Researcher profile

Franco Scarselli

Franco Scarselli contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

6 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

APEX: Assumption-free Projection-based Embedding eXamination Metric for Image Quality Assessment

As generative models achieve unprecedented visual quality, the gold standard for image evaluation remains traditional feature-distribution metrics (e.g., FID). However, these metrics are provably hindered by the closed-vocabulary bottleneck of outdated features and the assumptive bias of rigid parametric formulations. Recent alternatives exploit modern backbones to solve the feature bottleneck, yet continue to suffer from parametric limitations. To close this gap, we introduce APEX (Assumption-free Projection-based Embedding eXamination), a novel evaluation framework leveraging the Sliced Wasserstein Distance as a mathematically grounded, assumption-free similarity measure. APEX inherits effective scalability to high-dimensional spaces, as we prove with theoretical and empirical evidences. Moreover, APEX is embedding-agnostic and uses two open-vocabulary foundation models, CLIP and DINOv2, as feature extractors. Benchmarking APEX against established baselines reveals superior robustness to visual degradations. Additionally, we show that APEX metrics exhibit intra- and cross-dataset stability, ensuring highly stable evaluations on out-of-domain datasets.

preprint2024arXiv

A topological description of loss surfaces based on Betti Numbers

In the context of deep learning models, attention has recently been paid to studying the surface of the loss function in order to better understand training with methods based on gradient descent. This search for an appropriate description, both analytical and topological, has led to numerous efforts to identify spurious minima and characterize gradient dynamics. Our work aims to contribute to this field by providing a topological measure to evaluate loss complexity in the case of multilayer neural networks. We compare deep and shallow architectures with common sigmoidal activation functions by deriving upper and lower bounds on the complexity of their loss function and revealing how that complexity is influenced by the number of hidden units, training models, and the activation function used. Additionally, we found that certain variations in the loss function or model architecture, such as adding an $\ell_2$ regularization term or implementing skip connections in a feedforward network, do not affect loss topology in specific cases.

preprint2022arXiv

Graph Neural Networks for Communication Networks: Context, Use Cases and Opportunities

Graph neural networks (GNN) have shown outstanding applications in many fields where data is fundamentally represented as graphs (e.g., chemistry, biology, recommendation systems). In this vein, communication networks comprise many fundamental components that are naturally represented in a graph-structured manner (e.g., topology, configurations, traffic flows). This position article presents GNNs as a fundamental tool for modeling, control and management of communication networks. GNNs represent a new generation of data-driven models that can accurately learn and reproduce the complex behaviors behind real networks. As a result, such models can be applied to a wide variety of networking use cases, such as planning, online optimization, or troubleshooting. The main advantage of GNNs over traditional neural networks lies in its unprecedented generalization capabilities when applied to other networks and configurations unseen during training, which is a critical feature for achieving practical data-driven solutions for networking. This article comprises a brief tutorial on GNNs and their possible applications to communication networks. To showcase the potential of this technology, we present two use cases with state-of-the-art GNN models respectively applied to wired and wireless networks. Lastly, we delve into the key open challenges and opportunities yet to be explored in this novel research area.

preprint2022arXiv

Modular multi-source prediction of drug side-effects with DruGNN

Drug Side-Effects (DSEs) have a high impact on public health, care system costs, and drug discovery processes. Predicting the probability of side-effects, before their occurrence, is fundamental to reduce this impact, in particular on drug discovery. Candidate molecules could be screened before undergoing clinical trials, reducing the costs in time, money, and health of the participants. Drug side-effects are triggered by complex biological processes involving many different entities, from drug structures to protein-protein interactions. To predict their occurrence, it is necessary to integrate data from heterogeneous sources. In this work, such heterogeneous data is integrated into a graph dataset, expressively representing the relational information between different entities, such as drug molecules and genes. The relational nature of the dataset represents an important novelty for drug side-effect predictors. Graph Neural Networks (GNNs) are exploited to predict DSEs on our dataset with very promising results. GNNs are deep learning models that can process graph-structured data, with minimal information loss, and have been applied on a wide variety of biological tasks. Our experimental results confirm the advantage of using relationships between data entities, suggesting interesting future developments in this scope. The experimentation also shows the importance of specific subsets of data in determining associations between drugs and side-effects.

preprint2019arXiv

Embedding of FRPN in CNN architecture

This paper extends the fully recursive perceptron network (FRPN) model for vectorial inputs to include deep convolutional neural networks (CNNs) which can accept multi-dimensional inputs. A FRPN consists of a recursive layer, which, given a fixed input, iteratively computes an equilibrium state. The unfolding realized with this kind of iterative mechanism allows to simulate a deep neural network with any number of layers. The extension of the FRPN to CNN results in an architecture, which we call convolutional-FRPN (C-FRPN), where the convolutional layers are recursive. The method is evaluated on several image classification benchmarks. It is shown that the C-FRPN consistently outperforms standard CNNs having the same number of parameters. The gap in performance is particularly large for small networks, showing that the C-FRPN is a very powerful architecture, since it allows to obtain equivalent performance with fewer parameters when compared with deep CNNs.

preprint2019arXiv

Weak Supervision for Generating Pixel-Level Annotations in Scene Text Segmentation

Providing pixel-level supervisions for scene text segmentation is inherently difficult and costly, so that only few small datasets are available for this task. To face the scarcity of training data, previous approaches based on Convolutional Neural Networks (CNNs) rely on the use of a synthetic dataset for pre-training. However, synthetic data cannot reproduce the complexity and variability of natural images. In this work, we propose to use a weakly supervised learning approach to reduce the domain-shift between synthetic and real data. Leveraging the bounding-box supervision of the COCO-Text and the MLT datasets, we generate weak pixel-level supervisions of real images. In particular, the COCO-Text-Segmentation (COCO_TS) and the MLT-Segmentation (MLT_S) datasets are created and released. These two datasets are used to train a CNN, the Segmentation Multiscale Attention Network (SMANet), which is specifically designed to face some peculiarities of the scene text segmentation task. The SMANet is trained end-to-end on the proposed datasets, and the experiments show that COCO_TS and MLT_S are a valid alternative to synthetic images, allowing to use only a fraction of the training samples and improving significantly the performances.