76.5CVMay 20Code
ArchSIBench: Benchmarking the Architectural Spatial Intelligence of Vision-Language ModelsQirui Shen, Wenda Wang, Jiachen Lu et al.
Architectural spatial intelligence, the ability to recognize and infer architectural space, is fundamental to tasks such as robot navigation, embodied interaction, and 3D scene understanding and generation. Although extensive research has evaluated the basic spatial skills of Vision-Language Models (VLMs) such as relative orientation, distance comparison, and object counting, these tasks cover only the most elementary levels of spatial cognition and largely overlook higher-level cognition of architectural space, including layout understanding, circulation patterns, and functional zoning. In this work, we present ArchSIBench, a Benchmark for Architectural Spatial Intelligence based on the perspectives from architecture, cognitive science, and psychology. ArchSIBench covers five core dimensions: perception, reasoning, navigation, transformation, and configuration, comprising 17 fine-grained subtasks. Through careful manual annotation by experts with architectural backgrounds, we construct 3,000 question-answer pairs to enable comprehensive evaluation of architectural spatial intelligence. Based on ArchSIBench, we evaluate various VLMs and find that the architectural spatial intelligence of most models shows significant differences from human baselines; additionally, models exhibit substantial variability across capability dimensions. Some state-of-the-art models can approach the level of human evaluators without architectural training. However, a clear gap remains compared to human evaluators with architectural training, particularly in spatial transformation and configuration reasoning. We believe that ArchSIBench will provide important insights and systematic resources for measuring and advancing the architectural spatial intelligence of VLMs. The dataset and code are available at https://huggingface.co/datasets/ArchSIBench/ArchSIBench.
33.9CVMar 30
Bridging the Geometry Mismatch: Frequency-Aware Anisotropic Serialization for Thin-Structure SSMsJin Bai, Huiyao Zhang, Qi Wen et al.
The segmentation of thin linear structures is inherently topology allowbreak-critical, where minor local errors can sever long-range connectivity. While recent State-Space Models (SSMs) offer efficient long-range modeling, their isotropic serialization (e.g., raster scanning) creates a geometry mismatch for anisotropic targets, causing state propagation across rather than along the structure trajectories. To address this, we propose FGOS-Net, a framework based on frequency allowbreak-geometric disentanglement. We first decompose features into a stable topology carrier and directional high-frequency bands, leveraging the latter to explicitly correct spatial misalignments induced by downsampling. Building on this calibrated topology, we introduce frequency-aligned scanning that elevates serialization to a geometry-conditioned decision, preserving direction-consistent traces. Coupled with an active probing strategy to selectively inject high-frequency details and suppress texture ambiguity, FGOS-Net consistently outperforms strong baselines across four challenging benchmarks. Notably, it achieves 91.3% mIoU and 97.1% clDice on DeepCrack while running at 80 FPS with only 7.87 GFLOPs.
MTRL-SCINov 13, 2023
Novel models for fatigue life prediction under wideband random loads based on machine learningHong Sun, Yuanying Qiu, Jing Li et al.
Machine learning as a data-driven solution has been widely applied in the field of fatigue lifetime prediction. In this paper, three models for wideband fatigue life prediction are built based on three machine learning models, i.e. support vector machine (SVM), Gaussian process regression (GPR) and artificial neural network (ANN). The generalization ability of the models is enhanced by employing numerous power spectra samples with different bandwidth parameters and a variety of material properties related to fatigue life. Sufficient Monte Carlo numerical simulations demonstrate that the newly developed machine learning models are superior to the traditional frequency-domain models in terms of life prediction accuracy and the ANN model has the best overall performance among the three developed machine learning models.
LGApr 20, 2023
Automatic Procurement Fraud Detection with Machine LearningJin Bai, Tong Qiu
Although procurement fraud is always a critical problem in almost every free market, audit departments still have a strong reliance on reporting from informed sources when detecting them. With our generous cooperator, SF Express, sharing the access to the database related with procurements took place from 2015 to 2017 in their company, our team studies how machine learning techniques could help with the audition of one of the most profound crime among current chinese market, namely procurement frauds. By representing each procurement event as 9 specific features, we construct neural network models to identify suspicious procurements and classify their fraud types. Through testing our models over 50000 samples collected from the procurement database, we have proven that such models -- despite having space for improvements -- are useful in detecting procurement frauds.
26.8CVMar 28
IP-SAM: Prompt-Space Conditioning for Prompt-Absent Camouflaged Object DetectionHuiyao Zhang, Jin Bai, Rui Guo et al.
Prompt-conditioned foundation segmenters have emerged as a dominant paradigm for image segmentation, where explicit spatial prompts (e.g., points, boxes, masks) guide mask decoding. However, many real-world deployments require fully automatic segmentation, creating a structural mismatch: the decoder expects prompts that are unavailable at inference. Existing adaptations typically modify intermediate features, inadvertently bypassing the model's native prompt interface and weakening prompt-conditioned decoding. We propose IP-SAM, which revisits adaptation from a prompt-space perspective through prompt-space conditioning. Specifically, a Self-Prompt Generator (SPG) distills image context into complementary intrinsic prompts that serve as coarse regional anchors. These cues are projected through SAM2's frozen prompt encoder, restoring prompt-guided decoding without external intervention. To suppress background-induced false positives, Prompt-Space Gating (PSG) leverages the intrinsic background prompt as an asymmetric suppressive constraint prior to decoding. Under a deterministic no-external-prompt protocol, IP-SAM achieves state-of-the-art performance across four camouflaged object detection benchmarks (e.g., MAE 0.017 on COD10K) with only 21.26M trainable parameters (optimizing SPG, PSG, and a task-specific mask decoder trained from scratch, alongside image-encoder LoRA while keeping the prompt encoder frozen). Furthermore, the proposed conditioning strategy generalizes beyond COD to medical polyp segmentation, where a model trained solely on Kvasir-SEG exhibits strong zero-shot transfer to both CVC-ClinicDB and ETIS.
CLMar 14, 2024
MCFEND: A Multi-source Benchmark Dataset for Chinese Fake News DetectionYupeng Li, Haorui He, Jin Bai et al.
The prevalence of fake news across various online sources has had a significant influence on the public. Existing Chinese fake news detection datasets are limited to news sourced solely from Weibo. However, fake news originating from multiple sources exhibits diversity in various aspects, including its content and social context. Methods trained on purely one single news source can hardly be applicable to real-world scenarios. Our pilot experiment demonstrates that the F1 score of the state-of-the-art method that learns from a large Chinese fake news detection dataset, Weibo-21, drops significantly from 0.943 to 0.470 when the test data is changed to multi-source news data, failing to identify more than one-third of the multi-source fake news. To address this limitation, we constructed the first multi-source benchmark dataset for Chinese fake news detection, termed MCFEND, which is composed of news we collected from diverse sources such as social platforms, messaging apps, and traditional online news outlets. Notably, such news has been fact-checked by 14 authoritative fact-checking agencies worldwide. In addition, various existing Chinese fake news detection methods are thoroughly evaluated on our proposed dataset in cross-source, multi-source, and unseen source ways. MCFEND, as a benchmark dataset, aims to advance Chinese fake news detection approaches in real-world scenarios.
CVDec 8, 2019
DASZL: Dynamic Action Signatures for Zero-shot LearningTae Soo Kim, Jonathan D. Jones, Michael Peven et al.
There are many realistic applications of activity recognition where the set of potential activity descriptions is combinatorially large. This makes end-to-end supervised training of a recognition system impractical as no training set is practically able to encompass the entire label set. In this paper, we present an approach to fine-grained recognition that models activities as compositions of dynamic action signatures. This compositional approach allows us to reframe fine-grained recognition as zero-shot activity recognition, where a detector is composed "on the fly" from simple first-principles state machines supported by deep-learned components. We evaluate our method on the Olympic Sports and UCF101 datasets, where our model establishes a new state of the art under multiple experimental paradigms. We also extend this method to form a unique framework for zero-shot joint segmentation and classification of activities in video and demonstrate the first results in zero-shot decoding of complex action sequences on a widely-used surgical dataset. Lastly, we show that we can use off-the-shelf object detectors to recognize activities in completely de-novo settings with no additional training.
CVMar 21, 2018
A Unified Framework for Multi-View Multi-Class Object Pose EstimationChi Li, Jin Bai, Gregory D. Hager
One core challenge in object pose estimation is to ensure accurate and robust performance for large numbers of diverse foreground objects amidst complex background clutter. In this work, we present a scalable framework for accurately inferring six Degree-of-Freedom (6-DoF) pose for a large number of object classes from single or multiple views. To learn discriminative pose features, we integrate three new capabilities into a deep Convolutional Neural Network (CNN): an inference scheme that combines both classification and pose regression based on a uniform tessellation of the Special Euclidean group in three dimensions (SE(3)), the fusion of class priors into the training process via a tiled class map, and an additional regularization using deep supervision with an object mask. Further, an efficient multi-view framework is formulated to address single-view ambiguity. We show that this framework consistently improves the performance of the single-view network. We evaluate our method on three large-scale benchmarks: YCB-Video, JHUScene-50 and ObjectNet-3D. Our approach achieves competitive or superior performance over the current state-of-the-art methods.