Sanjana Jain

CV
4papers
61citations
Novelty43%
AI Score23

4 Papers

LGSep 22, 2022
Amortized Variational Inference: A Systematic Review

Ankush Ganguly, Sanjana Jain, Ukrit Watchareeruetai

The core principle of Variational Inference (VI) is to convert the statistical inference problem of computing complex posterior probability densities into a tractable optimization problem. This property enables VI to be faster than several sampling-based techniques. However, the traditional VI algorithm is not scalable to large data sets and is unable to readily infer out-of-bounds data points without re-running the optimization process. Recent developments in the field, like stochastic-, black box-, and amortized-VI, have helped address these issues. Generative modeling tasks nowadays widely make use of amortized VI for its efficiency and scalability, as it utilizes a parameterized function to learn the approximate posterior density parameters. In this paper, we review the mathematical foundations of various VI techniques to form the basis for understanding amortized VI. Additionally, we provide an overview of the recent trends that address several issues of amortized VI, such as the amortization gap, generalization issues, inconsistent representation learning, and posterior collapse. Finally, we analyze alternate divergence measures that improve VI optimization.

CVOct 7, 2022
FastCLIPstyler: Optimisation-free Text-based Image Style Transfer Using Style Representations

Ananda Padhmanabhan Suresh, Sanjana Jain, Pavit Noinongyao et al.

In recent years, language-driven artistic style transfer has emerged as a new type of style transfer technique, eliminating the need for a reference style image by using natural language descriptions of the style. The first model to achieve this, called CLIPstyler, has demonstrated impressive stylisation results. However, its lengthy optimisation procedure at runtime for each query limits its suitability for many practical applications. In this work, we present FastCLIPstyler, a generalised text-based image style transfer model capable of stylising images in a single forward pass for arbitrary text inputs. Furthermore, we introduce EdgeCLIPstyler, a lightweight model designed for compatibility with resource-constrained devices. Through quantitative and qualitative comparisons with state-of-the-art approaches, we demonstrate that our models achieve superior stylisation quality based on measurable metrics while offering significantly improved runtime efficiency, particularly on edge devices.

CVSep 21, 2021
LOTR: Face Landmark Localization Using Localization Transformer

Ukrit Watchareeruetai, Benjaphan Sommana, Sanjana Jain et al.

This paper presents a novel Transformer-based facial landmark localization network named Localization Transformer (LOTR). The proposed framework is a direct coordinate regression approach leveraging a Transformer network to better utilize the spatial information in the feature map. An LOTR model consists of three main modules: 1) a visual backbone that converts an input image into a feature map, 2) a Transformer module that improves the feature representation from the visual backbone, and 3) a landmark prediction head that directly predicts the landmark coordinates from the Transformer's representation. Given cropped-and-aligned face images, the proposed LOTR can be trained end-to-end without requiring any post-processing steps. This paper also introduces the smooth-Wing loss function, which addresses the gradient discontinuity of the Wing loss, leading to better convergence than standard loss functions such as L1, L2, and Wing loss. Experimental results on the JD landmark dataset provided by the First Grand Challenge of 106-Point Facial Landmark Localization indicate the superiority of LOTR over the existing methods on the leaderboard and two recent heatmap-based approaches. On the WFLW dataset, the proposed LOTR framework demonstrates promising results compared with several state-of-the-art methods. Additionally, we report the improvement in state-of-the-art face recognition performance when using our proposed LOTRs for face alignment.

CVMar 4, 2021
Sub-pixel face landmarks using heatmaps and a bag of tricks

Samuel W. F. Earp, Aubin Samacoits, Sanjana Jain et al.

Accurate face landmark localization is an essential part of face recognition, reconstruction and morphing. To accurately localize face landmarks, we present our heatmap regression approach. Each model consists of a MobileNetV2 backbone followed by several upscaling layers, with different tricks to optimize both performance and inference cost. We use five naïve face landmarks from a publicly available face detector to position and align the face instead of using the bounding box like traditional methods. Moreover, we show by adding random rotation, displacement and scaling -- after alignment -- that the model is more sensitive to the face position than orientation. We also show that it is possible to reduce the upscaling complexity by using a mixture of deconvolution and pixel-shuffle layers without impeding localization performance. We present our state-of-the-art face landmark localization model (ranking second on The 2nd Grand Challenge of 106-Point Facial Landmark Localization validation set). Finally, we test the effect on face recognition using these landmarks, using a publicly available model and benchmarks.