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Xin Wang

Xin Wang contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

4 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

A Unified Graph Language Model for Multi-Domain Multi-Task Graph Alignment Instruction Tuning

Leveraging Graph Neural Networks (GNNs) as graph encoders and aligning the resulting representations with Large Language Models (LLMs) through alignment instruction tuning has become a mainstream paradigm for constructing Graph Language Models (GLMs), combining the generalization ability of LLMs with the structural modeling capacity of GNNs. However, existing GLMs that adopt GNNs as graph encoders largely overlook the problem of aligning GNN-encoded representations across domains and tasks with the LLM token space to obtain unified graph tokens, thereby limiting their ability to generalize across diverse graph data. To bridge this gap, we aim to incorporate a multi-domain, multi-task GNN encoder into GLMs and align its representations with LLMs to enable multi-domain, multi-task graph alignment instruction tuning. This alignment problem remains underexplored and poses two key challenges: 1) learning GNN-encoded representations that are simultaneously generalizable across domains and tasks and well aligned with textual semantics is difficult, due to substantial variations in graph structures, feature distributions, and supervision signals, together with the lack of textual-semantic alignment guidance in task-specific GNN training; 2) diverse graph data and task-specific instructions can exhibit different degrees of compatibility with the LLM token space during instruction tuning, leading to varying alignment difficulty and rendering a fixed alignment strategy suboptimal. To tackle these challenges, we propose UniGraphLM, a Unified Graph Language Model that incorporates a multi-domain, multi-task GNN encoder to learn generalizable graph representations aligned with textual semantics, and then adaptively aligns these representations with the LLM.

preprint2026arXiv

Asymmetric Generative Recommendation via Multi-Expert Projection and Multi-Faceted Hierarchical Quantization

Generative Recommendation (GenRec) models reformulate recommendation as a sequence generation task, representing items as discrete Semantic IDs used symmetrically as both inputs and prediction targets. We identify a critical dual-stage information bottleneck in this design: (1) the Input Bottleneck, where lossy quantization degrades fine-grained semantics, while popularity bias skews the learned representations toward frequent items, and (2) the Output Bottleneck, where imprecise discrete targets limit supervision quality. To address these issues, we propose AsymRec, an asymmetric continuous-discrete framework that decouples input and output representations. Specifically, Multi-expert Semantic Projection (MSP) maps continuous embeddings into the Transformer's hidden space via expert-specialized projections, preserving semantic richness and improving generalization to infrequent items. Multi-faceted Hierarchical Quantization (MHQ) constructs high-capacity, structured discrete targets through multi-view and multi-level quantization with semantic regularization, preventing dimensional collapse while retaining fine-grained distinctions. Extensive experiments demonstrate that AsymRec consistently outperforms state-of-the-art generative recommenders by an average of 15.8 %. The code will be released.

preprint2026arXiv

DarkLLM: Learning Language-Driven Adversarial Attacks with Large Language Models

While vision and multimodal foundation models underpin critical tasks from perception to complex reasoning, they remain highly vulnerable to adversarial attacks. However, traditional adversarial attacks are typically limited to single, predefined objectives, tightly coupling each attack to a specific model or task, which restricts their scalability and flexibility in real-world scenarios. In this work, we present DarkLLM, a novel attack framework that trains an LLM to translate natural-language attack instructions into latent attack vectors, which are then decoded into visual adversarial perturbations. By leveraging natural-language instruction tuning, DarkLLM not only unifies targeted, untargeted, segmentation, and multi-model attacks within a single framework, but also achieves flexible and controllable adversarial generation, enabling each instruction to produce a perturbation that induces desired behaviors across heterogeneous models. Through extensive experiments across 4 tasks, 13 datasets, and 15 models, we demonstrate that DarkLLM with only 1B parameters can follow attacker instructions and generate highly effective attacks against CLIP, SAM, and frontier LLMs, revealing a systemic vulnerability in modern foundation models.

preprint2026arXiv

Selective Rollout: Mid-Trajectory Termination for Multi-Sample Agent RL

Group-relative RL training (GRPO) samples a small group of parallel rollouts for every training prompt and uses their within-group reward spread to compute per-trajectory advantages. In agentic environments each rollout is a long multi-turn dialogue with one LLM call per step, so this multi-sample multiplier dominates the total training cost. When every rollout of a prompt ends with the same reward, the group has zero reward variance and contributes no gradient, so the extra rollouts add no information; such groups are common in practice (typically around 40% of all groups), so the wasted-compute fraction is substantial rather than marginal. Existing methods filter such groups at the prompt level, either after their rollouts are paid for or before any rollout begins, but both decide without using information that becomes available during the rollout itself. We instead ask whether the in-group divergence between the partial trajectories at an intermediate step can already predict that the group will be zero-variance: when the parallel rollouts have already converged on the same action prefix, the group is on track to produce a single reward, and we can stop early. We propose a one-parameter gate that stops a group when the mean pairwise prefix edit distance between its partial action sequences falls below a threshold. On a 60-iteration on-policy GRPO run on ALFWorld with Qwen2.5-7B, averaged over four random seeds, the gated arm finishes 10.7% faster in wall-clock (bootstrap 95% CI excludes 0) and shifts held-out success rate on 50 unseen tasks by +2.5 pp, with the held-out gain tracing to a measurable reduction in zero-advantage gradient-batch dilution. Code is available at https://github.com/zhiyuanZhai20/selective-rollout.