Abstract:In web data, product images are central to boosting user engagement and advertising efficacy on e-commerce platforms, yet the intrusive elements such as watermarks and promotional text remain major obstacles to delivering clear and appealing product visuals. Although diffusion-based inpainting methods have advanced, they still face challenges in commercial settings due to unreliable object removal and limited domain-specific adaptation. To tackle these challenges, we propose Repainter, a reinforcement learning framework that integrates spatial-matting trajectory refinement with Group Relative Policy Optimization (GRPO). Our approach modulates attention mechanisms to emphasize background context, generating higher-reward samples and reducing unwanted object insertion. We also introduce a composite reward mechanism that balances global, local, and semantic constraints, effectively reducing visual artifacts and reward hacking. Additionally, we contribute EcomPaint-100K, a high-quality, large-scale e-commerce inpainting dataset, and a standardized benchmark EcomPaint-Bench for fair evaluation. Extensive experiments demonstrate that Repainter significantly outperforms state-of-the-art methods, especially in challenging scenes with intricate compositions. We will release our code and weights upon acceptance.
Abstract:Recently, significant advancements have been made in diffusion-based visual text generation models. Although the effectiveness of these methods in visual text rendering is rapidly improving, they still encounter challenges such as inaccurate characters and strokes when rendering complex visual text. In this paper, we propose CharGen, a highly accurate character-level visual text generation and editing model. Specifically, CharGen employs a character-level multimodal encoder that not only extracts character-level text embeddings but also encodes glyph images character by character. This enables it to capture fine-grained cross-modality features more effectively. Additionally, we introduce a new perceptual loss in CharGen to enhance character shape supervision and address the issue of inaccurate strokes in generated text. It is worth mentioning that CharGen can be integrated into existing diffusion models to generate visual text with high accuracy. CharGen significantly improves text rendering accuracy, outperforming recent methods in public benchmarks such as AnyText-benchmark and MARIO-Eval, with improvements of more than 8% and 6%, respectively. Notably, CharGen achieved a 5.5% increase in accuracy on Chinese test sets.