance of deep learning methods in rs-fMRI time series classification. However, existing works either pre-define the brain network as the correlation matrix derived from the raw time series or jointly learn the connectome and model parameters without any topology constraint. These methods could suffer from degraded classification performance caused by the deviation from the intrinsic brain connectivity and lack biological interpretability of demonstrating the causal structure (i.e., effective connectivity) among brain regions. Moreover, most existing methods for effective connectivity learning are unaware of the downstream classification task and cannot sufficiently exploit useful rs-fMRI label information. To address these issues in an end-to-end manner, we model the brain network as a directed acyclic graph (DAG) to discover direct causal connections between brain regions and propose Spatial-Temporal DAG Convolutional Network (ST-DAGCN) to jointly infer effective connectivity and classify rs-fMRI time series by learning brain representations based on nonlinear structural equation model. The optimization problem is formulated into a continuous program and solved with score-based learning method via gradient descent. We evaluate ST-DAGCN on two public rs-fMRI databases. Experiments show that ST-DAGCN outperforms existing models by evident margins in rs-fMRI classification and simultaneously learns meaningful edges of effective connectivity that help understand brain activity patterns and pathological mechanisms in brain disease.
3.8LGDec 16, 2023
scBiGNN: Bilevel Graph Representation Learning for Cell Type Classification from Single-cell RNA Sequencing DataRui Yang, Wenrui Dai, Chenglin Li et al.
Single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) technology provides high-throughput gene expression data to study the cellular heterogeneity and dynamics of complex organisms. Graph neural networks (GNNs) have been widely used for automatic cell type classification, which is a fundamental problem to solve in scRNA-seq analysis. However, existing methods do not sufficiently exploit both gene-gene and cell-cell relationships, and thus the true potential of GNNs is not realized. In this work, we propose a bilevel graph representation learning method, named scBiGNN, to simultaneously mine the relationships at both gene and cell levels for more accurate single-cell classification. Specifically, scBiGNN comprises two GNN modules to identify cell types. A gene-level GNN is established to adaptively learn gene-gene interactions and cell representations via the self-attention mechanism, and a cell-level GNN builds on the cell-cell graph that is constructed from the cell representations generated by the gene-level GNN. To tackle the scalability issue for processing a large number of cells, scBiGNN adopts an Expectation Maximization (EM) framework in which the two modules are alternately trained via the E-step and M-step to learn from each other. Through this interaction, the gene- and cell-level structural information is integrated to gradually enhance the classification performance of both GNN modules. Experiments on benchmark datasets demonstrate that our scBiGNN outperforms a variety of existing methods for cell type classification from scRNA-seq data.
Efficient Online Transfer Learning for 3D Object Classification in Autonomous DrivingRui Yang, Zhi Yan, Tao Yang et al.
Autonomous driving has achieved rapid development over the last few decades, including the machine perception as an important issue of it. Although object detection based on conventional cameras has achieved remarkable results in 2D/3D, non-visual sensors such as 3D LiDAR still have incomparable advantages in the accuracy of object position detection. However, the challenge also exists with the difficulty in properly interpreting point cloud generated by LiDAR. This paper presents a multi-modal-based online learning system for 3D LiDAR-based object classification in urban environments, including cars, cyclists and pedestrians. The proposed system aims to effectively transfer the mature detection capabilities based on visual sensors to the new model learning based on non-visual sensors through a multi-target tracker (i.e. using one sensor to train another). In particular, it integrates the Online Random Forests (ORF) [1] method, which inherently has the abilities of fast and multi-class learning. Through experiments, we show that our system is capable of learning a high-performance model for LiDAR-based 3D object classification on-the-fly, which is especially suitable for robotics in-situ deployment while responding to the widespread challenge of insufficient detector generalization capabilities.
8.1CVAug 12, 2019
Learning Target-oriented Dual Attention for Robust RGB-T TrackingRui Yang, Yabin Zhu, Xiao Wang et al.
RGB-Thermal object tracking attempt to locate target object using complementary visual and thermal infrared data. Existing RGB-T trackers fuse different modalities by robust feature representation learning or adaptive modal weighting. However, how to integrate dual attention mechanism for visual tracking is still a subject that has not been studied yet. In this paper, we propose two visual attention mechanisms for robust RGB-T object tracking. Specifically, the local attention is implemented by exploiting the common visual attention of RGB and thermal data to train deep classifiers. We also introduce the global attention, which is a multi-modal target-driven attention estimation network. It can provide global proposals for the classifier together with local proposals extracted from previous tracking result. Extensive experiments on two RGB-T benchmark datasets validated the effectiveness of our proposed algorithm.
2.6CVMay 6, 2019
Improved Hard Example Mining by Discovering Attribute-based Hard Person IdentityXiao Wang, Ziliang Chen, Rui Yang et al.
In this paper, we propose Hard Person Identity Mining (HPIM) that attempts to refine the hard example mining to improve the exploration efficacy in person re-identification. It is motivated by following observation: the more attributes some people share, the more difficult to separate their identities. Based on this observation, we develop HPIM via a transferred attribute describer, a deep multi-attribute classifier trained from the source noisy person attribute datasets. We encode each image into the attribute probabilistic description in the target person re-ID dataset. Afterwards in the attribute code space, we consider each person as a distribution to generate his view-specific attribute codes in different practical scenarios. Hence we estimate the person-specific statistical moments from zeroth to higher order, which are further used to calculate the central moment discrepancies between persons. Such discrepancy is a ground to choose hard identity to organize proper mini-batches, without concerning the person representation changing in metric learning. It presents as a complementary tool of hard example mining, which helps to explore the global instead of the local hard example constraint in the mini-batch built by randomly sampled identities. Extensive experiments on two person re-identification benchmarks validated the effectiveness of our proposed algorithm.
0.9CVNov 27, 2018
Quality-Aware Multimodal Saliency Detection via Deep Reinforcement LearningXiao Wang, Tao Sun, Rui Yang et al.
Incorporating various modes of information into the machine learning procedure is becoming a new trend. And data from various source can provide more information than single one no matter they are heterogeneous or homogeneous. Existing deep learning based algorithms usually directly concatenate features from each domain to represent the input data. Seldom of them take the quality of data into consideration which is a key issue in related multimodal problems. In this paper, we propose an efficient quality-aware deep neural network to model the weight of data from each domain using deep reinforcement learning (DRL). Specifically, we take the weighting of each domain as a decision-making problem and teach an agent learn to interact with the environment. The agent can tune the weight of each domain through discrete action selection and obtain a positive reward if the saliency results are improved. The target of the agent is to achieve maximum rewards after finished its sequential action selection. We validate the proposed algorithms on multimodal saliency detection in a coarse-to-fine way. The coarse saliency maps are generated from an encoder-decoder framework which is trained with content loss and adversarial loss. The final results can be obtained via adaptive weighting of maps from each domain. Experiments conducted on two kinds of salient object detection benchmarks validated the effectiveness of our proposed quality-aware deep neural network.
9.6CVNov 25, 2018
Describe and Attend to Track: Learning Natural Language guided Structural Representation and Visual Attention for Object TrackingXiao Wang, Chenglong Li, Rui Yang et al.
The tracking-by-detection framework requires a set of positive and negative training samples to learn robust tracking models for precise localization of target objects. However, existing tracking models mostly treat different samples independently while ignores the relationship information among them. In this paper, we propose a novel structure-aware deep neural network to overcome such limitations. In particular, we construct a graph to represent the pairwise relationships among training samples, and additionally take the natural language as the supervised information to learn both feature representations and classifiers robustly. To refine the states of the target and re-track the target when it is back to view from heavy occlusion and out of view, we elaborately design a novel subnetwork to learn the target-driven visual attentions from the guidance of both visual and natural language cues. Extensive experiments on five tracking benchmark datasets validated the effectiveness of our proposed method.