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Erfan Miahi

Erfan Miahi contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

2 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

Grounded or Guessing? LVLM Confidence Estimation via Blind-Image Contrastive Ranking

Large vision-language models suffer from visual ungroundedness: they can produce a fluent, confident, and even correct response driven entirely by language priors, with the image contributing nothing to the prediction. Existing confidence estimation methods cannot detect this, as they observe model behavior under normal inference with no mechanism to determine whether a prediction was shaped by the image or by text alone. We introduce BICR (Blind-Image Contrastive Ranking), a model-agnostic confidence estimation framework that makes this contrast explicit during training by extracting hidden states from a frozen LVLM twice: once with the real image-question pair, and once with the image blacked out while the question is held fixed. A lightweight probe is trained on the real-image hidden state and regularized by a ranking loss that penalizes higher confidence on the blacked-out view, teaching it to treat visual grounding as a signal of reliability at zero additional inference cost. Evaluated across five modern LVLMs and seven baselines on a benchmark covering visual question answering, object hallucination detection, medical imaging, and financial document understanding, BICR achieves the best cross-LVLM average on both calibration and discrimination simultaneously, with statistically significant discrimination gains robust to cluster-aware analysis at 4-18x fewer parameters than the strongest probing baseline.

preprint2022arXiv

Scalable Transfer Evolutionary Optimization: Coping with Big Task Instances

In today's digital world, we are faced with an explosion of data and models produced and manipulated by numerous large-scale cloud-based applications. Under such settings, existing transfer evolutionary optimization frameworks grapple with simultaneously satisfying two important quality attributes, namely (1) scalability against a growing number of source tasks and (2) online learning agility against sparsity of relevant sources to the target task of interest. Satisfying these attributes shall facilitate practical deployment of transfer optimization to scenarios with big task-instances, while curbing the threat of negative transfer. While applications of existing algorithms are limited to tens of source tasks, in this paper, we take a quantum leap forward in enabling more than two orders of magnitude scale-up in the number of tasks; i.e., we efficiently handle scenarios beyond 1000 source task-instances. We devise a novel transfer evolutionary optimization framework comprising two co-evolving species for joint evolutions in the space of source knowledge and in the search space of solutions to the target problem. In particular, co-evolution enables the learned knowledge to be orchestrated on the fly, expediting convergence in the target optimization task. We have conducted an extensive series of experiments across a set of practically motivated discrete and continuous optimization examples comprising a large number of source task-instances, of which only a small fraction indicate source-target relatedness. The experimental results show that not only does our proposed framework scale efficiently with a growing number of source tasks but is also effective in capturing relevant knowledge against sparsity of related sources, fulfilling the two salient features of scalability and online learning agility.