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Shen Chen

Shen Chen contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

5 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

A Novel $αβ$-Approximation Method Based on Numerical Integration for Discretizing Continuous Systems

In this article, we propose a novel discretization method based on numerical integration for discretizing continuous systems, termed the $αβ$-approximation or Scalable Bilinear Transformation (SBT). In contrast to existing methods, the proposed method consists of two factors, i.e., shape factor ($α$) and time factor ($β$). Depending on the discretization technique applied, we identify two primary distortion modes in discrete resonant controllers: frequency warping and resonance damping. We further provide a theoretical explanation for these distortion modes, and demonstrate that the performance of the method is superior to all typical methods. The proposed method is implemented to discretize a quasi-resonant (QR) controller on a control board, achieving 25\% reduction in the root-mean-square error (RMSE) compared to the SOTA method. Finally, the approach is extended to discretizing a resonant controller of a grid-tied inverter. The efficacy of the proposed method is conclusively validated through favorable comparisons among the theory, simulation, and experiments.

preprint2026arXiv

GenShield: Unified Detection and Artifact Correction for AI-Generated Images

Diffusion-based image synthesis has made AI-generated images (AIGI) increasingly photorealistic, raising urgent concerns about authenticity in applications such as misinformation detection, digital forensics, and content moderation. Despite the substantial advances in AIGI detection, how to correct detected AI-generated images with visible artifacts and restore realistic appearance remains largely underexplored. Moreover, few existing work has established the connection between AIGI detection and artifact correction. To fill this gap, we propose GenShield, a unified autoregressive framework that jointly performs explainable AIGI detection and controllable artifact correction in a closed loop from diagnosis to restoration, revealing a mutually reinforcing relationship between these two tasks. We further introduce a Visual Chain-of-Thought based curriculum learning strategy that enables self-explained, multi-step ``diagnose-then-repair'' correction with an explicit stopping criterion. A high-quality dataset with large-scale ``artifact-restored'' pairs is also constructed alongside a unified evaluation pipeline. Extensive experiments on our correction benchmark and mainstream AIGI detection benchmarks demonstrate state-of-the-art performance and strong generalization of our method. The code is available at https://github.com/zhipeixu/GenShield.

preprint2021arXiv

DeeperForensics Challenge 2020 on Real-World Face Forgery Detection: Methods and Results

This paper reports methods and results in the DeeperForensics Challenge 2020 on real-world face forgery detection. The challenge employs the DeeperForensics-1.0 dataset, one of the most extensive publicly available real-world face forgery detection datasets, with 60,000 videos constituted by a total of 17.6 million frames. The model evaluation is conducted online on a high-quality hidden test set with multiple sources and diverse distortions. A total of 115 participants registered for the competition, and 25 teams made valid submissions. We will summarize the winning solutions and present some discussions on potential research directions.

preprint2020arXiv

Generalized Operating Procedure for Deep Learning: an Unconstrained Optimal Design Perspective

Deep learning (DL) has brought about remarkable breakthrough in processing images, video and speech due to its efficacy in extracting highly abstract representation and learning very complex functions. However, there is seldom operating procedure reported on how to make it for real use cases. In this paper, we intend to address this problem by presenting a generalized operating procedure for DL from the perspective of unconstrained optimal design, which is motivated by a simple intension to remove the barrier of using DL, especially for those scientists or engineers who are new but eager to use it. Our proposed procedure contains seven steps, which are project/problem statement, data collection, architecture design, initialization of parameters, defining loss function, computing optimal parameters, and inference, respectively. Following this procedure, we build a multi-stream end-to-end speaker verification system, in which the input speech utterance is processed by multiple parallel streams within different frequency range, so that the acoustic modeling can be more robust resulting from the diversity of features. Trained with VoxCeleb dataset, our experimental results verify the effectiveness of our proposed operating procedure, and also show that our multi-stream framework outperforms single-stream baseline with 20 % relative reduction in minimum decision cost function (minDCF).

preprint2020arXiv

Hadamard Matrix Guided Online Hashing

Online image hashing has attracted increasing research attention recently, which receives large-scale data in a streaming manner to update the hash functions on-the-fly. Its key challenge lies in the difficulty of balancing the learning timeliness and model accuracy. To this end, most works follow a supervised setting, i.e., using class labels to boost the hashing performance, which defects in two aspects: First, strong constraints, e.g., orthogonal or similarity preserving, are used, which however are typically relaxed and lead to large accuracy drop. Second, large amounts of training batches are required to learn the up-to-date hash functions, which largely increase the learning complexity. To handle the above challenges, a novel supervised online hashing scheme termed Hadamard Matrix Guided Online Hashing (HMOH) is proposed in this paper. Our key innovation lies in introducing Hadamard matrix, which is an orthogonal binary matrix built via Sylvester method. In particular, to release the need of strong constraints, we regard each column of Hadamard matrix as the target code for each class label, which by nature satisfies several desired properties of hashing codes. To accelerate the online training, LSH is first adopted to align the lengths of target code and to-be-learned binary code. We then treat the learning of hash functions as a set of binary classification problems to fit the assigned target code. Finally, extensive experiments demonstrate the superior accuracy and efficiency of the proposed method over various state-of-the-art methods. Codes are available at https://github.com/lmbxmu/mycode.