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Dongyue Wu

Dongyue Wu contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

2 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

The Wittgensteinian Representation Hypothesis: Is Language the Attractor of Multimodal Convergence?

Understanding why independently trained neural networks from different modalities converge toward shared representations, and where this convergence leads, remains an open question in representation learning. All existing evidence relies on symmetric similarity measures, which can detect convergence but are structurally blind to its direction. We introduce directional convergence analysis using cycle-kNN, an asymmetric alignment measure, applied across dozens of independently trained unimodal models spanning point clouds, vision, and language. We uncover a consistent directional asymmetry: non-language modalities move toward the neighborhood structure of language significantly more than the reverse, and this pattern holds across all model families and scales--yet is entirely invisible to symmetric measures. Mechanistic analysis traces the directionality to feature density asymmetry, whereby language representations occupy the most compact regions of representational space. The Information Bottleneck framework provides a principled interpretation: optimization under compression drives representations toward discrete, compositional structures characteristic of language. We formalize this as the Wittgensteinian Representation Hypothesis: the semantic structure of language is the asymptotic attractor of multimodal representation convergence.

preprint2023arXiv

Semantic Segmentation via Pixel-to-Center Similarity Calculation

Since the fully convolutional network has achieved great success in semantic segmentation, lots of works have been proposed focusing on extracting discriminative pixel feature representations. However, we observe that existing methods still suffer from two typical challenges, i.e. (i) large intra-class feature variation in different scenes, (ii) small inter-class feature distinction in the same scene. In this paper, we first rethink semantic segmentation from a perspective of similarity between pixels and class centers. Each weight vector of the segmentation head represents its corresponding semantic class in the whole dataset, which can be regarded as the embedding of the class center. Thus, the pixel-wise classification amounts to computing similarity in the final feature space between pixels and the class centers. Under this novel view, we propose a Class Center Similarity layer (CCS layer) to address the above-mentioned challenges by generating adaptive class centers conditioned on different scenes and supervising the similarities between class centers. It utilizes a Adaptive Class Center Module (ACCM) to generate class centers conditioned on each scene, which adapt the large intra-class variation between different scenes. Specially designed loss functions are introduced to control both inter-class and intra-class distances based on predicted center-to-center and pixel-to-center similarity, respectively. Finally, the CCS layer outputs the processed pixel-to-center similarity as the segmentation prediction. Extensive experiments demonstrate that our model performs favourably against the state-of-the-art CNN-based methods.