Abstract:Edge devices increasingly run multimodal sensing pipelines that must remain accurate despite fluctuating power budgets and unpredictable sensor dropout. Existing pruning methods fail under these conditions: they generally require fine-tuning after compression, consuming over $10\times$ the deployment energy, and they assign static importance scores that are blind to which sensors are present. We present the SentryFuse framework, which addresses both challenges jointly through two key components. First, SentryGate learns modality-conditioned importance scores during training via first-order saliency supervision and then prunes attention heads and feed-forward channels at deployment without fine-tuning. Second, SentryAttend replaces dense self-attention, a key bottleneck in contemporary multimodal architectures, with sparse grouped-query attention, yielding a net 15% reduction in GFLOPs across three different multimodal architectures. Across three applications and multimodal backbones, SentryGate achieves a 12.7% average accuracy improvement over the strongest pruning baseline, and upto to 18% under modality dropout conditions. Together, SentryFuse reduces memory by 28.2% and lowers latency by up to $1.63\times$ without further fine-tuning, establishing modality-aware zero-shot compression as a practical path to multimodal intelligence on heterogeneous edge hardware.
Abstract:Parkinson's disease (PD), a prevalent neurodegenerative disorder, significantly affects patients' daily functioning and social interactions. To facilitate a more efficient and accessible diagnostic approach for PD, we propose a dynamic facial expression analysis-based PD auxiliary diagnosis method. This method targets hypomimia, a characteristic clinical symptom of PD, by analyzing two manifestations: reduced facial expressivity and facial rigidity, thereby facilitating the diagnosis process. We develop a multimodal facial expression analysis network to extract expression intensity features during patients' performance of various facial expressions. This network leverages the CLIP architecture to integrate visual and textual features while preserving the temporal dynamics of facial expressions. Subsequently, the expression intensity features are processed and input into an LSTM-based classification network for PD diagnosis. Our method achieves an accuracy of 93.1%, outperforming other in-vitro PD diagnostic approaches. This technique offers a more convenient detection method for potential PD patients, improving their diagnostic experience.