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Yuanxi Wang

Yuanxi Wang contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

6 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

FineState-Bench: Benchmarking State-Conditioned Grounding for Fine-grained GUI State Setting

Despite the rapid progress of large vision-language models (LVLMs), fine-grained, state-conditioned GUI interaction remains challenging. Current evaluations offer limited coverage, imprecise target-state definitions, and an overreliance on final-task success, obscuring where and why agents fail. To address this gap, we introduce \textbf{FineState-Bench}, a benchmark that evaluates whether an agent can correctly ground an instruction to the intended UI control and reach the exact target state. FineState-Bench comprises 2,209 instances across desktop, web, and mobile platforms, spanning four interaction families and 23 UI component types, with each instance explicitly specifying an exact target state for fine-grained state setting. We further propose \textit{FineState-Metrics}, a four-stage diagnostic pipeline with stage-wise success rates: Localization Success Rate (SR@Loc), Interaction Success Rate (SR@Int), Exact State Success Rate at Locate (ES-SR@Loc), and Exact State Success Rate at Interact (ES-SR@Int), and a plug-and-play \textit{Visual Diagnostic Assistant} (VDA) that generates a Description and a bounding-box Localization Hint to diagnose visual grounding reason via controlled w/ vs.\ w/o comparisons. On FineState-Bench, exact goal-state success remains low: ES-SR@Int peaks at 32.8\% on Web and 22.8\% on average across platforms. With VDA localization hints, Gemini-2.5-Flash gains +14.9 ES-SR@Int points, suggesting substantial headroom from improved visual grounding, yet overall accuracy is still insufficient for reliable fine-grained state-conditioned interaction \href{https://github.com/FengxianJi/FineState-Bench}{Github.}

preprint2022arXiv

Momentum-Space Spin Antivortex and Spin Transport in Monolayer Pb

Non-trivial momentum-space spin texture of electrons can be induced by spin-orbit coupling and underpins various spin transport phenomena, such as current-induced spin polarization and spin Hall effect. In this work, we find a non-trivial spin texture, spin anti-vortex, can appear at certain momenta on the $Γ-\text K$ line in 2D monolayer Pb on top of SiC. Different from spin vortex due to the band degeneracy in the Rashba model, the existence of this spin anti-vortex is guaranteed by Poincare-Hopf theorem and thus topologically stable. Accompanied with this spin anti-vortex, a Lifshtiz transition of Fermi surfaces occur at certain momenta on the $\text K- \text M$ line, and both phenomena are originated from the anti-crossing between the $j=1/2$ and $j=3/2$ bands. A rapid variation of the response coefficients for both the current-induced spin polarization and spin Hall conductivity is found when the Fermi energy is tuned around the spin anti-vortex. Our work demonstrates the monolayer Pb as a potentially appealing platform for spintronic applications.

preprint2022arXiv

SnP$_2$S$_6$: A Promising Infrared Nonlinear Optical Crystal with Strong Non-Resonant Second Harmonic Generation and Phase-matchability

High-power infrared laser systems with broadband tunability are of great importance due to their wide range of applications in spectroscopy and free-space communications. These systems require nonlinear optical (NLO) crystals for wavelength up/down conversion using sum/difference frequency generation, respectively. NLO crystals need to satisfy many competing criteria, including large nonlinear optical susceptibility, large laser induced damage threshold (LIDT), wide transparency range and phase-matchability. Here, we report bulk single crystals of SnP_2S_6 with a large non-resonant SHG coefficient of d33= 53 pm/V at 1550nm and a large LIDT of 350 GW/cm^2 for femtosecond laser pulses. It also exhibits a broad transparency range from 0.54 μm to 8.5μm (bandgap of ~2.3 eV) and can be both Type I and Type II phase-matched. The complete linear and SHG tensors are measured as well as predicted by first principles calculations, and they are in excellent agreement. A proximate double-resonance condition in the electronic band structure for both the fundamental and the SHG light is shown to enhance the non-resonant SHG response. Therefore, SnP2S6 is an outstanding candidate for infrared laser applications.

preprint2020arXiv

Monolayer Vanadium-doped Tungsten Disulfide: A Room-Temperature Dilute Magnetic Semiconductor

Dilute magnetic semiconductors, achieved through substitutional doping of spin-polarized transition metals into semiconducting systems, enable experimental modulation of spin dynamics in ways that hold great promise for novel magneto-electric or magneto-optical devices, especially for two-dimensional systems such as transition metal dichalcogenides that accentuate interactions and activate valley degrees of freedom. Practical applications of 2D magnetism will likely require room-temperature operation, air stability, and (for magnetic semiconductors) the ability to achieve optimal doping levels without dopant aggregation. Here we describe room-temperature ferromagnetic order obtained in semiconducting vanadium-doped tungsten disulfide monolayers produced by a reliable single-step film sulfidation method across an exceptionally wide range of vanadium concentrations, up to 12 at% with minimal dopant aggregation. These monolayers develop p-type transport as a function of vanadium incorporation and rapidly reach ambipolarity. Ferromagnetism peaks at an intermediate vanadium concentration of a few atomic percent and decreases for higher concentrations, which is consistent with quenching due to orbital hybridization at closer vanadium-vanadium spacings, as supported by transmission electron microscopy, magnetometry and first-principles calculations. Room-temperature two-dimensional dilute magnetic semiconductors provide a new component to expand the functional scope of van der Waals heterostructures and bring semiconducting magnetic 2D heterostructures them into the realm of practical application.

preprint2020arXiv

On the Convexity of Independent Set Games

Independent set games are cooperative games defined on graphs, where players are edges and the value of a coalition is the maximum cardinality of independent sets in the subgraph defined by the coalition. In this paper, we investigate the convexity of independent set games, as convex games possess many nice properties both economically and computationally. For independent set games introduced by Deng et al. (Math. Oper. Res., 24:751-766, 1999), we provide a necessary and sufficient characterization for the convexity, i.e., every non-pendant edge is incident to a pendant edge in the underlying graph. Our characterization immediately yields a polynomial time algorithm for recognizing convex instances of independent set games. Besides, we introduce a new class of independent set games and provide an efficient characterization for the convexity.

preprint2019arXiv

Nonlinear dark-field imaging of 1D defects in monolayer dichalcogenides

Extended defects with one dimensionality smaller than that of the host, such as 2D grain boundaries in 3D materials or 1D grain boundaries in 2D materials, can be particularly damaging since they directly impede the transport of charge, spin or heat, and can introduce a metallic character into otherwise semiconducting systems. Unfortunately, a technique to rapidly and non-destructively image 1D defects in 2D materials is lacking. Scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM), Raman, photoluminescence and nonlinear optical spectroscopies, are all extremely valuable, but current implementations suffer from low throughput and a destructive nature (STEM) or limitations in their unambiguous sensitivity at the nanoscale. Here we demonstrate that dark-field second harmonic generation (SHG) microscopy can rapidly, efficiently, and non-destructively probe grain boundaries and edges in monolayer dichalcogenides (i.e. MoSe2, MoS2 and WS2). Dark-field SHG efficiently separates the spatial components of the emitted light and exploits interference effects from crystal domains of different orientations to localize grain boundaries and edges as very bright 1D patterns through a Cerenkov-type SHG emission. The frequency dependence of this emission in MoSe2 monolayers is explained in terms of plasmon-enhanced SHG related to the defects metallic character. This new technique for nanometer-scale imaging of the grain structure, domain orientation and localized 1D plasmons in 2D different semiconductors, thus enables more rapid progress towards both applications and fundamental materials discoveries.