J

Jinjun Xiong

Total Citations
16
h-index
3
Papers
2

Publications

#1 2603.20116v1 Mar 20, 2026

Chain-of-Adaptation: Surgical Vision-Language Adaptation with Reinforcement Learning

Conventional fine-tuning on domain-specific datasets can inadvertently alter a model's pretrained multimodal priors, leading to reduced generalization. To address this, we propose Chain-of-Adaptation (CoA), an adaptation framework designed to integrate domain knowledge while maintaining the model's inherent reasoning and perceptual capabilities. CoA introduces a structured reasoning format that enhances domain alignment without sacrificing general multimodal competence by reinforcement learning. Experiments on standard surgical benchmarks, under both in-distribution and out-of-distribution settings, demonstrate that CoA achieves higher accuracy, stronger generalization, and more stable behavior than supervised fine-tuning. Furthermore, ablation studies confirm that CoA effectively preserves the model's core visual-language abilities, providing a reliable pathway for domain specialization in VLMs.

Jinjun Xiong Jiajie Li Chenhui Xu Meihua Liu
0 Citations
#2 2603.05225v1 Mar 05, 2026

AI+HW 2035: Shaping the Next Decade

Artificial intelligence (AI) and hardware (HW) are advancing at unprecedented rates, yet their trajectories have become inseparably intertwined. The global research community lacks a cohesive, long-term vision to strategically coordinate the development of AI and HW. This fragmentation constrains progress toward holistic, sustainable, and adaptive AI systems capable of learning, reasoning, and operating efficiently across cloud, edge, and physical environments. The future of AI depends not only on scaling intelligence, but on scaling efficiency, achieving exponential gains in intelligence per joule, rather than unbounded compute consumption. Addressing this grand challenge requires rethinking the entire computing stack. This vision paper lays out a 10-year roadmap for AI+HW co-design and co-development, spanning algorithms, architectures, systems, and sustainability. We articulate key insights that redefine scaling around energy efficiency, system-level integration, and cross-layer optimization. We identify key challenges and opportunities, candidly assess potential obstacles and pitfalls, and propose integrated solutions grounded in algorithmic innovation, hardware advances, and software abstraction. Looking ahead, we define what success means in 10 years: achieving a 1000x improvement in efficiency for AI training and inference; enabling energy-aware, self-optimizing systems that seamlessly span cloud, edge, and physical AI; democratizing access to advanced AI infrastructure; and embedding human-centric principles into the design of intelligent systems. Finally, we outline concrete action items for academia, industry, government, and the broader community, calling for coordinated national initiatives, shared infrastructure, workforce development, cross-agency collaboration, and sustained public-private partnerships to ensure that AI+HW co-design becomes a unifying long-term mission.

Yann LeCun Azalia Mirhoseini Christos Kozyrakis Yizhou Sun Deming Chen +25
1 Citations