CVMar 1Code
Vision-Language Feature Alignment for Road Anomaly SegmentationZhuolin He, Jiacheng Tang, Jian Pu et al.
Safe autonomous systems in complex environments require robust road anomaly segmentation to identify unknown obstacles. However, existing approaches often rely on pixel-level statistics to determine whether a region appears anomalous. This reliance leads to high false-positive rates on semantically normal background regions such as sky or vegetation, and poor recall of true Out-of-distribution (OOD) instances, thereby posing safety risks for robotic perception and decision-making. To address these challenges, we propose VL-Anomaly, a vision-language anomaly segmentation framework that incorporates semantic priors from pre-trained Vision-Language Models (VLMs). Specifically, we design a prompt learning-driven alignment module that adapts Mask2Forme's visual features to CLIP text embeddings of known categories, effectively suppressing spurious anomaly responses in background regions. At inference time, we further introduce a multi-source inference strategy that integrates text-guided similarity, CLIP-based image-text similarity and detector confidence, enabling more reliable anomaly prediction by leveraging complementary information sources. Extensive experiments demonstrate that VL-Anomaly achieves state-of-the-art performance on benchmark datasets including RoadAnomaly, SMIYC and Fishyscapes.Code is released on https://github.com/NickHezhuolin/VL-aligner-Road-anomaly-segment.
49.8CVMar 19
CausalVAD: De-confounding End-to-End Autonomous Driving via Causal InterventionJiacheng Tang, Zhiyuan Zhou, Zhuolin He et al.
Planning-oriented end-to-end driving models show great promise, yet they fundamentally learn statistical correlations instead of true causal relationships. This vulnerability leads to causal confusion, where models exploit dataset biases as shortcuts, critically harming their reliability and safety in complex scenarios. To address this, we introduce CausalVAD, a de-confounding training framework that leverages causal intervention. At its core, we design the sparse causal intervention scheme (SCIS), a lightweight, plug-and-play module to instantiate the backdoor adjustment theory in neural networks. SCIS constructs a dictionary of prototypes representing latent driving contexts. It then uses this dictionary to intervene on the model's sparse vectorized queries. This step actively eliminates spurious associations induced by confounders, thereby eliminating spurious factors from the representations for downstream tasks. Extensive experiments on benchmarks like nuScenes show CausalVAD achieves state-of-the-art planning accuracy and safety. Furthermore, our method demonstrates superior robustness against both data bias and noisy scenarios configured to induce causal confusion.
CLMar 4, 2025
From Metaphor to Mechanism: How LLMs Decode Traditional Chinese Medicine Symbolic Language for Modern Clinical RelevanceJiacheng Tang, Nankai Wu, Fan Gao et al.
Metaphorical expressions are abundant in Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM), conveying complex disease mechanisms and holistic health concepts through culturally rich and often abstract terminology. Bridging these metaphors to anatomically driven Western medical (WM) concepts poses significant challenges for both automated language processing and real-world clinical practice. To address this gap, we propose a novel multi-agent and chain-of-thought (CoT) framework designed to interpret TCM metaphors accurately and map them to WM pathophysiology. Specifically, our approach combines domain-specialized agents (TCM Expert, WM Expert) with a Coordinator Agent, leveraging stepwise chain-of-thought prompts to ensure transparent reasoning and conflict resolution. We detail a methodology for building a metaphor-rich TCM dataset, discuss strategies for effectively integrating multi-agent collaboration and CoT reasoning, and articulate the theoretical underpinnings that guide metaphor interpretation across distinct medical paradigms. We present a comprehensive system design and highlight both the potential benefits and limitations of our approach, while leaving placeholders for future experimental validation. Our work aims to support clinical decision-making, cross-system educational initiatives, and integrated healthcare research, ultimately offering a robust scaffold for reconciling TCM's symbolic language with the mechanistic focus of Western medicine.
CVNov 17, 2025
Decoupling Scene Perception and Ego Status: A Multi-Context Fusion Approach for Enhanced Generalization in End-to-End Autonomous DrivingJiacheng Tang, Mingyue Feng, Jiachao Liu et al.
Modular design of planning-oriented autonomous driving has markedly advanced end-to-end systems. However, existing architectures remain constrained by an over-reliance on ego status, hindering generalization and robust scene understanding. We identify the root cause as an inherent design within these architectures that allows ego status to be easily leveraged as a shortcut. Specifically, the premature fusion of ego status in the upstream BEV encoder allows an information flow from this strong prior to dominate the downstream planning module. To address this challenge, we propose AdaptiveAD, an architectural-level solution based on a multi-context fusion strategy. Its core is a dual-branch structure that explicitly decouples scene perception and ego status. One branch performs scene-driven reasoning based on multi-task learning, but with ego status deliberately omitted from the BEV encoder, while the other conducts ego-driven reasoning based solely on the planning task. A scene-aware fusion module then adaptively integrates the complementary decisions from the two branches to form the final planning trajectory. To ensure this decoupling does not compromise multi-task learning, we introduce a path attention mechanism for ego-BEV interaction and add two targeted auxiliary tasks: BEV unidirectional distillation and autoregressive online mapping. Extensive evaluations on the nuScenes dataset demonstrate that AdaptiveAD achieves state-of-the-art open-loop planning performance. Crucially, it significantly mitigates the over-reliance on ego status and exhibits impressive generalization capabilities across diverse scenarios.
CVJun 25, 2024
Towards Camera Open-set 3D Object Detection for Autonomous Driving ScenariosZhuolin He, Xinrun Li, Jiacheng Tang et al.
Conventional camera-based 3D object detectors in autonomous driving are limited to recognizing a predefined set of objects, which poses a safety risk when encountering novel or unseen objects in real-world scenarios. To address this limitation, we present OS-Det3D, a two-stage training framework designed for camera-based open-set 3D object detection. In the first stage, our proposed 3D object discovery network (ODN3D) uses geometric cues from LiDAR point clouds to generate class-agnostic 3D object proposals, each of which are assigned a 3D objectness score. This approach allows the network to discover objects beyond known categories, allowing for the detection of unfamiliar objects. However, due to the absence of class constraints, ODN3D-generated proposals may include noisy data, particularly in cluttered or dynamic scenes. To mitigate this issue, we introduce a joint selection (JS) module in the second stage. The JS module uses both camera bird's eye view (BEV) feature responses and 3D objectness scores to filter out low-quality proposals, yielding high-quality pseudo ground truth for unknown objects. OS-Det3D significantly enhances the ability of camera 3D detectors to discover and identify unknown objects while also improving the performance on known objects, as demonstrated through extensive experiments on the nuScenes and KITTI datasets.
SYJan 27, 2022
Change Detection of Markov Kernels with Unknown Pre and Post Change KernelHao Chen, Jiacheng Tang, Abhishek Gupta
In this paper, we develop a new change detection algorithm for detecting a change in the Markov kernel over a metric space in which the post-change kernel is unknown. Under the assumption that the pre- and post-change Markov kernel is uniformly ergodic, we derive an upper bound on the mean delay and a lower bound on the mean time between false alarms. A numerical simulation is provided to demonstrate the effectiveness of our method.
CRNov 9, 2021
Nash Equilibrium Control Policy against Bus-off Attacks in CAN NetworksJiacheng Tang, Shiping Shao, Jiguo Song et al.
A bus-off attack is a denial-of-service (DoS) attack which exploits error handling in the controller area network (CAN) to induce an honest node to disconnect itself from the CAN bus. This paper develops a stochastic transmission policy as a countermeasure for the controller-transmitter pair against the bus-off attack. We model this as a non-zero-sum linear-quadratic-Gaussian game between the controller-transmitter pair and the attacker. We derive Nash equilibria of the game for two different information structures of the attacker. We show that the attacker has a dominant attack strategy under both information structures. Under the dominant attack strategy, we show that the optimal control policy is linear in the system state. We further identify a necessary and a sufficient conditions on the transmission policy to have bounded average cost. The theoretical results are complemented by a detailed case study of a bus-off attack on a vehicular adaptive cruise control model.