Recently, several works tackled the video editing task fostered by the success of large-scale text-to-image generative models. However, most of these methods holistically edit the frame using the text, exploiting the prior given by foundation diffusion models and focusing on improving the temporal consistency across frames. In this work, we introduce a framework that is object-centric and is designed to control both the object's appearance and, notably, to execute precise and explicit structural modifications on the object. We build our framework on a pre-trained image-conditioned diffusion model, integrate layers to handle the temporal dimension, and propose training strategies and architectural modifications to enable shape control. We evaluate our method on the image-driven video editing task showing similar performance to the state-of-the-art, and showcasing novel shape-editing capabilities. Further details, code and examples are available on our project page: https://helia95.github.io/vase-website/
The commercialization of diffusion models, renowned for their ability to generate high-quality images that are often indistinguishable from real ones, brings forth potential copyright concerns. Although attempts have been made to impede unauthorized access to copyrighted material during training and to subsequently prevent DMs from generating copyrighted images, the effectiveness of these solutions remains unverified. This study explores the vulnerabilities associated with copyright protection in DMs by introducing a backdoor data poisoning attack (SilentBadDiffusion) against text-to-image diffusion models. Our attack method operates without requiring access to or control over the diffusion model's training or fine-tuning processes; it merely involves the insertion of poisoning data into the clean training dataset. This data, comprising poisoning images equipped with prompts, is generated by leveraging the powerful capabilities of multimodal large language models and text-guided image inpainting techniques. Our experimental results and analysis confirm the method's effectiveness. By integrating a minor portion of non-copyright-infringing stealthy poisoning data into the clean dataset-rendering it free from suspicion-we can prompt the finetuned diffusion models to produce copyrighted content when activated by specific trigger prompts. These findings underline potential pitfalls in the prevailing copyright protection strategies and underscore the necessity for increased scrutiny and preventative measures against the misuse of DMs.
Diffusion and Poisson flow models have shown impressive performance in a wide range of generative tasks, including low-dose CT image denoising. However, one limitation in general, and for clinical applications in particular, is slow sampling. Due to their iterative nature, the number of function evaluations (NFE) required is usually on the order of $10-10^3$, both for conditional and unconditional generation. In this paper, we present posterior sampling Poisson flow generative models (PPFM), a novel image denoising technique for low-dose and photon-counting CT that produces excellent image quality whilst keeping NFE=1. Updating the training and sampling processes of Poisson flow generative models (PFGM)++, we learn a conditional generator which defines a trajectory between the prior noise distribution and the posterior distribution of interest. We additionally hijack and regularize the sampling process to achieve NFE=1. Our results shed light on the benefits of the PFGM++ framework compared to diffusion models. In addition, PPFM is shown to perform favorably compared to current state-of-the-art diffusion-style models with NFE=1, consistency models, as well as popular deep learning and non-deep learning-based image denoising techniques, on clinical low-dose CT images and clinical images from a prototype photon-counting CT system.
Image segmentation, real-value prediction, and cross-modal translation are critical challenges in medical imaging. In this study, we propose a versatile multi-task neural network framework, based on an enhanced Transformer U-Net architecture, capable of simultaneously, selectively, and adaptively addressing these medical image tasks. Validation is performed on a public repository of human brain MR and CT images. We decompose the traditional problem of synthesizing CT images into distinct subtasks, which include skull segmentation, Hounsfield unit (HU) value prediction, and image sequential reconstruction. To enhance the framework's versatility in handling multi-modal data, we expand the model with multiple image channels. Comparisons between synthesized CT images derived from T1-weighted and T2-Flair images were conducted, evaluating the model's capability to integrate multi-modal information from both morphological and pixel value perspectives.
In recent years, Deep Neural Networks (DNN) have emerged as a practical method for image recognition. The raw data, which contain sensitive information, are generally exploited within the training process. However, when the training process is outsourced to a third-party organization, the raw data should be desensitized before being transferred to protect sensitive information. Although masks are widely applied to hide important sensitive information, preventing inpainting masked images is critical, which may restore the sensitive information. The corresponding models should be adjusted for the masked images to reduce the degradation of the performance for recognition or classification tasks due to the desensitization of images. In this paper, we propose a mask-based image desensitization approach while supporting recognition. This approach consists of a mask generation algorithm and a model adjustment method. We propose exploiting an interpretation algorithm to maintain critical information for the recognition task in the mask generation algorithm. In addition, we propose a feature selection masknet as the model adjustment method to improve the performance based on the masked images. Extensive experimentation results based on multiple image datasets reveal significant advantages (up to 9.34% in terms of accuracy) of our approach for image desensitization while supporting recognition.
Purpose: Depth estimation in robotic surgery is vital in 3D reconstruction, surgical navigation and augmented reality visualization. Although the foundation model exhibits outstanding performance in many vision tasks, including depth estimation (e.g., DINOv2), recent works observed its limitations in medical and surgical domain-specific applications. This work presents a low-ranked adaptation (LoRA) of the foundation model for surgical depth estimation. Methods: We design a foundation model-based depth estimation method, referred to as Surgical-DINO, a low-rank adaptation of the DINOv2 for depth estimation in endoscopic surgery. We build LoRA layers and integrate them into DINO to adapt with surgery-specific domain knowledge instead of conventional fine-tuning. During training, we freeze the DINO image encoder, which shows excellent visual representation capacity, and only optimize the LoRA layers and depth decoder to integrate features from the surgical scene. Results: Our model is extensively validated on a MICCAI challenge dataset of SCARED, which is collected from da Vinci Xi endoscope surgery. We empirically show that Surgical-DINO significantly outperforms all the state-of-the-art models in endoscopic depth estimation tasks. The analysis with ablation studies has shown evidence of the remarkable effect of our LoRA layers and adaptation. Conclusion: Surgical-DINO shed some light on the successful adaptation of the foundation models into the surgical domain for depth estimation. There is clear evidence in the results that zero-shot prediction on pre-trained weights in computer vision datasets or naive fine-tuning is not sufficient to use the foundation model in the surgical domain directly. Code is available at https://github.com/BeileiCui/SurgicalDINO.
The widespread use of Text-to-Image (T2I) models in content generation requires careful examination of their safety, including their robustness to adversarial attacks. Despite extensive research into this, the reasons for their effectiveness are underexplored. This paper presents an empirical study on adversarial attacks against T2I models, focusing on analyzing factors associated with attack success rates (ASRs). We introduce a new attack objective - entity swapping using adversarial suffixes and two gradient-based attack algorithms. Human and automatic evaluations reveal the asymmetric nature of ASRs on entity swap: for example, it is easier to replace "human" with "robot" in the prompt "a human dancing in the rain." with an adversarial suffix but is significantly harder in reverse. We further propose probing metrics to establish indicative signals from the model's beliefs to the adversarial ASR. We identify conditions resulting in a 60% success probability for adversarial attacks and others where this likelihood drops below 5%.
Visual storytelling often uses nontypical aspect-ratio images like scroll paintings, comic strips, and panoramas to create an expressive and compelling narrative. While generative AI has achieved great success and shown the potential to reshape the creative industry, it remains a challenge to generate coherent and engaging content with arbitrary size and controllable style, concept, and layout, all of which are essential for visual storytelling. To overcome the shortcomings of previous methods including repetitive content, style inconsistency, and lack of controllability, we propose MagicScroll, a multi-layered, progressive diffusion-based image generation framework with a novel semantic-aware denoising process. The model enables fine-grained control over the generated image on object, scene, and background levels with text, image, and layout conditions. We also establish the first benchmark for nontypical aspect-ratio image generation for visual storytelling including mediums like paintings, comics, and cinematic panoramas, with customized metrics for systematic evaluation. Through comparative and ablation studies, MagicScroll showcases promising results in aligning with the narrative text, improving visual coherence, and engaging the audience. We plan to release the code and benchmark in the hope of a better collaboration between AI researchers and creative practitioners involving visual storytelling.
Domain adaptation is crucial in aerial imagery, as the visual representation of these images can significantly vary based on factors such as geographic location, time, and weather conditions. Additionally, high-resolution aerial images often require substantial storage space and may not be readily accessible to the public. To address these challenges, we propose a novel Source-Free Object Detection (SFOD) method. Specifically, our approach is built upon a self-training framework; however, self-training can lead to inaccurate learning in the absence of labeled training data. To address this issue, we further integrate Contrastive Language-Image Pre-training (CLIP) to guide the generation of pseudo-labels, termed CLIP-guided Aggregation. By leveraging CLIP's zero-shot classification capability, we use it to aggregate scores with the original predicted bounding boxes, enabling us to obtain refined scores for the pseudo-labels. To validate the effectiveness of our method, we constructed two new datasets from different domains based on the DIOR dataset, named DIOR-C and DIOR-Cloudy. Experiments demonstrate that our method outperforms other comparative algorithms.
We introduce a Cascaded Diffusion Model (Cas-DM) that improves a Denoising Diffusion Probabilistic Model (DDPM) by effectively incorporating additional metric functions in training. Metric functions such as the LPIPS loss have been proven highly effective in consistency models derived from the score matching. However, for the diffusion counterparts, the methodology and efficacy of adding extra metric functions remain unclear. One major challenge is the mismatch between the noise predicted by a DDPM at each step and the desired clean image that the metric function works well on. To address this problem, we propose Cas-DM, a network architecture that cascades two network modules to effectively apply metric functions to the diffusion model training. The first module, similar to a standard DDPM, learns to predict the added noise and is unaffected by the metric function. The second cascaded module learns to predict the clean image, thereby facilitating the metric function computation. Experiment results show that the proposed diffusion model backbone enables the effective use of the LPIPS loss, leading to state-of-the-art image quality (FID, sFID, IS) on various established benchmarks.