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Yuewen Cao

Yuewen Cao contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

5 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

Sketch Then Paint: Hierarchical Reinforcement Learning for Diffusion Multi-Modal Large Language Models

Diffusion Multi-Modal Large Language Models (dMLLMs) are powerful for image generation, but optimizing them through reinforcement learning (RL) remains a major challenge. One primary difficulty is that a single image can be generated through many different unmasking sequences, which makes calculating importance ratios often intractable. Additionally, existing methods tend to ignore the hierarchical generation process of dMLLMs, where early tokens define the global layout and later tokens focus on local details. By assigning uniform rewards to all tokens, these current methods fail to reflect the actual contribution of each token to the final image. To address these issues, we propose Hierarchical Token GRPO (HT-GRPO), which integrates this hierarchy directly into the policy optimization process. Our approach features a Sketch-Then-Paint training scheme that organizes updates into three distinct stages: global, structure, and refinement. We also use a prompt-conditioned estimator to calculate importance ratios starting from a fully masked state. Furthermore, we introduce a Hierarchical Credit Assignment mechanism that prioritizes key structural tokens to ensure accurate reward propagation. Experiments using two popular dMLLM backbones, MMaDA and Lumina-DiMOO, demonstrate that HT-GRPO achieves substantial gains on the GenEval and DPG benchmarks. Evaluations across six additional metrics confirm significant improvements in image quality, aesthetics, and human preference.

preprint2021arXiv

VARA-TTS: Non-Autoregressive Text-to-Speech Synthesis based on Very Deep VAE with Residual Attention

This paper proposes VARA-TTS, a non-autoregressive (non-AR) text-to-speech (TTS) model using a very deep Variational Autoencoder (VDVAE) with Residual Attention mechanism, which refines the textual-to-acoustic alignment layer-wisely. Hierarchical latent variables with different temporal resolutions from the VDVAE are used as queries for residual attention module. By leveraging the coarse global alignment from previous attention layer as an extra input, the following attention layer can produce a refined version of alignment. This amortizes the burden of learning the textual-to-acoustic alignment among multiple attention layers and outperforms the use of only a single attention layer in robustness. An utterance-level speaking speed factor is computed by a jointly-trained speaking speed predictor, which takes the mean-pooled latent variables of the coarsest layer as input, to determine number of acoustic frames at inference. Experimental results show that VARA-TTS achieves slightly inferior speech quality to an AR counterpart Tacotron 2 but an order-of-magnitude speed-up at inference; and outperforms an analogous non-AR model, BVAE-TTS, in terms of speech quality.

preprint2020arXiv

Emotional Voice Conversion With Cycle-consistent Adversarial Network

Emotional Voice Conversion, or emotional VC, is a technique of converting speech from one emotion state into another one, keeping the basic linguistic information and speaker identity. Previous approaches for emotional VC need parallel data and use dynamic time warping (DTW) method to temporally align the source-target speech parameters. These approaches often define a minimum generation loss as the objective function, such as L1 or L2 loss, to learn model parameters. Recently, cycle-consistent generative adversarial networks (CycleGAN) have been used successfully for non-parallel VC. This paper investigates the efficacy of using CycleGAN for emotional VC tasks. Rather than attempting to learn a mapping between parallel training data using a frame-to-frame minimum generation loss, the CycleGAN uses two discriminators and one classifier to guide the learning process, where the discriminators aim to differentiate between the natural and converted speech and the classifier aims to classify the underlying emotion from the natural and converted speech. The training process of the CycleGAN models randomly pairs source-target speech parameters, without any temporal alignment operation. The objective and subjective evaluation results confirm the effectiveness of using CycleGAN models for emotional VC. The non-parallel training for a CycleGAN indicates its potential for non-parallel emotional VC.

preprint2020arXiv

Multi-Target Emotional Voice Conversion With Neural Vocoders

Emotional voice conversion (EVC) is one way to generate expressive synthetic speech. Previous approaches mainly focused on modeling one-to-one mapping, i.e., conversion from one emotional state to another emotional state, with Mel-cepstral vocoders. In this paper, we investigate building a multi-target EVC (MTEVC) architecture, which combines a deep bidirectional long-short term memory (DBLSTM)-based conversion model and a neural vocoder. Phonetic posteriorgrams (PPGs) containing rich linguistic information are incorporated into the conversion model as auxiliary input features, which boost the conversion performance. To leverage the advantages of the newly emerged neural vocoders, we investigate the conditional WaveNet and flow-based WaveNet (FloWaveNet) as speech generators. The vocoders take in additional speaker information and emotion information as auxiliary features and are trained with a multi-speaker and multi-emotion speech corpus. Objective metrics and subjective evaluation of the experimental results verify the efficacy of the proposed MTEVC architecture for EVC.

preprint2020arXiv

Transferring Source Style in Non-Parallel Voice Conversion

Voice conversion (VC) techniques aim to modify speaker identity of an utterance while preserving the underlying linguistic information. Most VC approaches ignore modeling of the speaking style (e.g. emotion and emphasis), which may contain the factors intentionally added by the speaker and should be retained during conversion. This study proposes a sequence-to-sequence based non-parallel VC approach, which has the capability of transferring the speaking style from the source speech to the converted speech by explicitly modeling. Objective evaluation and subjective listening tests show superiority of the proposed VC approach in terms of speech naturalness and speaker similarity of the converted speech. Experiments are also conducted to show the source-style transferability of the proposed approach.