Radio-frequency (RF) fingerprinting identifies wire-less transmitters using hardware-induced imperfections present in baseband I/Q signals. However, deep learning models often degrade under receiver and channel distribution shifts, particularly as transmitter populations grow. This work proposes the Hamiltonian Transformer, a physics-informed attention architecture that enforces norm preserving value dynamics within each attention head using a learned skew-symmetric generator and a Störmer-Verlet leapfrog integration step. An additional phase-increment embedding exposes oscillator dynamics at the input layer. All experiments use non-equalized raw I/Q signals from the WiSig dataset under four protocols: same-day classification, cross-receiver generalisation, cross-day generalisation, and transmitter scaling up to 150 devices. The Hamiltonian Transformer achieves 99.12% accuracy under same-day conditions and 61.64% at 150 transmitters, consistently outperforming CNN and Transformer baselines across all scale points. A controlled ablation study identifies norm-preservation in the value update as the primary inductive bias driving the scaling advantage, with the phase increment embedding providing the single largest per-component improvement. These results indicate that embedding physics-informed structural priors into attention mechanisms is an effective approach to large-scale transmitter identification on raw wireless signals.
Regional accent classification in Brazilian Portuguese (pt-BR) suffers from the need for reliable labeling. While large self-supervised learning (SSL) speech models are powerful, their training pipelines dilute sociophonetic information, since accent labels are generally not reliable or are not used in training objectives. This work introduces a novel workflow for feature extraction using only acoustic labels. By isolating explicit regional accent landmarks and using a phoneme-based forced aligner (ZIPA), our targeted feature set captures dialectal variance more effectively than utterance embeddings, demonstrating that localized features can outperform general-purpose architectures on accent-related tasks using minimal and objective data labels.
Accurate loss characterization is essential for the design of high-frequency power magnetic components. State-of-the-art resonant characterization methods are attractive for high accuracy and low sensitivity, especially at the MHz regime. However, they predominantly rely on manual tuning and computationally intensive Fast Fourier Transform (FFT) analysis to identify resonant conditions, causing both inefficiencies and inaccuracies. To ensure accuracy and expedite the process, this paper proposes a fully automated measurement architecture, the core innovation of which lies in the integration of digitally-controlled switched capacitor sequences and onboard signal processing circuits,enabling automated sweeping of both frequency and drive level for complete and rapid characterization with no human intervention. A design guideline for the switched capacitor sequence is presented and common commercial electromechanical power relays are characterized to enable sub-MHz measurements. Experimental results for several different magnetic materials demonstrate that the proposed system has great accuracy and is able to collect more than 1000 data points within 20 seconds, providing a very fast and robust solution for high-frequency magnetic characterization.
Rainfall measurement with high spatial and temporal resolution is critical for flood forecasting, drought mitigation, and disaster preparedness. Rainfall patterns are highly variable, both geographically and over time. This variability presents a significant challenge for monitoring, as rain gauges can accurately capture temporal patterns only at a single location. Furthermore, the high cost of commercial instruments restricts their widespread deployment, and rain gauge networks often fail to adequately capture the spatial heterogeneity of precipitation patterns. To address these limitations, this study introduces a low-cost IoT-based rainfall monitoring system developed upon the Low-cost Efficient Wireless Intelligent Sensor (LEWIS) platform. Four rainfall sensors were designed, developed, and deployed at different locations across the semi-arid region of the United States, in the State of New Mexico, to capture localized precipitation variability. Each sensor node integrates a rainfall detection module with an LTE-enabled microcontroller and is powered by a compact solar-battery system, ensuring autonomous and self-sufficient operation. Real-time precipitation data are transmitted to a cloud server for continuous access, visualization, and integration with early-warning frameworks. The results demonstrate that IoT-based rainfall monitoring can achieve reliable accuracy at a fraction of the cost of conventional gauges, while supporting dense deployment for microscale precipitation analysis. Comparative validation with model-based precipitation data and in situ observations shows strong agreement in the detection and timing of recorded precipitation events, highlighting the system potential for early warning, disaster risk reduction, and bias correction of remotely sensed precipitation products by filling observational gaps in under-instrumented semi-arid areas.
Audio bandwidth extension aims to reconstruct missing high-frequency content from bandlimited signals. This paper proposes FiPA-SR, a GAN-based perceptual architecture capable of handling different input bandwidths within a single model. Building upon the previous $\textrm{AEROMamba}_\textrm{P}$ framework, the proposed model incorporates FiLM layers to adapt the reconstruction process according to the respective bandwidth. Experiments on the MUSDB dataset show that FiPA-SR outperforms the state-of-the-art AudioSR model across 8, 20, and 32 kHz input sampling rates. Moreover, the proposed architecture uses approximately 3$\times$ less GPU memory and performs inference more than 60$\times$ faster than the diffusion-based baseline.
An impulse response/equilibrium model (IREM) structure combines a linear convolution model with a nonlinear function that sets the current operating point via an equilibrium variable with integrator dynamics. This model structure is well suited for mildly nonlinear systems and in particular has been applied to battery fast charging control. This paper provides observability conditions for the IREM model structure and bounds on the prediction error. These conditions can be evaluated directly on the system impulse response.
Coordinating large-scale, heterogeneous building aggregations for demand response (DR) is impeded by a dual challenge: the computational intractability of centralized Model Predictive Control (MPC) and the inadequacy of conventional feature selection methods, which fail to address the error-compounding nature of multi-step forecasting required by MPC. This paper proposes a comprehensive, data-driven framework that first employs a systematic, MPC-aware feature selection methodology to ensure robust multi-step prediction, then models the complex building dynamics using a novel Input-Convex Encoder-Only Transformer (IC-EoT) to guarantee a convex optimization problem, and finally solves the resulting constraint-coupled problem (CCP) in a fully distributed manner using the Tracking Alternating Direction Method of Multipliers (ADMM) algorithm. The framework is validated in a high-fidelity co-simulation environment, controlling a heterogeneous aggregation of consumer and prosumer buildings based on the EnergyPlus under a dynamic time-of-use (TOU) tariff. Results demonstrate that the proposed distributed approach achieves near-identical economic optimality and superior thermal comfort compared to a theoretical centralized controller, while exhibiting exceptional computational scalability that overcomes the real-time infeasibility of the centralized approach for large aggregations.
The transition to near-field (NF) communications in ultra-massive multiple-input multiple-output (UM-MIMO) systems fundamentally alters the spatial degrees of freedom (DoF) of wireless channels. While the NF DoF of line-of-sight (LoS) transmission channels is well-characterized in the literature, the DoF in NF multipath scenarios remains underexplored. This paper investigates the spatial DoF of NF UM-MIMO channels under practical multipath conditions. A generic DoF metric is derived by modeling multipath propagation and analyzing the resulting eigenvalue distribution based on the Green' s function representation of the channel. The DoF contribution of each path is determined by the product of the effective electrical aperture and the subtended solid angle, and the total DoF is obtained through the effective union of spatially resolvable path contributions. A mapping between the eigenvalue distribution and multipath powers is further established. Numerical simulations and real-world NF channel measurements at 28-30 GHz with 720 array elements are conducted for validation in both LoS multipath and non-LoS scenarios. The results show that multipath propagation can significantly increase the spatial DoF and that the proposed metric accurately predicts the DoF of practical NF channels. The proposed framework provides a practical tool for DoF prediction and supports capacity analysis and spatial multiplexing design in future NF UM-MIMO systems.
Speech translation systems increasingly span speech-to-text translation (S2TT), speech-to-speech translation (S2ST), offline translation, and streaming generation, producing outputs that differ in modality, speech realization, and timing behavior. Existing evaluation practices assess important aspects such as translation quality, speech quality, and temporal quality, but these aspects are often evaluated under separate protocols, making it difficult to compare heterogeneous systems comprehensively. To address this gap, we present OpenSTBench, a unified multidimensional evaluation framework that organizes heterogeneous speech translation outputs into a shared evaluation format. OpenSTBench supports both S2TT and S2ST systems in offline and streaming settings, and jointly evaluates translation quality, speech quality, speaker preservation, emotion and paralinguistic fidelity, temporal consistency, and latency. Through experiments on representative speech translation systems, we show that systems with strong translation quality can still differ substantially in speech quality, as well as in temporal quality. OpenSTBench provides a reproducible protocol for analyzing these cross-dimensional differences and supporting application-oriented comparison of speech translation systems. The code and datasets are available at this https URL.
Speech foundation models and Speech LLMs have advanced speech understanding, yet deployment-oriented model selection is hindered by non-comparable evaluations caused by mismatched post-processing, and by training results that are hard to reproduce across data scales and pipelines. We present SURE, a unified experimentation framework that standardizes prediction formats, normalization, and scoring. SURE evaluates strong systems across paradigms, from conventional pipelines to Speech LLMs, on representative tasks under realistic acoustic and linguistic stressors. Beyond evaluation, SURE introduces an agent-assisted training conversion flow that maps paper and code into versioned, runnable training pipelines under a unified protocol on matched open-data subsets. Overall, SURE improves comparability and reproducibility for deployment-oriented evaluation.
Real-time and accurate spatial audio generation is pivotal for delivering an immersive experience. However, existing spatial audio synthesis technologies are often encumbered by a tradeoff between generation quality and high inference latency, as well as difficulty in capturing precise spatial information from multimodal inputs. To address these challenges, we propose SwanSphere, a unified streaming framework for high-fidelity spatial audio generation from panoramic videos and text prompts. SwanSphere mainly makes the following contributions: 1) We introduce a causal autoregressive diffusion transformer architecture that enables streaming high-quality spatial audio generation. 2) We design a Spatial Video-Audio Contrastive (SVAC) learning strategy to align the video encoder with the acoustic domain, and further employ a multi-objective online direct preference optimization (ODPO) scheme, resulting in strong spatial perception and robust multimodal spatial audio synthesis. 3) To alleviate the current scarcity of spatial audio datasets, we also develop an automated annotation pipeline for generating detailed spatial captions. Experimental results demonstrate that SwanSphere achieves superior performance in both video-to-spatial and text-to-spatial audio generation tasks. Demos can be found at: this https URL.
Recent advancements in text-guided audio generation have yielded promising results in diverse domains, including sound effects, speech, and music. However, jointly generating speech with environmental audio remains challenging due to the inherent disparities in their acoustic patterns and temporal dynamics. We propose ImmersiveTTS, an environment-aware text-to-speech (TTS) model that generates natural speech seamlessly integrated within environmental contexts by explicitly modeling cross-modal interactions. Our model builds on a multimodal diffusion transformer and fuses transcript-aligned speech latent with text-conditioned environmental context via joint attention. To enhance semantic consistency, we introduce a domain-specific representation alignment objective tailored to environment-aware TTS, leveraging complementary self-supervised representations from speech and audio encoders. Experimental results show that ImmersiveTTS achieves higher naturalness, intelligibility, and audio fidelity than existing approaches across objective metrics and human listening tests.
HyperSpectral-MultiSpectral Image (HSI-MSI) fusion enables high-resolution hyperspectral imaging by combining the rich spectral information of low-spatial-resolution hyperspectral images with the detailed spatial structure of multispectral images. Classical methods such as Coupled Nonnegative Matrix Factorization (CNMF) benefit from a strong physical interpretability but suffer from inferior results compared to their deep-learning counterparts. To address this limitation, we propose SCALMU (Synthetically-trained Coupling of Adaptive Learned Multiplicative Updates), a novel unrolled neural network architecture that integrates adaptive learnable matrices within the classical framework of CNMF multiplicative updates, improving its results. Due to its architectural proximity with CNMF, the resulting algorithm preserves physical interpretability and nonnegativity constraints. To overcome data scarcity for training, we additionally generate a synthetic HSI-MSI dataset via the dead leaves model, enabling synthetic supervision. SCALMU is then trained end-to-end on this dataset. Experiments demonstrate SCALMU's superiority over state-of-the-art methods on several datasets. The code is available at this https URL
Semantic communication has demonstrated significant potential for image transmission, especially in bandwidth-limited and low signal-to-noise ratio scenarios. However, most existing methods are based on analog transmission, which poses challenges to the compatibility with existing digital communication systems. Existing digital semantic communication methods commonly adopt conventional quadrature amplitude modulation constellations, which mismatch the empirical distribution of semantic features produced by the semantic encoder. This paper proposes a distribution-aware learnable modulation for semantic communication framework, which bridges semantic feature representations and discrete modulation through constellation learning. Specifically, a learnable constellation module, initialized with an amplitude phase shift keying geometric prior, is developed to refine the constellation geometry as a trainable codebook, enabling modulation symbols to better align with the distribution of semantic features. To enable end-to-end optimization, a two-stage training strategy is introduced, combining differentiable soft assignment with straight-through estimator. Simulation results show that the proposed framework consistently outperforms existing digital semantic communication schemes and achieves performance comparable to advanced analog methods.
Zero-shot text-to-speech (TTS) has improved substantially for single-speaker synthesis, yet expressive long-form multi-speaker dialogue remains difficult. A common workaround is to synthesize each turn with a monologue TTS model and stitch the outputs together. This adds inference cost and often breaks acoustic consistency, conversational coherence, and affective continuity across turns. Recent dialogue TTS systems have begun to address this setting, but they still struggle to keep expressive coherence, controllable speaker switching, and monologue quality at the same time. We present SwanData-Speech and SwanVoice. SwanData-Speech builds monologue and dialogue corpora from in-the-wild audio, using Swan Forced Aligner for pause-aware word-level alignment and RobustMegaTTS3 for pronunciation-hard cases. Built on these data, SwanVoice is a zero-shot TTS model for 1--4 speakers, combining a 25 Hz VAE, raw-text conditioning with pause-aware symbols and pinyin substitution, and a flow-matching DiT with speaker-turn conditioning. Training starts from monologue speech, moves through mixed and real dialogue data, and then uses DiffusionNFT post-training with phone-level and speaker-similarity rewards. On SwanBench-Speech, SwanVoice obtains higher richness and hierarchy scores than all evaluated open-source baselines in both monologue and dialogue settings, while content accuracy remains the main limitation. Audio demos are available at this https URL.
Purpose: T1-weighted MPRAGE remains a cornerstone of clinical anatomical imaging, yet its long acquisition times constrain routine use. Established acceleration techniques, namely Parallel Imaging (PI) and Compressed Sensing (CS), tend to introduce substantial noise and blurring when pushed to high acceleration factors. Although they rely on fundamentally different redundancies, combining them synergistically remains an open challenge. Methods: The GoLF-SPARKLING framework was extended to jointly exploit two acceleration mechanisms: GRAPPA-based PI in the central k-space region and variable-density CS in the periphery, with independent acceleration factors in each zone. To preserve smooth signal evolution throughout the inversion-recovery period and avoid modulation artifacts, the acquisition trajectory was reordered accordingly. The resulting method was evaluated prospectively in vivo at 1mm isotropic resolution and benchmarked against Wave-CAIPI and Poisson-disk sampling. Results: The proposed hybrid approach produced sharper, less noisy, and more stable whole-brain images in approximately one minute than either acceleration strategy alone. Purely PI-based reconstructions were degraded by high g-factor noise, while purely CS-based reconstructions exhibited pronounced blurring. Furthermore, this method yielded lower average volumetric errors in downstream automated brain segmentation than state-of-the-art acceleration techniques, demonstrating its clinical utility. Conclusion: By jointly leveraging PI and CS, GoLF-SPARKLING achieves high acceleration factors that enable sub-minute, high-quality anatomical MRI. This translates into greater clinical throughput and more reliable imaging in patients who are challenging to scan.
This paper characterizes the performance limits of optimal array designs using orthogonal and coherent waveforms for both linear and planar arrays. For orthogonal waveforms, we show that the single-target Cramér-Rao Bound (CRB) depends on the sum of the so-called spatial variances of the transmit (Tx) and receive (Rx) arrays, or equivalently, the spatial variance of the sum co-array weighted by the multiplicities of the virtual sensors. This reveals that CRB-optimal geometries are inherently redundant, highlighting a fundamental trade-off between mean squared error (MSE) and identifiability in parameter estimation. Moreover, we derive optimal Tx-Rx sensor allocations given a total sensor budget and show that unequal allocation (favoring the Rx) is optimal even for nonredundant arrays, questioning conventional designs. We extend our results to planar arrays, providing a new general condition that the spatial covariances of the Tx and Rx arrays should satisfy for the optimal waveforms to direct power in the target direction. Additionally, we establish a connection between Diophantine equations and array geometries with equal CRB, along with a constructive method for designing such arrays. Our work provides new guidelines for and insights into optimal array and waveform design with relevance in emerging active sensing multiple-input multiple-output systems.
Non-terrestrial networks (NTNs) are expected to play a pivotal role in sixth-generation (6G) systems by enabling ubiquitous connectivity and massive communication. In this context, channel prediction emerges as a key technique to improve the spectrum utilization efficiency by limiting the pilot overhead. However, many proposed predictors based on artificial intelligence (AI) are characterized by high inference complexity, posing challenges to onboard implementation. In this paper, we address the challenge of designing accurate yet computationally efficient channel prediction techniques tailored to low Earth orbit (LEO) NTNs, where strict power constraints limit model complexity, to enable spectral efficiency gains. We propose an iterative joint channel estimation and prediction framework in the context of 6G NTNs that significantly reduces pilot overhead by transmitting pilots only in the initial slot and relying on data-driven processing for subsequent slots. We introduce Data-driven Refinement and Iterative Forecast for wireless channel Tracking (DRIFT), a lightweight architecture that refines data-aided channel estimates and predicts future channel frequency responses with low computational cost and reduced error propagation. Two predictor variants based on convolutional and long short-term memory layers are investigated. Simulation results in an end-to-end simulation of an uplink LEO NTN scenario show that the proposed approach achieves up to 12% spectral efficiency gain compared to conventional pilot-based systems, with robustness to training-test mismatches and consistent performance across different channel models. Moreover, DRIFT requires fewer than 200k multiply-accumulate operations, making it suitable for on-board satellite implementation under stringent power constraints.
In public address systems and hearing aids, the maximally achievable amplification or gain is limited by acoustic feedback. Therefore, in order to be able to apply a higher gain, feedback cancellation methods are required. In addition, it is oftentimes also desirable to dereverberate a recorded signal, that is, remove the late reverberation component of the signal, before playing it back. In this paper, it is shown that under two mild conditions, the acoustic feedback signal can be written as a reverberant version of the source signal. Therefore, it is possible to treat the joint dereverberation and acoustic feedback cancellation problem as a dereverberation-only problem, meaning that dereverberation algorithms can be applied to the joint problem. Simulations corroborate this finding
This paper investigates distributed beam focusing for coordinated satellite constellations with phased arrays, motivated by future non-terrestrial network (NTN) systems. A geometric and channel model is developed by incorporating satellite positions, array orientations, antenna directivity, and polarization effects. Under ideal synchronization, the achievable coherent combining gain is analyzed for different constellation geometries, showing that maximum ratio transmission (MRT) enables quadratic scaling of the received power with the number of satellites. The impact of phase errors caused by residual synchronization, timing, mobility, and localization mismatches is then investigated. Closed-form expressions for the average coherent gain are derived for uniformly distributed timing offsets, demonstrating the transition from coherent to non-coherent combining. The results show that synchronization and timing mismatches reduce the coherent combining gain, while geometry dependent effects govern the resulting spatial focusing behavior. Numerical results further show that linear and circular constellations provide different focusing characteristics and spatial separation capabilities. However, MRT-based focusing results in strong sidelobes and limited spatial division capability, motivating the need for joint analog beamforming and digital precoding optimization to improve spatial selectivity and robustness against mobility and localization errors.
This study introduces a novel Air Traffic Control (ATC) concept to support self-separation between vehicles in Urban Air Mobility (UAM) corridors. Our proposed scheme involves sharing intended arrival schedules at Constrained Waypoints (CWPs) among UAM operators. We propose two approaches to assist the arrival scheduling at CWPs by computing the minimum arrival time gap necessary for each pair of vehicles to ensure their safety throughout the flights within the corridor. The first approach considers the minimum separation distance required by the Near Mid-Air-Collision (NMAC) avoidance rules, while the second one is based on the Responsibility-Sensitive Safety (RSS) rules. We demonstrate that the NMAC-rule-based approach can effectively prevent collisions in normal circumstances, where the vehicles adhere to the speed limits of the corridor. However, this approach does not guarantee safety if vehicles exceed the speed limits. Conversely, while the RSS-rule-based approach ensures collision prevention during emergencies when vehicles exceed speed limits, it may require larger arrival time gaps under normal circumstances, which may lead to reduced traffic flow. Our results are confirmed through numerical simulations.
The experimental validation of diffuse scattering models has long been limited by the inability to spatially separate specular and diffuse contributions in measured channels. This paper overcomes this limitation by combining super-resolution multipath component (MPC) extraction, which resolves individual propagation paths including the specular component, with digital-twin-assisted geometry, enabling the spatial separation of specular and diffuse contributions from bistatic measurements at 28~GHz. Using this framework, we provide the first measurement-driven validation of the Effective Roughness (ER) model with independent characterization of diffuse scattering across ten common building materials, each measured over 266 angular configurations and all polarization combinations (HH, HV, VH, VV). Furthermore, we extend the ER framework by proposing a novel angle-dependent cross-polarization discrimination (XPD) model, capturing the geometry-dependent nature of depolarization that is neglected in existing approaches. The proposed method reproduces the measured diffuse power trends, achieving RMSE values as low as 3 dB across the tested materials, and improves XPD prediction over the baseline constant-XPD model for nearly all material-polarization cases. These results establish a physically consistent and practically viable approach for high-fidelity channel modeling in mmWave systems.
This paper studies the control of discrete-time linear fractional-order networks, a flexible modeling framework for systems with long-range memory such as power grids, biological networks, and neuronal circuits. In contrast to the common view that fractional exponents (time-scales) are fixed parameters, we show that they can be systematically steered, together with the network coupling matrix, by appropriately designed input sequences. We first derive algebraic conditions under which the coupling matrix and the vector of fractional exponents of a given network can be reconfigured to desired values, and we characterize how truncating the infinite-memory term impacts the resulting dynamics. Building on these results, we construct an equivalent linear representation that isolates the contribution of memory, and we introduce a fractional reachability matrix that provides explicit conditions for jointly steering both network parameters and state in a finite number of steps. To address practical implementations, we further formulate an energy-constrained steering problem that incorporates actuator bounds and finite-memory approximations as a quadratic program. The framework is illustrated on low-dimensional toy examples, on larger networks with Erdos-Renyi, Barabasi-Albert, and Watts-Strogatz topologies, and on a brain network model inferred from electrocorticography recordings of an epilepsy patient, where we showcase transitions between pre-seizure and seizure configurations.
To make cross-band channel prediction practical for AI-native RAN, algorithms must generalize across diverse environments and support real-time inference. Existing approaches achieve one but not both. To bridge this gap, we introduce GUIDE, a physics-guided deep unfolding framework that embeds wireless channel physics into differentiable layers. Without retraining in unseen environments, GUIDE achieves 2.75x beamforming gain than the deep learning-based baseline FIRE with only a slight increase in inference time, and 1.39x beamforming gain than the strongest model-based baseline R2F2 while running over 1610x faster.
Undersampled magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) reconstruction seeks to recover temporally or contrast-varying image series from incomplete multicoil k-space data while preserving state-dependent fidelity for dynamic and quantitative MRI (qMRI). Existing scan-specific implicit neural representations (INRs) often use monolithic spatiotemporal coordinate fields, explicit subspaces, motion or deformation models, calibration variables, or sequence-specific quantitative signal models. These design choices can limit flexibility in sharing spatial information while adapting image synthesis across acquisition states. Moreover, many INR-based baselines remain computationally demanding, typically requiring per-scan optimization times on the order of hundreds to thousands of seconds. We propose MoE-dqINR, a scan-specific multicoil MRI reconstruction framework that factorizes the image-domain representation into shared spatial experts and a state-conditioned routing pathway. Spatial experts encode reusable coordinate-dependent image content, whereas routing weights, conditioned on ordered acquisition states, synthesize each dynamic frame or contrast state from a common expert bank. The representation is coupled to a multicoil MRI forward model, uses the normalized state index to drive routing in both dynamic and quantitative MRI. By separating shared spatial representation from state-dependent synthesis, the framework provides an image-first architecture for dynamic and quantitative MRI while reducing scan-specific INR optimization to approximately 30 s per scan in our experiments. The proposed formulation establishes state-conditioned mixture-of-experts INR as a scan-specific multicoil MRI reconstruction prior that unifies shared spatial representation, dynamic- and qMRI-specific synthesis, and practical per-scan efficiency.
This paper studies model-free optimal control design and its convergence properties for linear time-invariant systems subject to probabilistic risk or chance constraints. In particular, we study a natural policy gradient (NPG)-based actor-critic (AC) algorithm with two timescales, using a Lagrangian primal-dual framework to enforce the constraint. Furthermore, the risk is defined as the probability that a function of the one-step-ahead state exceeds a user-specified threshold. To our knowledge, this is the first work to study the analytical convergence properties for NPG-based AC in a chance-constrained linear-quadratic Gaussian (LQG) regulator setting without model knowledge. We establish the coercivity and gradient dominance properties of the Lagrangian function, which ensure linear convergence and closed-loop stability during training for the actor. On the other hand, we analyse the convergence properties of the temporal difference (TD(0)) learning for the critic, applying stochastic approximation theory. Also, we demonstrate no duality gap in the constrained optimisation problem. Additionally, we have performed numerical analysis of the convergence properties and accuracy of the proposed method, comparing it with model-based chance-constrained LQR and scenario-based MPC. Results show that our approach effectively limits risk while maintaining near-optimal performance, without requiring full model knowledge or real-time optimisation.
Detecting unauthorized UAV flights is critical for surveillance, security, and airspace management. Acoustic drone detection, which relies on the distinctive propeller and motor sounds of UAVs, provides a low-cost, passive solution that requires no line of sight. A central challenge is generalization: reliably distinguishing drone signatures from ambient noise across unseen recording setups, environments, and UAV types (out-of-domain). Inspired by advances in large-scale audio pretraining, we develop a compact DNN-based detector and improve its generalization by (1) pretraining the model for broad sound-event classification before fine-tuning on diverse in-house and public drone recordings, and (2) applying on-the-fly augmentations (pitch shifting, noise mixing, microphone transfer function simulation, spectrogram augmentation) to expose the model to varied acoustic conditions. An ablation study quantifies the impact of each augmentation. For evaluation, we set target false-positive rates (FPR) aligned with real-world surveillance needs and report true-positive rates (TPR) on both in-domain data (public IDMT Berne 2022) and out-of-domain data (public AuDroK). Our results show that pretraining is the dominant factor for robust detection, yielding substantial TPR improvements over training from scratch on all benchmarks. The full augmentation chain provides additional gains on acoustically mismatched out-of-domain data, achieving the best mean TPR on the AuDroK subsets and the largest improvements on the most challenging scenarios. We further validate real-world applicability by measuring false positives on public non-drone corpora (IDMT-TRAFFIC and ESC-50), demonstrating equally low FPR on unfamiliar backgrounds. A distance-dependent analysis on IDMT Berne 2022 shows effective detection at distances up to 150 m.
This paper proposes an integrated sensing and communication (ISAC)-enabled grant-free uplink framework based on artificial-path delay modulation. A grant-free user equipment (g-UE) conveys uplink information by modulating the delay of a controllable artificial path derived from the scheduled downlink waveform. In contrast to conventional superposition-based schemes with successive interference cancellation, the proposed method enables uplink-downlink coexistence in the delay-sensing domain. By introducing a single weak artificial path confined within the cyclic prefix (CP), the g-UE allows the access point (AP) to decode uplink symbols from CSI perturbations while causing only limited degradation to the scheduled user equipment (s-UE) in the downlink. To support reliable finite-alphabet delay detection under unknown path gain and off-grid leakage, we develop a baseline delay calibration procedure and a normalized matched-filter detector. Results show that reflection power determines the reliability trade-off between the g-UE and the s-UE, whereas the delay step mainly controls the g-UE reliability-efficiency trade-off with little additional impact on the downlink s-UE. Even with an artificial path 15 dB weaker than the scheduled downlink signal, the g-UE achieves lower BER than the s-UE at an effective modulation order of 16-QAM. The proposed framework thus offers a low-complexity, SIC-free, and downlink-friendly solution for grant-free uplink in ISAC systems.
The electrification of on-road fleet logistics promises improved air quality, lower noise emissions, major climate benefits, increased energy flexibility through the use of locally generated electricity and reduced dependence on imported fuels. However, battery electric vehicles can introduce operational planning challenges not present with internal combustion engine vehicles, including heterogeneous charging speeds, exposure to volatile electricity prices, and scarcity in infrastructure. Managing these complexities requires solutions that balance cost efficiency and robustness, supported by sector coupling between transport and electricity systems. This paper reviews the current state of digital systems for operational decision-making in electric fleet management through a grey literature analysis, drawing on practitioner-oriented sources such as industry reports, company documentation, and technical blogs that reflect real-world practices and developments. We identify key trends and gaps, providing insights to guide future research and development.
Image Scanning Microscopy (ISM) is a fluorescence imaging technique that combines detector-array acquisition and computational reconstruction to achieve the theoretical resolution of an ideal confocal microscope, i.e., one operating with an infinitesimally small pinhole, while maintaining high signal-to-noise ratio. Among the reconstruction methods for obtaining the super-resolved image, multi-image deconvolution (MID) and its extension aimed at preserving the optical sectioning capability of confocal microscopy, known as super-resolution sectioning ISM (s$^2$ISM), are among the most widely used approaches. Both methods rely on Richardson--Lucy-type iterative schemes, whose semi-convergent behavior requires early stopping and often leads to noise amplification and reconstruction artifacts. In this work, we introduce a self-tuning explicit regularization framework for both MID and s$^2$ISM reconstruction. Within a Bayesian maximum a posteriori formulation, we combine a multi-frame Poisson data fidelity term with explicit regularization, considering $\ell_1$ and smoothed total variation penalties as representative examples. We further develop an automatic and ground-truth-free strategy for regularization parameter selection by adapting the residual whiteness principle to the multi-frame Poisson setting and introducing a spectral high-pass extension tailored to s$^2$ISM. The resulting framework enables stable reconstructions without empirical stopping rules. To demonstrate the proposed framework, we consider first-order optimization schemes based on proximal gradient and mirror descent methods with adaptive backtracking strategies. Experiments on simulated and real fluorescence ISM datasets demonstrate improved reconstruction stability and image quality with respect to unregularized approaches, while enabling robust super-resolution and optical sectioning in low-photon conditions.
For high-throughput applications such as ultra-high-definition video streaming and immersive extended-reality, perceptual quality rather than bit-level accuracy defines the primary performance criterion and provides a more informative and spectrally efficient objective than strict bitwise reconstruction. This is particularly relevant in millimeter-wave (mmWave) and sub-Terahertz (sub-THz) systems, where path loss, short channel coherence times and phase noise introduce severe fluctuations that degrade link spectral efficiency. We propose an extension to conventional Adaptive Modulation and Coding (AMC) framework that incorporates perceptual quality awareness into link adaptation. In this framework, the decision metric is a Perceptual Quality Indicator (PQI) derived from the Structural Similarity Index Measure (SSIM). The receiver employs a Denoising Convolutional Neural Network (DnCNN) denoiser to enhance post-decoding image quality before feedback estimation. The resulting perceptual metric replaces the standard Channel Quality Indicator (CQI) in the AMC loop, enabling adaptation to maximize spectral efficiency while satisfying a perceptual-fidelity constraint. Experiments on a 5G-compliant mmWave testbed demonstrate up to a twofold gain in spectral efficiency while maintaining perceptual fidelity, underscoring the potential of perception-optimized link adaptation.
Cell-free massive multi-input-multi-output (CFmMIMO) communication networks aim to provide uniform quality of service by distributing access points (APs) across a coverage area. In user-centric variants, each user equipment (UE) can choose a cluster of APs with the best channel conditions (e.g., the closest APs) for accessing service. This approach eliminates the notion of cells with dedicated regions and APs, as found in cellular mMIMO communication networks. Estimating uplink channels between UEs and APs is a crucial step in CFmMIMO communication networks; however, existing channel estimation (CE) approaches typically originate from mMIMO systems without considering the unique properties of CFmMIMO communication networks. For instance, shorter AP-UE distances in CFmMIMO systems result in Rician channel models with prominent line of sight (LoS) components between APs and UEs, motivating cooperation between APs for improved performance. In this paper, we propose a cooperative minimum-mean-squared-error (MMSE)-based uplink CE approach where APs share their linearly compressed signals as fused signals with other APs in the same cluster. The proposed approach is optimal, i.e., its performance is equivalent to that of the centralized CE approach, where APs share their uncompressed raw signals. Notably, this optimality is achieved in one shot; that is, given the required correlation matrices, the optimal fusion filters and estimators are derived non-iteratively. Consequently, the proposed approach guarantees lower communication overhead for cooperative CE compared to the centralized approach. Numerical experiments corroborate the superior performance of the proposed cooperative CE approaches in terms of CE accuracy and convergence rate.
We present UNISON, a latent diffusion framework that unifies speech generation, sound generation, and audio editing within a single model. A single model handles text-to-audio, text-to-speech, zero-shot speaker cloning, mixed speech-and-sound generation, scene-level audio editing, speech-in-scene editing, and timed temporal composition, all of which share a single set of weights. Our architecture features two core designs: (1) Layer-wise deep LLM fusion, which injects hidden states from uniformly sampled layers of a frozen MLLM into corresponding MM-DiT blocks via learned projections, providing depth-matched semantic conditioning that improves instruction following over single-layer baselines; and (2) a unified multi-task architecture where task identity is encoded solely by a channel-wise mask and source audio is provided through VAE-encoded channel concatenation. Training is stabilized by an online GPU-side multi-task data synthesis pipeline with task-homogeneous batching and a two-stage curriculum. With 621M--732M trainable parameters, UNISON achieves results competitive with or exceeding task-specialist models across evaluated domains, while being roughly $4\times$ smaller than comparable unified systems.
This paper develops a functional theory for multi-target detection, where a compactly supported signal is recovered from a single noisy observation containing many unknown translations of the signal. Our formulation allows continuous, off-grid translations and correlated stationary Gaussian process noise, extending beyond the discrete, grid-aligned, white-noise models common in prior work. We analyze two uninitialized recovery algorithms based on autocorrelation analysis; in particular, both algorithms first estimate the signal's bispectrum via a debiased third-order empirical autocorrelation. The signal is then recovered from the estimated bispectrum using either a functional frequency marching scheme or a Kotlarski-type deconvolution formula. For both algorithms, we prove non-asymptotic recovery guarantees for compactly supported signals without bandlimiting assumptions. The resulting error bounds depend on the smoothness of the signal and the accuracy of bispectrum estimation, with the latter governed by the noise characteristics and the number of signal occurrences. Numerical experiments validate our theory and demonstrate accurate recovery in low-SNR regimes.
Generating high-performance GPU kernels remains challenging due to the need for both correctness and hardware-aware optimization. While large language models (LLMs) show promise in code generation, they often fail to produce kernels that are both correct and efficient. We propose Kernel Foundry, a diagnosis-driven evolutionary framework for automatic GPU kernel optimization. Our method combines expert-guided, retrieval-augmented initialization with a multi-island evolutionary search, where candidate kernels are iteratively refined using structured diagnostic feedback. A centralized experience library accumulates reusable optimization knowledge to guide subsequent evolution, while explicit mechanisms prevent cheating behaviors that bypass kernel-level computation. Experiments on KernelBench show that our method consistently improves both correctness and performance over strong baselines, achieving up to 100% correctness on Level~2.
Retrieval-augmented text-to-music (TTM) systems augment underspecified user prompts using captions retrieved from a music caption dataset. This design introduces an integrity dependency on the music knowledge database. We show that an attacker can poison the database by injecting a small number of crafted music captions, causing the system to retrieve malicious captions that bias prompt augmentation and steer generation away from the user's intended function, without modifying the user prompt, retriever, or generator. To achieve the music caption poisoning attack, we propose a dual-layer caption poisoning strategy that preserves high-level retrieval anchors while injecting low-level acoustic descriptors to steer prompt augmentation and downstream music generation toward an attacker-chosen target intent. In a MusicCaps knowledge database, CLAP retriever, and MusicGen pipeline, poisoned generations move substantially closer to the attacker's target, while remaining comparably aligned with the original user query. These results expose a practical integrity risk for retrieval-augmented creative AI systems. Our demo can be found at: this https URL
Recent Singing Voice Synthesis (SVS) advances enable highly realistic but potentially malicious AI covers, making singing voice deepfake detection (SVDD) crucial. Self-Supervised Learning (SSL)-based detectors achieve state-of-the-art performance by fine-tuning speech SSL backbones to capture singing-specific spoof artifacts. Existing adversarial attacks often fail against SSL-SVDD, creating a false impression of inherent robustness. We reveal this stems from two challenges. First, at the objective level, attacks optimize cross-entropy on local surrogates, crossing surrogate-specific boundaries rather than suppressing shared spoof evidence. Second, at the method level, attacks follow the surrogate's dominant gradient direction. In SSL-SVDD, this aligns with fine-tuned artifact-sensitive directions, limiting transferability to unseen detectors - a geometric failure we term the Linearity Trap. To properly evaluate robustness, we propose MARS (Meta-Adversarial Regression of Semantics), a transfer-based black-box framework tailored to SSL-SVDD. Structurally, MARS shifts to hypothesis-evidence manipulation by constructing a natural semantic anchor from the pre-trained SSL space and an artifact anchor from the fine-tuned space. Algorithmically, MARS escapes the Linearity Trap via bi-level optimization: the inner stage induces tangential exploration, while the outer stage guides the audio toward the natural semantic manifold. Experiments on the CtrSVDD benchmark show MARS improves Attack Success Rate (ASR) in in-distribution transfer (13%), out-of-distribution transfer (10%), and cross-task evaluation (36%), highlighting the urgent need for robust SVDD systems.
Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) provides non-invasive access to dynamic brain activity by measuring blood oxygen level-dependent (BOLD) signals over time. However, the resource-intensive nature of fMRI acquisition limits the availability of high-fidelity samples required for data-driven brain analysis models. While modern generative models can synthesize fMRI data, they often remain challenging in replicating their inherent non-stationarity, intricate spatiotemporal dynamics, and physiological variations of raw BOLD signals. To address these challenges, we propose Dual-Spectral Flow Matching (DSFM), a novel fMRI generative framework that cascades dual frequency representation of BOLD signals with spectral flow matching. Specifically, our framework first converts BOLD signals into a wavelet decomposition map via a discrete wavelet transform (DWT) to capture globalized transient and multi-scale variations, and projects into the discrete cosine transform (DCT) space across brain regions and time to exploit localized energy compaction of low-frequency dominant BOLD coefficients. Subsequently, a spectral flow matching model is trained to generate class-conditioned cosine-frequency representation. The generated samples are reconstructed through inverse DCT and inverse DWT operations to recover physiologically plausible time-domain BOLD signals. This dual-transform approach imposes structured frequency priors and preserves key physiological brain dynamics. Ultimately, we demonstrate the efficacy of our approach through improved downstream fMRI-based brain network classification. The code is available at this https URL .
The aquaculture industry needs to address several challenges to secure sustainable seafood production that can serve an increasing global demand. One major challenge is to ensure good fish health and acceptable welfare during production since the improvement of fish welfare is of vital importance in current and future production systems. In this study, this is addressed by developing and implementing methods to identify fish behaviors in response to intrusive objects both on individual and on a group basis. A novel approach for detecting, tracking, and estimating the 3D position of individual fish has thus been developed, and specifically designed to track the caudal fins of farmed fish in industrial sea cages. The tracking data was subjected to a novel stereo-vision method adapted to estimate fish positions, velocities, accelerations, and turning and pitch angles. Datasets obtained from industrial-scale fish farms were then analyzed to identify the impact of structures of varying shapes, sizes, and colors on fish behavior. The method was trained using manually labeled caudal fins, and used YOLOv8 with ByteTrack as an object detector and tracker, SuperGlue for matching detections in the left and right frames, and triangulation to reconstruct the 3D positions of the fish. Different image pre-processing and augmentation methods for enhancing object detection accuracy were tested and their performance compared, while RAFT-Stereo was tested for depth estimation purposes. The obtained results both validate the method's performance against previous research efforts, and demonstrate the novelty and potential of this method in providing more insight into behavioral dynamics in sea-cages.
Learning to reach arbitrary goals from sparse feedback requires agents to infer a rich notion of reachability across state--goal pairs. Goal-conditioned reinforcement learning (GCRL) tackles this challenge by learning policies that generalize across goals, but this generalization becomes increasingly difficult as the underlying dynamics become high-dimensional, hybrid, or contact-dependent. To address this issue, physics-informed GCRL (Pi-GCRL) introduces optimal-control-inspired inductive biases into goal-conditioned value learning. While Pi-GCRL methods have proven effective in navigation and object-free goal-reaching domains, their reliability in contact-rich tasks remains unclear, where contact interactions induce hybrid dynamics, mode-dependent controllability, and nonsmooth value landscapes. In this work, we show that these structural properties can cause existing Pi-GCRL methods to degrade when applied naively to contact-rich manipulation. Motivated by this analysis, we introduce contact-aware and hierarchical formulations that apply physics-informed inductive biases selectively across the manipulation problem. Our results provide a principled step toward extending Pi-GCRL to contact-rich manipulation.
We present a conservation-based feedback-circuit decomposition specifically for general linear forced systems. In a role parallel to that of eigenvalues and eigenvectors for initial-value problems, the complete set of independent intrinsic circuit gains and their associated forcing-transformation vectors provide a complete analytical representation of both transient and equilibrium forced solutions. The sign of intrinsic circuit gains determines whether successive feedback cycles exhibit monotonic or oscillatory convergence to transformed forcing, while the forcing-transformation vectors determine the structure of transformed forcing. The exact transient and equilibrium solutions are represented analytically through the convergence of the finite-cycle forcing-transformation kernel to the equilibrium forcing-transformation kernel, which is guaranteed regardless of whether the magnitudes of circuit gains exceed one or unstable modes exist in the system. The feedback-circuit decomposition provides a new generic foundational mathematical tool for understanding, predicting, and controlling forced responses in a broad range of coupled linear systems across science and engineering.
Continuous control policies trained with off-policy reinforcement learning frequently exhibit high-frequency action jitter, rendering direct deployment on physical actuators impractical. Post-hoc filtering attenuates jitter but introduces phase lag; embedding smoothness penalties in the actor's loss couples them with the RL gradient and conflates reward regression with over-aggressive smoothing. We present ZAPS-DA, a framework that reduces action jitter at deployment with negligible phase lag and no post-processing. ZAPS-DA pairs an unmodified main actor (trained by the base RL loss) with a separate decoupled actor trained via supervised imitation of zero-phase filtered targets stored in the replay buffer. The deployed policy is the decoupled actor: a feed-forward map from the current observation to a smooth action, with no inference-time filter and no action-history input -- a mechanism we term causal distillation of a non-causal filter. A magnitude-matched MSE loss provides zero-hyperparameter portability across optimizer classes. Validated with Soft Actor-Critic and a Savitzky--Golay filter in two driving simulators using paired n=150 evaluation protocols: on MetaDrive, ZAPS-DA reduces steering jitter by 14--21x and throttle jitter by 3--5x (all $p < 10^{-4}$, Bonferroni-corrected) while matching task-completion (p=0.28 success, p=0.31 crash) at a 6.3% reward cost; on a custom Webots adaptive cruise control environment, the same SG configuration produces a Pareto improvement -- reward parity (p=0.121), 8--45x steering jitter reduction, and total task-failure rate reduced from 2.0% to 0.7%.
Safe navigation often relies on well-defined conditions based on the shape of robots and obstacles, and can be challenging when they have irregular geometries. While Control Barrier Functions (CBFs) offer an efficient mechanism to enforce safe set forward invariance, common shape surrogates (e.g., spheres or super-ellipsoids) either are overly conservative in unstructured scenes or require many local primitives, which inflates constraint counts and degrades real-time performance. In this paper, we introduce a novel geometry-aware Control Barrier Function (CBF) based on Bernstein-Polynomial Signed Distance Fields (BP-SDFs). It provides a unified way to represent the obstacles and robots, so as to represent the barrier function with a unified minimum distance. Benefiting from the differentiability of the Bernstein polynomials, one can easily enforce the control constraints in a closed loop. We validate the method's efficiency and performance to guarantee safety in single-robot navigation and heterogeneous multi-robot collision avoidance via simulations under different environments.
We present Chatterbox-Flash, a zero-shot text-to-speech model obtained by fine-tuning a pretrained autoregressive TTS decoder into a block-diffusion decoder, enabling parallel token generation within each block while retaining block-by-block streaming. We find that naively transferring mainstream block-diffusion decoding to discrete speech tokens degrades quality, as a long-tail token distribution biases parallel position selection toward a few high-frequency tokens. To mitigate this without architectural modification, we introduce two inference-time techniques: prior-calibrated scoring, which subtracts the block-level marginal token distribution, and an early-decoding schedule, which adaptively terminates iteration based on calibrated confidence. On standard zero-shot TTS benchmarks, Chatterbox-Flash attains high-fidelity synthesis comparable to strong autoregressive and non-autoregressive baselines, while supporting streaming inference with time-to-first-packet on par with streaming AR systems and substantially lower real-time factor. Code and audio samples are available at this https URL.
Deriving analytic solutions for optimal mixed strategies in zero-sum linear-quadratic differential games (ZSLQDGs) remains an open problem. In this paper, we analytically synthesize near-optimal mixed strategies for ZSLQDGs and establish rigorous performance certifications. Specifically, we construct a surrogate pure-strategy stochastic differential game (SDG) by matching the first two moments of the mixed strategies. This method achieves an $\mathcal{O}(\bar{\pi}^2)$ weak approximation of state distributions and expected costs with respect to the maximum commitment delay $\bar{\pi}$. By analytically resolving the surrogate SDG, we derive closed-form optimal control laws for the matched moments. Crucially, we reveal that the surrogate game is governed by a Generalized Riccati Differential Equation (GRDE), which explicitly dictates a dynamic energy allocation law for variance injection. Building on these solutions, we propose a robust dual-routing architecture to execute the near-optimal mixed strategies. Furthermore, we certify that both the global value approximation error and the strategy suboptimality gaps are bounded by $\mathcal{O}(\bar{\pi}^{\frac{1}{2}})$. Finally, numerical experiments on a double-integrator pursuit-evasion game illustrate the induced physical behaviors and validate the theoretical bounds.
To enable an efficient interaction of non-communicating mobile robots in collision avoidance scenarios, we present a novel combined trajectory planning and prediction algorithm. Inverse optimal control is used to estimate unknown goal states of all robots based on observed past trajectories. Each robot also takes the perspective of other robots in considering self-prediction and solves a joint prediction problem using the estimated goal states. The resulting predictions are then considered for planning. Simulation results of scenarios with 2-8 robots show that the median of the durations until all vehicles reach their goals is 9.8 % faster compared to planning with constant acceleration based estimated goal states. Moreover, the proposed approach never leads to the solver being unable to find a solution to the planning or prediction problem.
We introduce the notion of worst-case posterior and worst-case likelihood sensitivity. These measure, respectively, the sensitivity of the expected cost to worst-case perturbations of the posterior distribution and worst-case perturbations of the likelihood of a Bayesian model. Each defines a quantitative measure of robustness. A decision maker concerned about the sensitivity of the out-of-sample expected cost to deviations from her assumptions will want a decision for which both sensitivities are small. We derive posterior and likelihood sensitivities for uncertainty sets defined in terms of deviation measures. Posterior sensitivity vanishes when the posterior variance shrinks to zero, which occurs when parameter uncertainty is eliminated from learning. Parameter learning does not eliminate likelihood sensitivity. A distributionally robust formulation of a Bayesian optimization problem makes a near-Pareto-optimal tradeoff between performance (expected cost) and robustness (posterior and likelihood sensitivity).
Ladder logic translation is an important problem in industrial automation because without it, it is difficult to switch Programmable Logic Controller (PLC) vendors. The prevailing translation problem highlights mismatched programming environments, incompatible ladder logic constructs, limitations in terms of differences in the semantic expressiveness of the vendor formalisms and integrated black-box proprietary engineering tools which are exemplified in our example case; Rockwell to Siemens PLC code translation. This work presents a mathematical formulation of the problem, the detailed architecture of a solution which supports XML extraction, structural normalization, constrained generative function (LLM), and system integration via the TIA Portal Openness API as rigorously engineered pipeline for automated translation of Rockwell Ladder Programs to Siemens S7 ladder programs. Finally, we present results that show that the translations retain high semantic consistency across instruction categories.
Reasoning-based robotic policies using large language and vision-language models achieve strong semantic planning capabilities but mostly suffer from a high inference latency that limits practical real-time deployment. In this work, we observe that robotic reasoning workloads contain substantial temporal redundancy, where consecutive observations frequently produce identical actions and subgoals. Based on this insight, we present REIS, a human cognition inspired robotic decision-making framework that minimizes unnecessary reasoning while preserving semantic adaptability. REIS combines lightweight scene gating, KV-steered affordance routing, and deliberative reasoning to accelerate robotic control under embodied constraints. Experiments on ALFRED, and real-world robotic tasks demonstrate that REIS significantly suppresses reasoning overhead while maintaining competitive task performance.
Conversational automatic speech recognition in Hungarian is constrained by the limited amount of publicly available dialogue-style training data. The BEA-Dialogue corpus addresses this need, but its strictly speaker-disjoint train/dev/eval split reduces the usable material to only 85 hours. In this paper, we introduce BEA-Dialogue+, an expanded version of the corpus that relaxes the split criterion for experimenters and dialogue partners while preserving complete separation of the primary speakers. This results in 200 hours of transcribed natural conversations and enables a controlled study of the trade-off between additional training data and speaker overlap across the splits. We evaluate several Whisper- and FastConformer-based models on both corpus versions, including Serialized Output Training (SOT)-based fine-tuning for dialogue transcription. Our results show that the larger corpus is more challenging for models without fine-tuning, whereas SOT-based adaptation yields consistent improvements in WER, CER, cpWER, and cpCER. Overall, BEA-Dialogue+ provides a substantially larger yet still demanding benchmark for Hungarian dialogue ASR, and a practical resource for training and evaluating dialogue transcription systems.
Large language models (LLMs) are increasingly used to automate power-system analysis, but many utilities and energy-research labs require on-premise serving for confidentiality, regulatory, reproducibility, and cost reasons. This makes the reliability of open-weight models a deployment issue. We show that first-pass failures in power-system code generation are dominated not by reasoning alone, but by structured API-knowledge boundary errors: hallucinated function names, misused parameters, and mishandled result tables in versioned simulation libraries. We introduce PowerCodeBench, an execution-validated benchmark generator that pairs natural-language operator queries with pandapower code and numerical ground truth; an L0-L3 documentation-driven probing procedure that measures per-model API knowledge profiles; and a boundary-aware intervention that combines query-side API demand estimation with targeted proactive documentation injection and routed reactive correction. On a 2,000-task frozen release, we evaluate ten open-weight LLMs (1.5B-480B parameters) and four commercial mid-tier APIs. The intervention improves every evaluated open-weight model of at least 7B parameters and every commercial API by 32 to 56 accuracy points. Open-weight models in the 70B-120B range match the commercial mid-tier accuracy range, while Llama-3.1-405B and Qwen3-Coder-480B lead the panel. The targeted prompts preserve the full-context accuracy ceiling while using 41% of the prompt-token cost. The result is an accuracy-side, deployment-time path toward reliable on-premise LLM assistance for grid-analysis workflows without fine-tuning or cloud inference.
Satellite communications are envisioned as a key enabler for ubiquitous coverage in future 6G networks, yet the broadcast nature renders them vulnerable to eavesdropping, especially given the long-distance transmissions and associated high uncertainties. In this paper, we propose the physical layer security enhancement for multi-beam satellite communications with the assistance of an aerial reconfigurable intelligent surface (ARIS). Considering the high dynamics and uncertainties of channels, we characterize the channel distribution with moment-based ambiguity sets. Accordingly, a distributionally robust secrecy rate optimization is formulated through joint design of transmit and reflection beamforming. We then introduce a conditional value-at-risk-based reformulation to convert the probabilistic constraints into deterministic forms. An alternating optimization framework is subsequently employed to iteratively update the transmit and reflective beamforming vectors until convergence. Simulation results demonstrate that the proposed distributionally robust scheme significantly enhances secrecy performance, and maintains reliable performance across various channel error distributions.
Microwave linear analog computers (MiLACs) have recently emerged to enable high-performance and efficient beamforming in the analog domain. In this paper, we introduce a dual-functionality framework for MiLAC-aided transceivers. Beyond analog-domain precoding/combining (active beamforming), a MiLAC and its antenna array can simultaneously act as a reconfigurable intelligent surface (RIS) (passive beamforming). This allows the MiLAC to execute beamforming for transmission/reception while reflecting external incident signals. We provide an optimal reconfiguration strategy for this dual-functional MiLAC, and characterize the fundamental limits on the trade-off between active and passive rate, namely the capacity region bounds and the sum-rate capacity.
Today's control systems are often characterized by modularity and safety requirements to handle complexity, resulting in the use of hierarchical control structures. Although hierarchical model predictive control offers favorable properties, achieving a provably safe, yet modular design remains a challenge. This paper introduces a contract-based hierarchical control strategy to improve the performance of control systems facing challenges related to model inconsistency and independent controller design across hierarchies. We consider a setup where a higher-level controller generates references that affect the constraints of a lower-level controller, which is based on a soft-constrained MPC formulation. The optimal slack variables of the lower-level MPC serve as the basis for a contract that allows the higher-level controller to assess the feasibility of the reference trajectory without exact knowledge of the model, constraints, and cost of the lower-level controller. To ensure computational efficiency while maintaining model confidentiality, we propose using an explicit function approximation, such as a neural network, to represent the cost of optimal slack values. The approach is tested for a hierarchical control setup consisting of a planner and a motion controller as commonly found in autonomous driving.
Quantum computing has emerged as a promising computational paradigm to address unresolved challenges in the modeling and control of modern power systems. However, most existing studies focus on offline simulations, and a practical framework for validating quantum algorithms in real-time operational environments remains lacking. This study proposes a quantum hardware-in-the-loop framework that integrates a real-time digital simulator with quantum and quantum-inspired hardware to solve combinatorial power flow and optimal power flow formulations under dynamic operating conditions. The proposed framework is validated using the IEEE 9-bus test system and a modified version with integrated solar and wind farms. The results confirm successful integration and convergence within a predefined tolerance. The study also identifies key limitations and challenges, such as limited access to quantum and digital annealers and current scalability limitations, that must be considered in future developments. Nevertheless, the results highlight the potential of quantum computing to significantly enhance the modeling and control of future power systems with high penetration of renewable energy sources.
This paper investigates a control approach that renders the driveshaft inertia completely available on the grid side and enhances the fault ride-through behavior of medium-voltage (MV) drive systems. Two main contributions are presented. First, we show how the rotational inertia of the driveline shaft can be synchronously coupled to the grid through a modification of the speed control reference signal and through an adapted DC-link control strategy. For the latter, we pursue two alternatives: one based on conventional cascaded control and another based on synchronous machine (SM) model matching. Second, we demonstrate that both the standard phase-locked loop (PLL) and the matching control approach can be interpreted, via the ray-circle complementarity, as feedback optimization schemes with distinct steady-state maps. This perspective allows us to revisit matching control, reveal its embedded PLL, highlight its current-limiting and tracking capabilities, and provide an extensive simulation study.
Replay speech attacks pose a significant threat to voice-controlled systems, especially in smart environments where voice assistants are widely deployed. While multi-channel audio offers spatial cues that can enhance replay detection robustness, existing datasets and methods predominantly rely on single-channel recordings. Moreover, previous studies highlighted that generalization of this attack to new environments is challenging, requiring new methods for generating data encompassing various acoustic conditions. Hence, in this work we introduce an acoustic simulation framework designed to simulate multi-channel replay speech configurations using publicly available resources. Using the framework, we train the state-of-the-art multi-channel replay detector M-ALRAD and evaluate its generalisation on the ReMASC real-recording corpus without any real training data. To improve the exploitation of spatial information, we extend M-ALRAD with inter-channel phase difference features computed for adjacent microphone pairs, augmenting the beamformed representation with directional cues. Synthetic datasets will be available upon acceptance of the paper.
Synchronous reference frame phase-locked loop (SRF-PLL) techniques are widely used for interfacing and control applications in the power systems and energy conversion at large. Since a PLL system synchronizes its output with an exogenous harmonic signal, often 3-phases voltage or current, the locking of the frequency and phase angle depends on the performance of the feedback loop with at least two integrator terms, and on the distortions of the measured input quantities. For the conventional SRF-PLL with a proportional-integral (PI) control in feedback, we are providing a robust design which maximizes the phase margin and uses the normalization scheme for yielding the loop insensitive to the input amplitude variations. The main improvement in the transient behavior and also in tracking of frequency ramps is achieved by using the robust feed-forward frequency estimator, which is model-free and suitable for the noisy and time-varying harmonic signals. The proposed feed-forward-feedback SRF-PLL scheme is experimentally evaluated on the 3-phases harmonic currents from a standard PMSM drive with the varying angular speeds and loads. Both, the tracked angular frequency and locked phase angle are assessed as performance indicators of the proposed SRF-PLL with feedforwarding.
In this work, we present and investigate the novel blind inverse problem of position-blind ptychography, i.e., ptychographic phase retrieval without any knowledge of scan positions, which then must be recovered jointly with the image. The motivation for this problem comes from single-particle diffractive X-ray imaging, where particles in random orientations are illuminated and a set of diffraction patterns is collected. If one uses a highly focused X-ray beam, the measurements would also become sensitive to the beam positions relative to each particle and therefore ptychographic, but these positions are also unknown. We investigate the viability of image reconstruction in a simulated, simplified 2-D variant of this difficult problem, using variational inference with modern data-driven image priors in the form of score-based diffusion models. We find that, with the right illumination structure and a strong prior, one can achieve reliable and successful image reconstructions even under measurement noise, in all except the most difficult evaluated imaging scenario.
Electrophysiological (ExG) signals offer valuable insights into human physiology, yet building foundation models that generalize across everyday tasks remains challenging due to two key limitations: (i)~insufficient data diversity, as most ExG recordings are collected in controlled labs with bulky, expensive devices; and (ii)~task-specific model designs that require tailored processing (i.e., targeted frequency filters) and architectures, which limit generalization across tasks. To address these challenges, we introduce an approach for scalable, task-agnostic ExG monitoring in the wild. We collected 50 hours of unobtrusive free-living ExG data with an earphone-based hardware prototype to narrow the data diversity gap. At the core of our approach is Physiology-informed Multi-band Tokenization (PiMT), which decomposes ExG signals into 12 physiology-informed tokens, followed by a reconstruction task to learn robust representations. This enables adaptive feature recognition across the full frequency spectrum while capturing task-relevant information. Experiments on our new DailySense dataset, the first to enable ExG-based analysis across five human senses, together with four public ExG benchmarks, demonstrate that PiMT consistently outperforms state-of-the-art methods across diverse tasks.
Power outages caused by tropical cyclones (TCs) pose serious risks to electric power systems and the communities they serve. Accurate, high-resolution outage forecasting is essential for enabling both proactive mitigation planning and real-time emergency response. This study introduces the SpatioTemporal Outage ForeCAST (STO-CAST) model, a deep learning framework developed for real-time, regional-scale outage prediction during TC events with high-resolution outputs in both space and time. STO-CAST integrates static environmental and infrastructure attributes with dynamic meteorological and outage sequences using gated recurrent units (GRUs) and fully connected layers, and is trained via a Leave-One-Storm-Out (LOSO) cross-validation strategy along with holdout grid experiments to demonstrate its preliminary generalization capability to unseen storms and grids. The model produces hourly outage forecasts at a 4 km * 4 km resolution and supports dual forecasting modes: short-term nowcasting with a 6-hour lead time via assimilation of real-time observations, and long-term forecasting with a 60-hour lead time based on evolving meteorological projections. A case study on Typhoon Muifa (2022) demonstrates STO-CAST's operational effectiveness, including error decomposition across model design, meteorological uncertainty, and observation gaps, while highlighting the value of real-time data assimilation and the model's capacity to identify evolving outage hotspots. STO-CAST offers a scalable, data-driven solution to support risk-informed emergency response and enhance power system resilience under intensifying TC threats.
This paper investigates near-field (NF) position and orientation tracking of a multi-antenna mobile station (MS) using an extremely large antenna array (ELAA)-equipped base station (BS) with a limited number of radio frequency (RF) chains. Under this hybrid array architecture, the received uplink pilot signal at the BS is first combined by analog phase shifters, producing a low-dimensional observation before digital processing. Such analog compression provides only partial access to the ELAA measurement, making it essential to design an analog combiner that can preserve pose-relevant signal components despite channel uncertainty and unit-modulus hardware constraints. To address this, we propose a predictive analog combining-assisted extended Kalman filter (PAC-EKF) framework, where the analog combiner can leverage the temporal correlation in the MS pose variation to capture the most informative signal components predictively. We then analyze fundamental performance limits via Bayesian Cramér-Rao bound and Fisher information matrix, explicitly quantifying how the analog combiner, array size, signal-to-noise ratio, and MS pose influence the pose information contained in the uplink observation. Building on these insights, we develop two methods for designing a low-complexity analog combiner. Numerical results show that the proposed predictive analog combining approach significantly improves tracking accuracy, even with fewer RF chains and lower transmit power.
As wireless systems evolve toward higher frequencies and extremely large antenna arrays, near-field (NF) propagation becomes increasingly dominant. Unlike far-field (FF) communication, which relies on a planar-wavefront model and is limited to angular-domain beamsteering, NF propagation exhibits spherical wavefronts that enable beamfocusing in both angle and distance, i.e., the polar domain, offering new opportunities for spatial multiple access. This paper develops an analytical stochastic geometry (SG) framework for a multi-user system assisted by polar-domain beamfocusing, which jointly captures NF propagation characteristics and the spatial randomness of user locations. The intrinsic coupling between angle and distance in the NF antenna pattern renders inter-user interference analysis intractable. To address this challenge, we propose a tractable near-field multi-level antenna pattern (NF-MLAP) approximation, which enables computationally efficient expressions and tight upper bounds for key performance metrics, including coverage probability, spectrum efficiency, and area spectrum efficiency. Analytical and simulation results demonstrate that the proposed framework accurately captures performance trends and reveals fundamental trade-offs between hardware configuration (including the number of antennas and radio frequency chains) and system performance (in terms of spatial resource reuse and interference mitigation).
Semantic communication (SemCom) emerges as a transformative paradigm for traffic-intensive visual data transmission, shifting focus from raw data to meaningful content transmission and relieving the increasing pressure on communication resources. However, to achieve SemCom, challenges are faced in accurate semantic quantization for visual data, robust semantic extraction and reconstruction under diverse tasks and goals, transceiver coordination with effective knowledge utilization, and adaptation to unpredictable wireless communication environments. In this paper, we present a systematic review of SemCom for visual data transmission (SemCom-Vision), wherein an interdisciplinary analysis integrating computer vision (CV) and communication engineering is conducted to provide comprehensive guidelines for the machine learning (ML)-empowered SemCom-Vision design. Specifically, this survey first elucidates the basics and key concepts of SemCom. Then, we introduce a novel classification perspective to categorize existing SemCom-Vision approaches as semantic preservation communication (SPC), semantic expansion communication (SEC), and semantic refinement communication (SRC) based on communication goals interpreted through semantic quantization schemes. Moreover, this survey articulates the ML-based encoder-decoder models and training algorithms for each SemCom-Vision category, followed by knowledge structure and utilization strategies. Finally, we discuss potential SemCom-Vision applications.
Machine learning (ML)-assisted outage-based resource allocation has recently emerged as an effective alternative to conventional scheduling methods in reliability-critical wireless systems. However, existing approaches are fundamentally limited to single-resource allocation, whereas modern and emerging systems increasingly require the simultaneous allocation of multiple resources to meet aggregate rate and reliability constraints. In this paper, we extend outage-based learning to the bulk resource allocation regime, where a user requires at least $D$ reliable resources from a pool of $R$ candidates. We first introduce a practical allocation policy, termed gate + top-$D$ allocation (GTBA), which combines threshold-based admission control with ranking-based selection. We then propose a novel ranking-aware bulk outage loss (RBOL) that provides a differentiable surrogate for the bulk outage event induced by GTBA, explicitly accounting for both gate failures and ranking errors near the selection boundary. An exact reliability analysis is developed, establishing a decomposition of bulk outage probability (BOP), identifying dominant failure mechanisms and deriving an oracle lower bound that characterizes the fundamental performance limit. Extensive simulations under balanced, light and heavy stress regimes demonstrate that RBOL consistently outperforms conventional pointwise losses and baselines, achieving substantial reductions in BOP and remaining significantly closer to the oracle bound across a wide range of operating conditions. These results confirm that set-level ranking-aware training objectives are essential for reliable ML-assisted bulk resource allocation.
Brain tumors result in 20 years of lost life on average. Standard therapies induce complex structural changes in the brain that are monitored through MRI. Recent developments in artificial intelligence (AI) enable conditional multimodal image generation from clinical data. In this study, we investigate AI-driven generation of follow-up MRI in patients with intracranial tumors through conditional image generation. This approach enables realistic modeling of post-radiotherapy changes, allowing for treatment optimization. The public SAILOR dataset of 25 patients was used to create a 2D rectified flow model conditioned on axial slices of pre-treatment MRI and RT dose maps. Cross-attention conditioning was used to incorporate temporal and chemotherapy data. The resulting images were validated with structural similarity index measure (SSIM), peak signal-to-noise ratio (PSNR), Dice scores and Jacobian determinants. The resulting model generates realistic follow-up MRI for any time point, while integrating treatment information. Comparing real versus predicted images, SSIM is 0.88, and PSNR is 22.82. Tissue segmentations from real versus predicted MRI result in a mean Dice-Sørensen coefficient (DSC) of 0.91. The rectified flow (RF) model enables up to 250x faster inference than Denoising Diffusion Probabilistic Models (DDPM). The proposed model generates realistic follow-up MRI in real-time, preserving both semantic and visual fidelity as confirmed by image quality metrics and tissue segmentations. Conditional generation allows counterfactual simulations by varying treatment parameters, producing predicted morphological changes. This capability has potential to support adaptive treatment dose planning and personalized outcome prediction for patients with intracranial tumors. Code will be available upon peer-reviewed publication at: this https URL
We study timestamped speaker-attributed automatic speech recognition (SA-ASR) for long-form, multi-party speech with overlap. In this setting, chunk-wise inference must preserve meeting-level speaker identity consistency while producing time-stamped, speaker-labeled transcripts. Prior Speech-LLM systems tend to prioritize either local diarization or global labeling, lacking the ability to jointly model fine-grained temporal boundaries and robust cross-chunk identity linking. We propose G-STAR, an end-to-end framework that couples a cache-conditioned speaker-tracking module with a Speech-LLM transcription backbone. The tracker provides structured speaker cues with temporal grounding, and the LLM generates attributed text conditioned on these cues. G-STAR supports component-wise optimization and joint end-to-end training, enabling flexible learning under heterogeneous supervision and domain shift. Under chunk-wise decoding protocols, experiments on both oracle-segmented local evaluation and full-meeting global evaluation show strong speaker-attributed transcription performance.
Due to the directive property of each antenna element, the received signal power can be severely attenuated when the emitter deviates from the array boresight, which will lead to a severe degradation in sensing performance along the corresponding direction. Although existing rotatable array sensing methods such as recursive rotation (RR-Root-MUSIC) can mitigate this issue by iteratively rotating and sensing, several mechanical rotations and repeated eigendecomposition operations are required to yield a high computational complexity and low time-efficiency. To address this problem, a pre-rotation initialization with recieve power as a rule is proposed to signifcantly reduce the computational complexity and improve the time-efficiency. Using this idea, a low-complexity enhanced direction-sensing framework with pre-rotation initialization and iterative greedy spatial-spectrum search (PRI-IGSS) is develped with three stages: (1) the normal vector of array is rotated to a set of candidates to find the opimal direction with the maximum sensing energy with the corresponding DOA value computed by the Root-MUSIC algorithm; (2) the array is mechanically rotated to the initial estimated direction and kept fixed; (3) an iterative greedy spatial-spectrum search or recieving beamforming method, moviated by reinforcement learning, is designed with a reduced search range and making a summation of all previous sampling variance matrices and the current one is adopted to provide an increasiong performance gain as the iteration process continues. To assess the performance of the proposed method, the corresponding CRLB is derived with a simplified rotation model. Simulation results demonstrate that the proposed PRI-IGSS method performs much better than RR-Root-MUSIC and achieves the CRLB in term of mean squared error due to the fact there is no sample accumulation for the latter.
Extracellular DNA accumulation in recirculating bioprocesses inhibits microbial growth and reduces productivity. We consider a continuous bioreactor with a recirculating loop and an electrophoretic filtration unit for selective DNA removal, and develop a feedback control framework combining online state and parameter estimation via an Unscented Kalman Filter with an adaptive Model Predictive Controller that jointly optimizes dilution rate and filtration activation. Closed-loop simulations under nominal and perturbed conditions show that the addition of the filtration unit enables the proposed control strategy to achieve significantly higher cumulative profit while keeping DNA concentration below the inhibition threshold.
The emergence of movable antenna (MA) technology provides a promising way to enhance wireless sensing and communication by introducing spatial degrees of freedom through dynamic array reconfiguration. In near-field localization, achieving high resolution at low cost necessitates the adoption of sparse arrays. However, such sparsity tends to introduce spatial ambiguity due to aliasing effects. To resolve this resolution-ambiguity dilemma, this paper proposes an MA-enabled array zooming (AZ) system. First, we design a multi-measurement array zooming system that dynamically adjusts antenna spacings. By fusing the observational information from different measurements, the proposed AZ system effectively mitigates spatial aliasing while maintaining spatial resolution. Second, to quantify the performance limits under the severe multi-modal distributions inherent in sparse near-field sensing, we theoretically analyze the false peak distribution and derive a tighter performance lower bound, which incorporates the false detection probability. Third, considering that multiple false peaks may exist in practical multi-modal distributions, we propose an optimization algorithm for the AZ system to suppress false peaks and minimize the localization error. Extensive numerical results demonstrate that the proposed AZ strategy adaptively optimizes array configurations under varying signal-to-noise ratios (SNRs), substantially outperforming both conventional fixed-spacing arrays and Cramer-Rao bound (CRB)-based AZ benchmarks in localization accuracy.
We study \textsc{OCO-S$^2$}, an online convex optimization setting in which decisions drive a stable dynamical state, losses are incurred along the induced state trajectory, and first-order feedback is available only through sparse block communication with partial participation. This coupling creates a dynamic-regret problem beyond pointwise OCO: the learner updates and holds decisions at the block scale, whereas the hindsight comparator may vary at the per-round scale. We propose \textsc{OCO-S$^2$-OGD}, a projected block online gradient method that updates deployed decisions using sparse block-level distributed feedback. We prove dynamic-regret bounds for the incurred trajectory cost, quantifying the tradeoff among block communication, comparator variation, state-memory truncation, and partial participation. We further introduce a prediction-augmented variant, \textsc{OCO-S$^2$-OGD-P}, and show that accurate block-level predictions improve the optimization term in the regret bound through their realized gradient-mismatch error. Overall, this work provides a regret-theoretic foundation for communication-efficient online decision-making in systems where algorithmic updates and physical state trajectories are intrinsically coupled.
This study proposes a novel radar-centric signaling design and architecture for secure integrated sensing and communication (ISAC) systems. The proposed framework is designed to provide robust physical layer security for data transmission while simultaneously enhancing sensing privacy. It employs index modulation and phase coding over frequency-modulated continuous-wave radar (FMCW) chirps, where index modulation (IM) provides an outer layer of data security, and we explicitly design the phase coding (PC) to perturb the resulting signal's ambiguity function (AF) to enhance sensing privacy. This design reduces the risk of unauthorized surveillance by rendering target velocity estimation practically infeasible for unauthorized passive sensing hardware (i.e., a sensing eavesdropper, S-Eve) and significantly impairing its range estimation capabilities. Furthermore, this study also presents the transmitter and receiver architectures required for effective modulation and demodulation of the proposed ISAC signaling and for performing sensing at the legitimate sensing hardware. Simulation results show that the proposed approach achieves high data throughput while enhancing communication security and sensing privacy.
Speech and audio systems operate in inherently non-stationary environments, yet continual learning (CL) research in this domain, especially in the foundation model era, remains fragmented that fail to account for the coupled, geometry-sensitive nature of acoustic representations. Modern speech foundation models operate over highly entangled, continuous representations that jointly encode linguistic, speaker, and paralinguistic factors within a shared latent space. CL is therefore fundamentally about preserving and evolving shared representation structure rather than retaining isolated task knowledge. In this work, we revisit CL for speech from a representation-centered perspective, and introduce a new taxonomy that organizes CL according to how underlying representation geometry evolves under non-stationary acoustic conditions. We further identify key mismatches between current CL assumptions and speech foundation model behavior, and finally outline a set of open challenges and future research directions.
We study single-target localization in a group-connected beyond-diagonal reconfigurable intelligent surface (BD-RIS)-assisted monostatic network with K element groups. We propose a Nested Tensor Factorization and Estimation (NTFE) algorithm that models the received signal as a 3rd-order nested Tucker tensor, decoupling the delay-Doppler and angle domains. The resulting two-stage procedure estimates the target-bearing tensor factors and then extracts the other physical parameters using subspace and closed-form steps. We also analyze identifiability and uniqueness conditions. Simulations show that NTFE exploits the group-connected BD-RIS structure and outperforms state-of-the-art sensing benchmarks.
In this paper, we consider the expansion of power grids under emerging large loads from data centers and electrified manufacturing. We develop a multi-period grid capacity expansion model to determine optimal investment profiles for power generation, storage, and transmission capacity while accounting for hourly power dispatch, such that electricity demand is satisfied and the total planning and operation cost is minimized. We also propose a new modeling approach regarding the spatial distribution of demand from large loads. The model is used to analyze the expansion of a synthetic grid that follows key characteristics of the ERCOT system over a seven-year planning horizon, under loads from data centers and electrified oil refining, which account for 17.5% and 4.7% of total annual electricity demand by the end of the planning horizon. The optimal investment policy leads to an 83.6% increase in generation capacity and exploits the short construction times of solar and storage as well as the operational flexibility of thermal generators. Finally, sensitivity analysis reveals that the construction time of grid assets substantially impacts investment timing, generation technology mix, and transmission capacity expansion. The proposed modeling framework is general and can be extended to other grid systems, enabling the exploration of diverse demand scenarios, policy assumptions, and regional characteristics.
Visible light communication (VLC) provides a unified framework for wireless data transmission and illumination, but its practical deployment requires transmission schemes that jointly satisfy communication and lighting constraints. In color-shift keying (CSK) systems, dimming remains a challenging and underexplored problem because the average optical power must be controlled without altering the perceived chromaticity. This paper proposes a dimming space-time code (DSTC) for CSK-based VLC systems, where a structured dimming matrix introduces controlled temporal power variations while satisfying physical feasibility, color preservation, and identifiability conditions. Two receiver architectures are developed: a pilot-assisted zero-forcing (ZF) receiver and a tensor-based semi-blind PARAFAC receiver that jointly estimates the channel and transmitted symbols using only one training time slot. Simulation results show that the proposed DSTC provides diversity gains and substantial BER reductions with respect to conventional CSK, while the tensor-based receiver improves spectral efficiency by reducing training overhead, with particular benefits in large-scale MIMO configurations.
This work presents a high-resolution X-ray microtomography system that uses commercial off-the-shelf (COTS) CMOS image sensors as direct detectors, relying on the sensor s intrinsic resolution to achieve tomographic reconstructions without optical components. The system employs a microfocus X-ray source in cone-beam geometry, enabling both absorption-contrast and propagation-based phase-contrast imaging. A dynamic flat-field correction algorithm mitigates radiation-induced degradation during long acquisitions, helping to overcome limitations of consumer-grade hardware. The setup provides voxel sizes from 3.9 micron to 5.2 micron. Phase contrast visualizes soft tissue boundaries that would be undetectable by conventional radiography. Compared to synchrotron or nanofocus systems, our solution is simpler, lower-cost, and avoids complex optics or slow scans. COTS CMOS sensors appear as a viable alternative for laboratory-scale high-resolution microtomography.
Polarimetric synthetic aperture radar (PolSAR) images encompass valuable information that can facilitate extensive land cover interpretation and generate diverse output products. Extracting meaningful features from PolSAR data poses challenges distinct from those encountered in optical imagery. Deep learning (DL) methods offer effective solutions for overcoming these challenges in PolSAR feature extraction. Convolutional neural networks (CNNs) play a crucial role in capturing PolSAR image characteristics by leveraging kernel capabilities to consider local information and the complex-valued nature of PolSAR data. In this study, a novel three-branch fusion of complex-valued CNN, named the Shallow to Deep Feature Fusion Network (SDF2Net), is proposed for PolSAR image classification. To validate the performance of the proposed method, classification results are compared against multiple state-of-the-art approaches using the airborne synthetic aperture radar (AIRSAR) datasets of Flevoland and San Francisco, as well as the ESAR Oberpfaffenhofen dataset. The results indicate that the proposed approach demonstrates improvements in overallaccuracy, with a 1.3% and 0.8% enhancement for the AIRSAR datasets and a 0.5% improvement for the ESAR dataset. Analyses conducted on the Flevoland data underscore the effectiveness of the SDF2Net model, revealing a promising overall accuracy of 96.01% even with only a 1% sampling ratio.
The widespread usage of the Internet of Things (IoT) has raised the risks of cyber threats; thus, developing Anomaly Detection Systems (ADSs) that can adapt to evolving traffic pattern is critical. Previous studies primarily focused on offline unsupervised learning methods to safeguard ADSs, which is not applicable in practical real-world applications. In this paper, we design Adaptive NAD, an online and self-Adaptive unsupervised Network Anomaly Detection framework for security domains. A two-layer anomaly detection strategy is proposed to generate reliable high-confidence pseudo-labels. Then, an online training scheme is introduced to update Adaptive NAD by a novel threshold calculation technique. Experimental results demonstrate that Adaptive NAD achieves the lowest false alarm rate (1.33%, 0.71%, and 0.08%) and has a more than 3 times faster online inference latency compared with state-of-the-art solutions on the CIC-Darknet2020, NSL-KDD, and Edge-IIoTset datasets, respectively. The code is released at this https URL.
Robots navigating human-populated environments must avoid collisions while respecting the social structure of crowds, particularly the implicit boundaries of social groups. Most navigation approaches model humans as independent individuals,causing socially disruptive behavior even when collision-free. This paper presents TAGA (Tangent Action for Group Avoidance), detected group boundaries via tangent-path maneuvers without modifying the underlying navigation policy. A hierarchical safety controller coordinates group-level avoidance with individual collision prevention. We propose the Group Crossing Rate (GCR), a continuous metric measuring the fraction of timesteps the robot spends inside any group convex hull, providing finer-grained social compliance assessment than terminal metrics alone. We introduce a realistic crowd simulation benchmark with five empirically grounded phases: individual speed heterogeneity, group speed coupling, F-formation static groups, leader-follower dynamics, and convex-hull boundaries, evaluated under both ORCA and Social Force pedestrian dynamics. Experiments across ORCA, Social Force, DS-RNN, and Intention-RL reveal a reactive-learning asymmetry: TAGA provides the largest gains for classical reactive baselines (up to +8pp success rate, GCR halved) with near-zero cost for learned policies. These findings offer actionable guidance for when modular group-awareness adds value versus when end-to-end group-aware training is preferable.
Hebbian and anti-Hebbian plasticity are widely observed in the brain and are classically modeled as mechanistic, local homosynaptic rules stabilized by homeostatic constraints. This raises an identifiability question: does observing Hebbian/anti-Hebbian structure in synaptic updates uniquely imply an underlying Hebbian computation? We identify an alternative, emergent route. We show that near stationarity, L2 weight decay generically drives the \emph{learning-signal} component of many update rules to align with a Hebbian direction, with alignment increasing monotonically with decay strength. This Hebbian-like signature is not specific to SGD and can arise even for non-learning or random update rules long before learning has ceased. We further show that stochastic noise in the learning signal can induce anti-Hebbian alignment, yielding a simple tradeoff with weight decay and a phase boundary in regression settings. These mechanisms do not replace standard Hebbian theory; they can coexist with genuine Hebbian plasticity and complicate the interpretation of synaptic measurements, motivating experiments that distinguish mechanistic Hebbian computation from emergent Hebbian signatures.
Cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) is an essential tool to ensure oxygen supply during cardiac arrest, yet not quantifiable to this day. Low-quality chest compressions or wrong pressure placement go unnoticed. This paper presents a solution for the quantification of blood flow to guide first responders in their efforts. An approach for automated vessel identification with three different steps was developed, featuring a new sensor probe for ultrasonic measurements with non-symmetrically angled piezo ceramics. The probe was used with prototype ultrasound hardware for Pulsed Wave Doppler (PW Doppler) in a phantom. Initial measurements evaluated sensor vessel alignment at different sensor positions by examining Doppler results with a large sample volume during periodic flow. Afterward, an iterative mode was used for depth-dependent frequency measurements with score calculation of flow periodicity and power. The configuration with the best score was used for a prolonged monitoring mode. Initial mode and iterative mode aligned with ultrasound imaging regarding the best position and vessel depth. Simultaneous flow-sensor data and flow values of monitoring mode calculated via Doppler substitution showed a minimum correlation coefficient of 0.98, a minimum R2 of 0.96, and an average root mean square error of 3.84 ml/s. With the proposed hardware and software solutions, a basis for future developments was made, which could lead to a fully automated vessel identification and blood flow calculation during CPR. When used in emergencies, a miniaturized device could provide vital information about CPR efficiency that has yet to be included in the therapy of people during cardiac arrest.
State preparation is a cornerstone of quantum technologies, underpinning applications in computation, communication, and sensing. Its importance becomes even more pronounced in non-Markovian open quantum systems, where environmental memory and model uncertainties pose significant challenges to achieving high-fidelity control. Invariant-based inverse engineering provides a principled framework for synthesizing analytic control fields, yet existing parameterizations often lead to experimentally infeasible, singular pulses and are limited to simplified noise models such as those of Lindblad form. Here, we introduce a generalized invariant-based protocol for finite-dimensional state preparation under arbitrary noise conditions. We transform the finite-dimensional control problem into the equivalent problem for a single-qubit, by restricting the dynamics to a designed SU(2) subspace. The control protocol then proceeds in two-stages: first, we construct a family of bounded pulses that achieve perfect state preparation in a closed system; second, we identify the optimal member of this family that minimizes the effect of noise. The framework accommodates both (i) characterized noise, enabling noise-aware control synthesis, and (ii) uncharacterized noise, where a noise-agnostic variant preserves robustness without requiring a master-equation description. Numerical simulations demonstrate high-fidelity state preparation across diverse targets while producing smooth, hardware-feasible control fields. This singularity-free framework extends invariant-based control to realistic open-system regimes, providing a versatile route toward robust quantum state engineering on NISQ hardware and other platforms exhibiting non-Markovian dynamics.
Transmitting information about quantum states over classical noisy channels is an important problem with applications to science, computing, and sensing. This task, however, poses fundamental challenges due to the exponential scaling of state space with system size. We introduce shadow tomography-based transmission with unequal error protection (STT-UEP), a novel communication protocol that enables efficient transmission of properties of quantum states, allowing decoder-side estimation of arbitrary observables. Unlike conventional approaches requiring the transmission of a number of bits that is exponential in the number of qubits, STT-UEP achieves communication complexity that scales logarithmically with the number of observables, depending on the observable weight. The protocol exploits classical shadow tomography for measurement efficiency, and applies unequal error protection by encoding measurement bases with stronger channel codes than measurement outcomes. We provide theoretical guarantees on estimation accuracy as a function of the bit error probability of the classical channel, and validate the approach against several benchmarks via numerical results.
This paper studies robust optimal operation control problems for microgrids with a high share of renewable energy sources. The main goal is to ensure an optimal operation in the presence of a wide range of scenarios of uncertain infeed of renewable sources and uncertain load demand. We formally state a minimum-regret robust model predictive control (MPC) problem and address it by making effective use of a hierarchical microgrid control structure. In detail, we consider an enhanced primary control layer composed of droop control and an autonomous limitation of power and energy. We prove that this enables us to use constant power setpoints to achieve an optimal operation under certain conditions. To obtain a tractable controller, we then combine the abovementioned constant saturation-aware setpoints with an energy management system, which solves a robust unit commitment problem within a model predictive control framework. In a case study, we finally demonstrate the viability of the control design.
This paper analyzes the discrete-time natural power method, demonstrating its convergence to the dominant $r$-dimensional subspace corresponding to the $r$ eigenvalues with the largest absolute values. This contrasts with the Oja flow, which targets eigenvalues with the largest real parts. We leverage this property to develop methods for model order reduction and low-rank controller synthesis for discrete-time LTI systems, proving preservation of key system properties. We also extend the low-rank control framework to slowly-varying LTV systems, showing its utility for tracking time-varying dominant subspaces.
In speech machine learning, neural network models are typically designed by choosing an architecture with fixed layer sizes and structure. These models are then trained to maximize performance on metrics aligned with the task's objective. While the overall architecture is usually guided by prior knowledge of the task, the sizes of individual layers are often chosen heuristically. However, this approach does not guarantee an optimal trade-off between performance and computational complexity; consequently, post hoc methods such as weight quantization or model pruning are typically employed to reduce computational cost. This occurs because stochastic gradient descent (SGD) methods can only optimize differentiable functions, while factors influencing computational complexity, such as layer sizes and floating-point operations per second (FLOP/s), are non-differentiable and require modifying the model structure during training. We propose a reparameterization technique based on feature noise injection that enables joint optimization of performance and computational complexity during training using SGD-based methods. Unlike traditional pruning methods, our approach allows the model size to be dynamically optimized for a target performance-complexity trade-off, without relying on heuristic criteria to select which weights or structures to remove. We demonstrate the effectiveness of our method through three case studies, including a synthetic example and two practical real-world applications: voice activity detection and audio anti-spoofing. The code related to our work is publicly available to encourage further research.
Deep reinforcement learning for continuous control often suffers from high variance, low energy efficiency, and poor generalization under distribution shift, as purely data-driven exploration ignores available physical structure. This paper proposes Hybrid Energy-Aware Reward Shaping (H-EARS), which encodes dominant energy terms -- assumed known a priori -- directly as reward potentials at O(n) per-step computation. H-EARS decomposes the shaping potential into task-oriented and energy-based components, supplemented by an action regularization term that deliberately modifies the optimization objective to enforce energy-efficient control. A complete theoretical foundation is established: functional independence of shaping and regularization, energy-based gradient enrichment under positive-definite Hessian conditions, convergence guarantees under function approximation, and approximate potential error bounds. Across four continuous control benchmarks and four baseline algorithms, H-EARS achieves consistent gains in convergence speed, policy stability, and final performance. High-fidelity vehicle simulations validate applicability in safety-critical settings under extreme road conditions.
Imitating the highest earners is a common decision-making heuristic, but in finite populations it can generate persistent fluctuations between strategies. This paper studies whether such fluctuations persist as population size grows in heterogeneous two-strategy populations. We show that the Markov chains describing the discrete imitation dynamics form generalized stochastic approximation processes for a good upper semicontinuous differential inclusion, which defines the associated mean dynamics. We prove that these mean dynamics always converge to equilibria. Using stochastic approximation results, we then show that the amplitudes of fluctuations in the population proportions of the two strategies vanish almost surely as population size tends to infinity. Thus, in well-mixed large populations, highest-earning imitation is unlikely to produce large-scale perpetual fluctuations.