Mingzhe Tao

h-index39
2papers

2 Papers

24.4CVMar 11
DriveXQA: Cross-modal Visual Question Answering for Adverse Driving Scene Understanding

Mingzhe Tao, Ruiping Liu, Junwei Zheng et al.

Fusing sensors with complementary modalities is crucial for maintaining a stable and comprehensive understanding of abnormal driving scenes. However, Multimodal Large Language Models (MLLMs) are underexplored for leveraging multi-sensor information to understand adverse driving scenarios in autonomous vehicles. To address this gap, we propose the DriveXQA, a multimodal dataset for autonomous driving VQA. In addition to four visual modalities, five sensor failure cases, and five weather conditions, it includes $102,505$ QA pairs categorized into three types: global scene level, allocentric level, and ego-vehicle centric level. Since no existing MLLM framework adopts multiple complementary visual modalities as input, we design MVX-LLM, a token-efficient architecture with a Dual Cross-Attention (DCA) projector that fuses the modalities to alleviate information redundancy. Experiments demonstrate that our DCA achieves improved performance under challenging conditions such as foggy (GPTScore: $53.5$ vs. $25.1$ for the baseline). The established dataset and source code will be made publicly available.

CVOct 13, 2025
mmWalk: Towards Multi-modal Multi-view Walking Assistance

Kedi Ying, Ruiping Liu, Chongyan Chen et al.

Walking assistance in extreme or complex environments remains a significant challenge for people with blindness or low vision (BLV), largely due to the lack of a holistic scene understanding. Motivated by the real-world needs of the BLV community, we build mmWalk, a simulated multi-modal dataset that integrates multi-view sensor and accessibility-oriented features for outdoor safe navigation. Our dataset comprises 120 manually controlled, scenario-categorized walking trajectories with 62k synchronized frames. It contains over 559k panoramic images across RGB, depth, and semantic modalities. Furthermore, to emphasize real-world relevance, each trajectory involves outdoor corner cases and accessibility-specific landmarks for BLV users. Additionally, we generate mmWalkVQA, a VQA benchmark with over 69k visual question-answer triplets across 9 categories tailored for safe and informed walking assistance. We evaluate state-of-the-art Vision-Language Models (VLMs) using zero- and few-shot settings and found they struggle with our risk assessment and navigational tasks. We validate our mmWalk-finetuned model on real-world datasets and show the effectiveness of our dataset for advancing multi-modal walking assistance.