Blind deconvolution is an ill-posed problem arising in various fields ranging from microscopy to astronomy. The ill-posed nature of the problem requires adequate priors to arrive to a desirable solution. Recently, it has been shown that deep learning architectures can serve as an image generation prior during unsupervised blind deconvolution optimization, however often exhibiting a performance fluctuation even on a single image. We propose to use Wiener-deconvolution to guide the image generator during optimization by providing it a sharpened version of the blurry image using an auxiliary kernel estimate starting from a Gaussian. We observe that the high-frequency artifacts of deconvolution are reproduced with a delay compared to low-frequency features. In addition, the image generator reproduces low-frequency features of the deconvolved image faster than that of a blurry image. We embed the computational process in a constrained optimization framework and show that the proposed method yields higher stability and performance across multiple datasets. In addition, we provide the code.
Image-to-image (I2I) translation is an established way of translating data from one domain to another but the usability of the translated images in the target domain when working with such dissimilar domains as the SAR/optical satellite imagery ones and how much of the origin domain is translated to the target domain is still not clear enough. This article address this by performing translations of labelled datasets from the optical domain to the SAR domain with different I2I algorithms from the state-of-the-art, learning from transferred features in the destination domain and evaluating later how much from the original dataset was transferred. Added to this, stacking is proposed as a way of combining the knowledge learned from the different I2I translations and evaluated against single models.
The capacity to achieve out-of-distribution (OOD) generalization is a hallmark of human intelligence and yet remains out of reach for machines. This remarkable capability has been attributed to our abilities to make conceptual abstraction and analogy, and to a mechanism known as indirection, which binds two representations and uses one representation to refer to the other. Inspired by these mechanisms, we hypothesize that OOD generalization may be achieved by performing analogy-making and indirection in the functional space instead of the data space as in current methods. To realize this, we design FINE (Functional Indirection Neural Estimator), a neural framework that learns to compose functions that map data input to output on-the-fly. FINE consists of a backbone network and a trainable semantic memory of basis weight matrices. Upon seeing a new input-output data pair, FINE dynamically constructs the backbone weights by mixing the basis weights. The mixing coefficients are indirectly computed through querying a separate corresponding semantic memory using the data pair. We demonstrate empirically that FINE can strongly improve out-of-distribution generalization on IQ tasks that involve geometric transformations. In particular, we train FINE and competing models on IQ tasks using images from the MNIST, Omniglot and CIFAR100 datasets and test on tasks with unseen image classes from one or different datasets and unseen transformation rules. FINE not only achieves the best performance on all tasks but also is able to adapt to small-scale data scenarios.
Attention networks have successfully boosted accuracy in various vision problems. Previous works lay emphasis on designing a new self-attention module and follow the traditional paradigm that individually plugs the modules into each layer of a network. However, such a paradigm inevitably increases the extra parameter cost with the growth of the number of layers. From the dynamical system perspective of the residual neural network, we find that the feature maps from the layers of the same stage are homogenous, which inspires us to propose a novel-and-simple framework, called the dense and implicit attention (DIA) unit, that shares a single attention module throughout different network layers. With our framework, the parameter cost is independent of the number of layers and we further improve the accuracy of existing popular self-attention modules with significant parameter reduction without any elaborated model crafting. Extensive experiments on benchmark datasets show that the DIA is capable of emphasizing layer-wise feature interrelation and thus leads to significant improvement in various vision tasks, including image classification, object detection, and medical application. Furthermore, the effectiveness of the DIA unit is demonstrated by novel experiments where we destabilize the model training by (1) removing the skip connection of the residual neural network, (2) removing the batch normalization of the model, and (3) removing all data augmentation during training. In these cases, we verify that DIA has a strong regularization ability to stabilize the training, i.e., the dense and implicit connections formed by our method can effectively recover and enhance the information communication across layers and the value of the gradient thus alleviate the training instability.
Fine-grained image classification is a challenging computer vision task where various species share similar visual appearances, resulting in misclassification if merely based on visual clues. Therefore, it is helpful to leverage additional information, e.g., the locations and dates for data shooting, which can be easily accessible but rarely exploited. In this paper, we first demonstrate that existing multimodal methods fuse multiple features only on a single dimension, which essentially has insufficient help in feature discrimination. To fully explore the potential of multimodal information, we propose a dynamic MLP on top of the image representation, which interacts with multimodal features at a higher and broader dimension. The dynamic MLP is an efficient structure parameterized by the learned embeddings of variable locations and dates. It can be regarded as an adaptive nonlinear projection for generating more discriminative image representations in visual tasks. To our best knowledge, it is the first attempt to explore the idea of dynamic networks to exploit multimodal information in fine-grained image classification tasks. Extensive experiments demonstrate the effectiveness of our method. The t-SNE algorithm visually indicates that our technique improves the recognizability of image representations that are visually similar but with different categories. Furthermore, among published works across multiple fine-grained datasets, dynamic MLP consistently achieves SOTA results https://paperswithcode.com/dataset/inaturalist and takes third place in the iNaturalist challenge at FGVC8 https://www.kaggle.com/c/inaturalist-2021/leaderboard. Code is available at https://github.com/ylingfeng/DynamicMLP.git
Deep learning driven joint source-channel coding (JSCC) for wireless image or video transmission, also called DeepJSCC, has been a topic of interest recently with very promising results. The idea is to map similar source samples to nearby points in the channel input space such that, despite the noise introduced by the channel, the input can be recovered with minimal distortion. In DeepJSCC, this is achieved by an autoencoder architecture with a non-trainable channel layer between the encoder and decoder. DeepJSCC has many favorable properties, such as better end-to-end distortion performance than its separate source and channel coding counterpart as well as graceful degradation with respect to channel quality. However, due to the inherent correlation between the source sample and channel input, DeepJSCC is vulnerable to eavesdropping attacks. In this paper, we propose the first DeepJSCC scheme for wireless image transmission that is secure against eavesdroppers, called DeepJSCEC. DeepJSCEC not only preserves the favorable properties of DeepJSCC, it also provides security against chosen-plaintext attacks from the eavesdropper, without the need to make assumptions about the eavesdropper's channel condition, or its intended use of the intercepted signal. Numerical results show that DeepJSCEC achieves similar or better image quality than separate source coding using BPG compression, AES encryption, and LDPC codes for channel coding, while preserving the graceful degradation of image quality with respect to channel quality. We also show that the proposed encryption method is problem agnostic, meaning it can be applied to other end-to-end JSCC problems, such as remote classification, without modification. Given the importance of security in modern wireless communication systems, we believe this work brings DeepJSCC schemes much closer to adoption in practice.
Space-based infrared tiny ship detection aims at separating tiny ships from the images captured by earth orbiting satellites. Due to the extremely large image coverage area (e.g., thousands square kilometers), candidate targets in these images are much smaller, dimer, more changeable than those targets observed by aerial-based and land-based imaging devices. Existing short imaging distance-based infrared datasets and target detection methods cannot be well adopted to the space-based surveillance task. To address these problems, we develop a space-based infrared tiny ship detection dataset (namely, NUDT-SIRST-Sea) with 48 space-based infrared images and 17598 pixel-level tiny ship annotations. Each image covers about 10000 square kilometers of area with 10000X10000 pixels. Considering the extreme characteristics (e.g., small, dim, changeable) of those tiny ships in such challenging scenes, we propose a multi-level TransUNet (MTU-Net) in this paper. Specifically, we design a Vision Transformer (ViT) Convolutional Neural Network (CNN) hybrid encoder to extract multi-level features. Local feature maps are first extracted by several convolution layers and then fed into the multi-level feature extraction module (MVTM) to capture long-distance dependency. We further propose a copy-rotate-resize-paste (CRRP) data augmentation approach to accelerate the training phase, which effectively alleviates the issue of sample imbalance between targets and background. Besides, we design a FocalIoU loss to achieve both target localization and shape description. Experimental results on the NUDT-SIRST-Sea dataset show that our MTU-Net outperforms traditional and existing deep learning based SIRST methods in terms of probability of detection, false alarm rate and intersection over union.
In this paper, we present the Multi-Forgery Detection Challenge held concurrently with the IEEE Computer Society Workshop on Biometrics at CVPR 2022. Our Multi-Forgery Detection Challenge aims to detect automatic image manipulations including but not limited to image editing, image synthesis, image generation, image photoshop, etc. Our challenge has attracted 674 teams from all over the world, with about 2000 valid result submission counts. We invited the Top 10 teams to present their solutions to the challenge, from which three teams are awarded prizes in the grand finale. In this paper, we present the solutions from the Top 3 teams, in order to boost the research work in the field of image forgery detection.
Images acquired during underwater activities suffer from environmental properties of the water, such as turbidity and light attenuation. These phenomena cause color distortion, blurring, and contrast reduction. In addition, irregular ambient light distribution causes color channel unbalance and regions with high-intensity pixels. Recent works related to underwater image enhancement, and based on deep learning approaches, tackle the lack of paired datasets generating synthetic ground-truth. In this paper, we present a self-supervised learning methodology for underwater image enhancement based on deep learning that requires no paired datasets. The proposed method estimates the degradation present in underwater images. Besides, an autoencoder reconstructs this image, and its output image is degraded using the estimated degradation information. Therefore, the strategy replaces the output image with the degraded version in the loss function during the training phase. This procedure \textit{misleads} the neural network that learns to compensate the additional degradation. As a result, the reconstructed image is an enhanced version of the input image. Also, the algorithm presents an attention module to reduce high-intensity areas generated in enhanced images by color channel unbalances and outlier regions. Furthermore, the proposed methodology requires no ground-truth. Besides, only real underwater images were used to train the neural network, and the results indicate the effectiveness of the method in terms of color preservation, color cast reduction, and contrast improvement.
We consider a new problem of few-shot learning of compact models. Meta-learning is a popular approach for few-shot learning. Previous work in meta-learning typically assumes that the model architecture during meta-training is the same as the model architecture used for final deployment. In this paper, we challenge this basic assumption. For final deployment, we often need the model to be small. But small models usually do not have enough capacity to effectively adapt to new tasks. In the mean time, we often have access to the large dataset and extensive computing power during meta-training since meta-training is typically performed on a server. In this paper, we propose task-specific meta distillation that simultaneously learns two models in meta-learning: a large teacher model and a small student model. These two models are jointly learned during meta-training. Given a new task during meta-testing, the teacher model is first adapted to this task, then the adapted teacher model is used to guide the adaptation of the student model. The adapted student model is used for final deployment. We demonstrate the effectiveness of our approach in few-shot image classification using model-agnostic meta-learning (MAML). Our proposed method outperforms other alternatives on several benchmark datasets.