arXiv:2510.24058v2 Announce Type: replace-cross
Abstract: Multi-sensory systems for embodied intelligence, from wearable body-sensor networks to instrumented robotic platforms, routinely face a sensor-asymmetry problem: the richest modality available during laboratory data collection is absent or impractical at deployment time due to cost, fragility, or interference with physical interaction. We introduce PULSE, a general framework for privileged knowledge transfer from an information-rich teacher sensor to a set of cheaper, deployment-ready student sensors. Each student encoder produces shared (modality-invariant) and private (modality-specific) embeddings; the shared subspace is aligned across modalities and then matched to representations of a frozen teacher via multi-layer hidden-state and pooled-embedding distillation. Private embeddings preserve modality-specific structure needed for self-supervised reconstruction, which we show is critical to prevent representational collapse. We instantiate PULSE on the wearable stress-monitoring task, using electrodermal activity (EDA) as the privileged teacher and ECG, BVP, accelerometry, and temperature as students. On the WESAD benchmark under leave-one-subject-out evaluation, PULSE achieves 0.994 AUROC and 0.988 AUPRC (0.965/0.955 on STRESS) without EDA at inference, exceeding all no-EDA baselines and matching the performance of a full-sensor model that retains EDA at test time. We further demonstrate modality-agnostic transfer with ECG as teacher, provide extensive ablations on hidden-state matching depth, shared-private capacity, hinge-loss margin, fusion strategy, and modality dropout, and discuss how the framework generalizes to broader embodied sensing scenarios involving tactile, inertial, and bioelectrical modalities.
Assessing nurses’ attitudes toward artificial intelligence in Kazakhstan: psychometric validation of a nine-item scale
BackgroundArtificial intelligence (AI) is increasingly integrated into healthcare, yet the attitudes and knowledge of nurses, who are the key mediators of AI implementation, remain underexplored.



