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Zhan Ma

Zhan Ma contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

19 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

$\mathcal{H}$-HIGNN: A Scalable Graph Neural Network Framework with Hierarchical Matrix Acceleration for Simulation of Large-Scale Particulate Suspensions

We present a fast and scalable framework, leveraging graph neural networks (GNNs) and hierarchical matrix ($\mathcal{H}$-matrix) techniques, for simulating large-scale particulate suspensions, which have broader impacts across science and engineering. The framework draws on the Hydrodynamic Interaction Graph Neural Network (HIGNN) that employs GNNs to model the mobility tensor governing particle motion under hydrodynamic interactions (HIs) and external forces. HIGNN offers several advantages: it effectively captures both short- and long-range HIs and their many-body nature; it realizes a substantial speedup over traditional methodologies, by requiring only a forward pass through its neural networks at each time step; it provides explainability beyond black-box neural network models, through direct correspondence between graph connectivity and physical interactions; and it demonstrates transferability across different systems, irrespective of particles' number, concentration, configuration, or external forces. While HIGNN provides significant speedup, the quadratic scaling of its overall prediction cost (with respect to the total number of particles), due to intrinsically slow-decaying two-body HIs, limits its scalability. To achieve superior efficiency across all scales, in the present work we integrate $\mathcal{H}$-matrix techniques into HIGNN, reducing the prediction cost scaling to quasi-linear. Through comprehensive evaluations, we validate $\mathcal{H}$-HIGNN's accuracy, and demonstrate its quasi-linear scalability and superior computational efficiency. It requires only minimal computing resources; for example, a single mid-range GPU is sufficient for a system containing 10 million particles. Finally, we demonstrate $\mathcal{H}$-HIGNN's ability to efficiently simulate practically relevant large-scale suspensions of both particles and flexible filaments.

preprint2026arXiv

PACE: Post-Causal Entropy Modeling for Learned LiDAR Point Cloud Compression

LiDAR point cloud compression is vital for autonomous systems to handle massive data from high-resolution sensors. While learned entropy modeling built upon octree structures yields high compression gains, it faces two critical bottlenecks: 1) prohibitive latency, particularly during decoding, caused by causal, multi-stage context modeling; and 2) a rigid performance-latency trade-off, preventing a single model from adapting to varying constraints. These limitations stem from the tight coupling between context aggregation backbone and probability prediction. To address this, we propose PACE, a new framework that reformulates ancestral context aggregation as a non-causal backbone and confines causality to a lightweight, stage-scalable predictor, eliminating repetitive backbone executions and reducing computational overhead. The predictor supports an arbitrary number of prediction stages, supporting seamless adaptation across diverse performance-latency trade-offs without reloading parameters. Experiments demonstrate that PACE sets a new state-of-the-art in compression efficiency, achieving notable BD-BR savings and reducing decoding latency by over 90% in autoregressive mode, highly attractive for practical applications.

preprint2026arXiv

ResTok: Learning Hierarchical Residuals in 1D Visual Tokenizers for Autoregressive Image Generation

Existing 1D visual tokenizers for autoregressive (AR) generation largely follow the design principles of language modeling, as they are built directly upon transformers whose priors originate in language, yielding single-hierarchy latent tokens and treating visual data as flat sequential token streams. However, this language-like formulation overlooks key properties of vision, particularly the hierarchical and residual network designs that have long been essential for convergence and efficiency in visual models. To bring "vision" back to vision, we propose the Residual Tokenizer (ResTok), a 1D visual tokenizer that builds hierarchical residuals for both image tokens and latent tokens. The hierarchical representations obtained through progressively merging enable cross-level feature fusion at each layer, substantially enhancing representational capacity. Meanwhile, the semantic residuals between hierarchies prevent information overlap, yielding more concentrated latent distributions that are easier for AR modeling. Cross-level bindings consequently emerge without any explicit constraints. To accelerate the generation process, we further introduce a hierarchical AR generator that substantially reduces sampling steps by predicting an entire level of latent tokens at once rather than generating them strictly token-by-token. Extensive experiments demonstrate that restoring hierarchical residual priors in visual tokenization significantly improves AR image generation, achieving a gFID of 2.34 on ImageNet-256 with only 9 sampling steps. Code is available at https://github.com/Kwai-Kolors/ResTok.

preprint2026arXiv

YODA: Yet Another One-step Diffusion-based Video Compressor

While one-step diffusion models have recently excelled in perceptual image compression, their application to video remains limited. Prior efforts typically rely on pretrained 2D autoencoders that generate per-frame latent representations independently, thereby neglecting temporal dependencies. We present YODA--Yet Another One-step Diffusion-based Video Compressor--which embeds multiscale features from temporal references for both latent generation and latent coding to better exploit spatial-temporal correlations for more compact representation, and employs a linear Diffusion Transformer (DiT) for efficient one-step denoising. YODA achieves state-of-the-art perceptual performance, consistently outperforming traditional and deep-learning baselines on LPIPS, DISTS, FID, and KID. Source code will be publicly available at https://github.com/NJUVISION/YODA.

preprint2022arXiv

Efficient LiDAR Point Cloud Geometry Compression Through Neighborhood Point Attention

Although convolutional representation of multiscale sparse tensor demonstrated its superior efficiency to accurately model the occupancy probability for the compression of geometry component of dense object point clouds, its capacity for representing sparse LiDAR point cloud geometry (PCG) was largely limited. This is because 1) fixed receptive field of the convolution cannot characterize extremely and unevenly distributed sparse LiDAR points very well; and 2) pretrained convolutions with fixed weights are insufficient to dynamically capture information conditioned on the input. This work therefore suggests the neighborhood point attention (NPA) to tackle them, where we first use k nearest neighbors (kNN) to construct adaptive local neighborhood; and then leverage the self-attention mechanism to dynamically aggregate information within this neighborhood. Such NPA is devised as a NPAFormer to best exploit cross-scale and same-scale correlations for geometric occupancy probability estimation. Compared with the anchor using standardized G-PCC, our method provides >17% BD-rate gains for lossy compression, and >14% bitrate reduction for lossless scenario using popular LiDAR point clouds in SemanticKITTI and Ford datasets. Compared with the state-of-the-art (SOTA) solution using attention optimized octree coding method, our approach requires much less decoding runtime with about 640 times speedup on average, while still presenting better compression efficiency.

preprint2022arXiv

Fast Simulation of Particulate Suspensions Enabled by Graph Neural Network

Predicting the dynamic behaviors of particles in suspension subject to hydrodynamic interaction (HI) and external drive can be critical for many applications. By harvesting advanced deep learning techniques, the present work introduces a new framework, hydrodynamic interaction graph neural network (HIGNN), for inferring and predicting the particles' dynamics in Stokes suspensions. It overcomes the limitations of traditional approaches in computational efficiency, accuracy, and/or transferability. In particular, by uniting the data structure represented by a graph and the neural networks with learnable parameters, the HIGNN constructs surrogate modeling for the mobility tensor of particles which is the key to predicting the dynamics of particles subject to HI and external forces. To account for the many-body nature of HI, we generalize the state-of-the-art GNN by introducing higher-order connectivity into the graph and the corresponding convolutional operation. For training the HIGNN, we only need the data for a small number of particles in the domain of interest, and hence the training cost can be maintained low. Once constructed, the HIGNN permits fast predictions of the particles' velocities and is transferable to suspensions of different numbers/concentrations of particles in the same domain and to any external forcing. It has the ability to accurately capture both the long-range HI and short-range lubrication effects. We demonstrate the accuracy, efficiency, and transferability of the proposed HIGNN framework in a variety of systems. The requirement on computing resource is minimum: most simulations only require a desktop with one GPU; the simulations for a large suspension of 100,000 particles call for up to 6 GPUs.

preprint2022arXiv

H2-Stereo: High-Speed, High-Resolution Stereoscopic Video System

High-speed, high-resolution stereoscopic (H2-Stereo) video allows us to perceive dynamic 3D content at fine granularity. The acquisition of H2-Stereo video, however, remains challenging with commodity cameras. Existing spatial super-resolution or temporal frame interpolation methods provide compromised solutions that lack temporal or spatial details, respectively. To alleviate this problem, we propose a dual camera system, in which one camera captures high-spatial-resolution low-frame-rate (HSR-LFR) videos with rich spatial details, and the other captures low-spatial-resolution high-frame-rate (LSR-HFR) videos with smooth temporal details. We then devise a Learned Information Fusion network (LIFnet) that exploits the cross-camera redundancies to enhance both camera views to high spatiotemporal resolution (HSTR) for reconstructing the H2-Stereo video effectively. We utilize a disparity network to transfer spatiotemporal information across views even in large disparity scenes, based on which, we propose disparity-guided flow-based warping for LSR-HFR view and complementary warping for HSR-LFR view. A multi-scale fusion method in feature domain is proposed to minimize occlusion-induced warping ghosts and holes in HSR-LFR view. The LIFnet is trained in an end-to-end manner using our collected high-quality Stereo Video dataset from YouTube. Extensive experiments demonstrate that our model outperforms existing state-of-the-art methods for both views on synthetic data and camera-captured real data with large disparity. Ablation studies explore various aspects, including spatiotemporal resolution, camera baseline, camera desynchronization, long/short exposures and applications, of our system to fully understand its capability for potential applications.

preprint2022arXiv

NTIRE 2021 Challenge on Quality Enhancement of Compressed Video: Methods and Results

This paper reviews the first NTIRE challenge on quality enhancement of compressed video, with a focus on the proposed methods and results. In this challenge, the new Large-scale Diverse Video (LDV) dataset is employed. The challenge has three tracks. Tracks 1 and 2 aim at enhancing the videos compressed by HEVC at a fixed QP, while Track 3 is designed for enhancing the videos compressed by x265 at a fixed bit-rate. Besides, the quality enhancement of Tracks 1 and 3 targets at improving the fidelity (PSNR), and Track 2 targets at enhancing the perceptual quality. The three tracks totally attract 482 registrations. In the test phase, 12 teams, 8 teams and 11 teams submitted the final results of Tracks 1, 2 and 3, respectively. The proposed methods and solutions gauge the state-of-the-art of video quality enhancement. The homepage of the challenge: https://github.com/RenYang-home/NTIRE21_VEnh

preprint2022arXiv

Rendering Nighttime Image Via Cascaded Color and Brightness Compensation

Image signal processing (ISP) is crucial for camera imaging, and neural networks (NN) solutions are extensively deployed for daytime scenes. The lack of sufficient nighttime image dataset and insights on nighttime illumination characteristics poses a great challenge for high-quality rendering using existing NN ISPs. To tackle it, we first built a high-resolution nighttime RAW-RGB (NR2R) dataset with white balance and tone mapping annotated by expert professionals. Meanwhile, to best capture the characteristics of nighttime illumination light sources, we develop the CBUnet, a two-stage NN ISP to cascade the compensation of color and brightness attributes. Experiments show that our method has better visual quality compared to traditional ISP pipeline, and is ranked at the second place in the NTIRE 2022 Night Photography Rendering Challenge for two tracks by respective People's and Professional Photographer's choices. The code and relevant materials are avaiable on our website: https://njuvision.github.io/CBUnet.

preprint2022arXiv

Sparse Tensor-based Point Cloud Attribute Compression

Recently, numerous learning-based compression methods have been developed with outstanding performance for the coding of the geometry information of point clouds. On the contrary, limited explorations have been devoted to point cloud attribute compression (PCAC). Thus, this study focuses on the PCAC by applying sparse convolution because of its superior efficiency for representing the geometry of unorganized points. The proposed method simply stacks sparse convolutions to construct the variational autoencoder (VAE) framework to compress the color attributes of a given point cloud. To better encode latent elements at the bottleneck, we apply the adaptive entropy model with the joint utilization of hyper prior and autoregressive neighbors to accurately estimate the bit rate. The qualitative measurement of the proposed method already rivals the latest G-PCC (or TMC13) version 14 at a similar bit rate. And, our method shows clear quantitative improvements to G-PCC version 6, and largely outperforms existing learning-based methods, which promises encouraging potentials for learnt PCAC.

preprint2021arXiv

Advances In Video Compression System Using Deep Neural Network: A Review And Case Studies

Significant advances in video compression system have been made in the past several decades to satisfy the nearly exponential growth of Internet-scale video traffic. From the application perspective, we have identified three major functional blocks including pre-processing, coding, and post-processing, that have been continuously investigated to maximize the end-user quality of experience (QoE) under a limited bit rate budget. Recently, artificial intelligence (AI) powered techniques have shown great potential to further increase the efficiency of the aforementioned functional blocks, both individually and jointly. In this article, we review extensively recent technical advances in video compression system, with an emphasis on deep neural network (DNN)-based approaches; and then present three comprehensive case studies. On pre-processing, we show a switchable texture-based video coding example that leverages DNN-based scene understanding to extract semantic areas for the improvement of subsequent video coder. On coding, we present an end-to-end neural video coding framework that takes advantage of the stacked DNNs to efficiently and compactly code input raw videos via fully data-driven learning. On post-processing, we demonstrate two neural adaptive filters to respectively facilitate the in-loop and post filtering for the enhancement of compressed frames. Finally, a companion website hosting the contents developed in this work can be accessed publicly at https://purdueviper.github.io/dnn-coding/.

preprint2021arXiv

Dynamical Clustering Interrupts Motility Induced Phase Separation in Chiral Active Brownian Particles

One of the most intriguing phenomena in active matter has been the gas-liquid like motility induced phase separation (MIPS) observed in repulsive active particles. However, experimentally no particle can be a perfect sphere, and the asymmetric shape, mass distribution or catalysis coating can induce an active torque on the particle, which makes it a chiral active particle. Here using computer simulations and dynamic mean-field theory, we demonstrate that the large enough torque of circle active Brownian particles (cABPs) in two dimensions generates a dynamical clustering state interrupting the conventional MIPS. Multiple clusters arise from the combination of the conventional MIPS cohesion, and the circulating current caused disintegration. The non-vanishing current in non-equilibrium steady states microscopically originates from the motility ``relieved'' by automatic rotation, which breaks the detailed balance at the continuum level. This suggests that no equilibrium-like phase separation theory can be constructed for chiral active colloids even with tiny active torque, in which no visible collective motion exists. This mechanism also sheds light on the understanding of dynamic clusters observed in a variety of active matter systems.

preprint2020arXiv

A Dual Camera System for High Spatiotemporal Resolution Video Acquisition

This paper presents a dual camera system for high spatiotemporal resolution (HSTR) video acquisition, where one camera shoots a video with high spatial resolution and low frame rate (HSR-LFR) and another one captures a low spatial resolution and high frame rate (LSR-HFR) video. Our main goal is to combine videos from LSR-HFR and HSR-LFR cameras to create an HSTR video. We propose an end-to-end learning framework, AWnet, mainly consisting of a FlowNet and a FusionNet that learn an adaptive weighting function in pixel domain to combine inputs in a frame recurrent fashion. To improve the reconstruction quality for cameras used in reality, we also introduce noise regularization under the same framework. Our method has demonstrated noticeable performance gains in terms of both objective PSNR measurement in simulation with different publicly available video and light-field datasets and subjective evaluation with real data captured by dual iPhone 7 and Grasshopper3 cameras. Ablation studies are further conducted to investigate and explore various aspects (such as reference structure, camera parallax, exposure time, etc) of our system to fully understand its capability for potential applications.

preprint2020arXiv

Dynamic assembly of active colloids: theory and simulation

Because of consuming energy to drive their motion, systems of active colloids are intrinsically out of equilibrium. In the past decade, a variety of intriguing dynamic patterns have been observed in systems of active colloids, and they offer a new platform for studying non-equilibrium physics, in which computer simulation and analytical theory have played an important role. Here we review the recent progress in understanding the dynamic assembly of active colloids by using numerical and analytical tools. We review the progress in understanding the motility induced phase separation in the past decade, followed by the discussion on the effect of shape anisotropy and hydrodynamics on the dynamic assembly of active colloids.

preprint2020arXiv

Extreme Image Coding via Multiscale Autoencoders With Generative Adversarial Optimization

We propose a MultiScale AutoEncoder(MSAE) based extreme image compression framework to offer visually pleasing reconstruction at a very low bitrate. Our method leverages the "priors" at different resolution scale to improve the compression efficiency, and also employs the generative adversarial network(GAN) with multiscale discriminators to perform the end-to-end trainable rate-distortion optimization. We compare the perceptual quality of our reconstructions with traditional compression algorithms using High-Efficiency Video Coding(HEVC) based Intra Profile and JPEG2000 on the public Cityscapes and ADE20K datasets, demonstrating the significant subjective quality improvement.

preprint2020arXiv

Intelligent Autofocus

We demonstrate that deep learning methods can determine the best focus position from 1-2 image samples, enabling 5-10x faster focus than traditional search-based methods. In contrast with phase detection methods, deep autofocus does not require specialized hardware. In further constrast with conventional methods, which assume a static "best focus," AI methods can generate scene-based focus trajectories that optimize synthesized image quality for dynamic and three dimensional scenes.

preprint2020arXiv

Neural Video Coding using Multiscale Motion Compensation and Spatiotemporal Context Model

Over the past two decades, traditional block-based video coding has made remarkable progress and spawned a series of well-known standards such as MPEG-4, H.264/AVC and H.265/HEVC. On the other hand, deep neural networks (DNNs) have shown their powerful capacity for visual content understanding, feature extraction and compact representation. Some previous works have explored the learnt video coding algorithms in an end-to-end manner, which show the great potential compared with traditional methods. In this paper, we propose an end-to-end deep neural video coding framework (NVC), which uses variational autoencoders (VAEs) with joint spatial and temporal prior aggregation (PA) to exploit the correlations in intra-frame pixels, inter-frame motions and inter-frame compensation residuals, respectively. Novel features of NVC include: 1) To estimate and compensate motion over a large range of magnitudes, we propose an unsupervised multiscale motion compensation network (MS-MCN) together with a pyramid decoder in the VAE for coding motion features that generates multiscale flow fields, 2) we design a novel adaptive spatiotemporal context model for efficient entropy coding for motion information, 3) we adopt nonlocal attention modules (NLAM) at the bottlenecks of the VAEs for implicit adaptive feature extraction and activation, leveraging its high transformation capacity and unequal weighting with joint global and local information, and 4) we introduce multi-module optimization and a multi-frame training strategy to minimize the temporal error propagation among P-frames. NVC is evaluated for the low-delay causal settings and compared with H.265/HEVC, H.264/AVC and the other learnt video compression methods following the common test conditions, demonstrating consistent gains across all popular test sequences for both PSNR and MS-SSIM distortion metrics.

preprint2020arXiv

Object-Based Image Coding: A Learning-Driven Revisit

The Object-Based Image Coding (OBIC) that was extensively studied about two decades ago, promised a vast application perspective for both ultra-low bitrate communication and high-level semantical content understanding, but it had rarely been used due to the inefficient compact representation of object with arbitrary shape. A fundamental issue behind is how to efficiently process the arbitrary-shaped objects at a fine granularity (e.g., feature element or pixel wise). To attack this, we have proposed to apply the element-wise masking and compression by devising an object segmentation network for image layer decomposition, and parallel convolution-based neural image compression networks to process masked foreground objects and background scene separately. All components are optimized in an end-to-end learning framework to intelligently weigh their (e.g., object and background) contributions for visually pleasant reconstruction. We have conducted comprehensive experiments to evaluate the performance on PASCAL VOC dataset at a very low bitrate scenario (e.g., $\lesssim$0.1 bits per pixel - bpp) which have demonstrated noticeable subjective quality improvement compared with JPEG2K, HEVC-based BPG and another learned image compression method. All relevant materials are made publicly accessible at https://njuvision.github.io/Neural-Object-Coding/.

preprint2020arXiv

Smart Cameras

We review camera architecture in the age of artificial intelligence. Modern cameras use physical components and software to capture, compress and display image data. Over the past 5 years, deep learning solutions have become superior to traditional algorithms for each of these functions. Deep learning enables 10-100x reduction in electrical sensor power per pixel, 10x improvement in depth of field and dynamic range and 10-100x improvement in image pixel count. Deep learning enables multiframe and multiaperture solutions that fundamentally shift the goals of physical camera design. Here we review the state of the art of deep learning in camera operations and consider the impact of AI on the physical design of cameras.