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Zhenheng Tang

Zhenheng Tang contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

5 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

CloneMem: Benchmarking Long-Term Memory for AI Clones

AI Clones aim to simulate an individual's thoughts and behaviors to enable long-term, personalized interaction, placing stringent demands on memory systems to model experiences, emotions, and opinions over time. Existing memory benchmarks primarily rely on user-agent conversational histories, which are temporally fragmented and insufficient for capturing continuous life trajectories. We introduce CloneMem, a benchmark for evaluating longterm memory in AI Clone scenarios grounded in non-conversational digital traces, including diaries, social media posts, and emails, spanning one to three years. CloneMem adopts a hierarchical data construction framework to ensure longitudinal coherence and defines tasks that assess an agent's ability to track evolving personal states. Experiments show that current memory mechanisms struggle in this setting, highlighting open challenges for life-grounded personalized AI. Code and dataset are available at https://github.com/AvatarMemory/CloneMemBench

preprint2026arXiv

VCG-Bench: Towards A Unified Visual-Centric Benchmark for Structured Generation and Editing

Despite the rapid advancements in Vision-Language Models (VLMs), a critical gap remains in their ability to handle structured, controllable diagrammatic tasks essential for professional workflows. Existing methods predominantly rely on pixel-based synthesis, which operates in probabilistic pixel spaces and is inherently limited in editability and fidelity. Instead, we propose a new Diagram-as-Code paradigm with symbolic logic that leverages mxGraph Extensible Markup Language (XML) for precise diagram generation and editing. We present VCG-Bench, a unified benchmark for visual-centric \texttt{mxGraph} tasks. VCG-Bench comprises: (1) a taxonomized dataset of 1,449 diverse diagrams spanning 6 domains and 15 sub-domains, (2) a paradigm definition that integrates Generation (Vision-to-Code) and Editability (Code-to-Code), (3) a Tailored Evaluation Protocol employing multi-dimensional metrics such as \texttt{mxGraph} Execution Success Rate, Style Consistency Score (SCS), etc. Experimental results highlight the challenges faced by current State-of-the-Art (SOTA) VLMs in structured fidelity and instruction compliance, reflecting their vision and reasoning capabilities.

preprint2022arXiv

Virtual Homogeneity Learning: Defending against Data Heterogeneity in Federated Learning

In federated learning (FL), model performance typically suffers from client drift induced by data heterogeneity, and mainstream works focus on correcting client drift. We propose a different approach named virtual homogeneity learning (VHL) to directly "rectify" the data heterogeneity. In particular, VHL conducts FL with a virtual homogeneous dataset crafted to satisfy two conditions: containing no private information and being separable. The virtual dataset can be generated from pure noise shared across clients, aiming to calibrate the features from the heterogeneous clients. Theoretically, we prove that VHL can achieve provable generalization performance on the natural distribution. Empirically, we demonstrate that VHL endows FL with drastically improved convergence speed and generalization performance. VHL is the first attempt towards using a virtual dataset to address data heterogeneity, offering new and effective means to FL.

preprint2020arXiv

Communication-Efficient Decentralized Learning with Sparsification and Adaptive Peer Selection

Distributed learning techniques such as federated learning have enabled multiple workers to train machine learning models together to reduce the overall training time. However, current distributed training algorithms (centralized or decentralized) suffer from the communication bottleneck on multiple low-bandwidth workers (also on the server under the centralized architecture). Although decentralized algorithms generally have lower communication complexity than the centralized counterpart, they still suffer from the communication bottleneck for workers with low network bandwidth. To deal with the communication problem while being able to preserve the convergence performance, we introduce a novel decentralized training algorithm with the following key features: 1) It does not require a parameter server to maintain the model during training, which avoids the communication pressure on any single peer. 2) Each worker only needs to communicate with a single peer at each communication round with a highly compressed model, which can significantly reduce the communication traffic on the worker. We theoretically prove that our sparsification algorithm still preserves convergence properties. 3) Each worker dynamically selects its peer at different communication rounds to better utilize the bandwidth resources. We conduct experiments with convolutional neural networks on 32 workers to verify the effectiveness of our proposed algorithm compared to seven existing methods. Experimental results show that our algorithm significantly reduces the communication traffic and generally select relatively high bandwidth peers.

preprint2020arXiv

Layer-wise Adaptive Gradient Sparsification for Distributed Deep Learning with Convergence Guarantees

To reduce the long training time of large deep neural network (DNN) models, distributed synchronous stochastic gradient descent (S-SGD) is commonly used on a cluster of workers. However, the speedup brought by multiple workers is limited by the communication overhead. Two approaches, namely pipelining and gradient sparsification, have been separately proposed to alleviate the impact of communication overheads. Yet, the gradient sparsification methods can only initiate the communication after the backpropagation, and hence miss the pipelining opportunity. In this paper, we propose a new distributed optimization method named LAGS-SGD, which combines S-SGD with a novel layer-wise adaptive gradient sparsification (LAGS) scheme. In LAGS-SGD, every worker selects a small set of "significant" gradients from each layer independently whose size can be adaptive to the communication-to-computation ratio of that layer. The layer-wise nature of LAGS-SGD opens the opportunity of overlapping communications with computations, while the adaptive nature of LAGS-SGD makes it flexible to control the communication time. We prove that LAGS-SGD has convergence guarantees and it has the same order of convergence rate as vanilla S-SGD under a weak analytical assumption. Extensive experiments are conducted to verify the analytical assumption and the convergence performance of LAGS-SGD. Experimental results on a 16-GPU cluster show that LAGS-SGD outperforms the original S-SGD and existing sparsified S-SGD without losing obvious model accuracy.