J

Jin Zhu

Total Citations
66
h-index
5
Papers
2

Publications

#1 2605.03723v1 May 05, 2026

Segmenting Human-LLM Co-authored Text via Change Point Detection

The rise of large language models (LLMs) has created an urgent need to distinguish between human-written and LLM-generated text to ensure authenticity and societal trust. Existing detectors typically provide a binary classification for an entire passage; however, this is insufficient for human--LLM co-authored text, where the objective is to localize specific segments authored by humans or LLMs. To bridge this gap, we propose algorithms to segment text into human- and LLM-authored pieces. Our key observation is that such a segmentation task is conceptually similar to classical change point detection in time-series analysis. Leveraging this analogy, we adapt change point detection to LLM-generated text detection, develop a weighted algorithm and a generalized algorithm to accommodate heterogeneous detection score variability, and establish the minimax optimality of our procedure. Empirically, we demonstrate the strong performance of our approach against a wide range of existing baselines.

Jin Zhu Chengchun Shi Mengchu Li Jinglai Li
0 Citations
#2 2601.21895v2 Jan 29, 2026

Learn-to-Distance: Distance Learning for Detecting LLM-Generated Text

Modern large language models (LLMs) such as GPT, Claude, and Gemini have transformed the way we learn, work, and communicate. Yet, their ability to produce highly human-like text raises serious concerns about misinformation and academic integrity, making it an urgent need for reliable algorithms to detect LLM-generated content. In this paper, we start by presenting a geometric approach to demystify rewrite-based detection algorithms, revealing their underlying rationale and demonstrating their generalization ability. Building on this insight, we introduce a novel rewrite-based detection algorithm that adaptively learns the distance between the original and rewritten text. Theoretically, we demonstrate that employing an adaptively learned distance function is more effective for detection than using a fixed distance. Empirically, we conduct extensive experiments with over 100 settings, and find that our approach demonstrates superior performance over baseline algorithms in the majority of scenarios. In particular, it achieves relative improvements from 54.3% to 75.4% over the strongest baseline across different target LLMs (e.g., GPT, Claude, and Gemini). A python implementation of our proposal is publicly available at https://github.com/Mamba413/L2D.

Kai Ye Hongyi Zhou Jin Zhu Erhan Xu Ying Yang +1
8 Citations