Ming Liang
2026
EGSS: Entropy-guided Stepwise Scaling for Reliable Software Engineering
Chenhui Mao | Yuanting Lei | Zhixiang Wei | Ming Liang | Zhixiang Wang | Jingxuan Xu | Dajun Chen | Wei Jiang | Yong Li
Proceedings of the 64th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (Volume 1: Long Papers)
Chenhui Mao | Yuanting Lei | Zhixiang Wei | Ming Liang | Zhixiang Wang | Jingxuan Xu | Dajun Chen | Wei Jiang | Yong Li
Proceedings of the 64th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (Volume 1: Long Papers)
Agentic Test-Time Scaling (TTS) has delivered state-of-the-art (SOTA) performance on complex software engineering tasks such as code generation and bug fixing. However, its practical adoption remains limited due to significant computational overhead, primarily driven by two key challenges: (1) the high cost associated with deploying excessively large ensembles, and (2) the lack of a reliable mechanism for selecting the optimal candidate solution—ultimately constraining the performance gains that can be realized. To address these challenges, we propose Entropy-Guided Stepwise Scaling (EGSS), a novel TTS framework that dynamically balances efficiency and effectiveness through entropy-guided adaptive search and robust test-suite augmentation.Extensive experiments on SWE-Bench-Verified demonstrate that EGSS consistently boosts performance by 5–10% across all evaluated models. Specifically, it increases the resolved ratio of Kimi-K2-Intruct from 63.2% to 72.2%, and GLM-4.6 from 65.8% to 74.6%. Furthermore, when paired with GLM-4.6, EGSS achieves new state-of-the-art among open-source large language models. In addition to these accuracy improvements, EGSS reduces inference-time token usage by over 28% compared to existing TTS methods, achieving simultaneous gains in both effectiveness and computational efficiency.
FuseSearch: Learning Adaptive Parallel Execution for Efficient Code Localization
Ke Xu | Siyang Xiao | Ming Liang | Yichen Yu | Zhixiang Wang | Jingxuan Xu | Dajun Chen | Wei Jiang | Yong Li
Findings of the Association for Computational Linguistics: ACL 2026
Ke Xu | Siyang Xiao | Ming Liang | Yichen Yu | Zhixiang Wang | Jingxuan Xu | Dajun Chen | Wei Jiang | Yong Li
Findings of the Association for Computational Linguistics: ACL 2026
Code localization is a primary bottleneck in automated software development. While parallel tool execution can accelerate discovery, existing agents suffer from a 34.9% redundant tool invocation rate, negating the benefits of parallelism. We introduce FuseSearch, which reframes parallel code localization as a quality–efficiency co-optimization problem. By defining tool efficiency—the ratio of novel information gain to total invocations—we employ a two-stage SFT and RL pipeline to train models in adaptive parallel strategies. Unlike fixed-breadth methods, FuseSearch dynamically adjusts search breadth based on task context, transitioning from exploration to refinement. On SWE-bench Verified, FuseSearch-4B matches SOTA performance (84.7% file-level and 56.4% function-level F1 scores) while being 93.6% faster, using 67.7% fewer turns and 68.9% fewer tokens. Our findings demonstrate that efficiency-aware training inherently boosts quality by eliminating noisy, redundant signals, enabling high-performance, low-cost localization agents. Code: https://github.com/sxthunder/FuseSearch
2022
DoTAT: A Domain-oriented Text Annotation Tool
Yupian Lin | Tong Ruan | Ming Liang | Tingting Cai | Wen Du | Yi Wang
Proceedings of the 60th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics: System Demonstrations
Yupian Lin | Tong Ruan | Ming Liang | Tingting Cai | Wen Du | Yi Wang
Proceedings of the 60th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics: System Demonstrations
We propose DoTAT, a domain-oriented text annotation tool. The tool designs and implements functions heavily in need in domain-oriented information extraction. Firstly, the tool supports a multi-person collaborative process with automatically merging and review, which can greatly improve the annotation accuracy. Secondly, the tool provides annotation of events, nested event and nested entity, which are frequently required in domain-related text structuring tasks. Finally, DoTAT provides visual annotation specification definition, automatic batch annotation and iterative annotation to improve annotation efficiency. Experiments on the ACE2005 dataset show that DoTAT can reduce the event annotation time by 19.7% compared with existing annotation tools. The accuracy without review is 84.09%, 1.35% higher than Brat and 2.59% higher than Webanno. The accuracy of DoTAT even reaches 93.76% with review. The demonstration video can be accessed from https://ecust-nlp-docker.oss-cn-shanghai.aliyuncs.com/dotat_demo.mp4. A live demo website is available at https://github.com/FXLP/MarkTool.