Recently, Class-Agnostic Counting (CAC) problem has garnered increasing attention owing to its intriguing generality and superior efficiency compared to Category-Specific Counting (CSC). This paper proposes a novel ExpressCount to enhance zero-shot object counting by delving deeply into language-guided exemplar learning. Specifically, the ExpressCount is comprised of an innovative Language-oriented Exemplar Perceptron and a downstream visual Zero-shot Counting pipeline. Thereinto, the perceptron hammers at exploiting accurate exemplar cues from collaborative language-vision signals by inheriting rich semantic priors from the prevailing pre-trained Large Language Models (LLMs), whereas the counting pipeline excels in mining fine-grained features through dual-branch and cross-attention schemes, contributing to the high-quality similarity learning. Apart from building a bridge between the LLM in vogue and the visual counting tasks, expression-guided exemplar estimation significantly advances zero-shot learning capabilities for counting instances with arbitrary classes. Moreover, devising a FSC-147-Express with annotations of meticulous linguistic expressions pioneers a new venue for developing and validating language-based counting models. Extensive experiments demonstrate the state-of-the-art performance of our ExpressCount, even showcasing the accuracy on par with partial CSC models.
Over the past decade, visual gaze estimation has garnered growing attention within the research community, thanks to its wide-ranging application scenarios. While existing estimation approaches have achieved remarkable success in enhancing prediction accuracy, they primarily infer gaze directions from single-image signals and discard the huge potentials of the currently dominant text guidance. Notably, visual-language collaboration has been extensively explored across a range of visual tasks, such as image synthesis and manipulation, leveraging the remarkable transferability of large-scale Contrastive Language-Image Pre-training (CLIP) model. Nevertheless, existing gaze estimation approaches ignore the rich semantic cues conveyed by linguistic signals and priors in CLIP feature space, thereby yielding performance setbacks. In pursuit of making up this gap, we delve deeply into the text-eye collaboration protocol and introduce a novel gaze estimation framework in this paper, referred to as GazeCLIP. Specifically, we intricately design a linguistic description generator to produce text signals with coarse directional cues. Additionally, a CLIP-based backbone that excels in characterizing text-eye pairs for gaze estimation is presented. This is followed by the implementation of a fine-grained multi-modal fusion module aimed at modeling the interrelationships between heterogeneous inputs. Extensive experiments on three challenging datasets demonstrate the superiority of the proposed GazeCLIP which surpasses the previous approaches and achieves the state-of-the-art estimation accuracy.
This paper focuses on the recently popular task of point cloud completion guided by multimodal information. Although existing methods have achieved excellent performance by fusing auxiliary images, there are still some deficiencies, including the poor generalization ability of the model and insufficient fine-grained semantic information for extracted features. In this work, we propose a novel multimodal fusion network for point cloud completion, which can simultaneously fuse visual and textual information to predict the semantic and geometric characteristics of incomplete shapes effectively. Specifically, to overcome the lack of prior information caused by the small-scale dataset, we employ a pre-trained vision-language model that is trained with a large amount of image-text pairs. Therefore, the textual and visual encoders of this large-scale model have stronger generalization ability. Then, we propose a multi-stage feature fusion strategy to fuse the textual and visual features into the backbone network progressively. Meanwhile, to further explore the effectiveness of fine-grained text descriptions for point cloud completion, we also build a text corpus with fine-grained descriptions, which can provide richer geometric details for 3D shapes. The rich text descriptions can be used for training and evaluating our network. Extensive quantitative and qualitative experiments demonstrate the superior performance of our method compared to state-of-the-art point cloud completion networks.
Recently, talking face generation has drawn ever-increasing attention from the research community in computer vision due to its arduous challenges and widespread application scenarios, e.g. movie animation and virtual anchor. Although persevering efforts have been undertaken to enhance the fidelity and lip-sync quality of generated talking face videos, there is still large room for further improvements of synthesis quality and efficiency. Actually, these attempts somewhat ignore the explorations of fine-granularity feature extraction/integration and the consistency between probability distributions of landmarks, thereby recurring the issues of local details blurring and degraded fidelity. To mitigate these dilemmas, in this paper, a novel CLIP-based Attention and Probability Map Guided Network (CPNet) is delicately designed for inferring high-fidelity talking face videos. Specifically, considering the demands of fine-grained feature recalibration, a clip-based attention condenser is exploited to transfer knowledge with rich semantic priors from the prevailing CLIP model. Moreover, to guarantee the consistency in probability space and suppress the landmark ambiguity, we creatively propose the density map of facial landmark as auxiliary supervisory signal to guide the landmark distribution learning of generated frame. Extensive experiments on the widely-used benchmark dataset demonstrate the superiority of our CPNet against state of the arts in terms of image and lip-sync quality. In addition, a cohort of studies are also conducted to ablate the impacts of the individual pivotal components.
The ever-increasing demands for intuitive interactions in Virtual Reality has triggered a boom in the realm of Facial Expression Recognition (FER). To address the limitations in existing approaches (e.g., narrow receptive fields and homogenous supervisory signals) and further cement the capacity of FER tools, a novel multifarious supervision-steering Transformer for FER in the wild is proposed in this paper. Referred as FER-former, our approach features multi-granularity embedding integration, hybrid self-attention scheme, and heterogeneous domain-steering supervision. In specific, to dig deep into the merits of the combination of features provided by prevailing CNNs and Transformers, a hybrid stem is designed to cascade two types of learning paradigms simultaneously. Wherein, a FER-specific transformer mechanism is devised to characterize conventional hard one-hot label-focusing and CLIP-based text-oriented tokens in parallel for final classification. To ease the issue of annotation ambiguity, a heterogeneous domains-steering supervision module is proposed to make image features also have text-space semantic correlations by supervising the similarity between image features and text features. On top of the collaboration of multifarious token heads, diverse global receptive fields with multi-modal semantic cues are captured, thereby delivering superb learning capability. Extensive experiments on popular benchmarks demonstrate the superiority of the proposed FER-former over the existing state-of-the-arts.
The class-agnostic counting (CAC) problem has caught increasing attention recently due to its wide societal applications and arduous challenges. To count objects of different categories, existing approaches rely on user-provided exemplars, which is hard-to-obtain and limits their generality. In this paper, we aim to empower the framework to recognize adaptive exemplars within the whole images. A zero-shot Generalized Counting Network (GCNet) is developed, which uses a pseudo-Siamese structure to automatically and effectively learn pseudo exemplar clues from inherent repetition patterns. In addition, a weakly-supervised scheme is presented to reduce the burden of laborious density maps required by all contemporary CAC models, allowing GCNet to be trained using count-level supervisory signals in an end-to-end manner. Without providing any spatial location hints, GCNet is capable of adaptively capturing them through a carefully-designed self-similarity learning strategy. Extensive experiments and ablation studies on the prevailing benchmark FSC147 for zero-shot CAC demonstrate the superiority of our GCNet. It performs on par with existing exemplar-dependent methods and shows stunning cross-dataset generality on crowd-specific datasets, e.g., ShanghaiTech Part A, Part B and UCF_QNRF.
Federated Learning (FL) is a new decentralized learning used for training machine learning algorithms where a global model iteratively gathers the parameters of local models but does not access their local data. A key challenge in FL is to handle the heterogeneity of local data distribution, resulting in a drifted global model, which is hard to converge. To cope with this challenge, current methods adopt different strategies like knowledge distillation, weighted model aggregation, and multi-task learning, as regulation. We refer to these approaches as asynchronous FL since they align user models in either a local or post-hoc manner where model drift has already happened or has been underestimated. In this paper, we propose an active and synchronous correlation approach to solve the challenge of user heterogeneity in FL. Specifically, we aim to approximate FL as the standard deep learning by actively and synchronously scheduling user learning pace in each round with a dynamic multi-phase curriculum. A global curriculum ensembles all user curriculum on its server by the auto-regressive auto-encoder. Then the global curriculum is divided into multiple phases and broadcast to users to measure and align the domain-agnostic learning pace. Empirical studies demonstrate that our approach equips FL with state-of-the-art generalization performance over existing asynchronous approaches, even facing severe user heterogeneity.
Existing state-of-the-art crowd counting algorithms rely excessively on location-level annotations, which are burdensome to acquire. When only count-level (weak) supervisory signals are available, it is arduous and error-prone to regress total counts due to the lack of explicit spatial constraints. To address this issue, a novel and efficient counter (referred to as CrowdMLP) is presented, which probes into modelling global dependencies of embeddings and regressing total counts by devising a multi-granularity MLP regressor. In specific, a locally-focused pre-trained frontend is cascaded to extract crude feature maps with intrinsic spatial cues, which prevent the model from collapsing into trivial outcomes. The crude embeddings, along with raw crowd scenes, are tokenized at different granularity levels. The multi-granularity MLP then proceeds to mix tokens at the dimensions of cardinality, channel, and spatial for mining global information. An effective proxy task, namely Split-Counting, is also proposed to evade the barrier of limited samples and the shortage of spatial hints in a self-supervised manner. Extensive experiments demonstrate that CrowdMLP significantly outperforms existing weakly-supervised counting algorithms and performs on par with state-of-the-art location-level supervised approaches.
The task of few-shot visual dubbing focuses on synchronizing the lip movements with arbitrary speech input for any talking head video. Albeit moderate improvements in current approaches, they commonly require high-quality homologous data sources of videos and audios, thus causing the failure to leverage heterogeneous data sufficiently. In practice, it may be intractable to collect the perfect homologous data in some cases, for example, audio-corrupted or picture-blurry videos. To explore this kind of data and support high-fidelity few-shot visual dubbing, in this paper, we novelly propose a simple yet efficient two-stage framework with a higher flexibility of mining heterogeneous data. Specifically, our two-stage paradigm employs facial landmarks as intermediate prior of latent representations and disentangles the lip movements prediction from the core task of realistic talking head generation. By this means, our method makes it possible to independently utilize the training corpus for two-stage sub-networks using more available heterogeneous data easily acquired. Besides, thanks to the disentanglement, our framework allows a further fine-tuning for a given talking head, thereby leading to better speaker-identity preserving in the final synthesized results. Moreover, the proposed method can also transfer appearance features from others to the target speaker. Extensive experimental results demonstrate the superiority of our proposed method in generating highly realistic videos synchronized with the speech over the state-of-the-art.