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Qixin Guo

Qixin Guo contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

2 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

CapsID: Soft-Routed Variable-Length Semantic IDs for Generative Recommendation

Generative recommendation maps each item to a sequence of Semantic IDs (SIDs) and recasts retrieval as autoregressive token generation. In this paradigm the main bottleneck is the tokenizer rather than the Transformer: residual vector quantization with a hard nearest-neighbor assignment at every layer collapses multi-faceted item semantics at cluster boundaries and propagates early errors to later SID positions. A common workaround is to append a dense vector or attribute prefix to the SID, but this dual-representation design inflates inference cost and gives up the simplicity of a generative interface. We address the bottleneck at the tokenizer itself. CAPSID replaces hard residual quantization with capsule routing: at each layer an item probabilistically routes to several semantic capsules, the residual is updated by the routed reconstruction rather than by a single winning code, and the SID terminates once the active capsule's confidence is high enough. On top of CAPSID, SEMANTICBPE composes adjacent SID tokens into reusable subwords by combining their co-occurrence with their embedding compatibility. On Amazon Beauty, Sports, Toys, and a 35M-item proprietary industrial catalog, CAPSID+SEMANTICBPE improves Recall at 10 by 9.6% on average over ReSID, the strongest single-representation baseline, and matches or exceeds a COBRA-style sparse-dense system on every public benchmark while running at 51% of its inference latency. Ablations show that soft routing, iterative agreement, and confidence-driven length each contribute independently, and the gains are largest on tail items where boundary semantics dominate.

preprint2022arXiv

Facile synthesis of Cu2O nanorods in the presence of NaCl by SILAR method and its characterizations

Cu2O nanorods have been deposited on soda-lime glass (SLG) substrates by the modified SILAR technique by varying the concentration of NaCl electrolyte into the precursor complex solution. The structural, electrical, and optical properties of synthesized Cu2O nanorod films have been studied by a variety of characterization tools. Structural analyses by XRD confirmed the polycrystalline Cu2O phase with (111) preferential growth. Raman scattering spectroscopic measurements conducted at room temperature also showed characteristic peaks of the pure Cu2O phase. The surface resistivity of the Cu2O nanorod films decreased from 15,142 to 685 Ohm.cm with the addition of NaCl from 0 to 4 mmol, and then exhibited an opposite trend with further addition of NaCl. The optical bandgap of the synthesized Cu2O nanorod films was observed as 1.88 - 2.36 eV, while the temperature-dependent activation energies of the Cu2O films were measured as about 0.14 - 0.21 eV. SEM morphologies demonstrated Cu2O nanorod as well as closely packed spherical grains with the alteration of NaCl concentration. The Cu2O phase of nanorods was found stable up to 230 0C corroborating the optical bandgap results of the same. The film fabricated in presence of 4 mmol of NaCl showed the lowest resistivity and activation energy as well comparatively uniform nanorod morphology. Our studies demonstrate that the nominal presence of NaCl electrolytes in the pre-cursor solutions has a significant impact on the physical properties of Cu2O nanorod films which could be beneficial in optoelectronic research.