Accurate segmentation of lesion regions is crucial for clinical diagnosis and treatment across various diseases. While deep convolutional networks have achieved satisfactory results in medical image segmentation, they face challenges such as loss of lesion shape information due to continuous convolution and downsampling, as well as the high cost of manually labeling lesions with varying shapes and sizes. To address these issues, we propose a novel medical visual prompting (MVP) framework that leverages pre-training and prompting concepts from natural language processing (NLP). The framework utilizes three key components: Super-Pixel Guided Prompting (SPGP) for superpixelating the input image, Image Embedding Guided Prompting (IEGP) for freezing patch embedding and merging with superpixels to provide visual prompts, and Adaptive Attention Mechanism Guided Prompting (AAGP) for pinpointing prompt content and efficiently adapting all layers. By integrating SPGP, IEGP, and AAGP, the MVP enables the segmentation network to better learn shape prompting information and facilitates mutual learning across different tasks. Extensive experiments conducted on five datasets demonstrate superior performance of this method in various challenging medical image tasks, while simplifying single-task medical segmentation models. This novel framework offers improved performance with fewer parameters and holds significant potential for accurate segmentation of lesion regions in various medical tasks, making it clinically valuable.
This research focuses on developing reinforcement learning approaches for the locomotion generation of small-size quadruped robots. The rat robot NeRmo is employed as the experimental platform. Due to the constrained volume, small-size quadruped robots typically possess fewer and weaker sensors, resulting in difficulty in accurately perceiving and responding to environmental changes. In this context, insufficient and imprecise feedback data from sensors makes it difficult to generate adaptive locomotion based on reinforcement learning. To overcome these challenges, this paper proposes a novel reinforcement learning approach that focuses on extracting effective perceptual information to enhance the environmental adaptability of small-size quadruped robots. According to the frequency of a robot's gait stride, key information of sensor data is analyzed utilizing sinusoidal functions derived from Fourier transform results. Additionally, a multifunctional reward mechanism is proposed to generate adaptive locomotion in different tasks. Extensive simulations are conducted to assess the effectiveness of the proposed reinforcement learning approach in generating rat robot locomotion in various environments. The experiment results illustrate the capability of the proposed approach to maintain stable locomotion of a rat robot across different terrains, including ramps, stairs, and spiral stairs.
User financial default prediction plays a critical role in credit risk forecasting and management. It aims at predicting the probability that the user will fail to make the repayments in the future. Previous methods mainly extract a set of user individual features regarding his own profiles and behaviors and build a binary-classification model to make default predictions. However, these methods cannot get satisfied results, especially for users with limited information. Although recent efforts suggest that default prediction can be improved by social relations, they fail to capture the higher-order topology structure at the level of small subgraph patterns. In this paper, we fill in this gap by proposing a motif-preserving Graph Neural Network with curriculum learning (MotifGNN) to jointly learn the lower-order structures from the original graph and higherorder structures from multi-view motif-based graphs for financial default prediction. Specifically, to solve the problem of weak connectivity in motif-based graphs, we design the motif-based gating mechanism. It utilizes the information learned from the original graph with good connectivity to strengthen the learning of the higher-order structure. And considering that the motif patterns of different samples are highly unbalanced, we propose a curriculum learning mechanism on the whole learning process to more focus on the samples with uncommon motif distributions. Extensive experiments on one public dataset and two industrial datasets all demonstrate the effectiveness of our proposed method.
Balancing oneself using the spine is a physiological alignment of the body posture in the most efficient manner by the muscular forces for mammals. For this reason, we can see many disabled quadruped animals can still stand or walk even with three limbs. This paper investigates the optimization of dynamic balance during trot gait based on the spatial relationship between the center of mass (CoM) and support area influenced by spinal flexion. During trotting, the robot balance is significantly influenced by the distance of the CoM to the support area formed by diagonal footholds. In this context, lateral spinal flexion, which is able to modify the position of footholds, holds promise for optimizing balance during trotting. This paper explores this phenomenon using a rat robot equipped with a soft actuated spine. Based on the lateral flexion of the spine, we establish a kinematic model to quantify the impact of spinal flexion on robot balance during trot gait. Subsequently, we develop an optimized controller for spinal flexion, designed to enhance balance without altering the leg locomotion. The effectiveness of our proposed controller is evaluated through extensive simulations and physical experiments conducted on a rat robot. Compared to both a non-spine based trot gait controller and a trot gait controller with lateral spinal flexion, our proposed optimized controller effectively improves the dynamic balance of the robot and retains the desired locomotion during trotting.
Previous single-stage detectors typically suffer the misalignment between localization accuracy and classification confidence. To solve the misalignment problem, we introduce a novel rectification method named neighbor IoU-voting (NIV) strategy. Typically, classification and regression are treated as separate branches, making it challenging to establish a connection between them. Consequently, the classification confidence cannot accurately reflect the regression quality. NIV strategy can serve as a bridge between classification and regression branches by calculating two types of statistical data from the regression output to correct the classification confidence. Furthermore, to alleviate the imbalance of detection accuracy for complete objects with dense points (easy objects) and incomplete objects with sparse points (difficult objects), we propose a new data augmentation scheme named object resampling. It undersamples easy objects and oversamples difficult objects by randomly transforming part of easy objects into difficult objects. Finally, combining the NIV strategy and object resampling augmentation, we design an efficient single-stage detector termed NIV-SSD. Extensive experiments on several datasets indicate the effectiveness of the NIV strategy and the competitive performance of the NIV-SSD detector. The code will be available at https://github.com/Say2L/NIV-SSD.
Recently, significant progress has been made in the research of 3D object detection. However, most prior studies have focused on the utilization of center-based or anchor-based label assignment schemes. Alternative label assignment strategies remain unexplored in 3D object detection. We find that the center-based label assignment often fails to generate sufficient positive samples for training, while the anchor-based label assignment tends to encounter an imbalanced issue when handling objects of varying scales. To solve these issues, we introduce a dynamic cross label assignment (DCLA) scheme, which dynamically assigns positive samples for each object from a cross-shaped region, thus providing sufficient and balanced positive samples for training. Furthermore, to address the challenge of accurately regressing objects with varying scales, we put forth a rotation-weighted Intersection over Union (RWIoU) metric to replace the widely used L1 metric in regression loss. Extensive experiments demonstrate the generality and effectiveness of our DCLA and RWIoU-based regression loss. The Code will be available at https://github.com/Say2L/DCDet.git.
Accurate and dense mapping in large-scale environments is essential for various robot applications. Recently, implicit neural signed distance fields (SDFs) have shown promising advances in this task. However, most existing approaches employ projective distances from range data as SDF supervision, introducing approximation errors and thus degrading the mapping quality. To address this problem, we introduce N3-Mapping, an implicit neural mapping system featuring normal-guided neural non-projective signed distance fields. Specifically, we directly sample points along the surface normal, instead of the ray, to obtain more accurate non-projective distance values from range data. Then these distance values are used as supervision to train the implicit map. For large-scale mapping, we apply a voxel-oriented sliding window mechanism to alleviate the forgetting issue with a bounded memory footprint. Besides, considering the uneven distribution of measured point clouds, a hierarchical sampling strategy is designed to improve training efficiency. Experiments demonstrate that our method effectively mitigates SDF approximation errors and achieves state-of-the-art mapping quality compared to existing approaches.
With the wide adoption of AI applications, there is a pressing need of enabling real-time neural network (NN) inference on small embedded devices, but deploying NNs and achieving high performance of NN inference on these small devices is challenging due to their extremely weak capabilities. Although NN partitioning and offloading can contribute to such deployment, they are incapable of minimizing the local costs at embedded devices. Instead, we suggest to address this challenge via agile NN offloading, which migrates the required computations in NN offloading from online inference to offline learning. In this paper, we present AgileNN, a new NN offloading technique that achieves real-time NN inference on weak embedded devices by leveraging eXplainable AI techniques, so as to explicitly enforce feature sparsity during the training phase and minimize the online computation and communication costs. Experiment results show that AgileNN's inference latency is >6x lower than the existing schemes, ensuring that sensory data on embedded devices can be timely consumed. It also reduces the local device's resource consumption by >8x, without impairing the inference accuracy.
On-device training is essential for neural networks (NNs) to continuously adapt to new online data, but can be time-consuming due to the device's limited computing power. To speed up on-device training, existing schemes select trainable NN portion offline or conduct unrecoverable selection at runtime, but the evolution of trainable NN portion is constrained and cannot adapt to the current need for training. Instead, runtime adaptation of on-device training should be fully elastic, i.e., every NN substructure can be freely removed from or added to the trainable NN portion at any time in training. In this paper, we present ElasticTrainer, a new technique that enforces such elasticity to achieve the required training speedup with the minimum NN accuracy loss. Experiment results show that ElasticTrainer achieves up to 3.5x more training speedup in wall-clock time and reduces energy consumption by 2x-3x more compared to the existing schemes, without noticeable accuracy loss.
Language-conditioned robotic manipulation represents a cutting-edge area of research, enabling seamless communication and cooperation between humans and robotic agents. This field focuses on teaching robotic systems to comprehend and execute instructions conveyed in natural language. To achieve this, the development of robust language understanding models capable of extracting actionable insights from textual input is essential. In this comprehensive survey, we systematically explore recent advancements in language-conditioned approaches within the context of robotic manipulation. We analyze these approaches based on their learning paradigms, which encompass reinforcement learning, imitation learning, and the integration of foundational models, such as large language models and vision-language models. Furthermore, we conduct an in-depth comparative analysis, considering aspects like semantic information extraction, environment & evaluation, auxiliary tasks, and task representation. Finally, we outline potential future research directions in the realm of language-conditioned learning for robotic manipulation, with the topic of generalization capabilities and safety issues.