Haisheng Fu

IV
h-index11
11papers
181citations
Novelty52%
AI Score51

11 Papers

89.8IVMay 27
ChWDTA: Channel-wise Wavelet-Domain Transformer Attention and Entropy Modeling for Learned Image Compression

Haisheng Fu, Runyu Yang, Feng Ding et al.

State-of-the-art learned image compression (LIC) schemes are increasingly based on hybrid CNN-transformer architectures. To further improve rate-distortion performance, we introduce channel-wise wavelet transforms into both the transformer and entropy-coding components. First, we propose a channel-wise wavelet-domain transformer attention (ChWDTA) mechanism. ChWDTA keeps the efficient windowed spatial self-attention used in modern LIC backbones, but computes the Q/K/V projections on channel-wise wavelet-transformed features before mapping the attention output back with the inverse transform. The resulting Channel-wise Wavelet-Domain Transformer Block (ChWDTB) therefore preserves the spatial tokenization pattern of windowed attention while sparsifying the channel covariance seen by the attention projections. Second, in the entropy-coding stage, we introduce a channel-wise wavelet packet (ChWP) decomposition that produces four equal-sized subbands, which better fit channel-wise slice-based autoregressive entropy modeling. When each channel-wise subband is divided into two slices, we use eight slices for entropy coding. With this configuration, the proposed scheme obtains BD-rate reductions of -17.82%, -19.15%, and -22.56% on the Kodak, CLIC Professional Validation, and Tecnick test sets, respectively. Even when each channel-wise subband is coded as a single slice, the scheme still retains most of the coding gains with lower complexity. The results confirm the advantage of introducing wavelet transform in CNN-transformer-based LIC schemes.

IVJun 21, 2022
Asymmetric Learned Image Compression with Multi-Scale Residual Block, Importance Map, and Post-Quantization Filtering

Haisheng Fu, Feng Liang, Jie Liang et al.

Recently, deep learning-based image compression has made signifcant progresses, and has achieved better ratedistortion (R-D) performance than the latest traditional method, H.266/VVC, in both subjective metric and the more challenging objective metric. However, a major problem is that many leading learned schemes cannot maintain a good trade-off between performance and complexity. In this paper, we propose an effcient and effective image coding framework, which achieves similar R-D performance with lower complexity than the state of the art. First, we develop an improved multi-scale residual block (MSRB) that can expand the receptive feld and is easier to obtain global information. It can further capture and reduce the spatial correlation of the latent representations. Second, a more advanced importance map network is introduced to adaptively allocate bits to different regions of the image. Third, we apply a 2D post-quantization flter (PQF) to reduce the quantization error, motivated by the Sample Adaptive Offset (SAO) flter in video coding. Moreover, We fnd that the complexity of encoder and decoder have different effects on image compression performance. Based on this observation, we design an asymmetric paradigm, in which the encoder employs three stages of MSRBs to improve the learning capacity, whereas the decoder only needs one stage of MSRB to yield satisfactory reconstruction, thereby reducing the decoding complexity without sacrifcing performance. Experimental results show that compared to the state-of-the-art method, the encoding and decoding time of the proposed method are about 17 times faster, and the R-D performance is only reduced by less than 1% on both Kodak and Tecnick datasets, which is still better than H.266/VVC(4:4:4) and other recent learning-based methods. Our source code is publicly available at https://github.com/fengyurenpingsheng.

IVSep 7, 2022
Learned Image Compression with Generalized Octave Convolution and Cross-Resolution Parameter Estimation

Haisheng Fu, Feng Liang

The application of the context-adaptive entropy model significantly improves the rate-distortion (R-D) performance, in which hyperpriors and autoregressive models are jointly utilized to effectively capture the spatial redundancy of the latent representations. However, the latent representations still contain some spatial correlations. In addition, these methods based on the context-adaptive entropy model cannot be accelerated in the decoding process by parallel computing devices, e.g. FPGA or GPU. To alleviate these limitations, we propose a learned multi-resolution image compression framework, which exploits the recently developed octave convolutions to factorize the latent representations into the high-resolution (HR) and low-resolution (LR) parts, similar to wavelet transform, which further improves the R-D performance. To speed up the decoding, our scheme does not use context-adaptive entropy model. Instead, we exploit an additional hyper layer including hyper encoder and hyper decoder to further remove the spatial redundancy of the latent representation. Moreover, the cross-resolution parameter estimation (CRPE) is introduced into the proposed framework to enhance the flow of information and further improve the rate-distortion performance. An additional information-fidelity loss is proposed to the total loss function to adjust the contribution of the LR part to the final bit stream. Experimental results show that our method separately reduces the decoding time by approximately 73.35 % and 93.44 % compared with that of state-of-the-art learned image compression methods, and the R-D performance is still better than H.266/VVC(4:2:0) and some learning-based methods on both PSNR and MS-SSIM metrics across a wide bit rates.

CVSep 18, 2025Code
LSTC-MDA: A Unified Framework for Long-Short Term Temporal Convolution and Mixed Data Augmentation in Skeleton-Based Action Recognition

Feng Ding, Haisheng Fu, Soroush Oraki et al.

Skeleton-based action recognition faces two longstanding challenges: the scarcity of labeled training samples and difficulty modeling short- and long-range temporal dependencies. To address these issues, we propose a unified framework, LSTC-MDA, which simultaneously improves temporal modeling and data diversity. We introduce a novel Long-Short Term Temporal Convolution (LSTC) module with parallel short- and long-term branches, these two feature branches are then aligned and fused adaptively using learned similarity weights to preserve critical long-range cues lost by conventional stride-2 temporal convolutions. We also extend Joint Mixing Data Augmentation (JMDA) with an Additive Mixup at the input level, diversifying training samples and restricting mixup operations to the same camera view to avoid distribution shifts. Ablation studies confirm each component contributes. LSTC-MDA achieves state-of-the-art results: 94.1% and 97.5% on NTU 60 (X-Sub and X-View), 90.4% and 92.0% on NTU 120 (X-Sub and X-Set),97.2% on NW-UCLA. Code: https://github.com/xiaobaoxia/LSTC-MDA.

IVJul 14, 2021Code
Learned Image Compression with Gaussian-Laplacian-Logistic Mixture Model and Concatenated Residual Modules

Haisheng Fu, Feng Liang, Jianping Lin et al.

Recently deep learning-based image compression methods have achieved significant achievements and gradually outperformed traditional approaches including the latest standard Versatile Video Coding (VVC) in both PSNR and MS-SSIM metrics. Two key components of learned image compression are the entropy model of the latent representations and the encoding/decoding network architectures. Various models have been proposed, such as autoregressive, softmax, logistic mixture, Gaussian mixture, and Laplacian. Existing schemes only use one of these models. However, due to the vast diversity of images, it is not optimal to use one model for all images, even different regions within one image. In this paper, we propose a more flexible discretized Gaussian-Laplacian-Logistic mixture model (GLLMM) for the latent representations, which can adapt to different contents in different images and different regions of one image more accurately and efficiently, given the same complexity. Besides, in the encoding/decoding network design part, we propose a concatenated residual blocks (CRB), where multiple residual blocks are serially connected with additional shortcut connections. The CRB can improve the learning ability of the network, which can further improve the compression performance. Experimental results using the Kodak, Tecnick-100 and Tecnick-40 datasets show that the proposed scheme outperforms all the leading learning-based methods and existing compression standards including VVC intra coding (4:4:4 and 4:2:0) in terms of the PSNR and MS-SSIM. The source code is available at \url{https://github.com/fengyurenpingsheng}

85.9IVMay 10
ML-CLIPSim: Multi-Layer CLIP Similarity for Machine-Oriented Image Quality

Feng Ding, Haisheng Fu, Jie Liang et al.

We study full-reference image quality assessment from a machine-centric perspective, where images are evaluated by how well they preserve information for downstream models. We formulate machine-oriented quality as a latent machine utility and approximate it through pairwise predictive-consistency comparisons. To this end, we construct PCMP, a dataset of PSNR-matched distortion pairs labeled by consistency votes from multiple pretrained models. We further propose ML-CLIPSim, a differentiable quality metric built on a frozen CLIP visual encoder, which aggregates intermediate patch-token similarities and global image embeddings. Experiments on machine-preference benchmarks, human-IQA datasets, and learned image compression show that ML-CLIPSim better aligns with machine-oriented preferences than conventional fidelity and perceptual metrics, while remaining competitive for human quality prediction. Used as a compression distortion term, it improves rate--task trade-offs across multiple downstream tasks.

CVApr 7, 2025
3DM-WeConvene: Learned Image Compression with 3D Multi-Level Wavelet-Domain Convolution and Entropy Model

Haisheng Fu, Jie Liang, Feng Liang et al.

Learned image compression (LIC) has recently made significant progress, surpassing traditional methods. However, most LIC approaches operate mainly in the spatial domain and lack mechanisms for reducing frequency-domain correlations. To address this, we propose a novel framework that integrates low-complexity 3D multi-level Discrete Wavelet Transform (DWT) into convolutional layers and entropy coding, reducing both spatial and channel correlations to improve frequency selectivity and rate-distortion (R-D) performance. Our proposed 3D multi-level wavelet-domain convolution (3DM-WeConv) layer first applies 3D multi-level DWT (e.g., 5/3 and 9/7 wavelets from JPEG 2000) to transform data into the wavelet domain. Then, different-sized convolutions are applied to different frequency subbands, followed by inverse 3D DWT to restore the spatial domain. The 3DM-WeConv layer can be flexibly used within existing CNN-based LIC models. We also introduce a 3D wavelet-domain channel-wise autoregressive entropy model (3DWeChARM), which performs slice-based entropy coding in the 3D DWT domain. Low-frequency (LF) slices are encoded first to provide priors for high-frequency (HF) slices. A two-step training strategy is adopted: first balancing LF and HF rates, then fine-tuning with separate weights. Extensive experiments demonstrate that our framework consistently outperforms state-of-the-art CNN-based LIC methods in R-D performance and computational complexity, with larger gains for high-resolution images. On the Kodak, Tecnick 100, and CLIC test sets, our method achieves BD-Rate reductions of -12.24%, -15.51%, and -12.97%, respectively, compared to H.266/VVC.

CVMar 9, 2025
FEDS: Feature and Entropy-Based Distillation Strategy for Efficient Learned Image Compression

Haisheng Fu, Jie Liang, Zhenman Fang et al.

Learned image compression (LIC) methods have recently outperformed traditional codecs such as VVC in rate-distortion performance. However, their large models and high computational costs have limited their practical adoption. In this paper, we first construct a high-capacity teacher model by integrating Swin-Transformer V2-based attention modules, additional residual blocks, and expanded latent channels, thus achieving enhanced compression performance. Building on this foundation, we propose a \underline{F}eature and \underline{E}ntropy-based \underline{D}istillation \underline{S}trategy (\textbf{FEDS}) that transfers key knowledge from the teacher to a lightweight student model. Specifically, we align intermediate feature representations and emphasize the most informative latent channels through an entropy-based loss. A staged training scheme refines this transfer in three phases: feature alignment, channel-level distillation, and final fine-tuning. Our student model nearly matches the teacher across Kodak (1.24\% BD-Rate increase), Tecnick (1.17\%), and CLIC (0.55\%) while cutting parameters by about 63\% and accelerating encoding/decoding by around 73\%. Moreover, ablation studies indicate that FEDS generalizes effectively to transformer-based networks. The experimental results demonstrate our approach strikes a compelling balance among compression performance, speed, and model parameters, making it well-suited for real-time or resource-limited scenarios.

CVMay 12, 2023
ROI-based Deep Image Compression with Swin Transformers

Binglin Li, Jie Liang, Haisheng Fu et al.

Encoding the Region Of Interest (ROI) with better quality than the background has many applications including video conferencing systems, video surveillance and object-oriented vision tasks. In this paper, we propose a ROI-based image compression framework with Swin transformers as main building blocks for the autoencoder network. The binary ROI mask is integrated into different layers of the network to provide spatial information guidance. Based on the ROI mask, we can control the relative importance of the ROI and non-ROI by modifying the corresponding Lagrange multiplier $ λ$ for different regions. Experimental results show our model achieves higher ROI PSNR than other methods and modest average PSNR for human evaluation. When tested on models pre-trained with original images, it has superior object detection and instance segmentation performance on the COCO validation dataset.

IVJul 15, 2019
Improved Hybrid Layered Image Compression using Deep Learning and Traditional Codecs

Haisheng Fu, Feng Liang, Bo Lei et al.

Recently deep learning-based methods have been applied in image compression and achieved many promising results. In this paper, we propose an improved hybrid layered image compression framework by combining deep learning and the traditional image codecs. At the encoder, we first use a convolutional neural network (CNN) to obtain a compact representation of the input image, which is losslessly encoded by the FLIF codec as the base layer of the bit stream. A coarse reconstruction of the input is obtained by another CNN from the reconstructed compact representation. The residual between the input and the coarse reconstruction is then obtained and encoded by the H.265/HEVC-based BPG codec as the enhancement layer of the bit stream. Experimental results using the Kodak and Tecnick datasets show that the proposed scheme outperforms the state-of-the-art deep learning-based layered coding scheme and traditional codecs including BPG in both PSNR and MS-SSIM metrics across a wide range of bit rates, when the images are coded in the RGB444 domain.

CVJul 3, 2019
A Deep Image Compression Framework for Face Recognition

Nai Bian, Feng Liang, Haisheng Fu et al.

Face recognition technology has advanced rapidly and has been widely used in various applications. Due to the extremely huge amount of data of face images and the large computing resources required correspondingly in large-scale face recognition tasks, there is a requirement for a face image compression approach that is highly suitable for face recognition tasks. In this paper, we propose a deep convolutional autoencoder compression network for face recognition tasks. In the compression process, deep features are extracted from the original image by the convolutional neural networks to produce a compact representation of the original image, which is then encoded and saved by existing codec such as PNG. This compact representation is utilized by the reconstruction network to generate a reconstructed image of the original one. In order to improve the face recognition accuracy when the compression framework is used in a face recognition system, we combine this compression framework with a existing face recognition network for joint optimization. We test the proposed scheme and find that after joint training, the Labeled Faces in the Wild (LFW) dataset compressed by our compression framework has higher face verification accuracy than that compressed by JPEG2000, and is much higher than that compressed by JPEG.