Researcher profile

Yong Zou

Yong Zou contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

2 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

Inferring bifurcation diagrams of two distinct chaotic systems by a single machine

We propose a dual-channel reservoir-computing scheme for inferring the dynamics of two distinct chaotic systems with a single machine. By augmenting a standard reservoir with a system-label channel and a parameter-control channel, the machine can be trained from time series collected from a few sampled states of the two systems. We show that the trained machine not only predicts the short-time evolution of the sampled states, but also reproduces the long-term statistical properties of unseen states, thereby enabling reconstruction of the bifurcation diagrams of both systems from partial observations. The effectiveness of the scheme is demonstrated for the Lorenz and Rössler systems in numerical simulations and for the Chua and Rossler circuits in experiments. Functional-network analysis further shows that the two target systems are encoded by distinct dynamical patterns in the reservoir. These results extend multifunctional and parameter-aware reservoir computing, and provide a route to data-driven inference of multiple nonlinear systems using a single machine.

preprint2019arXiv

Learning epidemic threshold in complex networks by Convolutional Neural Network

Deep learning has taken part in the competition since not long ago to learn and identify phase transitions in physical systems such as many body quantum systems, whose underlying lattice structures are generally regular as they're in euclidean space. Real networks have complex structural features which play a significant role in dynamics in them, and thus the structural and dynamical information of complex networks can not be directly learned by existing neural network models. Here we propose a novel and effective framework to learn the epidemic threshold in complex networks by combining the structural and dynamical information into the learning procedure. Considering the strong performance of learning in Euclidean space, Convolutional Neural Network (CNN) is used and, with the help of confusion scheme, we can identify precisely the outbreak threshold of epidemic dynamics. To represent the high dimensional network data set in Euclidean space for CNN, we reduce the dimensionality of a network by using graph representation learning algorithms and discretize the embedded space to convert it into an image-like structure. We then creatively merge the nodal dynamical states with the structural embedding by multi-channel images. In this manner, the proposed model can draw the conclusion from both structural and dynamical information. A large number of simulations show a great performance in both synthetic and empirical network data set. Our end-to-end machine learning framework is robust and universally applicable to complex networks with arbitrary size and topology.