Researcher profile

Zhiwei Ling

Zhiwei Ling contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

8 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

Industrial Data-Service-Knowledge Governance: Toward Integrated and Trusted Intelligence for Industry 5.0

The convergence of artificial intelligence, cyber-physical systems, and cross-enterprise data ecosystems has propelled industrial intelligence to unprecedented scales. Yet, the absence of a unified trust foundation across data, services, and knowledge layers undermines reliability, accountability, and regulatory compliance in real-world deployments. While existing surveys address isolated aspects, such as data governance, service orchestration, and knowledge representation, none provides a holistic, cross-layer perspective on trustworthiness tailored to industrial settings. To bridge this gap, we present \textsc{Trisk} (TRusted Industrial Data-Service-Knowledge governance), a novel conceptual and taxonomic framework for trustworthy industrial intelligence. Grounded in a five-dimensional trust model (quality, security, privacy, fairness, and explainability), \textsc{Trisk} unifies 120+ representative studies along three orthogonal axes: governance scope (data, service, and knowledge), architectural paradigm (centralized, federated, or edge-embedded), and enabling technology (knowledge graphs, zero-trust policies, causal inference, etc.). We systematically analyze how trust propagates across digital layers, identify critical gaps in semantic interoperability, runtime policy enforcement, and operational/information technologies alignment, and evaluate the maturity of current industrial implementations. Finally, we articulate a forward-looking research agenda for Industry 5.0, advocating for an integrated governance fabric that embeds verifiable trust semantics into every layer of the industrial intelligence stack. This survey serves as both a foundational reference for researchers and a practical roadmap for engineers to deploy trustworthy AI in complex and multi-stakeholder environments.

preprint2026arXiv

PAMNet: Cycle-aware Phase-Amplitude Modulation Network for Multivariate Time Series Forecasting

Reliable periodic patterns serve as a fundamental basis for accurate multivariate time series forecasting. However, existing methods either implicitly extract periodicity through complex model architectures (e.g., Transformers) with high computational overhead or overlook the intrinsic phase-amplitude coupling when modeling periodic components explicitly. To address these issues, we propose a novel Cycle-aware Phase-Amplitude Modulation Network (PAMNet) that explicitly decomposes periodic patterns into complementary phase and amplitude components. The core innovation lies in its dual-branch modulator, featuring dedicated learnable embeddings for phase positioning and amplitude modulation. The phase branch employs cyclical embeddings to capture phase-dependent mean shifts, while the amplitude branch models intensity variations to adapt to changes in variance. A lightweight modulator with element-wise fusion efficiently combines these components, enabling explicit modeling of their interactions without complex attention mechanisms. Extensive experiments on twelve real-world datasets demonstrate that our method achieves state-of-the-art performance through its novel phase-amplitude decoupling mechanism, offering a new perspective for cyclical modeling in time series forecasting.

preprint2026arXiv

When Does Hierarchy Help? Benchmarking Agent Coordination in Event-Driven Industrial Scheduling

Recent advances in agent and multi-agent systems have shown strong performance on tool use, reasoning, and collaborative tasks. However, existing benchmarks mostly evaluate task completion in weakly coupled environments, and provide limited support for studying coordination in shared, dynamically evolving systems with hierarchy and coupled constraints. This leaves an important question underexplored: when do different coordination paradigms succeed or fail? We introduce Distributed Event-driven Scheduling Benchmark (DESBench), a benchmark for evaluating agent coordination in hierarchical event-driven scheduling. Built on a shared discrete-event driven environment in industrial scheduling, our benchmark captures multi-timescale decision making, partial observability, and dynamically coupled constraints. We define tasks and metrics that evaluate effectiveness, constraint alignment, coordination efficiency, and robustness, and focus on four representative coordination paradigms: centralized, hierarchical, heterarchical, and holonic. These paradigms correspond to distinct mechanisms of information flow, decision authority, and conflict resolution. Our controlled evaluations reveal clear coordination trade-offs: centralized coordination is robust and communication-efficient but scales poorly with difficulty; hierarchical coordination improves efficiency through decomposition but suffers from cross-level misalignment; heterarchical coordination is flexible but communication-heavy; and holonic coordination satisfies constraints well but loses global robustness. These findings demonstrate that coordination design fundamentally shapes agent system behavior in complex environments, revealing structural trade-offs that cannot be captured by outcome metrics alone and underscoring the imperative for more adaptive, principled, and dynamic coordination mechanisms in future MAS research.

preprint2022arXiv

Efficient Federated Learning for AIoT Applications Using Knowledge Distillation

As a promising distributed machine learning paradigm, Federated Learning (FL) trains a central model with decentralized data without compromising user privacy, which has made it widely used by Artificial Intelligence Internet of Things (AIoT) applications. However, the traditional FL suffers from model inaccuracy since it trains local models using hard labels of data and ignores useful information of incorrect predictions with small probabilities. Although various solutions try to tackle the bottleneck of the traditional FL, most of them introduce significant communication and memory overhead, making the deployment of large-scale AIoT devices a great challenge. To address the above problem, this paper presents a novel Distillation-based Federated Learning (DFL) architecture that enables efficient and accurate FL for AIoT applications. Inspired by Knowledge Distillation (KD) that can increase the model accuracy, our approach adds the soft targets used by KD to the FL model training, which occupies negligible network resources. The soft targets are generated by local sample predictions of each AIoT device after each round of local training and used for the next round of model training. During the local training of DFL, both soft targets and hard labels are used as approximation objectives of model predictions to improve model accuracy by supplementing the knowledge of soft targets. To further improve the performance of our DFL model, we design a dynamic adjustment strategy for tuning the ratio of two loss functions used in KD, which can maximize the use of both soft targets and hard labels. Comprehensive experimental results on well-known benchmarks show that our approach can significantly improve the model accuracy of FL with both Independent and Identically Distributed (IID) and non-IID data.

preprint2022arXiv

FedCAT: Towards Accurate Federated Learning via Device Concatenation

As a promising distributed machine learning paradigm, Federated Learning (FL) enables all the involved devices to train a global model collaboratively without exposing their local data privacy. However, for non-IID scenarios, the classification accuracy of FL models decreases drastically due to the weight divergence caused by data heterogeneity. Although various FL variants have been studied to improve model accuracy, most of them still suffer from the problem of non-negligible communication and computation overhead. In this paper, we introduce a novel FL approach named Fed-Cat that can achieve high model accuracy based on our proposed device selection strategy and device concatenation-based local training method. Unlike conventional FL methods that aggregate local models trained on individual devices, FedCat periodically aggregates local models after their traversals through a series of logically concatenated devices, which can effectively alleviate the model weight divergence problem. Comprehensive experimental results on four well-known benchmarks show that our approach can significantly improve the model accuracy of state-of-the-art FL methods without causing extra communication overhead.

preprint2022arXiv

FedEntropy: Efficient Device Grouping for Federated Learning Using Maximum Entropy Judgment

Along with the popularity of Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Internet-of-Things (IoT), Federated Learning (FL) has attracted steadily increasing attentions as a promising distributed machine learning paradigm, which enables the training of a central model on for numerous decentralized devices without exposing their privacy. However, due to the biased data distributions on involved devices, FL inherently suffers from low classification accuracy in non-IID scenarios. Although various device grouping method have been proposed to address this problem, most of them neglect both i) distinct data distribution characteristics of heterogeneous devices, and ii) contributions and hazards of local models, which are extremely important in determining the quality of global model aggregation. In this paper, we present an effective FL method named FedEntropy with a novel dynamic device grouping scheme, which makes full use of the above two factors based on our proposed maximum entropy judgement heuristic.Unlike existing FL methods that directly aggregate local models returned from all the selected devices, in one FL round FedEntropy firstly makes a judgement based on the pre-collected soft labels of selected devices and then only aggregates the local models that can maximize the overall entropy of these soft labels. Without collecting local models that are harmful for aggregation, FedEntropy can effectively improve global model accuracy while reducing the overall communication overhead. Comprehensive experimental results on well-known benchmarks show that, FedEntropy not only outperforms state-of-the-art FL methods in terms of model accuracy and communication overhead, but also can be integrated into them to enhance their classification performance.

preprint2022arXiv

FedMR: Fedreated Learning via Model Recombination

As a promising privacy-preserving machine learning method, Federated Learning (FL) enables global model training across clients without compromising their confidential local data. However, existing FL methods suffer from the problem of low inference performance for unevenly distributed data, since most of them rely on Federated Averaging (FedAvg)-based aggregation. By averaging model parameters in a coarse manner, FedAvg eclipses the individual characteristics of local models, which strongly limits the inference capability of FL. Worse still, in each round of FL training, FedAvg dispatches the same initial local models to clients, which can easily result in stuck-at-local-search for optimal global models. To address the above issues, this paper proposes a novel and effective FL paradigm named FedMR (Federating Model Recombination). Unlike conventional FedAvg-based methods, the cloud server of FedMR shuffles each layer of collected local models and recombines them to achieve new models for local training on clients. Due to the fine-grained model recombination and local training in each FL round, FedMR can quickly figure out one globally optimal model for all the clients. Comprehensive experimental results demonstrate that, compared with state-of-the-art FL methods, FedMR can significantly improve the inference accuracy without causing extra communication overhead.

preprint2022arXiv

Model-Contrastive Learning for Backdoor Defense

Due to the popularity of Artificial Intelligence (AI) techniques, we are witnessing an increasing number of backdoor injection attacks that are designed to maliciously threaten Deep Neural Networks (DNNs) causing misclassification. Although there exist various defense methods that can effectively erase backdoors from DNNs, they greatly suffer from both high Attack Success Rate (ASR) and a non-negligible loss in Benign Accuracy (BA). Inspired by the observation that a backdoored DNN tends to form a new cluster in its feature spaces for poisoned data, in this paper we propose a novel two-stage backdoor defense method, named MCLDef, based on Model-Contrastive Learning (MCL). In the first stage, our approach performs trigger inversion based on trigger synthesis, where the resultant trigger can be used to generate poisoned data. In the second stage, under the guidance of MCL and our defined positive and negative pairs, MCLDef can purify the backdoored model by pulling the feature representations of poisoned data towards those of their clean data counterparts. Due to the shrunken cluster of poisoned data, the backdoor formed by end-to-end supervised learning is eliminated. Comprehensive experimental results show that, with only 5% of clean data, MCLDef significantly outperforms state-of-the-art defense methods by up to 95.79% reduction in ASR, while in most cases the BA degradation can be controlled within less than 2%. Our code is available at https://github.com/WeCanShow/MCL.