51.6ARApr 26
GTAC: A Generative Transformer for Approximate CircuitsJingxin Wang, Shitong Guo, Wenhui Liang et al.
Targeting error-tolerant applications, approximate computing relaxes rigid functional equivalence to significantly improve power, performance, and area. Traditional approximate logic synthesis (ALS) relies on incremental rewriting, limiting design space exploration. Meanwhile, the inherently probabilistic nature of Transformer-based generative AI makes it a natural fit for generating approximate circuits. Exploiting this, we propose GTAC, an end-to-end framework for arbitrary-scale generative ALS. To overcome the memory bottleneck of generative AI, GTAC partitions a large circuit into tractable subcircuits, applies a generative core to produce approximate candidates for each subcircuit, and finally selects proper candidates to form the final design. Its core generative Transformer utilizes a novel irredundant encoding to compactly encode a circuit, alongside a masking mechanism to exclude designs violating the given error bound. Empowered by a self-evolutionary training strategy, GTAC establishes a new paradigm that demonstrates superior performance: It reduces delay by 30.9% and gate count by 50.5% over exact generative baselines and saves 6.5% area with a 4.3x speedup against traditional ALS methods. Furthermore, its irredundant encoding achieves a 33.3x reduction in sequence length and a 61.6x reduction in peak memory compared to conventional memoryless traversal.
CVApr 8, 2024
Multi-level Graph Subspace Contrastive Learning for Hyperspectral Image ClusteringJingxin Wang, Renxiang Guan, Kainan Gao et al.
Hyperspectral image (HSI) clustering is a challenging task due to its high complexity. Despite subspace clustering shows impressive performance for HSI, traditional methods tend to ignore the global-local interaction in HSI data. In this study, we proposed a multi-level graph subspace contrastive learning (MLGSC) for HSI clustering. The model is divided into the following main parts. Graph convolution subspace construction: utilizing spectral and texture feautures to construct two graph convolution views. Local-global graph representation: local graph representations were obtained by step-by-step convolutions and a more representative global graph representation was obtained using an attention-based pooling strategy. Multi-level graph subspace contrastive learning: multi-level contrastive learning was conducted to obtain local-global joint graph representations, to improve the consistency of the positive samples between views, and to obtain more robust graph embeddings. Specifically, graph-level contrastive learning is used to better learn global representations of HSI data. Node-level intra-view and inter-view contrastive learning is designed to learn joint representations of local regions of HSI. The proposed model is evaluated on four popular HSI datasets: Indian Pines, Pavia University, Houston, and Xu Zhou. The overall accuracies are 97.75%, 99.96%, 92.28%, and 95.73%, which significantly outperforms the current state-of-the-art clustering methods.
LGSep 25, 2025
Alignment Unlocks Complementarity: A Framework for Multiview Circuit Representation LearningZhengyuan Shi, Jingxin Wang, Wentao Jiang et al.
Multiview learning on Boolean circuits holds immense promise, as different graph-based representations offer complementary structural and semantic information. However, the vast structural heterogeneity between views, such as an And-Inverter Graph (AIG) versus an XOR-Majority Graph (XMG), poses a critical barrier to effective fusion, especially for self-supervised techniques like masked modeling. Naively applying such methods fails, as the cross-view context is perceived as noise. Our key insight is that functional alignment is a necessary precondition to unlock the power of multiview self-supervision. We introduce MixGate, a framework built on a principled training curriculum that first teaches the model a shared, function-aware representation space via an Equivalence Alignment Loss. Only then do we introduce a multiview masked modeling objective, which can now leverage the aligned views as a rich, complementary signal. Extensive experiments, including a crucial ablation study, demonstrate that our alignment-first strategy transforms masked modeling from an ineffective technique into a powerful performance driver.