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Tianming Liang

Tianming Liang contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

3 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

$\textit{Don't Guess, Just Ask}$: Resolving Ambiguity in Referring Segmentation via Multi-turn Clarification

Referring segmentation aims to segment the target objects in images or videos based on the textual query. Despite remarkable progress over the past years, existing works always assume that the user-provided queries are already precise and clear. However, this assumption is impractical. In real-world scenarios, it is unrealistic to expect all users to thoroughly review their visual content and carefully ensure their queries are unique and unambiguous. When encountering such cases, existing segmentation models tend to arbitrarily guess the user preferences, often resulting in undesired outcomes. To address this limitation, we propose \textbf{IC-Seg}, a novel agentic framework that proactively clarifies user intent through multi-turn conversation before segmentation. To effectively incentivize this capability, we further introduce \textbf{Hi-GRPO}, a new hierarchical optimization strategy that injects dense and informative supervision signals at the trajectory, turn, and step levels. This strategy encourages efficient intent clarification, effectively eliminating redundant interactions and improving overall dialogue quality. For evaluation, we establish \textbf{Ambi-RVOS}, a referring video object segmentation benchmark with ambiguous user queries. Extensive experiments demonstrate that IC-Seg not only outperforms existing methods by a large margin in resolving ambiguous queries, but also maintains state-of-the-art performance on standard reasoning segmentation benchmarks. Code and data will be released at \url{https://github.com/iSEE-Laboratory/IC-Seg}.

preprint2026arXiv

Breaking $\textit{Winner-Takes-All}$: Cooperative Policy Optimization Improves Diverse LLM Reasoning

Reinforcement learning with verifiers (RLVR) has become a central paradigm for improving LLM reasoning, yet popular group-based optimization algorithms like GRPO often suffer from exploration collapse, where the models prematurely converge on a narrow set of high-scoring patterns, lacking the ability to explore new solutions. Recent efforts attempt to alleviate this by adding entropy regularization or diversity bonus. However, these approaches do not change the \textit{winner-takes-all} nature, where rollouts still compete for individual advantage rather than cooperating for maximizing global diversity. In this work, we propose Group Cooperative Policy Optimization (GCPO), which shifts the training paradigm from rollout competition to team cooperation. Specifically, GCPO replaces independent rollout scoring with team-level credit assignment: a rollout is rewarded by how much it contributes to the team's valid solution coverage, rather than its individual accuracy. This coverage is described as a determinant volume over reward-weighted semantic embeddings, where only correct and non-redundant rollouts contribute to this volume. During advantage estimation, GCPO redistributes the collective team reward to each single rollout according to its average marginal contribution to the team. This cooperative training paradigm routes optimization toward non-redundant correct reasoning paths. Experiments across multiple reasoning benchmarks demonstrate that GCPO significantly improves both reasoning accuracy and solution diversity over existing approaches. Code will be released at https://github.com/bradybuddiemarch/gcpo.

preprint2022arXiv

Distantly-Supervised Long-Tailed Relation Extraction Using Constraint Graphs

Label noise and long-tailed distributions are two major challenges in distantly supervised relation extraction. Recent studies have shown great progress on denoising, but paid little attention to the problem of long-tailed relations. In this paper, we introduce a constraint graph to model the dependencies between relation labels. On top of that, we further propose a novel constraint graph-based relation extraction framework(CGRE) to handle the two challenges simultaneously. CGRE employs graph convolution networks to propagate information from data-rich relation nodes to data-poor relation nodes, and thus boosts the representation learning of long-tailed relations. To further improve the noise immunity, a constraint-aware attention module is designed in CGRE to integrate the constraint information. Extensive experimental results indicate that CGRE achieves significant improvements over the previous methods for both denoising and long-tailed relation extraction. The pre-processed datasets and source code are publicly available at https://github.com/tmliang/CGRE.