Researcher profile

Faqiang Liu

Faqiang Liu contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

2 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

Joint sparse coding and temporal dynamics support context reconfiguration

Adaptive behavior requires the brain to transition between distinct contexts while maintaining representations of prior experience. The ability to reconfigure neural representations without erasing previously acquired knowledge is central to learning in dynamic environments, yet the neural mechanisms that support this balance remain unclear. Understanding these mechanisms is also critical for addressing catastrophic forgetting in artificial systems designed for lifelong learning. Here, we identify joint sparse coding and temporal dynamics in both the mouse medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) and computational networks as mechanisms that help preserve prior representations during context transitions. Specifically, sparsity in context-dependent representations reduces cross-context interference, whereas temporal dynamics within the network activity further enhance context separability across time. Strikingly, networks endowed with both properties, such as spiking neural networks, exhibit improved retention during lifelong learning without auxiliary heuristics. These findings establish joint sparse coding and temporal dynamics as a core mechanism supporting flexible context reconfiguration in lifelong learning and, through their activity constraining nature, as an energy-efficient architectural principle for stable adaptation. Together, they provide a mechanistic framework for understanding how the brain preserves prior knowledge while flexibly adapting to new contexts.

preprint2022arXiv

Towards Both Accurate and Robust Neural Networks without Extra Data

Deep neural networks have achieved remarkable performance in various applications but are extremely vulnerable to adversarial perturbation. The most representative and promising methods that can enhance model robustness, such as adversarial training and its variants, substantially degrade model accuracy on benign samples, limiting practical utility. Although incorporating extra training data can alleviate the trade-off to a certain extent, it remains unsolved to achieve both robustness and accuracy under limited training data. Here, we demonstrate the feasibility of overcoming the trade-off, by developing an adversarial feature stacking (AFS) model, which combines multiple independent feature extractors with varied levels of robustness and accuracy. Theoretical analysis is further conducted, and general principles for the selection of basic feature extractors are provided. We evaluate the AFS model on CIFAR-10 and CIFAR-100 datasets with strong adaptive attack methods, significantly advancing the state-of-the-art in terms of the trade-off. The AFS model achieves a benign accuracy improvement of ~6% on CIFAR-10 and ~10% on CIFAR-100 with comparable or even stronger robustness than the state-of-the-art adversarial training methods.