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Chuang Ma

Chuang Ma contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

2 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

Awakening the Hydra: Stabilizing Multi-Concept Backdoor Injection in Text-to-Image Diffusion Models

Text-to-image diffusion models are increasingly developed through open-source reuse and repeated downstream fine-tuning, where reused checkpoints are difficult to verify and thus more susceptible to hidden backdoor behaviors. In such ecosystems, a single pretrained model may be sequentially adapted and redistributed by multiple independent parties, allowing multiple concept-specific trigger-target associations to accumulate in the same model. When these associations coexist, semantic conflicts can be amplified in the shared representation space, leading to cross-concept entanglement and degraded generation quality. Notably, instead of strengthening the attack, such accumulation can destabilize previously injected behaviors and reduce attack reliability. In this work, we systematically investigate backdoor attacks under this interference-prone setting and propose Hydra, a unified framework for robust and controlled multi-concept backdoor injection under cumulative and decentralized reuse. Our core insight is that stable backdoor injection under large-scale multi-concept settings requires explicitly constraining trigger semantics while coordinating cross-task interactions during optimization. Specifically, Hydra performs evolutionary trigger search in the text encoder space to identify triggers that are semantically aligned with their target concepts while remaining stable across other injected concepts. It further combines multi-task fine-tuning with trigger-clean regularization to improve training stability under dense multi-concept injection. Extensive experiments across multiple diffusion backbones under rigorous multi-concept settings show that Hydra maintains effective backdoor activation while preserving clean generation fidelity and image quality. For instance, across 8 attackers and 500 concept pairs, Hydra maintains ~95% ASR and strong clean generation.

preprint2026arXiv

Path-Lock Expert: Separating Reasoning Mode in Hybrid Thinking via Architecture-Level Separation

Hybrid-thinking language models expose explicit think and no-think modes, but current designs do not separate them cleanly. Even in no-think mode, models often emit long and self-reflective responses, causing reasoning leakage. Existing work reduces this issue through better data curation and multi-stage training, yet leakage remains because both modes are still encoded in the same feed-forward parameters. We propose Path-Lock Expert (PLE), an architecture-level solution that replaces the single MLP in each decoder layer with two semantically locked experts, one for think and one for no-think, while keeping attention, embeddings, normalization, and the language-model head shared. A deterministic control-token router selects exactly one expert path for the entire sequence, so inference preserves the dense model's per-token computation pattern and each expert receives mode-pure updates during supervised fine-tuning. Across math and science reasoning benchmarks, PLE maintains strong think performance while producing a substantially stronger no-think mode that is more accurate, more concise, and far less prone to reasoning leakage. On Qwen3-4B, for example, PLE reduces no-think reflective tokens on AIME24 from 2.54 to 0.39 and improves no-think accuracy from 20.67% to 40.00%, all while preserving think-mode performance. These results suggest that controllable hybrid thinking is fundamentally an architectural problem, and separating mode-specific feed-forward pathways is a simple and effective solution.