Ming Hu


2024

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LMPT: Prompt Tuning with Class-Specific Embedding Loss for Long-Tailed Multi-Label Visual Recognition
Peng Xia | Di Xu | Ming Hu | Lie Ju | Zongyuan Ge
Proceedings of the 3rd Workshop on Advances in Language and Vision Research (ALVR)

Long-tailed multi-label visual recognition (LTML) task is a highly challenging task due to the label co-occurrence and imbalanced data distribution. In this work, we propose a unified framework for LTML, namely prompt tuning with class-specific embedding loss (LMPT), capturing the semantic feature interactions between categories by combining text and image modality data and improving the performance synchronously on both head and tail classes. Specifically, LMPT introduces the embedding loss function with class-aware soft margin and re-weighting to learn class-specific contexts with the benefit of textual descriptions (captions), which could help establish semantic relationships between classes, especially between the head and tail classes. Furthermore, taking into account the class imbalance, the distribution-balanced loss is adopted as the classification loss function to further improve the performance on the tail classes without compromising head classes. Extensive experiments are conducted on VOC-LT and COCO-LT datasets, which demonstrates that our method significantly surpasses the previous state-of-the-art methods and zero-shot CLIP in LTML. Our codes are fully public at https://github.com/richard-peng-xia/LMPT.

2018

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A Bilingual Interactive Human Avatar Dialogue System
Dana Abu Ali | Muaz Ahmad | Hayat Al Hassan | Paula Dozsa | Ming Hu | Jose Varias | Nizar Habash
Proceedings of the 19th Annual SIGdial Meeting on Discourse and Dialogue

This demonstration paper presents a bilingual (Arabic-English) interactive human avatar dialogue system. The system is named TOIA (time-offset interaction application), as it simulates face-to-face conversations between humans using digital human avatars recorded in the past. TOIA is a conversational agent, similar to a chat bot, except that it is based on an actual human being and can be used to preserve and tell stories. The system is designed to allow anybody, simply using a laptop, to create an avatar of themselves, thus facilitating cross-cultural and cross-generational sharing of narratives to wider audiences. The system currently supports monolingual and cross-lingual dialogues in Arabic and English, but can be extended to other languages.