The emergence of diffusion models has revolutionized the field of image generation, providing new methods for creating high-quality, high-resolution images across various applications. However, the potential of these models for generating domain-specific images, particularly remote sensing (RS) images, remains largely untapped. RS images that are notable for their high resolution, extensive coverage, and rich information content, bring new challenges that general diffusion models may not adequately address. This paper proposes CRS-Diff, a pioneering diffusion modeling framework specifically tailored for generating remote sensing imagery, leveraging the inherent advantages of diffusion models while integrating advanced control mechanisms to ensure that the imagery is not only visually clear but also enriched with geographic and temporal information. The model integrates global and local control inputs, enabling precise combinations of generation conditions to refine the generation process. A comprehensive evaluation of CRS-Diff has demonstrated its superior capability to generate RS imagery both in a single condition and multiple conditions compared with previous methods in terms of image quality and diversity.
Hyperspectral image (HSI) restoration aims at recovering clean images from degraded observations and plays a vital role in downstream tasks. Existing model-based methods have limitations in accurately modeling the complex image characteristics with handcraft priors, and deep learning-based methods suffer from poor generalization ability. To alleviate these issues, this paper proposes an unsupervised HSI restoration framework with pre-trained diffusion model (HIR-Diff), which restores the clean HSIs from the product of two low-rank components, i.e., the reduced image and the coefficient matrix. Specifically, the reduced image, which has a low spectral dimension, lies in the image field and can be inferred from our improved diffusion model where a new guidance function with total variation (TV) prior is designed to ensure that the reduced image can be well sampled. The coefficient matrix can be effectively pre-estimated based on singular value decomposition (SVD) and rank-revealing QR (RRQR) factorization. Furthermore, a novel exponential noise schedule is proposed to accelerate the restoration process (about 5$\times$ acceleration for denoising) with little performance decrease. Extensive experimental results validate the superiority of our method in both performance and speed on a variety of HSI restoration tasks, including HSI denoising, noisy HSI super-resolution, and noisy HSI inpainting. The code is available at https://github.com/LiPang/HIRDiff.
Change detection (CD) is a critical task to observe and analyze dynamic processes of land cover. Although numerous deep learning-based CD models have performed excellently, their further performance improvements are constrained by the limited knowledge extracted from the given labelled data. On the other hand, the foundation models that emerged recently contain a huge amount of knowledge by scaling up across data modalities and proxy tasks. In this paper, we propose a Bi-Temporal Adapter Network (BAN), which is a universal foundation model-based CD adaptation framework aiming to extract the knowledge of foundation models for CD. The proposed BAN contains three parts, i.e. frozen foundation model (e.g., CLIP), bitemporal adapter branch (Bi-TAB), and bridging modules between them. Specifically, the Bi-TAB can be either an existing arbitrary CD model or some hand-crafted stacked blocks. The bridging modules are designed to align the general features with the task/domain-specific features and inject the selected general knowledge into the Bi-TAB. To our knowledge, this is the first universal framework to adapt the foundation model to the CD task. Extensive experiments show the effectiveness of our BAN in improving the performance of existing CD methods (e.g., up to 4.08\% IoU improvement) with only a few additional learnable parameters. More importantly, these successful practices show us the potential of foundation models for remote sensing CD. The code is available at \url{https://github.com/likyoo/BAN} and will be supported in our Open-CD \url{https://github.com/likyoo/open-cd}.
Owing to its significant success, the prior imposed on gradient maps has consistently been a subject of great interest in the field of image processing. Total variation (TV), one of the most representative regularizers, is known for its ability to capture the intrinsic sparsity prior underlying gradient maps. Nonetheless, TV and its variants often underestimate the gradient maps, leading to the weakening of edges and details whose gradients should not be zero in the original image (i.e., image structures is not describable by sparse priors of gradient maps). Recently, total deep variation (TDV) has been introduced, assuming the sparsity of feature maps, which provides a flexible regularization learned from large-scale datasets for a specific task. However, TDV requires to retrain the network with image/task variations, limiting its versatility. To alleviate this issue, in this paper, we propose a neural gradient regularizer (NGR) that expresses the gradient map as the output of a neural network. Unlike existing methods, NGR does not rely on any subjective sparsity or other prior assumptions on image gradient maps, thereby avoiding the underestimation of gradient maps. NGR is applicable to various image types and different image processing tasks, functioning in a zero-shot learning fashion, making it a versatile and plug-and-play regularizer. Extensive experimental results demonstrate the superior performance of NGR over state-of-the-art counterparts for a range of different tasks, further validating its effectiveness and versatility.
Hyperspectral image (HSI) denoising is essentially ill-posed since a noisy HSI can be degraded from multiple clean HSIs. However, current deep learning-based approaches ignore this fact and restore the clean image with deterministic mapping (i.e., the network receives a noisy HSI and outputs a clean HSI). To alleviate this issue, this paper proposes a flow-based HSI denoising network (HIDFlowNet) to directly learn the conditional distribution of the clean HSI given the noisy HSI and thus diverse clean HSIs can be sampled from the conditional distribution. Overall, our HIDFlowNet is induced from the flow methodology and contains an invertible decoder and a conditional encoder, which can fully decouple the learning of low-frequency and high-frequency information of HSI. Specifically, the invertible decoder is built by staking a succession of invertible conditional blocks (ICBs) to capture the local high-frequency details since the invertible network is information-lossless. The conditional encoder utilizes down-sampling operations to obtain low-resolution images and uses transformers to capture correlations over a long distance so that global low-frequency information can be effectively extracted. Extensive experimental results on simulated and real HSI datasets verify the superiority of our proposed HIDFlowNet compared with other state-of-the-art methods both quantitatively and visually.
Conversational emotion recognition (CER) is an important research topic in human-computer interactions. Although deep learning (DL) based CER approaches have achieved excellent performance, existing cross-modal feature fusion methods used in these DL-based approaches either ignore the intra-modal and inter-modal emotional interaction or have high computational complexity. To address these issues, this paper develops a novel cross-modal feature fusion method for the CER task, i.e., the low-rank matching attention method (LMAM). By setting a matching weight and calculating attention scores between modal features row by row, LMAM contains fewer parameters than the self-attention method. We further utilize the low-rank decomposition method on the weight to make the parameter number of LMAM less than one-third of the self-attention. Therefore, LMAM can potentially alleviate the over-fitting issue caused by a large number of parameters. Additionally, by computing and fusing the similarity of intra-modal and inter-modal features, LMAM can also fully exploit the intra-modal contextual information within each modality and the complementary semantic information across modalities (i.e., text, video and audio) simultaneously. Experimental results on some benchmark datasets show that LMAM can be embedded into any existing state-of-the-art DL-based CER methods and help boost their performance in a plug-and-play manner. Also, experimental results verify the superiority of LMAM compared with other popular cross-modal fusion methods. Moreover, LMAM is a general cross-modal fusion method and can thus be applied to other multi-modal recognition tasks, e.g., session recommendation and humour detection.
Age estimation of face images is a crucial task with various practical applications in areas such as video surveillance and Internet access control. While deep learning-based age estimation frameworks, e.g., convolutional neural network (CNN), multi-layer perceptrons (MLP), and transformers have shown remarkable performance, they have limitations when modelling complex or irregular objects in an image that contains a large amount of redundant information. To address this issue, this paper utilizes the robustness property of graph representation learning in dealing with image redundancy information and proposes a novel Masked Contrastive Graph Representation Learning (MCGRL) method for age estimation. Specifically, our approach first leverages CNN to extract semantic features of the image, which are then partitioned into patches that serve as nodes in the graph. Then, we use a masked graph convolutional network (GCN) to derive image-based node representations that capture rich structural information. Finally, we incorporate multiple losses to explore the complementary relationship between structural information and semantic features, which improves the feature representation capability of GCN. Experimental results on real-world face image datasets demonstrate the superiority of our proposed method over other state-of-the-art age estimation approaches.
Model substructure learning aims to find an invariant network substructure that can have better out-of-distribution (OOD) generalization than the original full structure. Existing works usually search the invariant substructure using modular risk minimization (MRM) with fully exposed out-domain data, which may bring about two drawbacks: 1) Unfairness, due to the dependence of the full exposure of out-domain data; and 2) Sub-optimal OOD generalization, due to the equally feature-untargeted pruning on the whole data distribution. Based on the idea that in-distribution (ID) data with spurious features may have a lower experience risk, in this paper, we propose a novel Spurious Feature-targeted model Pruning framework, dubbed SFP, to automatically explore invariant substructures without referring to the above drawbacks. Specifically, SFP identifies spurious features within ID instances during training using our theoretically verified task loss, upon which, SFP attenuates the corresponding feature projections in model space to achieve the so-called spurious feature-targeted pruning. This is typically done by removing network branches with strong dependencies on identified spurious features, thus SFP can push the model learning toward invariant features and pull that out of spurious features and devise optimal OOD generalization. Moreover, we also conduct detailed theoretical analysis to provide the rationality guarantee and a proof framework for OOD structures via model sparsity, and for the first time, reveal how a highly biased data distribution affects the model's OOD generalization. Experiments on various OOD datasets show that SFP can significantly outperform both structure-based and non-structure-based OOD generalization SOTAs, with accuracy improvement up to 4.72% and 23.35%, respectively
Pansharpening is a process of merging a highresolution panchromatic (PAN) image and a low-resolution multispectral (LRMS) image to create a single high-resolution multispectral (HRMS) image. Most of the existing deep learningbased pansharpening methods have poor generalization ability and the traditional model-based pansharpening methods need careful manual exploration for the image structure prior. To alleviate these issues, this paper proposes an unsupervised pansharpening method by combining the diffusion model with the low-rank matrix factorization technique. Specifically, we assume that the HRMS image is decomposed into the product of two low-rank tensors, i.e., the base tensor and the coefficient matrix. The base tensor lies on the image field and has low spectral dimension, we can thus conveniently utilize a pre-trained remote sensing diffusion model to capture its image structures. Additionally, we derive a simple yet quite effective way to preestimate the coefficient matrix from the observed LRMS image, which preserves the spectral information of the HRMS. Extensive experimental results on some benchmark datasets demonstrate that our proposed method performs better than traditional model-based approaches and has better generalization ability than deep learning-based techniques. The code is released in https://github.com/xyrui/PLRDiff.