Researcher profile

William Chen

William Chen contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

ResearcherAffiliation not importedOpen to collaborate

Trust snapshot

Quick read

Trust 21 - EmergingVerification L1Unclaimed author
8works
0followers
10topics
4close collaborators

Actions

Decide how to stay connected

Follow researcher0

Identity and collaboration

How to connect with this researcher

Claiming links this public author record to a researcher profile and unlocks direct collaboration workflows.

Log in to claim

Direct collaboration

Open a focused conversation when the fit is right

Claim this author entity first to unlock direct invitations.

Research graph

See the researcher in context

Open full explorer

Inspect adjacent work, topics, institutions and collaborators without jumping out to a separate graph page.

Building this graph slice

BZPEER is loading the nearby papers, people, topics and institutions for this page.

Published work

8 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

LatentHDR: Decoupling Exposure from Diffusion via Conditional Latent-to-Latent Mapping for Text/Image-to-Panoramic HDR

High Dynamic Range (HDR) generation remains challenging for generative models, which are largely limited to low dynamic range outputs. Recent diffusionbased approaches approximate HDR by generating multiple exposure-conditioned samples, incurring high computational cost and structural inconsistencies across exposures. We propose LatentHDR, a framework that decouples scene generation from exposure modeling in latent space. A pretrained diffusion backbone produces a single coherent scene representation, while a lightweight conditional latent to-latent head deterministically maps it to exposure-specific representations. This enables the generation of a dense, structurally consistent exposure stack in a single pass. This design eliminates multi-pass diffusion, ensures cross-exposure alignment, and enables scalable HDR synthesis. LatentHDR supports both textand image-conditioned HDR generation for perspective and panoramic scenes. Experiments on synthetic data and the SI-HDR benchmark show that LatentHDR achieves state-of-the-art dynamic range with competitive perceptual quality, while reducing computation by an order of magnitude. Our results demonstrate that high-quality HDR generation can be achieved through structured latent modeling, challenging the need for stochastic multi-exposure generation.

preprint2025arXiv

PolaRiS: Scalable Real-to-Sim Evaluations for Generalist Robot Policies

A significant challenge for robot learning research is our ability to accurately measure and compare the performance of robot policies. Benchmarking in robotics is historically challenging due to the stochasticity, reproducibility, and time-consuming nature of real-world rollouts. This challenge is exacerbated for recent generalist policies, which has to be evaluated across a wide variety of scenes and tasks. Evaluation in simulation offers a scalable complement to real world evaluations, but the visual and physical domain gap between existing simulation benchmarks and the real world has made them an unreliable signal for policy improvement. Furthermore, building realistic and diverse simulated environments has traditionally required significant human effort and expertise. To bridge the gap, we introduce Policy Evaluation and Environment Reconstruction in Simulation (PolaRiS), a scalable real-to-sim framework for high-fidelity simulated robot evaluation. PolaRiS utilizes neural reconstruction methods to turn short video scans of real-world scenes into interactive simulation environments. Additionally, we develop a simple simulation data co-training recipe that bridges remaining real-to-sim gaps and enables zero-shot evaluation in unseen simulation environments. Through extensive paired evaluations between simulation and the real world, we demonstrate that PolaRiS evaluations provide a much stronger correlation to real world generalist policy performance than existing simulated benchmarks. Its simplicity also enables rapid creation of diverse simulated environments. As such, this work takes a step towards distributed and democratized evaluation for the next generation of robotic foundation models.

preprint2022arXiv

Benchmarking Azerbaijani Neural Machine Translation

Little research has been done on Neural Machine Translation (NMT) for Azerbaijani. In this paper, we benchmark the performance of Azerbaijani-English NMT systems on a range of techniques and datasets. We evaluate which segmentation techniques work best on Azerbaijani translation and benchmark the performance of Azerbaijani NMT models across several domains of text. Our results show that while Unigram segmentation improves NMT performance and Azerbaijani translation models scale better with dataset quality than quantity, cross-domain generalization remains a challenge

preprint2022arXiv

Extracting Zero-shot Common Sense from Large Language Models for Robot 3D Scene Understanding

Semantic 3D scene understanding is a problem of critical importance in robotics. While significant advances have been made in simultaneous localization and mapping algorithms, robots are still far from having the common sense knowledge about household objects and their locations of an average human. We introduce a novel method for leveraging common sense embedded within large language models for labelling rooms given the objects contained within. This algorithm has the added benefits of (i) requiring no task-specific pre-training (operating entirely in the zero-shot regime) and (ii) generalizing to arbitrary room and object labels, including previously-unseen ones -- both of which are highly desirable traits in robotic scene understanding algorithms. The proposed algorithm operates on 3D scene graphs produced by modern spatial perception systems, and we hope it will pave the way to more generalizable and scalable high-level 3D scene understanding for robotics.

preprint2022arXiv

Genetic Algorithms For Extractive Summarization

Most current work in NLP utilizes deep learning, which requires a lot of training data and computational power. This paper investigates the strengths of Genetic Algorithms (GAs) for extractive summarization, as we hypothesized that GAs could construct more efficient solutions for the summarization task due to their relative customizability relative to deep learning models. This is done by building a vocabulary set, the words of which are represented as an array of weights, and optimizing those set of weights with the GA. These weights can be used to build an overall weighting of a sentence, which can then be passed to some threshold for extraction. Our results showed that the GA was able to learn a weight representation that could filter out excessive vocabulary and thus dictate sentence importance based on common English words.

preprint2022arXiv

Quantitative behavior of non-integrable systems (IV)

In this paper, there are two sections. In Section 7, we simplify the eigenvalue-based surplus shortline method for arbitrary finite polysquare translation surfaces. This makes it substantially simpler to determine the irregularity exponents of some infinite orbits, and quicker to find the escape rate to infinity of some orbits in some infinite models. In Section 8, our primary goal is to extend the surplus shortline method, both this eigenvalue-based version as well as the eigenvalue-free version, for application to a large class of 2-dimensional flat dynamical systems beyond polysquares, including all Veech surfaces, and establish time-quantitative equidistribution and time-quantitative superdensity of some infinite orbits in these new systems.