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Canmiao Fu

Canmiao Fu contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

3 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

Breaking Dual Bottlenecks: Evolving Unified Multimodal Models into Self-Adaptive Interleaved Visual Reasoners

Recent unified models integrate multimodal understanding and generation within a single framework. However, an "understanding-generation gap" persists, where models can capture user intent but often fail to translate this semantic knowledge into precise pixel-level manipulation. This gap results in two bottlenecks in anything-to-image task (X2I): the attention entanglement bottleneck, where blind planning struggles with complex prompts, and the visual refinement bottleneck, where unstructured feedback fails to correct imperfections efficiently. In this paper, we propose a novel framework that empowers unified models to autonomously switch between generation strategies based on instruction complexity and model capability. To achieve this, we construct a hierarchical data pipeline that constructs execution paths across three adaptive modes: direct generation for simple cases, self-reflection for quality refinement, and multi-step planning for decomposing complex scenarios. Building on this pipeline, we contribute a high-quality dataset with over 50,000 samples and implement a two-stage training strategy comprising SFT and RL. Specifically, we design step-wise reasoning rewards to ensure logical consistency and intra-group complexity penalty to prevent redundant computational overhead. Extensive experiments demonstrate that our method outperforms existing baselines on X2I, achieving superior generation fidelity among simple-to-complex instructions. The code is released at https://github.com/WeChatCV/Interleaved_Visual_Reasoner.

preprint2026arXiv

WinTok: A Win-Win Hybrid Tokenizer via Decomposing Visual Understanding and Generation with Transferable Tokens

Building a unified visual tokenizer is essential for bridging the gap between visual understanding and generation. Yet existing approaches struggle with the inherent conflict between these tasks, as a single token space is forced to support both high-level semantic abstraction and low-level pixel reconstruction. We propose WinTok, a concise hybrid tokenizer that achieves a win-win performance by explicitly decoupling the two objectives. WinTok supplements pixel tokens with a set of learnable semantic tokens, effectively mitigating cross-task interference without incurring the computational overhead of dual tokenizers. To further enhance understanding capability, we introduce an asymmetric token distillation mechanism: the semantic tokens are guided by pretrained semantic embeddings from any visual foundation model, enabling them to inherit strong discriminative power while maintaining flexibility. Across 10 challenging benchmarks, WinTok delivers consistent improvements in reconstruction, understanding, and generation. Trained on only 50M open-source data, WinTok surpasses the strong baseline UniTok by 11.2% in classification accuracy and achieves a competitive reconstruction rFID of 0.41, despite using substantially less training data. Code is released at https://github.com/markywg/WinTok.

preprint2022arXiv

Learning Sequence Representations by Non-local Recurrent Neural Memory

The key challenge of sequence representation learning is to capture the long-range temporal dependencies. Typical methods for supervised sequence representation learning are built upon recurrent neural networks to capture temporal dependencies. One potential limitation of these methods is that they only model one-order information interactions explicitly between adjacent time steps in a sequence, hence the high-order interactions between nonadjacent time steps are not fully exploited. It greatly limits the capability of modeling the long-range temporal dependencies since the temporal features learned by one-order interactions cannot be maintained for a long term due to temporal information dilution and gradient vanishing. To tackle this limitation, we propose the Non-local Recurrent Neural Memory (NRNM) for supervised sequence representation learning, which performs non-local operations \MR{by means of self-attention mechanism} to learn full-order interactions within a sliding temporal memory block and models global interactions between memory blocks in a gated recurrent manner. Consequently, our model is able to capture long-range dependencies. Besides, the latent high-level features contained in high-order interactions can be distilled by our model. We validate the effectiveness and generalization of our NRNM on three types of sequence applications across different modalities, including sequence classification, step-wise sequential prediction and sequence similarity learning. Our model compares favorably against other state-of-the-art methods specifically designed for each of these sequence applications.