Deep neural networks (DNN) are commonly used to denoise and sharpen X-ray computed tomography (CT) images with the goal of reducing patient X-ray dosage while maintaining reconstruction quality. However, naive application of DNN-based methods can result in image texture that is undesirable in clinical applications. Alternatively, generative adversarial network (GAN) based methods can produce appropriate texture, but naive application of GANs can introduce inaccurate or even unreal image detail. In this paper, we propose a texture matching generative adversarial network (TMGAN) that enhances CT images while generating an image texture that can be matched to a target texture. We use parallel generators to separate anatomical features from the generated texture, which allows the GAN to be trained to match the desired texture without directly affecting the underlying CT image. We demonstrate that TMGAN generates enhanced image quality while also producing image texture that is desirable for clinical application.
How to efficiently and accurately handle image matching outliers is a critical issue in two-view relative estimation. The prevailing RANSAC method necessitates that the minimal point pairs be inliers. This paper introduces a linear relative pose estimation algorithm for n $( n \geq 6$) point pairs, which is founded on the recent pose-only imaging geometry to filter out outliers by proper reweighting. The proposed algorithm is able to handle planar degenerate scenes, and enhance robustness and accuracy in the presence of a substantial ratio of outliers. Specifically, we embed the linear global translation (LiGT) constraint into the strategies of iteratively reweighted least-squares (IRLS) and RANSAC so as to realize robust outlier removal. Simulations and real tests of the Strecha dataset show that the proposed algorithm achieves relative rotation accuracy improvement of 2 $\sim$ 10 times in face of as large as 80% outliers.
Convolutional Neural Networks (CNNs) and Vision Transformers (ViTs) stand as the two most popular foundation models for visual representation learning. While CNNs exhibit remarkable scalability with linear complexity w.r.t. image resolution, ViTs surpass them in fitting capabilities despite contending with quadratic complexity. A closer inspection reveals that ViTs achieve superior visual modeling performance through the incorporation of global receptive fields and dynamic weights. This observation motivates us to propose a novel architecture that inherits these components while enhancing computational efficiency. To this end, we draw inspiration from the recently introduced state space model and propose the Visual State Space Model (VMamba), which achieves linear complexity without sacrificing global receptive fields. To address the encountered direction-sensitive issue, we introduce the Cross-Scan Module (CSM) to traverse the spatial domain and convert any non-causal visual image into order patch sequences. Extensive experimental results substantiate that VMamba not only demonstrates promising capabilities across various visual perception tasks, but also exhibits more pronounced advantages over established benchmarks as the image resolution increases. Source code has been available at https://github.com/MzeroMiko/VMamba.
Neural style transfer (NST) is widely adopted in computer vision to generate new images with arbitrary styles. This process leverages neural networks to merge aesthetic elements of a style image with the structural aspects of a content image into a harmoniously integrated visual result. However, unauthorized NST can exploit artwork. Such misuse raises socio-technical concerns regarding artists' rights and motivates the development of technical approaches for the proactive protection of original creations. Adversarial attack is a concept primarily explored in machine learning security. Our work introduces this technique to protect artists' intellectual property. In this paper Locally Adaptive Adversarial Color Attack (LAACA), a method for altering images in a manner imperceptible to the human eyes but disruptive to NST. Specifically, we design perturbations targeting image areas rich in high-frequency content, generated by disrupting intermediate features. Our experiments and user study confirm that by attacking NST using the proposed method results in visually worse neural style transfer, thus making it an effective solution for visual artwork protection.
Advancements in machine learning (ML) have significantly revolutionized medical image analysis, prompting hospitals to rely on external ML services. However, the exchange of sensitive patient data, such as chest X-rays, poses inherent privacy risks when shared with third parties. Addressing this concern, we propose MedBlindTuner, a privacy-preserving framework leveraging fully homomorphic encryption (FHE) and a data-efficient image transformer (DEiT). MedBlindTuner enables the training of ML models exclusively on FHE-encrypted medical images. Our experimental evaluation demonstrates that MedBlindTuner achieves comparable accuracy to models trained on non-encrypted images, offering a secure solution for outsourcing ML computations while preserving patient data privacy. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first work that uses data-efficient image transformers and fully homomorphic encryption in this domain.
Recent advances in implicit function-based approaches have shown promising results in 3D human reconstruction from a single RGB image. However, these methods are not sufficient to extend to more general cases, often generating dragged or disconnected body parts, particularly for animated characters. We argue that these limitations stem from the use of the existing point-level 3D shape representation, which lacks holistic 3D context understanding. Voxel-based reconstruction methods are more suitable for capturing the entire 3D space at once, however, these methods are not practical for high-resolution reconstructions due to their excessive memory usage. To address these challenges, we introduce Tri-directional Implicit Function (TIFu), which is a vector-level representation that increases global 3D consistencies while significantly reducing memory usage compared to voxel representations. We also introduce a new algorithm in 3D reconstruction at an arbitrary resolution by aggregating vectors along three orthogonal axes, resolving inherent problems with regressing fixed dimension of vectors. Our approach achieves state-of-the-art performances in both our self-curated character dataset and the benchmark 3D human dataset. We provide both quantitative and qualitative analyses to support our findings.
Wasserstein Gradient Flows (WGF) with respect to specific functionals have been widely used in the machine learning literature. Recently, neural networks have been adopted to approximate certain intractable parts of the underlying Wasserstein gradient flow and result in efficient inference procedures. In this paper, we introduce the Neural Sinkhorn Gradient Flow (NSGF) model, which parametrizes the time-varying velocity field of the Wasserstein gradient flow w.r.t. the Sinkhorn divergence to the target distribution starting a given source distribution. We utilize the velocity field matching training scheme in NSGF, which only requires samples from the source and target distribution to compute an empirical velocity field approximation. Our theoretical analyses show that as the sample size increases to infinity, the mean-field limit of the empirical approximation converges to the true underlying velocity field. To further enhance model efficiency on high-dimensional tasks, a two-phase NSGF++ model is devised, which first follows the Sinkhorn flow to approach the image manifold quickly ($\le 5$ NFEs) and then refines the samples along a simple straight flow. Numerical experiments with synthetic and real-world benchmark datasets support our theoretical results and demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed methods.
Deep clustering has gained significant attention due to its capability in learning clustering-friendly representations without labeled data. However, previous deep clustering methods tend to treat all samples equally, which neglect the variance in the latent distribution and the varying difficulty in classifying or clustering different samples. To address this, this paper proposes a novel end-to-end deep clustering method with diffused sampling and hardness-aware self-distillation (HaDis). Specifically, we first align one view of instances with another view via diffused sampling alignment (DSA), which helps improve the intra-cluster compactness. To alleviate the sampling bias, we present the hardness-aware self-distillation (HSD) mechanism to mine the hardest positive and negative samples and adaptively adjust their weights in a self-distillation fashion, which is able to deal with the potential imbalance in sample contributions during optimization. Further, the prototypical contrastive learning is incorporated to simultaneously enhance the inter-cluster separability and intra-cluster compactness. Experimental results on five challenging image datasets demonstrate the superior clustering performance of our HaDis method over the state-of-the-art. Source code is available at https://github.com/Regan-Zhang/HaDis.
Recent deep-learning-based single image super-resolution (SISR) methods have shown impressive performance whereas typical methods train their networks by minimizing the pixel-wise distance with respect to a given high-resolution (HR) image. However, despite the basic training scheme being the predominant choice, its use in the context of ill-posed inverse problems has not been thoroughly investigated. In this work, we aim to provide a better comprehension of the underlying constituent by decomposing target HR images into two subcomponents: (1) the optimal centroid which is the expectation over multiple potential HR images, and (2) the inherent noise defined as the residual between the HR image and the centroid. Our findings show that the current training scheme cannot capture the ill-posed nature of SISR and becomes vulnerable to the inherent noise term, especially during early training steps. To tackle this issue, we propose a novel optimization method that can effectively remove the inherent noise term in the early steps of vanilla training by estimating the optimal centroid and directly optimizing toward the estimation. Experimental results show that the proposed method can effectively enhance the stability of vanilla training, leading to overall performance gain. Codes are available at github.com/2minkyulee/ECO.
Face anti-spoofing is crucial for ensuring the security and reliability of face recognition systems. Several existing face anti-spoofing methods utilize GAN-like networks to detect presentation attacks by estimating the noise pattern of a spoof image and recovering the corresponding genuine image. But GAN's limited face appearance space results in the denoised faces cannot cover the full data distribution of genuine faces, thereby undermining the generalization performance of such methods. In this work, we present a pioneering attempt to employ diffusion models to denoise a spoof image and restore the genuine image. The difference between these two images is considered as the spoof noise, which can serve as a discriminative cue for face anti-spoofing. We evaluate our proposed method on several intra-testing and inter-testing protocols, where the experimental results showcase the effectiveness of our method in achieving competitive performance in terms of both accuracy and generalization.