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Zeyu Jiang

Zeyu Jiang contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

5 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

FreeOcc: Training-Free Embodied Open-Vocabulary Occupancy Prediction

Existing learning-based occupancy prediction methods rely on large-scale 3D annotations and generalize poorly across environments. We present FreeOcc, a training-free framework for open-vocabulary occupancy prediction from monocular or RGB-D sequences. Unlike prior approaches that require voxel-level supervision and ground-truth camera poses, FreeOcc operates without 3D annotations, pose ground truth, or any learning stage. FreeOcc incrementally builds a globally consistent occupancy map via a four-layer pipeline: a SLAM backbone estimates poses and sparse geometry; a geometrically consistent Gaussian update constructs dense 3D Gaussian maps; open-vocabulary semantics from off-the-shelf vision-language models are associated with Gaussian primitives; and a probabilistic Gaussian-to-occupancy projection produces dense voxel occupancy. Despite being entirely training-free and pose-agnostic, FreeOcc achieves over $2\times$ improvements in IoU and mIoU on EmbodiedOcc-ScanNet compared to prior self-supervised methods. We further introduce ReplicaOcc, a benchmark for indoor open-vocabulary occupancy prediction, and show that FreeOcc transfers zero-shot to novel environments, substantially outperforming both supervised and self-supervised baselines. Project page: https://the-masses.github.io/freeocc-web/.

preprint2026arXiv

Imaging Intermediate Melting Phases of Dual Magnetic-Field-Stabilized Wigner Crystals

The competition between Coulomb repulsion and kinetic energy in correlated systems can allow electrons to crystallize into Wigner solids. Despite researches across diverse two-dimensional Wigner platforms, the microscopic melting processes through possible intermediate phases remains largely unknown. Here, we present the visualization of electron-lattice melting in monolayer VCl3 on graphite, where two Wigner crystals coexist with markedly different critical temperatures Tc and lattice periods as stabilized by high magnetic field. One Wigner crystal possesses both record-high Tc and electron density, and undergoes melting through an intermediate nematic phase upon decreasing magnetic field. In contrast, the other Wigner crystal with a lower Tc yields a different intermediate phase during melting, exhibiting an anomalous electron liquid with an energy-independent modulation period. First-principles calculations corroborate the band-selective occupations of interface-transferred electrons in the formation of dual Wigner crystals. Our atomically resolved intermediate phases provide crucial insights into the microscopic melting pathways of Wigner crystals, enabling a phase diagram parameterized by both quantum and thermal fluctuations.

preprint2023arXiv

Small polarom formation by electron-electron interaction

In a solid, electrons can be scattered both by phonons and other electrons. First proposed by Landau, scattering by phonons can lead to a composite entity called a polaron, in which a lattice distortion traps an itinerant electron (or hole) such that the distortion and carrier move in unison as a single particle with larger effective mass. While this is the traditional view of polarons, the rise of 2D systems, especially strongly correlated ones, open the prospect of electron scattering taking on a larger role in spontaneous carrier localization for such material systems. Here, we show that in transition metal halides, such electron-electron interactions can lead to polaron formation even in the absence of lattice distortion. This suggests an alternative direction for polaron formation, transport, and control in solids. This new mechanism of polaron formation is confirmed by first-principles calculation of 2D transition metal halides, CrI2, CoCl2 and CoBr2. These theoretical predictions are supported by scanning tunneling microscopy/spectroscopy measurements of polarons in CrI2.

preprint2022arXiv

1st Place Solution to the EPIC-Kitchens Action Anticipation Challenge 2022

In this report, we describe the technical details of our submission to the EPIC-Kitchens Action Anticipation Challenge 2022. In this competition, we develop the following two approaches. 1) Anticipation Time Knowledge Distillation using the soft labels learned by the teacher model as knowledge to guide the student network to learn the information of anticipation time; 2) Verb-Noun Relation Module for building the relationship between verbs and nouns. Our method achieves state-of-the-art results on the testing set of EPIC-Kitchens Action Anticipation Challenge 2022.

preprint2020arXiv

Spin-Triplet Excitonic Insulator: The Case of Graphone

While various excitonic insulators have been studied in the literature, due to the perceived too-small spin splitting, spin-triplet excitonic insulator is rare. In two-dimensional systems such as a graphone, however, it is possible, as revealed by first-principles calculations coupled with Bethe-Salpeter equation. The critical temperature, given by an effective Hamiltonian, is 11.5 K. While detecting excitonic insulators is still a daunting challenge, the condensation of triplet excitons will result in spin superfluidity, which can be directly measured by a transport experiment. Nonlocal dielectric screening also leads to an unexpected phenomenon, namely, an indirect-to-direct transition crossover between single-particle band and exciton dispersion in graphone, which offers yet another test by experiment.