Researcher profile

Huafeng Li

Huafeng Li contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

6 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

Expandable, Compressible, Mineable: Open-World Thermal Image Restoration

In open-world settings, thermal infrared (TIR) image degradations continuously emerge and evolve, while most existing all-in-one restoration methods are built on a closed-set assumption and struggle to continually adapt to novel degradations. To address this, we propose ECMRNet, an Expandable, Compressible, and Mineable Restoration Network for open-world TIR restoration from a continual learning perspective. Conceptually, ECMRNet unifies continual degradation learning as an "expand-compress-mine" closed-loop process, enabling sustained adaptation to new degradations with controllable evolution. Structurally, ECMRNet decomposes intermediate representations into group-isolated subspaces, and achieves strict parameter isolation and fast adaptation to new degradations by freezing historical groups and isomorphically expanding new ones. To curb model growth as tasks accumulate, we present Structural Entropy Pruning, which identifies and removes redundant channel groups via two-dimensional structural entropy minimization, achieving information contribution-driven adaptive compression. Moreover, we design a Sub-degradation Knowledge Mining Module that dynamically retrieves and recombines transferable components from historical representations to improve restoration under compound degradations. Experimental results demonstrate that ECMRNet achieves superior overall performance across diverse single and compound degradations while using fewer parameters and lower computational cost. The source code is available at https://github.com/Kust-lp/ECMRNet.

preprint2026arXiv

Infrared-Assisted Single-Stage Framework for Joint Restoration and Fusion of Visible and Infrared Images under Hazy Conditions

Infrared and visible (IR-VIS) image fusion has gained significant attention for its broad application value. However, existing methods often neglect the complementary role of infrared image in restoring visible image features under hazy conditions. To address this, we propose a joint learning framework that utilizes infrared image for the restoration and fusion of hazy IR-VIS images. To mitigate the adverse effects of feature diversity between IR-VIS images, we introduce a prompt generation mechanism that regulates modality-specific feature incompatibility. This creates a prompt selection matrix from non-shared image information, followed by prompt embeddings generated from a prompt pool. These embeddings help generate candidate features for dehazing. We further design an infrared-assisted feature restoration mechanism that selects candidate features based on haze density, enabling simultaneous restoration and fusion within a single-stage framework. To enhance fusion quality, we construct a multi-stage prompt embedding fusion module that leverages feature supplementation from the prompt generation module. Our method effectively fuses IR-VIS images while removing haze, yielding clear, haze-free fusion results. In contrast to two-stage methods that dehaze and then fuse, our approach enables collaborative training in a single-stage framework, making the model relatively lightweight and suitable for practical deployment. Experimental results validate its effectiveness and demonstrate advantages over existing methods. The source code of the paper is available at \href{https://github.com/fangjiaqi0909/IASSF}{\textcolor{blue}{https://github.com/fangjiaqi0909/IASSF

preprint2023arXiv

Symmetry breaking of Pancharatnam-Berry phase using non-axisymmetric meta-atoms

The Pancharatnam-Berry (PB) phase in metasurfaces obeys the symmetry restriction, according to which the PB phases of two orthogonal circularly polarized waves are the same but with opposite signs. Here, we reveal a general mechanism to break the axisymmetry of meta-atoms in order to break the PB-phase symmetry restriction. As a proof of concept, we designed a novel meta-atom with a QR-code structure and successfully demonstrated circular-polarization multiplexing metasurface holography. This study provides a fundamentally new understanding of the PB phase and opens a path for arbitrary wavefront engineering using asymmetric electromagnetic structures.

preprint2022arXiv

Learning Modal-Invariant and Temporal-Memory for Video-based Visible-Infrared Person Re-Identification

Thanks for the cross-modal retrieval techniques, visible-infrared (RGB-IR) person re-identification (Re-ID) is achieved by projecting them into a common space, allowing person Re-ID in 24-hour surveillance systems. However, with respect to the probe-to-gallery, almost all existing RGB-IR based cross-modal person Re-ID methods focus on image-to-image matching, while the video-to-video matching which contains much richer spatial- and temporal-information remains under-explored. In this paper, we primarily study the video-based cross-modal person Re-ID method. To achieve this task, a video-based RGB-IR dataset is constructed, in which 927 valid identities with 463,259 frames and 21,863 tracklets captured by 12 RGB/IR cameras are collected. Based on our constructed dataset, we prove that with the increase of frames in a tracklet, the performance does meet more enhancement, demonstrating the significance of video-to-video matching in RGB-IR person Re-ID. Additionally, a novel method is further proposed, which not only projects two modalities to a modal-invariant subspace, but also extracts the temporal-memory for motion-invariant. Thanks to these two strategies, much better results are achieved on our video-based cross-modal person Re-ID. The code and dataset are released at: https://github.com/VCMproject233/MITML.

preprint2020arXiv

A Data-Driven Network Model for the Emerging COVID-19 Epidemics in Wuhan, Toronto and Italy

The ongoing Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic threatens the health of humans and causes great economic losses. Predictive modelling and forecasting the epidemic trends are essential for developing countermeasures to mitigate this pandemic. We develop a network model, where each node represents an individual and the edges represent contacts between individuals where the infection can spread. The individuals are classified based on the number of contacts they have each day (their node degrees) and their infection status. The transmission network model was respectively fitted to the reported data for the COVID-19 epidemic in Wuhan (China), Toronto (Canada), and the Italian Republic using a Markov Chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) optimization algorithm. Our model fits all three regions well with narrow confidence intervals and could be adapted to simulate other megacities or regions. The model projections on the role of containment strategies can help inform public health authorities to plan control measures.

preprint2020arXiv

StreamNet: A DAG System with Streaming Graph Computing

To achieve high throughput in the POW based blockchain systems, researchers proposed a series of methods, and DAG is one of the most active and promising fields. We designed and implemented the StreamNet, aiming to engineer a scalable and endurable DAG system. When attaching a new block in the DAG, only two tips are selected. One is the parent tip whose definition is the same as in Conflux[1]; another is using Markov Chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) technique by which the definition is the same as IOTA [2]. We infer a pivotal chain along the path of each epoch in the graph, and a total order of the graph could be calculated without a centralized authority. To scale up, we leveraged the graph streaming property; high transaction validation speed will be achieved even if the DAG is growing. To scale out, we designed the direct signal gossip protocol to help disseminate block updates in the network, such that messages can be passed in the network more efficiently. We implemented our system based on IOTA's reference code (IRI) and ran comprehensive experiments over the different sizes of clusters of multiple network topologies.