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Xuguang Li

Xuguang Li contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

2 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

Adaptive Texture-aware Masking for Self-Supervised Learning in 3D Dental CBCT Analysis

Cone Beam Computed Tomography (CBCT) is pivotal for 3D diagnostic imaging in dentistry. However, the development of robust AI models for volumetric analysis is often constrained by the scarcity of large, annotated datasets. Self-supervised learning (SSL), particularly Masked Image Modeling (MIM), offers a promising pathway to leverage unlabeled data. A limitation of standard MIM is its reliance on random masking, which fails to prioritize diagnostically critical regions in dental CBCT volumes, such as subtle pathological changes and intricate anatomical boundaries. To address this, we propose ATMask, a novel adaptive masking strategy. Instead of applying random masks or employing computationally intensive attention modules, ATMask computes an inter-slice texture variation map to identify regions with high structural or textural complexity. These high-variation areas are then selectively masked during pre-training, compelling the model to learn richer contextual representations essential for inferring complex 3D morphological transitions. Furthermore, we contribute the first large-scale CBCT dataset, curated from both public and private sources, comprising 6,314 scans, for the dental AI model pretraining. Extensive experiments on three downstream dental CBCT tasks demonstrate that our ATMask enables more data-efficient and powerful representation learning than standard random masking and other advanced SSL baselines. The dataset and code will be released.

preprint2026arXiv

ImplantMamba: Long-range Sequential Modeling Mamba For Dental Implant Position Prediction

In the design of surgical guides for implant placement, determining the precise implant position is a critical step. However, the implant region itself is often characterized by a lack of distinctive texture in medical images. Consequently, artificial intelligence (AI) models must infer the correct implant position and angulation (slope) primarily by analyzing the texture of the surrounding teeth, which poses a significant challenge. To address this, we propose ImplantMamba, a network architecture designed for long-range sequential modeling to integrate texture information from adjacent teeth. Our approach explicitly couples the regression of the implant position with its slope. The core of ImplantMamba is a hybrid encoder that combines Convolutional Neural Networks (CNNs) with Mamba layers. This design enables the network to hierarchically extract local anatomical features through CNNs while simultaneously modeling global contextual dependencies across the entire scan volume via Mamba's selective scan operations, leading to a more comprehensive understanding of the implant site. Furthermore, we introduce a Slope-Coupled Prediction Branch (SCP). This branch is designed to connect the prediction of implant position with the slope, ensuring internal consistency and anatomical plausibility by thereby enforcing a coherent relationship between the predicted implant location and its angulation. Extensive experiments on a large-scale dental implant dataset demonstrate that the proposed ImplantMamba achieves superior performance compared to existing methods.