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Yongtao Wang

Yongtao Wang contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

10 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

HiDrive: A Closed-Loop Benchmark for High-Level Autonomous Driving

End-to-end autonomous driving has witnessed rapid progress, yet existing benchmarks are increasingly saturated, with state-of-the-art models achieving near-perfect scores on widely used open-loop and closed-loop benchmarks. This saturation does not mean that the problem has been solved; instead, it reveals that current benchmarks remain limited in scenario diversity, object variety, and the breadth of driving capabilities they evaluate. In particular, they lack sufficient long-tail scenarios involving rare but safety-critical objects and fail to assess advanced decision-making such as legal compliance, ethical reasoning, and emergency response. To address these gaps, we propose HiDrive, a new closed-loop benchmark for end-to-end autonomous driving that emphasizes long-tail scenarios and a richer evaluation of driving capabilities. HiDrive introduces a diverse set of rare objects and uncommon traffic situations, and expands evaluation from basic driving skills to more advanced capabilities, including rule compliance, moral reasoning, and context-dependent emergency maneuvers. Correspondingly, we extend previous collision-avoidance-centered metrics into a comprehensive evaluation system that encompasses collision and braking, traffic-rule compliance, and moral-reasoning indicators. Built on a more advanced physics engine, HiDrive provides physically realistic lighting and high-fidelity visual rendering, offering a more challenging and realistic testbed for assessing whether autonomous driving systems can handle the complexity of real-world deployment. The HiDrive software, source code, digital assets, and documentation are available at https://github.com/VDIGPKU/HiDrive.

preprint2026arXiv

VL-SAM-v3: Memory-Guided Visual Priors for Open-World Object Detection

Open-world object detection aims to localize and recognize objects beyond a fixed closed-set label space. It is commonly divided into two categories, i.e., open-vocabulary detection, which assumes a predefined category list at test time, and open-ended detection, which requires generating candidate categories during the inference. Existing methods rely primarily on coarse textual semantics and parametric knowledge, which often provide insufficient visual evidence for fine-grained appearance variation, rare categories, and cluttered scenes. In this paper, we propose VL-SAM-v3, a unified framework that augments open-world detection with retrieval-grounded external visual memory. Specifically, once candidate categories are available, VL-SAM-v3 retrieves relevant visual prototypes from a non-parametric memory bank and transforms them into two complementary visual priors, i.e., sparse priors for instance-level spatial anchoring and dense priors for class-aware local context. These priors are integrated with the original detection prompts via Memory-Guided Prompt Refinement, enabling a shared retrieval-and-refinement mechanism that supports open-vocabulary and open-ended inference. Extensive zero-shot experiments on LVIS show that VL-SAM-v3 consistently improves detection performance under both open-vocabulary and open-ended inference, with particularly strong gains on rare categories. Moreover, experiments with a stronger open-vocabulary detector (i.e., SAM3) validate the generality of the proposed retrieval-and-refinement mechanism.

preprint2022arXiv

Benchmarking the Robustness of LiDAR-Camera Fusion for 3D Object Detection

There are two critical sensors for 3D perception in autonomous driving, the camera and the LiDAR. The camera provides rich semantic information such as color, texture, and the LiDAR reflects the 3D shape and locations of surrounding objects. People discover that fusing these two modalities can significantly boost the performance of 3D perception models as each modality has complementary information to the other. However, we observe that current datasets are captured from expensive vehicles that are explicitly designed for data collection purposes, and cannot truly reflect the realistic data distribution due to various reasons. To this end, we collect a series of real-world cases with noisy data distribution, and systematically formulate a robustness benchmark toolkit, that simulates these cases on any clean autonomous driving datasets. We showcase the effectiveness of our toolkit by establishing the robustness benchmark on two widely-adopted autonomous driving datasets, nuScenes and Waymo, then, to the best of our knowledge, holistically benchmark the state-of-the-art fusion methods for the first time. We observe that: i) most fusion methods, when solely developed on these data, tend to fail inevitably when there is a disruption to the LiDAR input; ii) the improvement of the camera input is significantly inferior to the LiDAR one. We further propose an efficient robust training strategy to improve the robustness of the current fusion method. The benchmark and code are available at https://github.com/kcyu2014/lidar-camera-robust-benchmark

preprint2022arXiv

Differentiable Architecture Search with Random Features

Differentiable architecture search (DARTS) has significantly promoted the development of NAS techniques because of its high search efficiency and effectiveness but suffers from performance collapse. In this paper, we make efforts to alleviate the performance collapse problem for DARTS from two aspects. First, we investigate the expressive power of the supernet in DARTS and then derive a new setup of DARTS paradigm with only training BatchNorm. Second, we theoretically find that random features dilute the auxiliary connection role of skip-connection in supernet optimization and enable search algorithm focus on fairer operation selection, thereby solving the performance collapse problem. We instantiate DARTS and PC-DARTS with random features to build an improved version for each named RF-DARTS and RF-PCDARTS respectively. Experimental results show that RF-DARTS obtains \textbf{94.36\%} test accuracy on CIFAR-10 (which is the nearest optimal result in NAS-Bench-201), and achieves the newest state-of-the-art top-1 test error of \textbf{24.0\%} on ImageNet when transferring from CIFAR-10. Moreover, RF-DARTS performs robustly across three datasets (CIFAR-10, CIFAR-100, and SVHN) and four search spaces (S1-S4). Besides, RF-PCDARTS achieves even better results on ImageNet, that is, \textbf{23.9\%} top-1 and \textbf{7.1\%} top-5 test error, surpassing representative methods like single-path, training-free, and partial-channel paradigms directly searched on ImageNet.

preprint2022arXiv

FlowNAS: Neural Architecture Search for Optical Flow Estimation

Existing optical flow estimators usually employ the network architectures typically designed for image classification as the encoder to extract per-pixel features. However, due to the natural difference between the tasks, the architectures designed for image classification may be sub-optimal for flow estimation. To address this issue, we propose a neural architecture search method named FlowNAS to automatically find the better encoder architecture for flow estimation task. We first design a suitable search space including various convolutional operators and construct a weight-sharing super-network for efficiently evaluating the candidate architectures. Then, for better training the super-network, we propose Feature Alignment Distillation, which utilizes a well-trained flow estimator to guide the training of super-network. Finally, a resource-constrained evolutionary algorithm is exploited to find an optimal architecture (i.e., sub-network). Experimental results show that the discovered architecture with the weights inherited from the super-network achieves 4.67\% F1-all error on KITTI, an 8.4\% reduction of RAFT baseline, surpassing state-of-the-art handcrafted models GMA and AGFlow, while reducing the model complexity and latency. The source code and trained models will be released in https://github.com/VDIGPKU/FlowNAS.

preprint2022arXiv

IterVM: Iterative Vision Modeling Module for Scene Text Recognition

Scene text recognition (STR) is a challenging problem due to the imperfect imagery conditions in natural images. State-of-the-art methods utilize both visual cues and linguistic knowledge to tackle this challenging problem. Specifically, they propose iterative language modeling module (IterLM) to repeatedly refine the output sequence from the visual modeling module (VM). Though achieving promising results, the vision modeling module has become the performance bottleneck of these methods. In this paper, we newly propose iterative vision modeling module (IterVM) to further improve the STR accuracy. Specifically, the first VM directly extracts multi-level features from the input image, and the following VMs re-extract multi-level features from the input image and fuse them with the high-level (i.e., the most semantic one) feature extracted by the previous VM. By combining the proposed IterVM with iterative language modeling module, we further propose a powerful scene text recognizer called IterNet. Extensive experiments demonstrate that the proposed IterVM can significantly improve the scene text recognition accuracy, especially on low-quality scene text images. Moreover, the proposed scene text recognizer IterNet achieves new state-of-the-art results on several public benchmarks. Codes will be available at https://github.com/VDIGPKU/IterNet.

preprint2022arXiv

Training Protocol Matters: Towards Accurate Scene Text Recognition via Training Protocol Searching

The development of scene text recognition (STR) in the era of deep learning has been mainly focused on novel architectures of STR models. However, training protocol (i.e., settings of the hyper-parameters involved in the training of STR models), which plays an equally important role in successfully training a good STR model, is under-explored for scene text recognition. In this work, we attempt to improve the accuracy of existing STR models by searching for optimal training protocol. Specifically, we develop a training protocol search algorithm, based on a newly designed search space and an efficient search algorithm using evolutionary optimization and proxy tasks. Experimental results show that our searched training protocol can improve the recognition accuracy of mainstream STR models by 2.7%~3.9%. In particular, with the searched training protocol, TRBA-Net achieves 2.1% higher accuracy than the state-of-the-art STR model (i.e., EFIFSTR), while the inference speed is 2.3x and 3.7x faster on CPU and GPU respectively. Extensive experiments are conducted to demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed method and the generalization ability of the training protocol found by our search method. Code is available at https://github.com/VDIGPKU/STR_TPSearch.

preprint2020arXiv

DADA: Differentiable Automatic Data Augmentation

Data augmentation (DA) techniques aim to increase data variability, and thus train deep networks with better generalisation. The pioneering AutoAugment automated the search for optimal DA policies with reinforcement learning. However, AutoAugment is extremely computationally expensive, limiting its wide applicability. Followup works such as Population Based Augmentation (PBA) and Fast AutoAugment improved efficiency, but their optimization speed remains a bottleneck. In this paper, we propose Differentiable Automatic Data Augmentation (DADA) which dramatically reduces the cost. DADA relaxes the discrete DA policy selection to a differentiable optimization problem via Gumbel-Softmax. In addition, we introduce an unbiased gradient estimator, RELAX, leading to an efficient and effective one-pass optimization strategy to learn an efficient and accurate DA policy. We conduct extensive experiments on CIFAR-10, CIFAR-100, SVHN, and ImageNet datasets. Furthermore, we demonstrate the value of Auto DA in pre-training for downstream detection problems. Results show our DADA is at least one order of magnitude faster than the state-of-the-art while achieving very comparable accuracy. The code is available at https://github.com/VDIGPKU/DADA.

preprint2020arXiv

GSTO: Gated Scale-Transfer Operation for Multi-Scale Feature Learning in Pixel Labeling

Existing CNN-based methods for pixel labeling heavily depend on multi-scale features to meet the requirements of both semantic comprehension and detail preservation. State-of-the-art pixel labeling neural networks widely exploit conventional scale-transfer operations, i.e., up-sampling and down-sampling to learn multi-scale features. In this work, we find that these operations lead to scale-confused features and suboptimal performance because they are spatial-invariant and directly transit all feature information cross scales without spatial selection. To address this issue, we propose the Gated Scale-Transfer Operation (GSTO) to properly transit spatial-filtered features to another scale. Specifically, GSTO can work either with or without extra supervision. Unsupervised GSTO is learned from the feature itself while the supervised one is guided by the supervised probability matrix. Both forms of GSTO are lightweight and plug-and-play, which can be flexibly integrated into networks or modules for learning better multi-scale features. In particular, by plugging GSTO into HRNet, we get a more powerful backbone (namely GSTO-HRNet) for pixel labeling, and it achieves new state-of-the-art results on the COCO benchmark for human pose estimation and other benchmarks for semantic segmentation including Cityscapes, LIP and Pascal Context, with negligible extra computational cost. Moreover, experiment results demonstrate that GSTO can also significantly boost the performance of multi-scale feature aggregation modules like PPM and ASPP. Code will be made available at https://github.com/VDIGPKU/GSTO.

preprint2020arXiv

MixTConv: Mixed Temporal Convolutional Kernels for Efficient Action Recogntion

To efficiently extract spatiotemporal features of video for action recognition, most state-of-the-art methods integrate 1D temporal convolution into a conventional 2D CNN backbone. However, they all exploit 1D temporal convolution of fixed kernel size (i.e., 3) in the network building block, thus have suboptimal temporal modeling capability to handle both long-term and short-term actions. To address this problem, we first investigate the impacts of different kernel sizes for the 1D temporal convolutional filters. Then, we propose a simple yet efficient operation called Mixed Temporal Convolution (MixTConv), which consists of multiple depthwise 1D convolutional filters with different kernel sizes. By plugging MixTConv into the conventional 2D CNN backbone ResNet-50, we further propose an efficient and effective network architecture named MSTNet for action recognition, and achieve state-of-the-art results on multiple benchmarks.