Contrastive Language-Image Pre-training (CLIP) plays an essential role in extracting valuable content information from images across diverse tasks. It aligns textual and visual modalities to comprehend the entire image, including all the details, even those irrelevant to specific tasks. However, for a finer understanding and controlled editing of images, it becomes crucial to focus on specific regions of interest, which can be indicated as points, masks, or boxes by humans or perception models. To fulfill the requirements, we introduce Alpha-CLIP, an enhanced version of CLIP with an auxiliary alpha channel to suggest attentive regions and fine-tuned with constructed millions of RGBA region-text pairs. Alpha-CLIP not only preserves the visual recognition ability of CLIP but also enables precise control over the emphasis of image contents. It demonstrates effectiveness in various tasks, including but not limited to open-world recognition, multimodal large language models, and conditional 2D / 3D generation. It has a strong potential to serve as a versatile tool for image-related tasks.
This paper discusses the role of Transfer Learning (TL) and transformers in cancer detection based on image analysis. With the enormous evolution of cancer patients, the identification of cancer cells in a patient's body has emerged as a trend in the field of Artificial Intelligence (AI). This process involves analyzing medical images, such as Computed Tomography (CT) scans and Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRIs), to identify abnormal growths that may help in cancer detection. Many techniques and methods have been realized to improve the quality and performance of cancer classification and detection, such as TL, which allows the transfer of knowledge from one task to another with the same task or domain. TL englobes many methods, particularly those used in image analysis, such as transformers and Convolutional Neural Network (CNN) models trained on the ImageNet dataset. This paper analyzes and criticizes each method of TL based on image analysis and compares the results of each method, showing that transformers have achieved the best results with an accuracy of 97.41% for colon cancer detection and 94.71% for Histopathological Lung cancer. Future directions for cancer detection based on image analysis are also discussed.
The misuse of AI imagery can have harmful societal effects, prompting the creation of detectors to combat issues like the spread of fake news. Existing methods can effectively detect images generated by seen generators, but it is challenging to detect those generated by unseen generators. They do not concentrate on amplifying the output discrepancy when detectors process real versus fake images. This results in a close output distribution of real and fake samples, increasing classification difficulty in detecting unseen generators. This paper addresses the unseen-generator detection problem by considering this task from the perspective of anomaly detection and proposes an adversarial teacher-student discrepancy-aware framework. Our method encourages smaller output discrepancies between the student and the teacher models for real images while aiming for larger discrepancies for fake images. We employ adversarial learning to train a feature augmenter, which promotes smaller discrepancies between teacher and student networks when the inputs are fake images. Our method has achieved state-of-the-art on public benchmarks, and the visualization results show that a large output discrepancy is maintained when faced with various types of generators.
Parallel imaging is a commonly used technique to accelerate magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) data acquisition. Mathematically, parallel MRI reconstruction can be formulated as an inverse problem relating the sparsely sampled k-space measurements to the desired MRI image. Despite the success of many existing reconstruction algorithms, it remains a challenge to reliably reconstruct a high-quality image from highly reduced k-space measurements. Recently, implicit neural representation has emerged as a powerful paradigm to exploit the internal information and the physics of partially acquired data to generate the desired object. In this study, we introduced IMJENSE, a scan-specific implicit neural representation-based method for improving parallel MRI reconstruction. Specifically, the underlying MRI image and coil sensitivities were modeled as continuous functions of spatial coordinates, parameterized by neural networks and polynomials, respectively. The weights in the networks and coefficients in the polynomials were simultaneously learned directly from sparsely acquired k-space measurements, without fully sampled ground truth data for training. Benefiting from the powerful continuous representation and joint estimation of the MRI image and coil sensitivities, IMJENSE outperforms conventional image or k-space domain reconstruction algorithms. With extremely limited calibration data, IMJENSE is more stable than supervised calibrationless and calibration-based deep-learning methods. Results show that IMJENSE robustly reconstructs the images acquired at 5$\mathbf{\times}$ and 6$\mathbf{\times}$ accelerations with only 4 or 8 calibration lines in 2D Cartesian acquisitions, corresponding to 22.0% and 19.5% undersampling rates. The high-quality results and scanning specificity make the proposed method hold the potential for further accelerating the data acquisition of parallel MRI.
Synthesis of same-identity biometric iris images, both for existing and non-existing identities while preserving the identity across a wide range of pupil sizes, is complex due to intricate iris muscle constriction mechanism, requiring a precise model of iris non-linear texture deformations to be embedded into the synthesis pipeline. This paper presents the first method of fully data-driven, identity-preserving, pupil size-varying s ynthesis of iris images. This approach is capable of synthesizing images of irises with different pupil sizes representing non-existing identities as well as non-linearly deforming the texture of iris images of existing subjects given the segmentation mask of the target iris image. Iris recognition experiments suggest that the proposed deformation model not only preserves the identity when changing the pupil size but offers better similarity between same-identity iris samples with significant differences in pupil size, compared to state-of-the-art linear and non-linear (bio-mechanical-based) iris deformation models. Two immediate applications of the proposed approach are: (a) synthesis of, or enhancement of the existing biometric datasets for iris recognition, mimicking those acquired with iris sensors, and (b) helping forensic human experts in examining iris image pairs with significant differences in pupil dilation. Source codes and weights of the models are made available with the paper.
Large multi-modal models (LMMs) have demonstrated promising intelligence owing to the rapid development of pre-training techniques. However, their fine-grained cross-modal alignment ability is constrained by the coarse alignment in image-text pairs. This limitation hinders awareness of fine-grained concepts, resulting in sub-optimal performance. In this paper, we propose a multi-modal conceptual knowledge base, named M2ConceptBase, which aims to provide fine-grained alignment between images and concepts. Specifically, M2ConceptBase models concepts as nodes, associating each with relevant images and detailed text, thereby enhancing LMMs' cross-modal alignment with rich conceptual knowledge. To collect concept-image and concept-description alignments, we propose a context-aware multi-modal symbol grounding approach that considers context information in existing large-scale image-text pairs with respect to each concept. A cutting-edge large language model supplements descriptions for concepts not grounded via our symbol grounding approach. Finally, our M2ConceptBase contains more than 951K images and 152K concepts, each associating with an average of 6.27 images and a single detailed description. We conduct experiments on the OK-VQA task, demonstrating that our M2ConceptBase facilitates the model in achieving state-of-the-art performance. Moreover, we construct a comprehensive benchmark to evaluate the concept understanding of LMMs and show that M2ConceptBase could effectively improve LMMs' concept understanding and cross-modal alignment abilities.
Accurate image segmentation is crucial in reservoir modelling and material characterization, enhancing oil and gas extraction efficiency through detailed reservoir models. This precision offers insights into rock properties, advancing digital rock physics understanding. However, creating pixel-level annotations for complex CT and SEM rock images is challenging due to their size and low contrast, lengthening analysis time. This has spurred interest in advanced semi-supervised and unsupervised segmentation techniques in digital rock image analysis, promising more efficient, accurate, and less labour-intensive methods. Meta AI's Segment Anything Model (SAM) revolutionized image segmentation in 2023, offering interactive and automated segmentation with zero-shot capabilities, essential for digital rock physics with limited training data and complex image features. Despite its advanced features, SAM struggles with rock CT/SEM images due to their absence in its training set and the low-contrast nature of grayscale images. Our research fine-tunes SAM for rock CT/SEM image segmentation, optimizing parameters and handling large-scale images to improve accuracy. Experiments on rock CT and SEM images show that fine-tuning significantly enhances SAM's performance, enabling high-quality mask generation in digital rock image analysis. Our results demonstrate the feasibility and effectiveness of the fine-tuned SAM model (RockSAM) for rock images, offering segmentation without extensive training or complex labelling.
Soft context formation is a lossless image coding method for screen content. It encodes images pixel by pixel via arithmetic coding by collecting statistics for probability distribution estimation. Its main pipeline includes three stages, namely a context model based stage, a color palette stage and a residual coding stage. Each subsequent stage is only employed if the previous stage can not be applied since necessary statistics, e.g. colors or contexts, have not been learned yet. We propose the following enhancements: First, information from previous stages is used to remove redundant color palette entries and prediction errors in subsequent stages. Additionally, implicitly known stage decision signals are no longer explicitly transmitted. These enhancements lead to an average bit rate decrease of 1.07% on the evaluated data. Compared to VVC and HEVC, the proposed method needs roughly 0.44 and 0.17 bits per pixel less on average for 24-bit screen content images, respectively.
Visual tracking often faces challenges such as invalid targets and decreased performance in low-light conditions when relying solely on RGB image sequences. While incorporating additional modalities like depth and infrared data has proven effective, existing multi-modal imaging platforms are complex and lack real-world applicability. In contrast, near-infrared (NIR) imaging, commonly used in surveillance cameras, can switch between RGB and NIR based on light intensity. However, tracking objects across these heterogeneous modalities poses significant challenges, particularly due to the absence of modality switch signals during tracking. To address these challenges, we propose an adaptive cross-modal object tracking algorithm called Modality-Aware Fusion Network (MAFNet). MAFNet efficiently integrates information from both RGB and NIR modalities using an adaptive weighting mechanism, effectively bridging the appearance gap and enabling a modality-aware target representation. It consists of two key components: an adaptive weighting module and a modality-specific representation module......
Photo-trapping cameras are widely employed for wildlife monitoring. Those cameras take photographs when motion is detected to capture images where animals appear. A significant portion of these images are empty - no wildlife appears in the image. Filtering out those images is not a trivial task since it requires hours of manual work from biologists. Therefore, there is a notable interest in automating this task. Automatic discarding of empty photo-trapping images is still an open field in the area of Machine Learning. Existing solutions often rely on state-of-the-art supervised convolutional neural networks that require the annotation of the images in the training phase. PARDINUS (Weakly suPervised discARDINg of photo-trapping empty images based on aUtoencoderS) is constructed on the foundation of weakly supervised learning and proves that this approach equals or even surpasses other fully supervised methods that require further labeling work.