Yanyong Huang

LG
h-index32
18papers
140citations
Novelty50%
AI Score54

18 Papers

AISep 26, 2022
Automated Urban Planning aware Spatial Hierarchies and Human Instructions

Dongjie Wang, Kunpeng Liu, Yanyong Huang et al.

Traditional urban planning demands urban experts to spend considerable time and effort producing an optimal urban plan under many architectural constraints. The remarkable imaginative ability of deep generative learning provides hope for renovating urban planning. While automated urban planners have been examined, they are constrained because of the following: 1) neglecting human requirements in urban planning; 2) omitting spatial hierarchies in urban planning, and 3) lacking numerous urban plan data samples. To overcome these limitations, we propose a novel, deep, human-instructed urban planner. In the preliminary work, we formulate it into an encoder-decoder paradigm. The encoder is to learn the information distribution of surrounding contexts, human instructions, and land-use configuration. The decoder is to reconstruct the land-use configuration and the associated urban functional zones. The reconstruction procedure will capture the spatial hierarchies between functional zones and spatial grids. Meanwhile, we introduce a variational Gaussian mechanism to mitigate the data sparsity issue. Even though early work has led to good results, the performance of generation is still unstable because the way spatial hierarchies are captured may lead to unclear optimization directions. In this journal version, we propose a cascading deep generative framework based on generative adversarial networks (GANs) to solve this problem, inspired by the workflow of urban experts. In particular, the purpose of the first GAN is to build urban functional zones based on information from human instructions and surrounding contexts. The second GAN will produce the land-use configuration based on the functional zones that have been constructed. Additionally, we provide a conditioning augmentation module to augment data samples. Finally, we conduct extensive experiments to validate the efficacy of our work.

LGAug 20, 2022
C$^{2}$IMUFS: Complementary and Consensus Learning-based Incomplete Multi-view Unsupervised Feature Selection

Yanyong Huang, Zongxin Shen, Yuxin Cai et al.

Multi-view unsupervised feature selection (MUFS) has been demonstrated as an effective technique to reduce the dimensionality of multi-view unlabeled data. The existing methods assume that all of views are complete. However, multi-view data are usually incomplete, i.e., a part of instances are presented on some views but not all views. Besides, learning the complete similarity graph, as an important promising technology in existing MUFS methods, cannot achieve due to the missing views. In this paper, we propose a complementary and consensus learning-based incomplete multi-view unsupervised feature selection method (C$^{2}$IMUFS) to address the aforementioned issues. Concretely, C$^{2}$IMUFS integrates feature selection into an extended weighted non-negative matrix factorization model equipped with adaptive learning of view-weights and a sparse $\ell_{2,p}$-norm, which can offer better adaptability and flexibility. By the sparse linear combinations of multiple similarity matrices derived from different views, a complementary learning-guided similarity matrix reconstruction model is presented to obtain the complete similarity graph in each view. Furthermore, C$^{2}$IMUFS learns a consensus clustering indicator matrix across different views and embeds it into a spectral graph term to preserve the local geometric structure. Comprehensive experimental results on real-world datasets demonstrate the effectiveness of C$^{2}$IMUFS compared with state-of-the-art methods.

LGApr 5, 2022
Incremental Unsupervised Feature Selection for Dynamic Incomplete Multi-view Data

Yanyong Huang, Kejun Guo, Xiuwen Yi et al.

Multi-view unsupervised feature selection has been proven to be efficient in reducing the dimensionality of multi-view unlabeled data with high dimensions. The previous methods assume all of the views are complete. However, in real applications, the multi-view data are often incomplete, i.e., some views of instances are missing, which will result in the failure of these methods. Besides, while the data arrive in form of streams, these existing methods will suffer the issues of high storage cost and expensive computation time. To address these issues, we propose an Incremental Incomplete Multi-view Unsupervised Feature Selection method (I$^2$MUFS) on incomplete multi-view streaming data. By jointly considering the consistent and complementary information across different views, I$^2$MUFS embeds the unsupervised feature selection into an extended weighted non-negative matrix factorization model, which can learn a consensus clustering indicator matrix and fuse different latent feature matrices with adaptive view weights. Furthermore, we introduce the incremental leaning mechanisms to develop an alternative iterative algorithm, where the feature selection matrix is incrementally updated, rather than recomputing on the entire updated data from scratch. A series of experiments are conducted to verify the effectiveness of the proposed method by comparing with several state-of-the-art methods. The experimental results demonstrate the effectiveness and efficiency of the proposed method in terms of the clustering metrics and the computational cost.

LGJan 24, 2025Code
Iterative Feature Space Optimization through Incremental Adaptive Evaluation

Yanping Wu, Yanyong Huang, Zhengzhang Chen et al.

Iterative feature space optimization involves systematically evaluating and adjusting the feature space to improve downstream task performance. However, existing works suffer from three key limitations:1) overlooking differences among data samples leads to evaluation bias; 2) tailoring feature spaces to specific machine learning models results in overfitting and poor generalization; 3) requiring the evaluator to be retrained from scratch during each optimization iteration significantly reduces the overall efficiency of the optimization process. To bridge these gaps, we propose a gEneralized Adaptive feature Space Evaluator (EASE) to efficiently produce optimal and generalized feature spaces. This framework consists of two key components: Feature-Sample Subspace Generator and Contextual Attention Evaluator. The first component aims to decouple the information distribution within the feature space to mitigate evaluation bias. To achieve this, we first identify features most relevant to prediction tasks and samples most challenging for evaluation based on feedback from the subsequent evaluator. This decoupling strategy makes the evaluator consistently target the most challenging aspects of the feature space. The second component intends to incrementally capture evolving patterns of the feature space for efficient evaluation. We propose a weighted-sharing multi-head attention mechanism to encode key characteristics of the feature space into an embedding vector for evaluation. Moreover, the evaluator is updated incrementally, retaining prior evaluation knowledge while incorporating new insights, as consecutive feature spaces during the optimization process share partial information. Extensive experiments on fourteen real-world datasets demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed framework. Our code and data are publicly available.

3.9LGMay 11
Unlocking air traffic flow prediction through microscopic aircraft-state modeling

Bin Wang, Anqi Liu, Jiangtao Zhao et al.

Short-term air traffic flow prediction in terminal airspace is essential for proactive air traffic management. Existing approaches predominantly model traffic flow as aggregated time series, despite traffic dynamics being governed by aircraft states and interactions in continuous airspace. Such aggregation obscures fine-grained information including aircraft kinematics, boundary interactions, and control intent. Here we present AeroSense, a state-to-flow modeling framework that predicts future traffic flow directly from instantaneous airspace situations represented as dynamic sets of aircraft states derived from ADS-B trajectories. By establishing an end-to-end mapping from microscopic aircraft states to future regional traffic flow, AeroSense preserves aircraft-level dynamics while naturally accommodating varying traffic density without relying on historical look-back windows. Experiments on a large-scale real-world dataset show that AeroSense consistently improves predictive accuracy over aggregation-based forecasting approaches, particularly during high-density traffic periods. These findings suggest that instantaneous airspace situations provide an effective alternative to conventional time-series-based traffic forecasting paradigms.

LGJan 12
Kernel Alignment-based Multi-view Unsupervised Feature Selection with Sample-level Adaptive Graph Learning

Yalan Tan, Yanyong Huang, Zongxin Shen et al.

Although multi-view unsupervised feature selection (MUFS) has demonstrated success in dimensionality reduction for unlabeled multi-view data, most existing methods reduce feature redundancy by focusing on linear correlations among features but often overlook complex nonlinear dependencies. This limits the effectiveness of feature selection. In addition, existing methods fuse similarity graphs from multiple views by employing sample-invariant weights to preserve local structure. However, this process fails to account for differences in local neighborhood clarity among samples within each view, thereby hindering accurate characterization of the intrinsic local structure of the data. In this paper, we propose a Kernel Alignment-based multi-view unsupervised FeatUre selection with Sample-level adaptive graph lEarning method (KAFUSE) to address these issues. Specifically, we first employ kernel alignment with an orthogonal constraint to reduce feature redundancy in both linear and nonlinear relationships. Then, a cross-view consistent similarity graph is learned by applying sample-level fusion to each slice of a tensor formed by stacking similarity graphs from different views, which automatically adjusts the view weights for each sample during fusion. These two steps are integrated into a unified model for feature selection, enabling mutual enhancement between them. Extensive experiments on real multi-view datasets demonstrate the superiority of KAFUSE over state-of-the-art methods.

LGNov 15, 2025
Cross-view Joint Learning for Mixed-Missing Multi-view Unsupervised Feature Selection

Zongxin Shen, Yanyong Huang, Dongjie Wang et al.

Incomplete multi-view unsupervised feature selection (IMUFS), which aims to identify representative features from unlabeled multi-view data containing missing values, has received growing attention in recent years. Despite their promising performance, existing methods face three key challenges: 1) by focusing solely on the view-missing problem, they are not well-suited to the more prevalent mixed-missing scenario in practice, where some samples lack entire views or only partial features within views; 2) insufficient utilization of consistency and diversity across views limits the effectiveness of feature selection; and 3) the lack of theoretical analysis makes it unclear how feature selection and data imputation interact during the joint learning process. Being aware of these, we propose CLIM-FS, a novel IMUFS method designed to address the mixed-missing problem. Specifically, we integrate the imputation of both missing views and variables into a feature selection model based on nonnegative orthogonal matrix factorization, enabling the joint learning of feature selection and adaptive data imputation. Furthermore, we fully leverage consensus cluster structure and cross-view local geometrical structure to enhance the synergistic learning process. We also provide a theoretical analysis to clarify the underlying collaborative mechanism of CLIM-FS. Experimental results on eight real-world multi-view datasets demonstrate that CLIM-FS outperforms state-of-the-art methods.

LGDec 17, 2025
Joint Learning of Unsupervised Multi-view Feature and Instance Co-selection with Cross-view Imputation

Yuxin Cai, Yanyong Huang, Jinyuan Chang et al.

Feature and instance co-selection, which aims to reduce both feature dimensionality and sample size by identifying the most informative features and instances, has attracted considerable attention in recent years. However, when dealing with unlabeled incomplete multi-view data, where some samples are missing in certain views, existing methods typically first impute the missing data and then concatenate all views into a single dataset for subsequent co-selection. Such a strategy treats co-selection and missing data imputation as two independent processes, overlooking potential interactions between them. The inter-sample relationships gleaned from co-selection can aid imputation, which in turn enhances co-selection performance. Additionally, simply merging multi-view data fails to capture the complementary information among views, ultimately limiting co-selection effectiveness. To address these issues, we propose a novel co-selection method, termed Joint learning of Unsupervised multI-view feature and instance Co-selection with cross-viEw imputation (JUICE). JUICE first reconstructs incomplete multi-view data using available observations, bringing missing data recovery and feature and instance co-selection together in a unified framework. Then, JUICE leverages cross-view neighborhood information to learn inter-sample relationships and further refine the imputation of missing values during reconstruction. This enables the selection of more representative features and instances. Extensive experiments demonstrate that JUICE outperforms state-of-the-art methods.

LGJan 17, 2025
Towards Data-Centric AI: A Comprehensive Survey of Traditional, Reinforcement, and Generative Approaches for Tabular Data Transformation

Dongjie Wang, Yanyong Huang, Wangyang Ying et al.

Tabular data is one of the most widely used formats across industries, driving critical applications in areas such as finance, healthcare, and marketing. In the era of data-centric AI, improving data quality and representation has become essential for enhancing model performance, particularly in applications centered around tabular data. This survey examines the key aspects of tabular data-centric AI, emphasizing feature selection and feature generation as essential techniques for data space refinement. We provide a systematic review of feature selection methods, which identify and retain the most relevant data attributes, and feature generation approaches, which create new features to simplify the capture of complex data patterns. This survey offers a comprehensive overview of current methodologies through an analysis of recent advancements, practical applications, and the strengths and limitations of these techniques. Finally, we outline open challenges and suggest future perspectives to inspire continued innovation in this field.

LGNov 27, 2025
Structure-aware Hybrid-order Similarity Learning for Multi-view Unsupervised Feature Selection

Lin Xu, Ke Li, Dongjie Wang et al.

Multi-view unsupervised feature selection (MUFS) has recently emerged as an effective dimensionality reduction method for unlabeled multi-view data. However, most existing methods mainly use first-order similarity graphs to preserve local structure, often overlooking the global structure that can be captured by second-order similarity. In addition, a few MUFS methods leverage predefined second-order similarity graphs, making them vulnerable to noise and outliers and resulting in suboptimal feature selection performance. In this paper, we propose a novel MUFS method, termed Structure-aware Hybrid-order sImilarity learNing for multi-viEw unsupervised Feature Selection (SHINE-FS), to address the aforementioned problem. SHINE-FS first learns consensus anchors and the corresponding anchor graph to capture the cross-view relationships between the anchors and the samples. Based on the acquired cross-view consensus information, it generates low-dimensional representations of the samples, which facilitate the reconstruction of multi-view data by identifying discriminative features. Subsequently, it employs the anchor-sample relationships to learn a second-order similarity graph. Furthermore, by jointly learning first-order and second-order similarity graphs, SHINE-FS constructs a hybrid-order similarity graph that captures both local and global structures, thereby revealing the intrinsic data structure to enhance feature selection. Comprehensive experimental results on real multi-view datasets show that SHINE-FS outperforms the state-of-the-art methods.

LGSep 17, 2025
Beyond Correlation: Causal Multi-View Unsupervised Feature Selection Learning

Zongxin Shen, Yanyong Huang, Bin Wang et al.

Multi-view unsupervised feature selection (MUFS) has recently received increasing attention for its promising ability in dimensionality reduction on multi-view unlabeled data. Existing MUFS methods typically select discriminative features by capturing correlations between features and clustering labels. However, an important yet underexplored question remains: \textit{Are such correlations sufficiently reliable to guide feature selection?} In this paper, we analyze MUFS from a causal perspective by introducing a novel structural causal model, which reveals that existing methods may select irrelevant features because they overlook spurious correlations caused by confounders. Building on this causal perspective, we propose a novel MUFS method called CAusal multi-view Unsupervised feature Selection leArning (CAUSA). Specifically, we first employ a generalized unsupervised spectral regression model that identifies informative features by capturing dependencies between features and consensus clustering labels. We then introduce a causal regularization module that can adaptively separate confounders from multi-view data and simultaneously learn view-shared sample weights to balance confounder distributions, thereby mitigating spurious correlations. Thereafter, integrating both into a unified learning framework enables CAUSA to select causally informative features. Comprehensive experiments demonstrate that CAUSA outperforms several state-of-the-art methods. To our knowledge, this is the first in-depth study of causal multi-view feature selection in the unsupervised setting.

LGSep 16, 2025
TRUST-FS: Tensorized Reliable Unsupervised Multi-View Feature Selection for Incomplete Data

Minghui Lu, Yanyong Huang, Minbo Ma et al.

Multi-view unsupervised feature selection (MUFS), which selects informative features from multi-view unlabeled data, has attracted increasing research interest in recent years. Although great efforts have been devoted to MUFS, several challenges remain: 1) existing methods for incomplete multi-view data are limited to handling missing views and are unable to address the more general scenario of missing variables, where some features have missing values in certain views; 2) most methods address incomplete data by first imputing missing values and then performing feature selection, treating these two processes independently and overlooking their interactions; 3) missing data can result in an inaccurate similarity graph, which reduces the performance of feature selection. To solve this dilemma, we propose a novel MUFS method for incomplete multi-view data with missing variables, termed Tensorized Reliable UnSupervised mulTi-view Feature Selection (TRUST-FS). TRUST-FS introduces a new adaptive-weighted CP decomposition that simultaneously performs feature selection, missing-variable imputation, and view weight learning within a unified tensor factorization framework. By utilizing Subjective Logic to acquire trustworthy cross-view similarity information, TRUST-FS facilitates learning a reliable similarity graph, which subsequently guides feature selection and imputation. Comprehensive experimental results demonstrate the effectiveness and superiority of our method over state-of-the-art methods.

LGDec 9, 2024
CONDEN-FI: Consistency and Diversity Learning-based Multi-View Unsupervised Feature and In-stance Co-Selection

Yanyong Huang, Yuxin Cai, Dongjie Wang et al.

The objective of multi-view unsupervised feature and instance co-selection is to simultaneously iden-tify the most representative features and samples from multi-view unlabeled data, which aids in mit-igating the curse of dimensionality and reducing instance size to improve the performance of down-stream tasks. However, existing methods treat feature selection and instance selection as two separate processes, failing to leverage the potential interactions between the feature and instance spaces. Addi-tionally, previous co-selection methods for multi-view data require concatenating different views, which overlooks the consistent information among them. In this paper, we propose a CONsistency and DivErsity learNing-based multi-view unsupervised Feature and Instance co-selection (CONDEN-FI) to address the above-mentioned issues. Specifically, CONDEN-FI reconstructs mul-ti-view data from both the sample and feature spaces to learn representations that are consistent across views and specific to each view, enabling the simultaneous selection of the most important features and instances. Moreover, CONDEN-FI adaptively learns a view-consensus similarity graph to help select both dissimilar and similar samples in the reconstructed data space, leading to a more diverse selection of instances. An efficient algorithm is developed to solve the resultant optimization problem, and the comprehensive experimental results on real-world datasets demonstrate that CONDEN-FI is effective compared to state-of-the-art methods.

LGOct 16, 2024
Causally-Aware Unsupervised Feature Selection Learning

Zongxin Shen, Yanyong Huang, Dongjie Wang et al.

Unsupervised feature selection (UFS) has recently gained attention for its effectiveness in processing unlabeled high-dimensional data. However, existing methods overlook the intrinsic causal mechanisms within the data, resulting in the selection of irrelevant features and poor interpretability. Additionally, previous graph-based methods fail to account for the differing impacts of non-causal and causal features in constructing the similarity graph, which leads to false links in the generated graph. To address these issues, a novel UFS method, called Causally-Aware UnSupErvised Feature Selection learning (CAUSE-FS), is proposed. CAUSE-FS introduces a novel causal regularizer that reweights samples to balance the confounding distribution of each treatment feature. This regularizer is subsequently integrated into a generalized unsupervised spectral regression model to mitigate spurious associations between features and clustering labels, thus achieving causal feature selection. Furthermore, CAUSE-FS employs causality-guided hierarchical clustering to partition features with varying causal contributions into multiple granularities. By integrating similarity graphs learned adaptively at different granularities, CAUSE-FS increases the importance of causal features when constructing the fused similarity graph to capture the reliable local structure of data. Extensive experimental results demonstrate the superiority of CAUSE-FS over state-of-the-art methods, with its interpretability further validated through feature visualization.

LGJun 18, 2024
Adaptive Collaborative Correlation Learning-based Semi-Supervised Multi-Label Feature Selection

Li Yang, Yanyong Huang, Dongjie Wang et al.

Semi-supervised multi-label feature selection has recently been developed to solve the curse of dimensionality problem in high-dimensional multi-label data with certain samples missing labels. Although many efforts have been made, most existing methods use a predefined graph approach to capture the sample similarity or the label correlation. In this manner, the presence of noise and outliers within the original feature space can undermine the reliability of the resulting sample similarity graph. It also fails to precisely depict the label correlation due to the existence of unknown labels. Besides, these methods only consider the discriminative power of selected features, while neglecting their redundancy. In this paper, we propose an Adaptive Collaborative Correlation lEarning-based Semi-Supervised Multi-label Feature Selection (Access-MFS) method to address these issues. Specifically, a generalized regression model equipped with an extended uncorrelated constraint is introduced to select discriminative yet irrelevant features and maintain consistency between predicted and ground-truth labels in labeled data, simultaneously. Then, the instance correlation and label correlation are integrated into the proposed regression model to adaptively learn both the sample similarity graph and the label similarity graph, which mutually enhance feature selection performance. Extensive experimental results demonstrate the superiority of the proposed Access-MFS over other state-of-the-art methods.

LGJan 19, 2024
Unified View Imputation and Feature Selection Learning for Incomplete Multi-view Data

Yanyong Huang, Zongxin Shen, Tianrui Li et al.

Although multi-view unsupervised feature selection (MUFS) is an effective technology for reducing dimensionality in machine learning, existing methods cannot directly deal with incomplete multi-view data where some samples are missing in certain views. These methods should first apply predetermined values to impute missing data, then perform feature selection on the complete dataset. Separating imputation and feature selection processes fails to capitalize on the potential synergy where local structural information gleaned from feature selection could guide the imputation, thereby improving the feature selection performance in turn. Additionally, previous methods only focus on leveraging samples' local structure information, while ignoring the intrinsic locality of the feature space. To tackle these problems, a novel MUFS method, called UNified view Imputation and Feature selectIon lEaRning (UNIFIER), is proposed. UNIFIER explores the local structure of multi-view data by adaptively learning similarity-induced graphs from both the sample and feature spaces. Then, UNIFIER dynamically recovers the missing views, guided by the sample and feature similarity graphs during the feature selection procedure. Furthermore, the half-quadratic minimization technique is used to automatically weight different instances, alleviating the impact of outliers and unreliable restored data. Comprehensive experimental results demonstrate that UNIFIER outperforms other state-of-the-art methods.

CLDec 2, 2021
ScaleVLAD: Improving Multimodal Sentiment Analysis via Multi-Scale Fusion of Locally Descriptors

Huaishao Luo, Lei Ji, Yanyong Huang et al.

Fusion technique is a key research topic in multimodal sentiment analysis. The recent attention-based fusion demonstrates advances over simple operation-based fusion. However, these fusion works adopt single-scale, i.e., token-level or utterance-level, unimodal representation. Such single-scale fusion is suboptimal because that different modality should be aligned with different granularities. This paper proposes a fusion model named ScaleVLAD to gather multi-Scale representation from text, video, and audio with shared Vectors of Locally Aggregated Descriptors to improve unaligned multimodal sentiment analysis. These shared vectors can be regarded as shared topics to align different modalities. In addition, we propose a self-supervised shifted clustering loss to keep the fused feature differentiation among samples. The backbones are three Transformer encoders corresponding to three modalities, and the aggregated features generated from the fusion module are feed to a Transformer plus a full connection to finish task predictions. Experiments on three popular sentiment analysis benchmarks, IEMOCAP, MOSI, and MOSEI, demonstrate significant gains over baselines.

LGDec 27, 2020
Adaptive Graph-based Generalized Regression Model for Unsupervised Feature Selection

Yanyong Huang, Zongxin Shen, Fuxu Cai et al.

Unsupervised feature selection is an important method to reduce dimensions of high dimensional data without labels, which is benefit to avoid ``curse of dimensionality'' and improve the performance of subsequent machine learning tasks, like clustering and retrieval. How to select the uncorrelated and discriminative features is the key problem of unsupervised feature selection. Many proposed methods select features with strong discriminant and high redundancy, or vice versa. However, they only satisfy one of these two criteria. Other existing methods choose the discriminative features with low redundancy by constructing the graph matrix on the original feature space. Since the original feature space usually contains redundancy and noise, it will degrade the performance of feature selection. In order to address these issues, we first present a novel generalized regression model imposed by an uncorrelated constraint and the $\ell_{2,1}$-norm regularization. It can simultaneously select the uncorrelated and discriminative features as well as reduce the variance of these data points belonging to the same neighborhood, which is help for the clustering task. Furthermore, the local intrinsic structure of data is constructed on the reduced dimensional space by learning the similarity-induced graph adaptively. Then the learnings of the graph structure and the indicator matrix based on the spectral analysis are integrated into the generalized regression model. Finally, we develop an alternative iterative optimization algorithm to solve the objective function. A series of experiments are carried out on nine real-world data sets to demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed method in comparison with other competing approaches.