Chenming Xu

CV
6papers
85citations
Novelty47%
AI Score30

6 Papers

CVJun 9, 2022Code
JNMR: Joint Non-linear Motion Regression for Video Frame Interpolation

Meiqin Liu, Chenming Xu, Chao Yao et al.

Video frame interpolation (VFI) aims to generate predictive frames by warping learnable motions from the bidirectional historical references. Most existing works utilize spatio-temporal semantic information extractor to realize motion estimation and interpolation modeling. However, they insufficiently consider the real mechanistic rationality of generated middle motions. In this paper, we reformulate VFI as a Joint Non-linear Motion Regression (JNMR) strategy to model the complicated motions of inter-frame. Specifically, the motion trajectory between the target frame and the multiple reference frames is regressed by a temporal concatenation of multi-stage quadratic models. ConvLSTM is adopted to construct this joint distribution of complete motions in temporal dimension. Moreover, the feature learning network is designed to optimize for the joint regression modeling. A coarse-to-fine synthesis enhancement module is also conducted to learn visual dynamics at different resolutions through repetitive regression and interpolation. Experimental results on VFI show that the effectiveness and significant improvement of joint motion regression compared with the state-of-the-art methods. The code is available at https://github.com/ruhig6/JNMR.

IVSep 25, 2023Code
IBVC: Interpolation-driven B-frame Video Compression

Chenming Xu, Meiqin Liu, Chao Yao et al.

Learned B-frame video compression aims to adopt bi-directional motion estimation and motion compensation (MEMC) coding for middle frame reconstruction. However, previous learned approaches often directly extend neural P-frame codecs to B-frame relying on bi-directional optical-flow estimation or video frame interpolation. They suffer from inaccurate quantized motions and inefficient motion compensation. To address these issues, we propose a simple yet effective structure called Interpolation-driven B-frame Video Compression (IBVC). Our approach only involves two major operations: video frame interpolation and artifact reduction compression. IBVC introduces a bit-rate free MEMC based on interpolation, which avoids optical-flow quantization and additional compression distortions. Later, to reduce duplicate bit-rate consumption and focus on unaligned artifacts, a residual guided masking encoder is deployed to adaptively select the meaningful contexts with interpolated multi-scale dependencies. In addition, a conditional spatio-temporal decoder is proposed to eliminate location errors and artifacts instead of using MEMC coding in other methods. The experimental results on B-frame coding demonstrate that IBVC has significant improvements compared to the relevant state-of-the-art methods. Meanwhile, our approach can save bit rates compared with the random access (RA) configuration of H.266 (VTM). The code will be available at https://github.com/ruhig6/IBVC.

CVJul 7, 2022
A simple normalization technique using window statistics to improve the out-of-distribution generalization on medical images

Chengfeng Zhou, Songchang Chen, Chenming Xu et al.

Since data scarcity and data heterogeneity are prevailing for medical images, well-trained Convolutional Neural Networks (CNNs) using previous normalization methods may perform poorly when deployed to a new site. However, a reliable model for real-world clinical applications should be able to generalize well both on in-distribution (IND) and out-of-distribution (OOD) data (e.g., the new site data). In this study, we present a novel normalization technique called window normalization (WIN) to improve the model generalization on heterogeneous medical images, which is a simple yet effective alternative to existing normalization methods. Specifically, WIN perturbs the normalizing statistics with the local statistics computed on the window of features. This feature-level augmentation technique regularizes the models well and improves their OOD generalization significantly. Taking its advantage, we propose a novel self-distillation method called WIN-WIN for classification tasks. WIN-WIN is easily implemented with twice forward passes and a consistency constraint, which can be a simple extension for existing methods. Extensive experimental results on various tasks (6 tasks) and datasets (24 datasets) demonstrate the generality and effectiveness of our methods.

LGJun 29, 2024
MH-pFLGB: Model Heterogeneous personalized Federated Learning via Global Bypass for Medical Image Analysis

Luyuan Xie, Manqing Lin, ChenMing Xu et al.

In the evolving application of medical artificial intelligence, federated learning is notable for its ability to protect training data privacy. Federated learning facilitates collaborative model development without the need to share local data from healthcare institutions. Yet, the statistical and system heterogeneity among these institutions poses substantial challenges, which affects the effectiveness of federated learning and hampers the exchange of information between clients. To address these issues, we introduce a novel approach, MH-pFLGB, which employs a global bypass strategy to mitigate the reliance on public datasets and navigate the complexities of non-IID data distributions. Our method enhances traditional federated learning by integrating a global bypass model, which would share the information among the clients, but also serves as part of the network to enhance the performance on each client. Additionally, MH-pFLGB provides a feature fusion module to better combine the local and global features. We validate \model{}'s effectiveness and adaptability through extensive testing on different medical tasks, demonstrating superior performance compared to existing state-of-the-art methods.

CVJun 29, 2024
pFLFE: Cross-silo Personalized Federated Learning via Feature Enhancement on Medical Image Segmentation

Luyuan Xie, Manqing Lin, Siyuan Liu et al.

In medical image segmentation, personalized cross-silo federated learning (FL) is becoming popular for utilizing varied data across healthcare settings to overcome data scarcity and privacy concerns. However, existing methods often suffer from client drift, leading to inconsistent performance and delayed training. We propose a new framework, Personalized Federated Learning via Feature Enhancement (pFLFE), designed to mitigate these challenges. pFLFE consists of two main stages: feature enhancement and supervised learning. The first stage improves differentiation between foreground and background features, and the second uses these enhanced features for learning from segmentation masks. We also design an alternative training approach that requires fewer communication rounds without compromising segmentation quality, even with limited communication resources. Through experiments on three medical segmentation tasks, we demonstrate that pFLFE outperforms the state-of-the-art methods.

CLMay 13, 2018
An attention-based Bi-GRU-CapsNet model for hypernymy detection between compound entities

Qi Wang, Chenming Xu, Yangming Zhou et al.

Named entities are usually composable and extensible. Typical examples are names of symptoms and diseases in medical areas. To distinguish these entities from general entities, we name them \textit{compound entities}. In this paper, we present an attention-based Bi-GRU-CapsNet model to detect hypernymy relationship between compound entities. Our model consists of several important components. To avoid the out-of-vocabulary problem, English words or Chinese characters in compound entities are fed into the bidirectional gated recurrent units. An attention mechanism is designed to focus on the differences between the two compound entities. Since there are some different cases in hypernymy relationship between compound entities, capsule network is finally employed to decide whether the hypernymy relationship exists or not. Experimental results demonstrate