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Chunhui Wang

Chunhui Wang contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

5 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

Sheet as Token: A Graph-Enhanced Representation for Multi-Sheet Spreadsheet Understanding

Workbook-scale spreadsheet understanding is increasingly important for language-model-based data analysis agents, but remains challenging because relevant information is often distributed across multiple sheets with heterogeneous schemas, layouts, and implicit relationships. Existing retrieval-augmented approaches typically decompose spreadsheets into rows, columns, or blocks to improve scalability; however, such chunk-centric representations can fragment worksheets into isolated text spans and weaken global sheet-level semantics. We propose Sheet as Token, a graph-enhanced framework that treats each worksheet as a unified semantic unit for multi-sheet spreadsheet retrieval. Our method extracts schema-aware records from sheet names, column headers, representative values, and layout features, and encodes each worksheet into a compact dense token. Given a natural-language query, a Graph Retriever constructs a query-specific candidate graph over sheet tokens using semantic, query-conditioned, schema-consistency, and shape-compatibility relations, and composes these channels through a multi-stage graph transformer to retrieve supporting sheet sets. Experiments on a constructed multi-sheet spreadsheet corpus show that sheet-level tokenization learns stable representations, and that graph-enhanced cross-sheet reasoning improves listwise retrieval over a shallow graph baseline with limited additional graph-side computation. These results suggest that sheet-level tokenization is a promising abstraction for scalable multi-sheet spreadsheet understanding.

preprint2021arXiv

Self-supervised Low Light Image Enhancement and Denoising

This paper proposes a self-supervised low light image enhancement method based on deep learning, which can improve the image contrast and reduce noise at the same time to avoid the blur caused by pre-/post-denoising. The method contains two deep sub-networks, an Image Contrast Enhancement Network (ICE-Net) and a Re-Enhancement and Denoising Network (RED-Net). The ICE-Net takes the low light image as input and produces a contrast enhanced image. The RED-Net takes the result of ICE-Net and the low light image as input, and can re-enhance the low light image and denoise at the same time. Both of the networks can be trained with low light images only, which is achieved by a Maximum Entropy based Retinex (ME-Retinex) model and an assumption that noises are independently distributed. In the ME-Retinex model, a new constraint on the reflectance image is introduced that the maximum channel of the reflectance image conforms to the maximum channel of the low light image and its entropy should be the largest, which converts the decomposition of reflectance and illumination in Retinex model to a non-ill-conditioned problem and allows the ICE-Net to be trained with a self-supervised way. The loss functions of RED-Net are carefully formulated to separate the noises and details during training, and they are based on the idea that, if noises are independently distributed, after the processing of smoothing filters (\eg mean filter), the gradient of the noise part should be smaller than the gradient of the detail part. It can be proved qualitatively and quantitatively through experiments that the proposed method is efficient.

preprint2020arXiv

Automatic Generation of Acceptance Test Cases from Use Case Specifications: an NLP-based Approach

Acceptance testing is a validation activity performed to ensure the conformance of software systems with respect to their functional requirements. In safety critical systems, it plays a crucial role since it is enforced by software standards. Test engineers need to identify all the representative test execution scenarios from requirements, determine the runtime conditions that trigger these scenarios, and finally provide the input data that satisfy these conditions. Given that requirements specifications are typically large and often provided in natural language, the generation of acceptance test cases tends to be expensive and error-prone. In this paper, we present UMTG, an approach that supports the generation of executable, system-level, acceptance test cases from requirements specifications in natural language, with the goal of reducing the manual effort required to generate test cases and ensuring requirements coverage. More specifically, UMTG automates the generation of acceptance test cases based on use case specifications and a domain model for the system under test, which are commonly produced in many development environments. Unlike existing approaches, it does not impose strong restrictions on the expressiveness of use case specifications. We rely on recent advances in natural language processing to automatically identify test scenarios and to generate formal constraints that capture conditions triggering the execution of the scenarios, thus enabling the generation of test data. In two industrial case studies, UMTG automatically and correctly translated 95% of the use case specification steps into formal constraints required for test data generation; furthermore, it generated test cases that exercise not only all the test scenarios manually implemented by experts, but also some critical scenarios not previously considered.

preprint2020arXiv

Better Than Reference In Low Light Image Enhancement: Conditional Re-Enhancement Networks

Low light images suffer from severe noise, low brightness, low contrast, etc. In previous researches, many image enhancement methods have been proposed, but few methods can deal with these problems simultaneously. In this paper, to solve these problems simultaneously, we propose a low light image enhancement method that can combined with supervised learning and previous HSV (Hue, Saturation, Value) or Retinex model based image enhancement methods. First, we analyse the relationship between the HSV color space and the Retinex theory, and show that the V channel (V channel in HSV color space, equals the maximum channel in RGB color space) of the enhanced image can well represent the contrast and brightness enhancement process. Then, a data-driven conditional re-enhancement network (denoted as CRENet) is proposed. The network takes low light images as input and the enhanced V channel as condition, then it can re-enhance the contrast and brightness of the low light image and at the same time reduce noise and color distortion. It should be noted that during the training process, any paired images with different exposure time can be used for training, and there is no need to carefully select the supervised images which will save a lot. In addition, it takes less than 20 ms to process a color image with the resolution 400*600 on a 2080Ti GPU. Finally, some comparative experiments are implemented to prove the effectiveness of the method. The results show that the method proposed in this paper can significantly improve the quality of the enhanced image, and by combining with other image contrast enhancement methods, the final enhancement result can even be better than the reference image in contrast and brightness. (Code will be available at https://github.com/hitzhangyu/image-enhancement-with-denoise)

preprint2020arXiv

Self-supervised Image Enhancement Network: Training with Low Light Images Only

This paper proposes a self-supervised low light image enhancement method based on deep learning. Inspired by information entropy theory and Retinex model, we proposed a maximum entropy based Retinex model. With this model, a very simple network can separate the illumination and reflectance, and the network can be trained with low light images only. We introduce a constraint that the maximum channel of the reflectance conforms to the maximum channel of the low light image and its entropy should be largest in our model to achieve self-supervised learning. Our model is very simple and does not rely on any well-designed data set (even one low light image can complete the training). The network only needs minute-level training to achieve image enhancement. It can be proved through experiments that the proposed method has reached the state-of-the-art in terms of processing speed and effect.