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Chenglong Ma

Chenglong Ma contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

3 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

Bridging Brain and Semantics: A Hierarchical Framework for Semantically Enhanced fMRI-to-Video Reconstruction

Reconstructing dynamic visual experiences as videos from functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) is pivotal for advancing the understanding of neural processes. However, current fMRI-to-video reconstruction methods are hindered by a semantic gap between noisy fMRI signals and the rich content of videos, stemming from a reliance on incomplete semantic embeddings that neither capture video-specific cues (e.g., actions) nor integrate prior knowledge. To this end, we draw inspiration from the dual-pathway processing mechanism in human brain and introduce CineNeuron, a novel hierarchical framework for semantically enhanced video reconstruction from fMRI signals with two synergistic stages. First, a bottom-up semantic enrichment stage maps fMRI signals to a rich embedding space that comprehensively captures textual semantics, image contents, action concepts, and object categories. Second, a top-down memory integration stage utilizes the proposed Mixture-of-Memories method to dynamically select relevant "memories" from previously seen data and fuse them with the fMRI embedding to refine the video reconstruction. Extensive experimental results on two fMRI-to-video benchmarks demonstrate that CineNeuron surpasses state-of-the-art methods across various metrics.

preprint2026arXiv

GraphMAR: Geometry-Aware Graph Learning Framework for Spatially Adaptive CT Metal Artifact Reduction

Computed tomography (CT) metal artifact reduction (MAR) aims to reduce the severe streaking artifacts induced by metallic implants and other high-density objects. Effective MAR generally requires both accurate artifact localization and artifact removal. Sinogram-domain methods can exploit explicit geometric cues, such as metal traces, to identify metal-corrupted measurements, while requiring raw projection data, which is often unavailable in clinical and practical scenarios. Image-domain methods are more flexible and widely applicable, yet they usually lack comparable geometric guidance, limiting their ability to localize artifacts and leading to suboptimal results. To address this limitation, we propose GraphMAR, a geometry-aware learning framework for explicit artifact identification and spatially adaptive MAR in the image domain. The key idea is to introduce graph-based geometric modeling as an image-domain analogue of sinogram metal traces. Specifically, we first construct a geometric graph from the metal mask and derive a geometric density graph that coarsely localizes artifact-prone regions according to inter-implant geometry. We then design GraphMoE, a graph-routed mixture-of-experts module that builds a polar-coordinate artifact graph in feature space and adaptively routes different experts to different spatial regions for MAR. By aligning the learned routing maps with the geometric density graph, GraphMAR provides explicit and interpretable artifact localization while enabling region-adaptive artifact reduction. Experiments on both simulated and real-world datasets demonstrate that GraphMAR achieves superior MAR performance compared with existing methods. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first work to introduce graph-based modeling for CT MAR and to enable explicit artifact identification in the image domain, improving both restoration quality and interpretability.

preprint2026arXiv

Task-Aware Automated User Profile Generation for Recommendation Simulation Using Large Language Models

Large Language Model (LLM)-based agent simulation has emerged as a promising approach to meet the increasing demand for real-time and rigorous evaluation in modern recommender systems. A typical LLM-driven simulation framework comprises three essential components: the profile module, memory module, and action module. However, existing studies have primarily concentrated on enhancing the memory and action modules, with limited attention to profile generation, which plays a pivotal role in ensuring realistic agent behaviours and aligning simulated interactions with real user dynamics. Moreover, the scarcity of datasets specifically designed for recommendation simulations has led to heavy reliance on manually crafted profiles, significantly limiting the scalability and generalisability of simulation frameworks across different datasets. To address these challenges, this work proposes an Automated Profile Generation Framework for Recommendation Simulation, APG4RecSim, that constructs realistic, coherent, and robust user profiles with minimal supervision. Extensive experiments on three benchmark datasets demonstrate that APG4RecSim achieves the best overall performance on discrimination, ranking, and rating tasks, improving ranking quality by up to 7% in nDCG@10 and reducing rating distribution divergence by 8% in JSD compared to existing profile-generation baselines. Beyond overall performance gains, our results show that profiles generated by APG4RecSim are resilient to popularity- and position-induced biases and maintain stable performance across datasets and different LLMs.