Bingguo Liu

CV
h-index7
8papers
11citations
Novelty50%
AI Score48

8 Papers

CVAug 4, 2023
Rethinking Class Activation Maps for Segmentation: Revealing Semantic Information in Shallow Layers by Reducing Noise

Hang-Cheng Dong, Yuhao Jiang, Yingyan Huang et al.

Class activation maps are widely used for explaining deep neural networks. Due to its ability to highlight regions of interest, it has evolved in recent years as a key step in weakly supervised learning. A major limitation to the performance of the class activation maps is the small spatial resolution of the feature maps in the last layer of the convolutional neural network. Therefore, we expect to generate high-resolution feature maps that result in high-quality semantic information. In this paper, we rethink the properties of semantic information in shallow feature maps. We find that the shallow feature maps still have fine-grained non-discriminative features while mixing considerable non-target noise. Furthermore, we propose a simple gradient-based denoising method to filter the noise by truncating the positive gradient. Our proposed scheme can be easily deployed in other CAM-related methods, facilitating these methods to obtain higher-quality class activation maps. We evaluate the proposed approach through a weakly-supervised semantic segmentation task, and a large number of experiments demonstrate the effectiveness of our approach.

CVApr 11, 2022
SAL-CNN: Estimate the Remaining Useful Life of Bearings Using Time-frequency Information

Bingguo Liu, Zhuo Gao, Binghui Lu et al.

In modern industrial production, the prediction ability of the remaining useful life (RUL) of bearings directly affects the safety and stability of the system. Traditional methods require rigorous physical modeling and perform poorly for complex systems. In this paper, an end-to-end RUL prediction method is proposed, which uses short-time Fourier transform (STFT) as preprocessing. Considering the time correlation of signal sequences, a long and short-term memory network is designed in CNN, incorporating the convolutional block attention module, and understanding the decision-making process of the network from the interpretability level. Experiments were carried out on the 2012PHM dataset and compared with other methods, and the results proved the effectiveness of the method.

14.4CVMay 18
Network Knowledge Prior Guided Learning for Data-Efficient Surface Defect Detection

Hang-Cheng Dong, Guodong Liu, Dong Ye et al.

Deep learning-based methods have become the de facto standard for industrial defect detection. However, their data-hungry nature and inherent "black-box" characteristics often lead to performance bottlenecks and limited trustworthiness in real-world applications. To address these challenges, this paper proposes a novel knowledge-guided loss function that seamlessly integrates model interpretability into the training process without incurring any additional inference cost. Our method operates in two phases: first, a primary classification network is trained, and its explanations, in the form of saliency maps, are generated as prior knowledge. Second, a multi-task learning framework is established, where the main task performs classification, and an auxiliary task imposes consistency between the saliency maps of the final model and the primary model. This consistency is enforced by a dedicated knowledge-guided loss term, effectively acting as a powerful regularizer to steer the model towards robust feature representations. Extensive experiments on multiple public defect datasets demonstrate that our approach consistently enhances the performance of baseline models in terms of accuracy and AP. Moreover, visual analysis reveals that the proposed method yields more concentrated and human-intelligible saliency maps. This work presents a simple yet effective paradigm for bridging the gap between model performance and interpretability, paving the way for more reliable and high-performing vision systems in industrial quality inspection.

19.1CVApr 21
When Can We Trust Deep Neural Networks? Towards Reliable Industrial Deployment with an Interpretability Guide

Hang-Cheng Dong, Yuhao Jiang, Yibo Jiao et al.

The deployment of AI systems in safety-critical domains, such as industrial defect inspection, autonomous driving, and medical diagnosis, is severely hampered by their lack of reliability. A single undetected erroneous prediction can lead to catastrophic outcomes. Unfortunately, there is often no alternative but to place trust in the outputs of a trained AI system, which operates without an internal safeguard to flag unreliable predictions, even in cases of high accuracy. We propose a post-hoc explanation-based indicator to detect false negatives in binary defect detection networks. To our knowledge, this is the first method to proactively identify potentially erroneous network outputs. Our core idea leverages the difference between class-specific discriminative heatmaps and class-agnostic ones. We compute the difference in their intersection over union (IoU) as a reliability score. An adversarial enhancement method is further introduced to amplify this disparity. Evaluations on two industrial defect detection benchmarks show our method effectively identifies false negatives. With adversarial enhancement, it achieves 100\% recall, albeit with a trade-off for true negatives. Our work thus advocates for a new and trustworthy deployment paradigm: data-model-explanation-output, moving beyond conventional end-to-end systems to provide critical support for reliable AI in real-world applications.

CVJun 28, 2025
Region-Aware CAM: High-Resolution Weakly-Supervised Defect Segmentation via Salient Region Perception

Hang-Cheng Dong, Lu Zou, Bingguo Liu et al.

Surface defect detection plays a critical role in industrial quality inspection. Recent advances in artificial intelligence have significantly enhanced the automation level of detection processes. However, conventional semantic segmentation and object detection models heavily rely on large-scale annotated datasets, which conflicts with the practical requirements of defect detection tasks. This paper proposes a novel weakly supervised semantic segmentation framework comprising two key components: a region-aware class activation map (CAM) and pseudo-label training. To address the limitations of existing CAM methods, especially low-resolution thermal maps, and insufficient detail preservation, we introduce filtering-guided backpropagation (FGBP), which refines target regions by filtering gradient magnitudes to identify areas with higher relevance to defects. Building upon this, we further develop a region-aware weighted module to enhance spatial precision. Finally, pseudo-label segmentation is implemented to refine the model's performance iteratively. Comprehensive experiments on industrial defect datasets demonstrate the superiority of our method. The proposed framework effectively bridges the gap between weakly supervised learning and high-precision defect segmentation, offering a practical solution for resource-constrained industrial scenarios.

CVOct 15, 2025
Sample-Centric Multi-Task Learning for Detection and Segmentation of Industrial Surface Defects

Hang-Cheng Dong, Yibo Jiao, Fupeng Wei et al.

Industrial surface defect inspection for sample-wise quality control (QC) must simultaneously decide whether a given sample contains defects and localize those defects spatially. In real production lines, extreme foreground-background imbalance, defect sparsity with a long-tailed scale distribution, and low contrast are common. As a result, pixel-centric training and evaluation are easily dominated by large homogeneous regions, making it difficult to drive models to attend to small or low-contrast defects-one of the main bottlenecks for deployment. Empirically, existing models achieve strong pixel-overlap metrics (e.g., mIoU) but exhibit insufficient stability at the sample level, especially for sparse or slender defects. The root cause is a mismatch between the optimization objective and the granularity of QC decisions. To address this, we propose a sample-centric multi-task learning framework and evaluation suite. Built on a shared-encoder architecture, the method jointly learns sample-level defect classification and pixel-level mask localization. Sample-level supervision modulates the feature distribution and, at the gradient level, continually boosts recall for small and low-contrast defects, while the segmentation branch preserves boundary and shape details to enhance per-sample decision stability and reduce misses. For evaluation, we propose decision-linked metrics, Seg_mIoU and Seg_Recall, which remove the bias of classical mIoU caused by empty or true-negative samples and tightly couple localization quality with sample-level decisions. Experiments on two benchmark datasets demonstrate that our approach substantially improves the reliability of sample-level decisions and the completeness of defect localization.

LGOct 14, 2021
Training Neural Networks for Solving 1-D Optimal Piecewise Linear Approximation

Hangcheng Dong, Jingxiao Liao, Yan Wang et al.

Recently, the interpretability of deep learning has attracted a lot of attention. A plethora of methods have attempted to explain neural networks by feature visualization, saliency maps, model distillation, and so on. However, it is hard for these methods to reveal the intrinsic properties of neural networks. In this work, we studied the 1-D optimal piecewise linear approximation (PWLA) problem, and associated it with a designed neural network, named lattice neural network (LNN). We asked four essential questions as following: (1) What are the characters of the optimal solution of the PWLA problem? (2) Can an LNN converge to the global optimum? (3) Can an LNN converge to the local optimum? (4) Can an LNN solve the PWLA problem? Our main contributions are that we propose the theorems to characterize the optimal solution of the PWLA problem and present the LNN method for solving it. We evaluated the proposed LNNs on approximation tasks, forged an empirical method to improve the performance of LNNs. The experiments verified that our LNN method is competitive with the start-of-the-art method.

LGMay 17, 2021
How to Explain Neural Networks: an Approximation Perspective

Hangcheng Dong, Bingguo Liu, Fengdong Chen et al.

The lack of interpretability has hindered the large-scale adoption of AI technologies. However, the fundamental idea of interpretability, as well as how to put it into practice, remains unclear. We provide notions of interpretability based on approximation theory in this study. We first implement this approximation interpretation on a specific model (fully connected neural network) and then propose to use MLP as a universal interpreter to explain arbitrary black-box models. Extensive experiments demonstrate the effectiveness of our approach.