Goto

Collaborating Authors

 Ma, Zihan


Each Fake News is Fake in its Own Way: An Attribution Multi-Granularity Benchmark for Multimodal Fake News Detection

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Social platforms, while facilitating access to information, have also become saturated with a plethora of fake news, resulting in negative consequences. Automatic multimodal fake news detection is a worthwhile pursuit. Existing multimodal fake news datasets only provide binary labels of real or fake. However, real news is alike, while each fake news is fake in its own way. These datasets fail to reflect the mixed nature of various types of multimodal fake news. To bridge the gap, we construct an attributing multi-granularity multimodal fake news detection dataset \amg, revealing the inherent fake pattern. Furthermore, we propose a multi-granularity clue alignment model \our to achieve multimodal fake news detection and attribution. Experimental results demonstrate that \amg is a challenging dataset, and its attribution setting opens up new avenues for future research.


HiMAP: Learning Heuristics-Informed Policies for Large-Scale Multi-Agent Pathfinding

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Large-scale multi-agent pathfinding (MAPF) presents significant challenges in several areas. As systems grow in complexity with a multitude of autonomous agents operating simultaneously, efficient and collision-free coordination becomes paramount. Traditional algorithms often fall short in scalability, especially in intricate scenarios. Reinforcement Learning (RL) has shown potential to address the intricacies of MAPF; however, it has also been shown to struggle with scalability, demanding intricate implementation, lengthy training, and often exhibiting unstable convergence, limiting its practical application. In this paper, we introduce Heuristics-Informed Multi-Agent Pathfinding (HiMAP), a novel scalable approach that employs imitation learning with heuristic guidance in a decentralized manner. We train on small-scale instances using a heuristic policy as a teacher that maps each single agent observation information to an action probability distribution. During pathfinding, we adopt several inference techniques to improve performance. With a simple training scheme and implementation, HiMAP demonstrates competitive results in terms of success rate and scalability in the field of imitation-learning-only MAPF, showing the potential of imitation-learning-only MAPF equipped with inference techniques.


Unsupervised semantic segmentation of high-resolution UAV imagery for road scene parsing

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Two challenges are presented when parsing road scenes in UAV images. First, the high resolution of UAV images makes processing difficult. Second, supervised deep learning methods require a large amount of manual annotations to train robust and accurate models. In this paper, an unsupervised road parsing framework that leverages recent advances in vision language models and fundamental computer vision model is introduced.Initially, a vision language model is employed to efficiently process ultra-large resolution UAV images to quickly detect road regions of interest in the images. Subsequently, the vision foundation model SAM is utilized to generate masks for the road regions without category information. Following that, a self-supervised representation learning network extracts feature representations from all masked regions. Finally, an unsupervised clustering algorithm is applied to cluster these feature representations and assign IDs to each cluster. The masked regions are combined with the corresponding IDs to generate initial pseudo-labels, which initiate an iterative self-training process for regular semantic segmentation. The proposed method achieves an impressive 89.96% mIoU on the development dataset without relying on any manual annotation. Particularly noteworthy is the extraordinary flexibility of the proposed method, which even goes beyond the limitations of human-defined categories and is able to acquire knowledge of new categories from the dataset itself.


TwiBot-22: Towards Graph-Based Twitter Bot Detection

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Twitter bot detection has become an increasingly important task to combat misinformation, facilitate social media moderation, and preserve the integrity of the online discourse. State-of-the-art bot detection methods generally leverage the graph structure of the Twitter network, and they exhibit promising performance when confronting novel Twitter bots that traditional methods fail to detect. However, very few of the existing Twitter bot detection datasets are graph-based, and even these few graph-based datasets suffer from limited dataset scale, incomplete graph structure, as well as low annotation quality. In fact, the lack of a large-scale graph-based Twitter bot detection benchmark that addresses these issues has seriously hindered the development and evaluation of novel graph-based bot detection approaches. In this paper, we propose TwiBot-22, a comprehensive graph-based Twitter bot detection benchmark that presents the largest dataset to date, provides diversified entities and relations on the Twitter network, and has considerably better annotation quality than existing datasets. In addition, we re-implement 35 representative Twitter bot detection baselines and evaluate them on 9 datasets, including TwiBot-22, to promote a fair comparison of model performance and a holistic understanding of research progress. To facilitate further research, we consolidate all implemented codes and datasets into the TwiBot-22 evaluation framework, where researchers could consistently evaluate new models and datasets. The TwiBot-22 Twitter bot detection benchmark and evaluation framework are publicly available at https://twibot22.github.io/.