Junwei Hu

CV
h-index7
5papers
31citations
Novelty56%
AI Score43

5 Papers

CVSep 27, 2025Code
Desensitizing for Improving Corruption Robustness in Point Cloud Classification through Adversarial Training

Zhiqiang Tian, Weigang Li, Chunhua Deng et al.

Due to scene complexity, sensor inaccuracies, and processing imprecision, point cloud corruption is inevitable. Over-reliance on input features is the root cause of DNN vulnerabilities. It remains unclear whether this issue exists in 3D tasks involving point clouds and whether reducing dependence on these features can enhance the model's robustness to corrupted point clouds. This study attempts to answer these questions. Specifically, we quantified the sensitivity of the DNN to point cloud features using Shapley values and found that models trained using traditional methods exhibited high sensitivity values for certain features. Furthermore, under an equal pruning ratio, prioritizing the pruning of highly sensitive features causes more severe damage to model performance than random pruning. We propose `Desensitized Adversarial Training' (DesenAT), generating adversarial samples using feature desensitization and conducting training within a self-distillation framework, which aims to alleviate DNN's over-reliance on point clouds features by smoothing sensitivity. First, data points with high contribution components are eliminated, and spatial transformation is used to simulate corruption scenes, generate adversarial samples, and conduct adversarial training on the model. Next, to compensate for information loss in adversarial samples, we use the self-distillation method to transfer knowledge from clean samples to adversarial samples, and perform adversarial training in a distillation manner.Extensive experiments on ModelNet-C and PointCloud-C demonstrate show that the propose method can effectively improve the robustness of the model without reducing the performance of clean data sets. This code is publicly available at \href{https://github.com/JerkyT/DesenAT/tree/master}{https://github.com/JerkyT/DesenAT}.

BMOct 20, 2024Code
A Heterogeneous Network-based Contrastive Learning Approach for Predicting Drug-Target Interaction

Junwei Hu, Michael Bewong, Selasi Kwashie et al.

Drug-target interaction (DTI) prediction is crucial for drug development and repositioning. Methods using heterogeneous graph neural networks (HGNNs) for DTI prediction have become a promising approach, with attention-based models often achieving excellent performance. However, these methods typically overlook edge features when dealing with heterogeneous biomedical networks. We propose a heterogeneous network-based contrastive learning method called HNCL-DTI, which designs a heterogeneous graph attention network to predict potential/novel DTIs. Specifically, our HNCL-DTI utilizes contrastive learning to collaboratively learn node representations from the perspective of both node-based and edge-based attention within the heterogeneous structure of biomedical networks. Experimental results show that HNCL-DTI outperforms existing advanced baseline methods on benchmark datasets, demonstrating strong predictive ability and practical effectiveness. The data and source code are available at https://github.com/Zaiwen/HNCL-DTI.

CVSep 26, 2025
Joint graph entropy knowledge distillation for point cloud classification and robustness against corruptions

Zhiqiang Tian, Weigang Li, Junwei Hu et al.

Classification tasks in 3D point clouds often assume that class events \replaced{are }{follow }independent and identically distributed (IID), although this assumption destroys the correlation between classes. This \replaced{study }{paper }proposes a classification strategy, \textbf{J}oint \textbf{G}raph \textbf{E}ntropy \textbf{K}nowledge \textbf{D}istillation (JGEKD), suitable for non-independent and identically distributed 3D point cloud data, \replaced{which }{the strategy } achieves knowledge transfer of class correlations through knowledge distillation by constructing a loss function based on joint graph entropy. First\deleted{ly}, we employ joint graphs to capture add{the }hidden relationships between classes\replaced{ and}{,} implement knowledge distillation to train our model by calculating the entropy of add{add }graph.\replaced{ Subsequently}{ Then}, to handle 3D point clouds \deleted{that is }invariant to spatial transformations, we construct \replaced{S}{s}iamese structures and develop two frameworks, self-knowledge distillation and teacher-knowledge distillation, to facilitate information transfer between different transformation forms of the same data. \replaced{In addition}{ Additionally}, we use the above framework to achieve knowledge transfer between point clouds and their corrupted forms, and increase the robustness against corruption of model. Extensive experiments on ScanObject, ModelNet40, ScanntV2\_cls and ModelNet-C demonstrate that the proposed strategy can achieve competitive results.

IRNov 7, 2024
Best Practices for Distilling Large Language Models into BERT for Web Search Ranking

Dezhi Ye, Junwei Hu, Jiabin Fan et al.

Recent studies have highlighted the significant potential of Large Language Models (LLMs) as zero-shot relevance rankers. These methods predominantly utilize prompt learning to assess the relevance between queries and documents by generating a ranked list of potential documents. Despite their promise, the substantial costs associated with LLMs pose a significant challenge for their direct implementation in commercial search systems. To overcome this barrier and fully exploit the capabilities of LLMs for text ranking, we explore techniques to transfer the ranking expertise of LLMs to a more compact model similar to BERT, using a ranking loss to enable the deployment of less resource-intensive models. Specifically, we enhance the training of LLMs through Continued Pre-Training, taking the query as input and the clicked title and summary as output. We then proceed with supervised fine-tuning of the LLM using a rank loss, assigning the final token as a representative of the entire sentence. Given the inherent characteristics of autoregressive language models, only the final token </s> can encapsulate all preceding tokens. Additionally, we introduce a hybrid point-wise and margin MSE loss to transfer the ranking knowledge from LLMs to smaller models like BERT. This method creates a viable solution for environments with strict resource constraints. Both offline and online evaluations have confirmed the efficacy of our approach, and our model has been successfully integrated into a commercial web search engine as of February 2024.

AIOct 21, 2024
GIG: Graph Data Imputation With Graph Differential Dependencies

Jiang Hua, Michael Bewong, Selasi Kwashie et al.

Data imputation addresses the challenge of imputing missing values in database instances, ensuring consistency with the overall semantics of the dataset. Although several heuristics which rely on statistical methods, and ad-hoc rules have been proposed. These do not generalise well and often lack data context. Consequently, they also lack explainability. The existing techniques also mostly focus on the relational data context making them unsuitable for wider application contexts such as in graph data. In this paper, we propose a graph data imputation approach called GIG which relies on graph differential dependencies (GDDs). GIG, learns the GDDs from a given knowledge graph, and uses these rules to train a transformer model which then predicts the value of missing data within the graph. By leveraging GDDs, GIG incoporates semantic knowledge into the data imputation process making it more reliable and explainable. Experimental results on seven real-world datasets highlight GIG's effectiveness compared to existing state-of-the-art approaches.