Difference between revisions of "Resource:Seminar"

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{{SemNote
{{SemNote
|time='''2025-06-13 10:30-12:00'''
|time='''2025-12-12 10:30'''
|addr=4th Research Building A518
|addr=4th Research Building A518
|note=Useful links: [[Resource:Reading_List|📚 Readling list]]; [[Resource:Seminar_schedules|📆 Schedules]]; [[Resource:Previous_Seminars|🧐 Previous seminars]].
|note=Useful links: [[Resource:Reading_List|📚 Readling list]]; [[Resource:Seminar_schedules|📆 Schedules]]; [[Resource:Previous_Seminars|🧐 Previous seminars]].
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{{Latest_seminar
{{Latest_seminar
|abstract = In the metaverse era, point cloud video (PCV) streaming on mobile XR devices is pivotal. While most current methods focus on PCV compression from traditional 3-DoF video services, emerging AI techniques extract vital semantic information, producing content resembling the original. However, these are early-stage and computationally intensive. To enhance the inference efficacy of AI-based approaches, accommodate dynamic environments, and facilitate applicability to metaverse XR devices, we present ISCom, an interest-aware semantic communication scheme for lightweight PCV streaming. ISCom is featured with a region-of-interest (ROI) selection module, a lightweight encoder-decoder training module, and a learning-based scheduler to achieve real-time PCV decoding and rendering on resource-constrained devices. ISCom’s dual-stage ROI selection provides significantly reduces data volume according to real-time interest. The lightweight PCV encoder-decoder training is tailored to resource-constrained devices and adapts to the heterogeneous computing capabilities of devices. Furthermore, We provide a deep reinforcement learning (DRL)-based scheduler to select optimal encoder-decoder model for various devices adaptivelly, considering the dynamic network environments and device computing capabilities. Our extensive experiments demonstrate that ISCom outperforms baselines on mobile devices, achieving a minimum rendering frame rate improvement of 10 FPS and up to 22 FPS. Furthermore, our method significantly reduces memory usage by 41.7% compared to the state-of-the-art AITransfer method. These results highlight the effectiveness of ISCom in enabling lightweight PCV streaming and its potential to improve immersive experiences for emerging metaverse application.
|abstract = Code translation is a crucial activity in the software development and maintenance process, and researchers have recently begun to focus on using pre-trained large language models (LLMs) for code translation. However, existing LLMs only learn the contextual semantics of code during pre-training, neglecting executability information closely related to the execution state of the code, which results in unguaranteed code executability and unreliable automated code translation. To address this issue, we propose ExeCoder, an LLM specifically designed for code translation, aimed at utilizing executability representations such as functional semantics, syntax structures, and variable dependencies to enhance the capabilities of LLMs in code translation. To evaluate the effectiveness of ExeCoder, we manually enhanced the widely used benchmark TransCoder-test, resulting in a benchmark called TransCoder-test-X that serves LLMs. Evaluation of TransCoder-test-X indicates that ExeCoder achieves state-of-the-art performance in code translation, surpassing existing open-source code LLMs by over 10.88% to 38.78% and over 27.44% to 42.97% on two metrics, and even outperforms the renowned closed-source LLM GPT-4o.  
|confname =JSAC'24
|confname =EMNLP'25
|link = https://dl.acm.org/doi/10.1109/JSAC.2023.3345430
|link = https://arxiv.org/abs/2501.18460
|title= ISCom: Interest-Aware Semantic Communication Scheme for Point Cloud Video Streaming on Metaverse XR Devices
|title= ExeCoder: Empowering Large Language Models with Executability Representation for Code Translation
|speaker=Jiyi
|speaker=Youwei Ran
|date=2025-06-13
|date=2025-12-12
}}
}}
{{Latest_seminar
{{Latest_seminar
|abstract = Scientific Illustration Tutorial
|abstract =Imitation learning from human demonstrations has shown impressive performance in robotics. However, most results focus on table-top manipulation, lacking the mobility and dexterity necessary for generally useful tasks. In this work, we develop a system for imitating mobile manipulation tasks that are bimanual and require whole-body control. We first present Mobile ALOHA, a low-cost and whole-body teleoperation system for data collection. It augments the ALOHA system with a mobile base, and a whole-body teleoperation interface. Using data collected with Mobile ALOHA, we then perform supervised behavior cloning and find that co-training with existing static ALOHA datasets boosts performance on mobile manipulation tasks. With 50 demonstrations for each task, co-training can increase success rates by up to 90%, allowing Mobile ALOHA to autonomously complete complex mobile manipulation tasks such as sauteing and serving a piece of shrimp, opening a two-door wall cabinet to store heavy cooking pots, calling and entering an elevator, and lightly rinsing a used pan using a kitchen faucet. We will open-source all the hardware and software implementations upon publication.
|confname = TUTORIAL
|confname =CoRL'24
|link =  
|link = https://openreview.net/forum?id=FO6tePGRZj
|title=  
|title= Mobile ALOHA: Learning Bimanual Mobile Manipulation using Low-Cost Whole-Body Teleoperation
|speaker=OldBee
|speaker=Yi Zhou
|date=2025-06-13
|date=2025-12-12
}}
}}
{{Resource:Previous_Seminars}}
{{Resource:Previous_Seminars}}

Latest revision as of 23:32, 11 December 2025

Time: 2025-12-12 10:30
Address: 4th Research Building A518
Useful links: 📚 Readling list; 📆 Schedules; 🧐 Previous seminars.

Latest

  1. [EMNLP'25] ExeCoder: Empowering Large Language Models with Executability Representation for Code Translation, Youwei Ran
    Abstract: Code translation is a crucial activity in the software development and maintenance process, and researchers have recently begun to focus on using pre-trained large language models (LLMs) for code translation. However, existing LLMs only learn the contextual semantics of code during pre-training, neglecting executability information closely related to the execution state of the code, which results in unguaranteed code executability and unreliable automated code translation. To address this issue, we propose ExeCoder, an LLM specifically designed for code translation, aimed at utilizing executability representations such as functional semantics, syntax structures, and variable dependencies to enhance the capabilities of LLMs in code translation. To evaluate the effectiveness of ExeCoder, we manually enhanced the widely used benchmark TransCoder-test, resulting in a benchmark called TransCoder-test-X that serves LLMs. Evaluation of TransCoder-test-X indicates that ExeCoder achieves state-of-the-art performance in code translation, surpassing existing open-source code LLMs by over 10.88% to 38.78% and over 27.44% to 42.97% on two metrics, and even outperforms the renowned closed-source LLM GPT-4o.
  2. [CoRL'24] Mobile ALOHA: Learning Bimanual Mobile Manipulation using Low-Cost Whole-Body Teleoperation, Yi Zhou
    Abstract: Imitation learning from human demonstrations has shown impressive performance in robotics. However, most results focus on table-top manipulation, lacking the mobility and dexterity necessary for generally useful tasks. In this work, we develop a system for imitating mobile manipulation tasks that are bimanual and require whole-body control. We first present Mobile ALOHA, a low-cost and whole-body teleoperation system for data collection. It augments the ALOHA system with a mobile base, and a whole-body teleoperation interface. Using data collected with Mobile ALOHA, we then perform supervised behavior cloning and find that co-training with existing static ALOHA datasets boosts performance on mobile manipulation tasks. With 50 demonstrations for each task, co-training can increase success rates by up to 90%, allowing Mobile ALOHA to autonomously complete complex mobile manipulation tasks such as sauteing and serving a piece of shrimp, opening a two-door wall cabinet to store heavy cooking pots, calling and entering an elevator, and lightly rinsing a used pan using a kitchen faucet. We will open-source all the hardware and software implementations upon publication.

History

2024

2023

2022

2021

2020

  • [Topic] [ The path planning algorithm for multiple mobile edge servers in EdgeGO], Rong Cong, 2020-11-18

2019

2018

2017

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