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Xiaoyang Guo

Xiaoyang Guo contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

5 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

HorizonDrive: Self-Corrective Autoregressive World Model for Long-horizon Driving Simulation

Closed-loop driving simulation requires real-time interaction beyond short offline clips, pushing current driving world models toward autoregressive (AR) rollout. Existing AR distillation approaches typically rely on frame sinks or student-side degradation training. The former transfers poorly to driving due to fast ego-motion and rapid scene changes, while the latter remains bounded by the teacher's single-pass output length and thus provides only a limited supervision horizon. A natural question is: can the teacher itself be extended via AR rollout to provide unbounded-horizon supervision at bounded memory cost? The key difficulty is that a standard teacher drifts under its own predictions, contaminating the supervision it provides. Our key insight is to make the teacher rollout-capable, ensuring reliable supervision from its own AR rollouts. This is instantiated as HorizonDrive, an anti-drifting training-and-distillation framework for AR driving simulation. First, scheduled rollout recovery (SRR) trains the base model to reconstruct ground-truth future clips from prediction-corrupted histories, yielding a teacher that remains stable across long AR rollouts. Second, the rollout-capable teacher is extended via AR rollout, providing long-horizon distribution-matching supervision under bounded memory, while a short-window student aligns to it with teacher rollout DMD (TRD) for efficient real-time deployment. HorizonDrive natively supports minute-scale AR rollout under bounded memory; on nuScenes, HorizonDrive reduces FID by 52% and FVD by 37%, and lowers ARE and DTW by 21% and 9% relative to the strongest long-horizon streaming baselines, while remaining competitive with single-pass driving video generators.

preprint2022arXiv

Adaptive Feature Interpolation for Low-Shot Image Generation

Training of generative models especially Generative Adversarial Networks can easily diverge in low-data setting. To mitigate this issue, we propose a novel implicit data augmentation approach which facilitates stable training and synthesize high-quality samples without need of label information. Specifically, we view the discriminator as a metric embedding of the real data manifold, which offers proper distances between real data points. We then utilize information in the feature space to develop a fully unsupervised and data-driven augmentation method. Experiments on few-shot generation tasks show the proposed method significantly improve results from strong baselines with hundreds of training samples.

preprint2022arXiv

Data-Driven, Soft Alignment of Functional Data Using Shapes and Landmarks

Alignment or registration of functions is a fundamental problem in statistical analysis of functions and shapes. While there are several approaches available, a more recent approach based on Fisher-Rao metric and square-root velocity functions (SRVFs) has been shown to have good performance. However, this SRVF method has two limitations: (1) it is susceptible to over alignment, i.e., alignment of noise as well as the signal, and (2) in case there is additional information in form of landmarks, the original formulation does not prescribe a way to incorporate that information. In this paper we propose an extension that allows for incorporation of landmark information to seek a compromise between matching curves and landmarks. This results in a soft landmark alignment that pushes landmarks closer, without requiring their exact overlays to finds a compromise between contributions from functions and landmarks. The proposed method is demonstrated to be superior in certain practical scenarios.

preprint2022arXiv

Statistical Shape Analysis of Brain Arterial Networks (BAN)

Structures of brain arterial networks (BANs) - that are complex arrangements of individual arteries, their branching patterns, and inter-connectivities - play an important role in characterizing and understanding brain physiology. One would like tools for statistically analyzing the shapes of BANs, i.e. quantify shape differences, compare population of subjects, and study the effects of covariates on these shapes. This paper mathematically represents and statistically analyzes BAN shapes as elastic shape graphs. Each elastic shape graph is made up of nodes that are connected by a number of 3D curves, and edges, with arbitrary shapes. We develop a mathematical representation, a Riemannian metric and other geometrical tools, such as computations of geodesics, means and covariances, and PCA for analyzing elastic graphs and BANs. This analysis is applied to BANs after separating them into four components -- top, bottom, left, and right. This framework is then used to generate shape summaries of BANs from 92 subjects, and to study the effects of age and gender on shapes of BAN components. We conclude that while gender effects require further investigation, the age has a clear, quantifiable effect on BAN shapes. Specifically, we find an increased variance in BAN shapes as age increases.

preprint2020arXiv

Representations, Metrics and Statistics For Shape Analysis of Elastic Graphs

Past approaches for statistical shape analysis of objects have focused mainly on objects within the same topological classes, e.g., scalar functions, Euclidean curves, or surfaces, etc. For objects that differ in more complex ways, the current literature offers only topological methods. This paper introduces a far-reaching geometric approach for analyzing shapes of graphical objects, such as road networks, blood vessels, brain fiber tracts, etc. It represents such objects, exhibiting differences in both geometries and topologies, as graphs made of curves with arbitrary shapes (edges) and connected at arbitrary junctions (nodes). To perform statistical analyses, one needs mathematical representations, metrics and other geometrical tools, such as geodesics, means, and covariances. This paper utilizes a quotient structure to develop efficient algorithms for computing these quantities, leading to useful statistical tools, including principal component analysis and analytical statistical testing and modeling of graphical shapes. The efficacy of this framework is demonstrated using various simulated as well as the real data from neurons and brain arterial networks.