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Bo Zhao

Bo Zhao contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

4 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

AffectVerse: Emotional World Models for Multimodal Affective Computing

Humans infer emotions by integrating observed multimodal cues with expectations about how affective states may unfold. Existing multimodal large language models (MLLMs), however, often treat emotion recognition as static fusion over complete audiovisual-text inputs, leaving affective dynamics implicit. We propose AffectVerse, a Qwen2.5-Omni-based model equipped with an Emotion World Module (EWM), an action-free representation-level module for short-horizon latent affective prediction. \rev{EWM contains three modules: 1) Cross-Modal Temporal Imagination predicts future video/audio representations from past tokens with multi-step rollout. 2) MAMA(Modality-Aware Multi-step Attention) Belief Aggregation compresses imagined tokens into modality-aware belief tokens. 3) Belief Injection inserts these belief tokens into the LLM for affective reasoning.} AffectVerse uses future prediction as a past-conditioned self-supervised signal: it does not replace modeling observed history or require unseen signals at inference, but forces the current belief state to encode transition cues that are predictive of subsequent affective change. Across nine benchmarks, AffectVerse improves at least 2.57\% over other models, while controlled ablations show additive gains from temporal imagination, cross-modal rollout, and belief aggregation. These results suggest predictive belief-state modeling is a practical alternative for affective computing.

preprint2026arXiv

MomentSeeker: A Task-Oriented Benchmark For Long-Video Moment Retrieval

Accurately locating key moments within long videos is crucial for solving long video understanding (LVU) tasks. However, existing benchmarks are either severely limited in terms of video length and task diversity, or they focus solely on the end-to-end LVU performance, making them inappropriate for evaluating whether key moments can be accurately accessed. To address this challenge, we propose MomentSeeker, a novel benchmark for long-video moment retrieval (LMVR), distinguished by the following features. First, it is created based on long and diverse videos, averaging over 1200 seconds in duration and collected from various domains, e.g., movie, anomaly, egocentric, and sports. Second, it covers a variety of real-world scenarios in three levels: global-level, event-level, object-level, covering common tasks like action recognition, object localization, and causal reasoning, etc. Third, it incorporates rich forms of queries, including text-only queries, image-conditioned queries, and video-conditioned queries. On top of MomentSeeker, we conduct comprehensive experiments for both generation-based approaches (directly using MLLMs) and retrieval-based approaches (leveraging video retrievers). Our results reveal the significant challenges in long-video moment retrieval in terms of accuracy and efficiency, despite improvements from the latest long-video MLLMs and task-specific fine-tuning. We have publicly released MomentSeeker(https://yhy-2000.github.io/MomentSeeker/) to facilitate future research in this area.

preprint2026arXiv

UniPPTBench: A Unified Benchmark for Presentation Generation Across Diverse Input Settings

Existing works typically focus on presentation generation under isolated input settings, whereas real-world use cases span diverse scenarios, including vague user prompts, long documents, multimodal materials, and multiple heterogeneous sources. Moreover, current evaluations are often insufficiently scenario-specific. They mainly rely on generic presentation-quality criteria, such as visual appeal, layout quality, and overall coherence, but fail to assess the core capabilities required by different input settings, including grounded compression, visual-text alignment, and cross-source synthesis. Consequently, the field lacks a unified benchmark and a scenario-aware evaluation framework for faithfully diagnosing presentation-generation systems across diverse real-world settings. We present UniPPTBench, a unified benchmark for presentation generation across four representative input settings: vague-prompt, long-document, multimodal-document, and multi-source generation. We further introduce UniPPTEval, a scenario-aware evaluation protocol that combines shared metrics for cross-setting comparison with scenario-specific metrics tailored to the core requirements of each setting. We also provide transparent reference baselines to support reproducible comparison. Experiments on UniPPTBench reveal substantial performance variation across settings and recurring failure modes in content grounding, multimodal integration, and cross-source synthesis. In particular, strong performance on generic presentation-quality metrics does not necessarily imply strong task fulfillment in grounded scenarios. Together, UniPPTBench and UniPPTEval provide a faithful and diagnostic foundation for evaluating presentation generation across diverse real-world scenarios. Code and data will be publicly available.

preprint2025arXiv

Achieving high-performance polarization-independent nonreciprocal thermal radiation with pattern-free heterostructures

Many advanced energy harvesting technologies rely on advanced control of thermal emission. Recently, it has been shown that the emissivity and absorptivity of thermal emitters can be controlled independently in nonreciprocal emitters. While significant progress has been made in engineering these nonreciprocal thermal emitters, realizing a highly efficient, pattern-free emitter capable of supporting dual-polarization nonreciprocal emission remains a challenging task. Existing solutions are largely based on metamaterials and exhibit polarization-dependent behavior. This work proposes pattern-free multilayer heterostructures combining magneto-optical and magnetic Weyl semimetal materials and systematically evaluates their nonreciprocal emission performance for p- and s-polarized waves. The findings show that omnidirectional polarization-independent nonreciprocity can be achieved utilizing multilayer structures with different magnetization directions that do not follow simple vector summation. To further enhance the performance, Pareto optimization is employed to tune the key design parameters, enabling the maximization of nonreciprocal thermal emission in a given wavelength range. This approach offers a versatile strategy for designing high-performance thermal emitters tailored for multi-objective optical functionalities.