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Jingcheng Wu

Jingcheng Wu contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

4 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

Leveraging Graph Structure in Seq2Seq Models for Knowledge Graph Link Prediction

We introduce Graph-Augmented Sequence-to-Sequence (GA-S2S), a novel framework that integrates a T5-small encoder-decoder with a Relational Graph Attention Network (RGAT) to improve link prediction in knowledge graphs. While existing Seq2Seq models rely solely on surface-level textual descriptions of entities and relations and at best, flatten the neighborhoods of a query entity into a single linear sequence, thereby discarding the inherent graph structure, GA-S2S jointly encodes both textual features and the full $k$-hop subgraph topology surrounding the query entity. By integrating raw encoder outputs with RGAT's relation-aware embeddings, our model captures and leverages richer multi-hop relational patterns and textual information. Our preliminary experiments on the CoDEx dataset demonstrate that GA-S2S outperforms competitive Seq2Seq-based baseline models, achieving up to a 19\% relative gain in link prediction accuracy.

preprint2026arXiv

Scalable Uncertainty Reasoning in Knowledge Graphs

Knowledge Graphs are pivotal for semantic data integration. The real-world data they model is often inherently uncertain. Within knowledge graphs, uncertainty manifests in three distinct levels: imprecise attribute values, probabilistic triple existence, and incomplete schema knowledge. However, current Semantic Web standards lack native support for reasoning over such uncertainty, and naïve extensions often incur computational intractability. In this thesis, I aim to develop a modular framework that addresses each level through tailored techniques: (1) defining probabilistic literals and a corresponding query algebra for continuous attributes; (2) a compilation-based framework transforming SPARQL provenance into tractable probabilistic circuits for uncertain triples; and (3) topology-aware geometric embeddings for statistical schema reasoning. The central hypothesis is that specialized reasoning mechanisms, namely algebraic, logical, and geometric approaches, can reconcile semantic precision with computational tractability.

preprint2026arXiv

Towards Foundation Models for Relational Databases with Language Models and Graph Neural Networks

Relational databases store much of the world's structured information, and they are essential for driving complex predictive applications. However, deep learning progress on relational data remains limited, as conventional approaches flatten databases into single tables via manual feature engineering, discarding relational context. Relational deep learning (RDL) addresses this by modeling databases as relational entity graphs (REGs) for graph neural networks (GNNs), but remains task- and database-specific. To combine the strengths of both paradigms, we propose a hybrid architecture combining a fine-tuned BART encoder to capture intra-row semantics with a GraphSAGE-based GNN over REGs to inject relational context. Experiments on RelBench show that the GNN substantially enriches BART's row embeddings, achieving a ROC-AUC of 67.40 on the driver-dnf task from the rel-f1 dataset. This performance is competitive with supervised baselines such as LightGBM (68.86) and narrows the gap to RDL (72.62) to within 5.22 points, though a substantial gap remains to state-of-the-art foundation models such as KumoRFM (82.63). These results suggest that lightweight hybrid LM-GNN architectures offer a promising and resource-efficient path towards foundation models for relational databases.

preprint2022arXiv

Robustar: Interactive Toolbox Supporting Precise Data Annotation for Robust Vision Learning

We introduce the initial release of our software Robustar, which aims to improve the robustness of vision classification machine learning models through a data-driven perspective. Building upon the recent understanding that the lack of machine learning model's robustness is the tendency of the model's learning of spurious features, we aim to solve this problem from its root at the data perspective by removing the spurious features from the data before training. In particular, we introduce a software that helps the users to better prepare the data for training image classification models by allowing the users to annotate the spurious features at the pixel level of images. To facilitate this process, our software also leverages recent advances to help identify potential images and pixels worthy of attention and to continue the training with newly annotated data. Our software is hosted at the GitHub Repository https://github.com/HaohanWang/Robustar.