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Guodong Du

Guodong Du contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

2 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

Dynamic Model Merging Made Slim

Model merging enables the reuse of fine-tuned models without joint training or access to original data. Dynamic merging further improves flexibility by selectively activating task-relevant parameters and efficiently composing experts across multiple tasks. However, existing dynamic methods either maintain a full shared model with tiny experts or allocate excessive capacity to experts, leading to suboptimal accuracy--efficiency trade-offs. To address this, we propose DiDi-Merging, a slim dynamic merging framework that leverages differentiable rank allocation to balance shared and expert parameters. By formulating parameter budgeting as differentiable rank optimization in low-rank modules and introducing a data-free refinement step to recover task fidelity, DiDi-Merging matches prior dynamic baselines at only 1.24x the parameters of a single fine-tuned model and surpasses them at 1.4x, substantially more compact than methods requiring > 2x storage. DiDi-Merging applies across vision, language, and multimodal tasks.

preprint2026arXiv

Vocabulary Hijacking in LVLMs: Unveiling Critical Attention Heads by Excluding Inert Tokens to Mitigate Hallucination

Large Vision-Language Models (LVLMs) have achieved remarkable progress in multimodal tasks, yet their reliability is persistently undermined by hallucinations-generating text that contradicts visual input. Recent studies often attribute these errors to inadequate visual attention. In this work, we analyze the attention mechanisms via the logit lens, uncovering a distinct anomaly we term Vocabulary Hijacking. We discover that specific visual tokens, defined as Inert Tokens, disproportionately attract attention. Crucially, when their intermediate hidden states are projected into the vocabulary space, they consistently decode to a fixed set of unrelated words (termed Hijacking Anchors) across layers, revealing a rigid semantic collapse. Leveraging this semantic rigidity, we propose Hijacking Anchor-Based Identification (HABI), a robust strategy to accurately localize these Inert Tokens. To quantify the impact of this phenomenon, we introduce the Non-Hijacked Visual Attention Ratio (NHAR), a novel metric designed to identify attention heads that remain resilient to hijacking and are critical for factual accuracy. Building on these insights, we propose Hijacking-Aware Visual Attention Enhancement (HAVAE), a training-free intervention that selectively strengthens the focus of these identified heads on salient visual content. Extensive experiments across multiple benchmarks demonstrate that HAVAE significantly mitigates hallucinations with no additional computational overhead, while preserving the model's general capabilities. Our code is publicly available at https://github.com/lab-klc/HAVAE.