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Tao He

Tao He contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

10 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

Why Do DiT Editors Drift? Plug-and-Play Low Frequency Alignment in VAE Latent Space

Recent advances in diffusion transformers (DiTs) have enabled promising single-turn image editing capabilities. However, multi-turn editing often leads to progressive semantic drift and quality degradation.In this work, we study this problem from a latent-space frequency perspective by decomposing the editing process into two functional components: VAE and DiT. Through systematic analysis in the VAE latent space, we uncover that the DiT introduces dominant low-frequency drift that accumulates as semantic misalignment across editing rounds, while the VAE contributes comparatively stable reconstruction bias.Based on this insight, we propose VAE-LFA (Low Frequency Alignment), a training-free, plug-and-play method that performs alignment in VAE latent space. VAE-LFA decomposes latent discrepancies across editing rounds via low-pass filtering, and aligns low-frequency statistics to an exponential moving average of previous rounds, effectively suppressing accumulated semantic drift while preserving high-frequency details.Our method requires no retraining, ground-truth priors, or access to diffusion parameters, making it applicable to both white-box and black-box DiT editors. For white-box models, VAE-LFA is seamlessly integrated into the editing pipeline by eliminating redundant VAE round trips; for black-box models, it operates via an off-the-shelf VAE to perform inter-round latent alignment.Extensive experiments demonstrate that VAE-LFA improves semantic consistency and visual fidelity across diverse multi-turn editing scenarios, including both controlled and in-the-wild images.

preprint2023arXiv

Unicron: Economizing Self-Healing LLM Training at Scale

Training large-scale language models is increasingly critical in various domains, but it is hindered by frequent failures, leading to significant time and economic costs. Current failure recovery methods in cloud-based settings inadequately address the diverse and complex scenarios that arise, focusing narrowly on erasing downtime for individual tasks without considering the overall cost impact on a cluster. We introduce Unicron, a workload manager designed for efficient self-healing in large-scale language model training. Unicron optimizes the training process by minimizing failure-related costs across multiple concurrent tasks within a cluster. Its key features include in-band error detection for real-time error identification without extra overhead, a dynamic cost-aware plan generation mechanism for optimal reconfiguration, and an efficient transition strategy to reduce downtime during state changes. Deployed on a 128-GPU distributed cluster, Unicron demonstrates up to a 1.9x improvement in training efficiency over state-of-the-art methods, significantly reducing failure recovery costs and enhancing the reliability of large-scale language model training.

preprint2022arXiv

A Free Lunch to Person Re-identification: Learning from Automatically Generated Noisy Tracklets

A series of unsupervised video-based re-identification (re-ID) methods have been proposed to solve the problem of high labor cost required to annotate re-ID datasets. But their performance is still far lower than the supervised counterparts. In the mean time, clean datasets without noise are used in these methods, which is not realistic. In this paper, we propose to tackle this problem by learning re-ID models from automatically generated person tracklets by multiple objects tracking (MOT) algorithm. To this end, we design a tracklet-based multi-level clustering (TMC) framework to effectively learn the re-ID model from the noisy person tracklets. First, intra-tracklet isolation to reduce ID switch noise within tracklets; second, alternates between using inter-tracklet association to eliminate ID fragmentation noise and network training using the pseudo label. Extensive experiments on MARS with various manually generated noises show the effectiveness of the proposed framework. Specifically, the proposed framework achieved mAP 53.4% and rank-1 63.7% on the simulated tracklets with strongest noise, even outperforming the best existing method on clean tracklets. Based on the results, we believe that building re-ID models from automatically generated noisy tracklets is a reasonable approach and will also be an important way to make re-ID models feasible in real-world applications.

preprint2022arXiv

A High-Accuracy Unsupervised Person Re-identification Method Using Auxiliary Information Mined from Datasets

Supervised person re-identification methods rely heavily on high-quality cross-camera training label. This significantly hinders the deployment of re-ID models in real-world applications. The unsupervised person re-ID methods can reduce the cost of data annotation, but their performance is still far lower than the supervised ones. In this paper, we make full use of the auxiliary information mined from the datasets for multi-modal feature learning, including camera information, temporal information and spatial information. By analyzing the style bias of cameras, the characteristics of pedestrians' motion trajectories and the positions of camera network, this paper designs three modules: Time-Overlapping Constraint (TOC), Spatio-Temporal Similarity (STS) and Same-Camera Penalty (SCP) to exploit the auxiliary information. Auxiliary information can improve the model performance and inference accuracy by constructing association constraints or fusing with visual features. In addition, this paper proposes three effective training tricks, including Restricted Label Smoothing Cross Entropy Loss (RLSCE), Weight Adaptive Triplet Loss (WATL) and Dynamic Training Iterations (DTI). The tricks achieve mAP of 72.4% and 81.1% on MARS and DukeMTMC-VideoReID, respectively. Combined with auxiliary information exploiting modules, our methods achieve mAP of 89.9% on DukeMTMC, where TOC, STS and SCP all contributed considerable performance improvements. The method proposed by this paper outperforms most existing unsupervised re-ID methods and narrows the gap between unsupervised and supervised re-ID methods. Our code is at https://github.com/tenghehan/AuxUSLReID.

preprint2022arXiv

Intensity-surged and Bandwidth-extended Terahertz Radiation in Two-foci Cascading Plasmas

The two-color strong-field mixing in gas medium is a widely-used approach to generate bright broadband terahertz (THz) radiation. Here, we present a new and counterintuitive method to promote THz performance in two-color scheme. Beyond our knowledge that the maximum THz generation occurs with two-color foci overlapped, we found that, when the foci of two-color beams are noticeably separated along the propagation axis resulting in cascading plasmas, the THz conversion efficiency is surged by one order of magnitude and the bandwidth is stretched by more than 2 times, achieving $10^{-3}$ conversion efficiency and $>$100 THz bandwidth under the condition of 800/400 nm, $\sim$35 fs driving lasers. With the help of the pulse propagation equation and photocurrent model, the observations can be partially understood by the compromise between THz generation and absorption due to the spatial redistribution of laser energy in cascading plasmas. Present method can be extended to mid-infrared driving laser, and the new records of THz peak power and conversion efficiency are expected.

preprint2022arXiv

SCRDet++: Detecting Small, Cluttered and Rotated Objects via Instance-Level Feature Denoising and Rotation Loss Smoothing

Small and cluttered objects are common in real-world which are challenging for detection. The difficulty is further pronounced when the objects are rotated, as traditional detectors often routinely locate the objects in horizontal bounding box such that the region of interest is contaminated with background or nearby interleaved objects. In this paper, we first innovatively introduce the idea of denoising to object detection. Instance-level denoising on the feature map is performed to enhance the detection to small and cluttered objects. To handle the rotation variation, we also add a novel IoU constant factor to the smooth L1 loss to address the long standing boundary problem, which to our analysis, is mainly caused by the periodicity of angular (PoA) and exchangeability of edges (EoE). By combing these two features, our proposed detector is termed as SCRDet++. Extensive experiments are performed on large aerial images public datasets DOTA, DIOR, UCAS-AOD as well as natural image dataset COCO, scene text dataset ICDAR2015, small traffic light dataset BSTLD and our released S$^2$TLD by this paper. The results show the effectiveness of our approach. The released dataset S2TLD is made public available, which contains 5,786 images with 14,130 traffic light instances across five categories.

preprint2022arXiv

Semi-supervised Network Embedding with Differentiable Deep Quantisation

Learning accurate low-dimensional embeddings for a network is a crucial task as it facilitates many downstream network analytics tasks. For large networks, the trained embeddings often require a significant amount of space to store, making storage and processing a challenge. Building on our previous work on semi-supervised network embedding, we develop d-SNEQ, a differentiable DNN-based quantisation method for network embedding. d-SNEQ incorporates a rank loss to equip the learned quantisation codes with rich high-order information and is able to substantially compress the size of trained embeddings, thus reducing storage footprint and accelerating retrieval speed. We also propose a new evaluation metric, path prediction, to fairly and more directly evaluate model performance on the preservation of high-order information. Our evaluation on four real-world networks of diverse characteristics shows that d-SNEQ outperforms a number of state-of-the-art embedding methods in link prediction, path prediction, node classification, and node recommendation while being far more space- and time-efficient.

preprint2022arXiv

Unsupervised Domain-adaptive Hash for Networks

Abundant real-world data can be naturally represented by large-scale networks, which demands efficient and effective learning algorithms. At the same time, labels may only be available for some networks, which demands these algorithms to be able to adapt to unlabeled networks. Domain-adaptive hash learning has enjoyed considerable success in the computer vision community in many practical tasks due to its lower cost in both retrieval time and storage footprint. However, it has not been applied to multiple-domain networks. In this work, we bridge this gap by developing an unsupervised domain-adaptive hash learning method for networks, dubbed UDAH. Specifically, we develop four {task-specific yet correlated} components: (1) network structure preservation via a hard groupwise contrastive loss, (2) relaxation-free supervised hashing, (3) cross-domain intersected discriminators, and (4) semantic center alignment. We conduct a wide range of experiments to evaluate the effectiveness and efficiency of our method on a range of tasks including link prediction, node classification, and neighbor recommendation. Our evaluation results demonstrate that our model achieves better performance than the state-of-the-art conventional discrete embedding methods over all the tasks.

preprint2022arXiv

VEM$^2$L: A Plug-and-play Framework for Fusing Text and Structure Knowledge on Sparse Knowledge Graph Completion

Knowledge Graph Completion (KGC) aims to reason over known facts and infer missing links but achieves weak performances on those sparse Knowledge Graphs (KGs). Recent works introduce text information as auxiliary features or apply graph densification to alleviate this challenge, but suffer from problems of ineffectively incorporating structure features and injecting noisy triples. In this paper, we solve the sparse KGC from these two motivations simultaneously and handle their respective drawbacks further, and propose a plug-and-play unified framework VEM$^2$L over sparse KGs. The basic idea of VEM$^2$L is to motivate a text-based KGC model and a structure-based KGC model to learn with each other to fuse respective knowledge into unity. To exploit text and structure features together in depth, we partition knowledge within models into two nonoverlapping parts: expressiveness ability on the training set and generalization ability upon unobserved queries. For the former, we motivate these two text-based and structure-based models to learn from each other on the training sets. And for the generalization ability, we propose a novel knowledge fusion strategy derived by the Variational EM (VEM) algorithm, during which we also apply a graph densification operation to alleviate the sparse graph problem further. Our graph densification is derived by VEM algorithm. Due to the convergence of EM algorithm, we guarantee the increase of likelihood function theoretically with less being impacted by noisy injected triples heavily. By combining these two fusion methods and graph densification, we propose the VEM$^2$L framework finally. Both detailed theoretical evidence, as well as qualitative experiments, demonstrates the effectiveness of our proposed framework.

preprint2020arXiv

Learning from the Scene and Borrowing from the Rich: Tackling the Long Tail in Scene Graph Generation

Despite the huge progress in scene graph generation in recent years, its long-tail distribution in object relationships remains a challenging and pestering issue. Existing methods largely rely on either external knowledge or statistical bias information to alleviate this problem. In this paper, we tackle this issue from another two aspects: (1) scene-object interaction aiming at learning specific knowledge from a scene via an additive attention mechanism; and (2) long-tail knowledge transfer which tries to transfer the rich knowledge learned from the head into the tail. Extensive experiments on the benchmark dataset Visual Genome on three tasks demonstrate that our method outperforms current state-of-the-art competitors.