Fine classification of city-scale buildings from satellite remote sensing imagery is a crucial research area with significant implications for urban planning, infrastructure development, and population distribution analysis. However, the task faces big challenges due to low-resolution overhead images acquired from high altitude space-borne platforms and the long-tail sample distribution of fine-grained urban building categories, leading to severe class imbalance problem. To address these issues, we propose a deep network approach to fine-grained classification of urban buildings using open-access satellite images. A Denoising Diffusion Probabilistic Model (DDPM) based super-resolution method is first introduced to enhance the spatial resolution of satellite images, which benefits from domain-adaptive knowledge distillation. Then, a new fine-grained classification network with Category Information Balancing Module (CIBM) and Contrastive Supervision (CS) technique is proposed to mitigate the problem of class imbalance and improve the classification robustness and accuracy. Experiments on Hong Kong data set with 11 fine building types revealed promising classification results with a mean Top-1 accuracy of 60.45\%, which is on par with street-view image based approaches. Extensive ablation study shows that CIBM and CS improve Top-1 accuracy by 2.6\% and 3.5\% compared to the baseline method, respectively. And both modules can be easily inserted into other classification networks and similar enhancements have been achieved. Our research contributes to the field of urban analysis by providing a practical solution for fine classification of buildings in challenging mega city scenarios solely using open-access satellite images. The proposed method can serve as a valuable tool for urban planners, aiding in the understanding of economic, industrial, and population distribution.
Ensuring the trustworthiness of large language models (LLMs) is crucial. Most studies concentrate on fully pre-trained LLMs to better understand and improve LLMs' trustworthiness. In this paper, to reveal the untapped potential of pre-training, we pioneer the exploration of LLMs' trustworthiness during this period, focusing on five key dimensions: reliability, privacy, toxicity, fairness, and robustness. To begin with, we apply linear probing to LLMs. The high probing accuracy suggests that \textit{LLMs in early pre-training can already distinguish concepts in each trustworthiness dimension}. Therefore, to further uncover the hidden possibilities of pre-training, we extract steering vectors from a LLM's pre-training checkpoints to enhance the LLM's trustworthiness. Finally, inspired by~\citet{choi2023understanding} that mutual information estimation is bounded by linear probing accuracy, we also probe LLMs with mutual information to investigate the dynamics of trustworthiness during pre-training. We are the first to observe a similar two-phase phenomenon: fitting and compression~\citep{shwartz2017opening}. This research provides an initial exploration of trustworthiness modeling during LLM pre-training, seeking to unveil new insights and spur further developments in the field. We will make our code publicly accessible at \url{https://github.com/ChnQ/TracingLLM}.
This paper presents a new approach and algorithm for solving a class of constrained Bi-Level Optimization (BLO) problems in which the lower-level problem involves constraints coupling both upper-level and lower-level variables. Such problems have recently gained significant attention due to their broad applicability in machine learning. However, conventional gradient-based methods unavoidably rely on computationally intensive calculations related to the Hessian matrix. To address this challenge, we begin by devising a smooth proximal Lagrangian value function to handle the constrained lower-level problem. Utilizing this construct, we introduce a single-level reformulation for constrained BLOs that transforms the original BLO problem into an equivalent optimization problem with smooth constraints. Enabled by this reformulation, we develop a Hessian-free gradient-based algorithm-termed proximal Lagrangian Value function-based Hessian-free Bi-level Algorithm (LV-HBA)-that is straightforward to implement in a single loop manner. Consequently, LV-HBA is especially well-suited for machine learning applications. Furthermore, we offer non-asymptotic convergence analysis for LV-HBA, eliminating the need for traditional strong convexity assumptions for the lower-level problem while also being capable of accommodating non-singleton scenarios. Empirical results substantiate the algorithm's superior practical performance.
With the intensification of global warming, the monitoring of methane emission and detection of gas plumes from landfills have increasingly received attention. We decompose methane emission monitoring into three sub-tasks: methane concentration inversion, plume segmentation, and emission rate estimation. Conventional algorithms have limitations: methane concentration inversion usually uses the matched filter, which is sensitive to global spectrum distribution and contains a large amount of noises. There is limited research on plume segmentation, with many studies resorting to manual segmentation that is likely to be subjective. The estimation of methane emission rate often utilizes IME algorithm, which relies on obtaining meteorological measurement data. Using the WENT landfill site in Hong Kong and PRISMA hyperspectral satellite imagery, we propose a new deep learning-based framework for quantitative monitoring of methane emissions from remote sensing images based on physical simulation. We generate simulated methane plumes using large eddy simulation (LES) and different concentration maps of fugitive emission using the radiative transfer equation (RTE), while combining augmentation techniques to create a simulated PRISMA dataset. We train a U-Net network for methane concentration inversion, a Mask R-CNN network for methane plume segmentation, and a ResNet-50 network for methane emission rate estimation. All three deep networks achieve higher validation accuracy compared to conventional algorithms. We further respectively combine the first two sub-tasks and the last two sub-tasks to design the multi-task learning models - MTL-01 and MTL-02, both of which achieve higher accuracy than single-task models. Our research serves as a demonstration of applying multi-task deep learning to quantitative methane monitoring and can be extended to a broad range of methane monitoring tasks.
Deep neural networks are widely known to be vulnerable to adversarial examples. However, vanilla adversarial examples generated under the white-box setting often exhibit low transferability across different models. Since adversarial transferability poses more severe threats to practical applications, various approaches have been proposed for better transferability, including gradient-based, input transformation-based, and model-related attacks, \etc. In this work, we find that several tiny changes in the existing adversarial attacks can significantly affect the attack performance, \eg, the number of iterations and step size. Based on careful studies of existing adversarial attacks, we propose a bag of tricks to enhance adversarial transferability, including momentum initialization, scheduled step size, dual example, spectral-based input transformation, and several ensemble strategies. Extensive experiments on the ImageNet dataset validate the high effectiveness of our proposed tricks and show that combining them can further boost adversarial transferability. Our work provides practical insights and techniques to enhance adversarial transferability, and offers guidance to improve the attack performance on the real-world application through simple adjustments.
The recovery of 3D human mesh from monocular images has significantly been developed in recent years. However, existing models usually ignore spatial and temporal information, which might lead to mesh and image misalignment and temporal discontinuity. For this reason, we propose a novel Spatio-Temporal Alignment Fusion (STAF) model. As a video-based model, it leverages coherence clues from human motion by an attention-based Temporal Coherence Fusion Module (TCFM). As for spatial mesh-alignment evidence, we extract fine-grained local information through predicted mesh projection on the feature maps. Based on the spatial features, we further introduce a multi-stage adjacent Spatial Alignment Fusion Module (SAFM) to enhance the feature representation of the target frame. In addition to the above, we propose an Average Pooling Module (APM) to allow the model to focus on the entire input sequence rather than just the target frame. This method can remarkably improve the smoothness of recovery results from video. Extensive experiments on 3DPW, MPII3D, and H36M demonstrate the superiority of STAF. We achieve a state-of-the-art trade-off between precision and smoothness. Our code and more video results are on the project page https://yw0208.github.io/staf/
For a long time, in the field of reconstructing 3D human bodies from monocular images, most methods opted to simplify the task by minimizing the influence of the camera. Using a coarse focal length setting results in the reconstructed bodies not aligning well with distorted images. Ignoring camera rotation leads to an unrealistic reconstructed body pose in world space. Consequently, existing methods' application scenarios are confined to controlled environments. And they struggle to achieve accurate and reasonable reconstruction in world space when confronted with complex and diverse in-the-wild images. To address the above issues, we propose W-HMR, which decouples global body recovery into camera calibration, local body recovery and global body orientation correction. We design the first weak-supervised camera calibration method for body distortion, eliminating dependence on focal length labels and achieving finer mesh-image alignment. We propose a novel orientation correction module to allow the reconstructed human body to remain normal in world space. Decoupling body orientation and body pose enables our model to consider the accuracy in camera coordinate and the reasonableness in world coordinate simultaneously, expanding the range of applications. As a result, W-HMR achieves high-quality reconstruction in dual coordinate systems, particularly in challenging scenes. Codes will be released on https://yw0208.github.io/w-hmr/ after publication.
Gait recognition has achieved promising advances in controlled settings, yet it significantly struggles in unconstrained environments due to challenges such as view changes, occlusions, and varying walking speeds. Additionally, efforts to fuse multiple modalities often face limited improvements because of cross-modality incompatibility, particularly in outdoor scenarios. To address these issues, we present a multi-modal Hierarchy in Hierarchy network (HiH) that integrates silhouette and pose sequences for robust gait recognition. HiH features a main branch that utilizes Hierarchical Gait Decomposer (HGD) modules for depth-wise and intra-module hierarchical examination of general gait patterns from silhouette data. This approach captures motion hierarchies from overall body dynamics to detailed limb movements, facilitating the representation of gait attributes across multiple spatial resolutions. Complementing this, an auxiliary branch, based on 2D joint sequences, enriches the spatial and temporal aspects of gait analysis. It employs a Deformable Spatial Enhancement (DSE) module for pose-guided spatial attention and a Deformable Temporal Alignment (DTA) module for aligning motion dynamics through learned temporal offsets. Extensive evaluations across diverse indoor and outdoor datasets demonstrate HiH's state-of-the-art performance, affirming a well-balanced trade-off between accuracy and efficiency.
It has been observed that machine learning algorithms exhibit biased predictions against certain population groups. To mitigate such bias while achieving comparable accuracy, a promising approach is to introduce surrogate functions of the concerned fairness definition and solve a constrained optimization problem. However, an intriguing issue in previous work is that such fairness surrogate functions may yield unfair results. In this work, in order to deeply understand this issue, taking a widely used fairness definition, demographic parity as an example, we both theoretically and empirically show that there is a surrogate-fairness gap between the fairness definition and the fairness surrogate function. The "gap" directly determines whether a surrogate function is an appropriate substitute for a fairness definition. Also, the theoretical analysis and experimental results about the "gap" motivate us that the unbounded surrogate functions will be affected by the points far from the decision boundary, which is the large margin points issue investigated in this paper. To address it, we propose the general sigmoid surrogate with a rigorous and reliable fairness guarantee. Interestingly, the theory also provides insights into two important issues that deal with the large margin points as well as obtaining a more balanced dataset are beneficial to fairness. Furthermore, we elaborate a novel and general algorithm called Balanced Surrogate, which iteratively reduces the "gap" to improve fairness. Finally, we provide empirical evidence showing that our methods achieve better fairness performance in three real-world datasets.
Cutting-edge connected vehicle (CV) technologies have drawn much attention in recent years. The real-time traffic data captured by a CV can be shared with other CVs and data centers so as to open new possibilities for solving diverse transportation problems. However, imagery captured by onboard cameras in a connected environment, are not sufficiently investigated, especially for safety and health-oriented visual perception. In this paper, a bidirectional process of image synthesis and decomposition (BPISD) approach is proposed, and thus a novel self-supervised multi-task learning framework, to simultaneously estimate depth map, atmospheric visibility, airlight, and PM2.5 mass concentration, in which depth map and visibility are considered highly associated with traffic safety, while airlight and PM2.5 mass concentration are directly correlated with human health. Both the training and testing phases of the proposed system solely require a single image as input. Due to the innovative training pipeline, the depth estimation network can manage various levels of visibility conditions and overcome inherent problems in current image-synthesis-based depth estimation, thereby generating high-quality depth maps even in low-visibility situations and further benefiting accurate estimations of visibility, airlight, and PM2.5 mass concentration. Extensive experiments on the synthesized data from the KITTI and real-world data collected in Beijing demonstrate that the proposed method can (1) achieve performance competitive in depth estimation as compared with state-of-the-art methods when taking clear images as input; (2) predict vivid depth map for images contaminated by various levels of haze; and (3) accurately estimate visibility, airlight, and PM2.5 mass concentrations. Beneficial applications can be developed based on the presented work to improve traffic safety, air quality, and public health.