Ken Li

LG
h-index7
3papers
13citations
Novelty60%
AI Score43

3 Papers

CVDec 3, 2025
PosterCopilot: Toward Layout Reasoning and Controllable Editing for Professional Graphic Design

Jiazhe Wei, Ken Li, Tianyu Lao et al.

Graphic design forms the cornerstone of modern visual communication, serving as a vital medium for promoting cultural and commercial events. Recent advances have explored automating this process using Large Multimodal Models (LMMs), yet existing methods often produce geometrically inaccurate layouts and lack the iterative, layer-specific editing required in professional workflows. To address these limitations, we present PosterCopilot, a framework that advances layout reasoning and controllable editing for professional graphic design. Specifically, we introduce a progressive three-stage training strategy that equips LMMs with geometric understanding and aesthetic reasoning for layout design, consisting of Perturbed Supervised Fine-Tuning, Reinforcement Learning for Visual-Reality Alignment, and Reinforcement Learning from Aesthetic Feedback. Furthermore, we develop a complete workflow that couples the trained LMM-based design model with generative models, enabling layer-controllable, iterative editing for precise element refinement while maintaining global visual consistency. Extensive experiments demonstrate that PosterCopilot achieves geometrically accurate and aesthetically superior layouts, offering unprecedented controllability for professional iterative design.

LGDec 19, 2023
Blood Glucose Level Prediction: A Graph-based Explainable Method with Federated Learning

Chengzhe Piao, Ken Li

In the UK, approximately 400,000 people with type 1 diabetes (T1D) rely on insulin delivery due to insufficient pancreatic insulin production. Managing blood glucose (BG) levels is crucial, with continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) playing a key role. CGM, tracking BG every 5 minutes, enables effective blood glucose level prediction (BGLP) by considering factors like carbohydrate intake and insulin delivery. Recent research has focused on developing sequential models for BGLP using historical BG data, incorporating additional attributes such as carbohydrate intake, insulin delivery, and time. These methods have shown notable success in BGLP, with some providing temporal explanations. However, they often lack clear correlations between attributes and their impact on BGLP. Additionally, some methods raise privacy concerns by aggregating participant data to learn population patterns. Addressing these limitations, we introduced a graph attentive memory (GAM) model, combining a graph attention network (GAT) with a gated recurrent unit (GRU). GAT applies graph attention to model attribute correlations, offering transparent, dynamic attribute relationships. Attention weights dynamically gauge attribute significance over time. To ensure privacy, we employed federated learning (FL), facilitating secure population pattern analysis. Our method was validated using the OhioT1DM'18 and OhioT1DM'20 datasets from 12 participants, focusing on 6 key attributes. We demonstrated our model's stability and effectiveness through hyperparameter impact analysis.

LGMar 8
Hide and Find: A Distributed Adversarial Attack on Federated Graph Learning

Jinshan Liu, Ken Li, Jiazhe Wei et al.

Federated Graph Learning (FedGL) is vulnerable to malicious attacks, yet developing a truly effective and stealthy attack method remains a significant challenge. Existing attack methods suffer from low attack success rates, high computational costs, and are easily identified and smoothed by defense algorithms. To address these challenges, we propose \textbf{FedShift}, a novel two-stage "Hide and Find" distributed adversarial attack. In the first stage, before FedGL begins, we inject a learnable and hidden "shifter" into part of the training data, which subtly pushes poisoned graph representations toward a target class's decision boundary without crossing it, ensuring attack stealthiness during training. In the second stage, after FedGL is complete, we leverage the global model information and use the hidden shifter as an optimization starting point to efficiently find the adversarial perturbations. During the final attack, we aggregate these perturbations from multiple malicious clients to form the final effective adversarial sample and trigger the attack. Extensive experiments on six large-scale datasets demonstrate that our method achieves the highest attack effectiveness compared to existing advanced attack methods. In particular, our attack can effectively evade 3 mainstream robust federated learning defense algorithms and converges with a time cost reduction of over 90\%, highlighting its exceptional stealthiness, robustness, and efficiency.