CVJul 14, 2023Code
Erasing, Transforming, and Noising Defense Network for Occluded Person Re-IdentificationNeng Dong, Liyan Zhang, Shuanglin Yan et al.
Occlusion perturbation presents a significant challenge in person re-identification (re-ID), and existing methods that rely on external visual cues require additional computational resources and only consider the issue of missing information caused by occlusion. In this paper, we propose a simple yet effective framework, termed Erasing, Transforming, and Noising Defense Network (ETNDNet), which treats occlusion as a noise disturbance and solves occluded person re-ID from the perspective of adversarial defense. In the proposed ETNDNet, we introduce three strategies: Firstly, we randomly erase the feature map to create an adversarial representation with incomplete information, enabling adversarial learning of identity loss to protect the re-ID system from the disturbance of missing information. Secondly, we introduce random transformations to simulate the position misalignment caused by occlusion, training the extractor and classifier adversarially to learn robust representations immune to misaligned information. Thirdly, we perturb the feature map with random values to address noisy information introduced by obstacles and non-target pedestrians, and employ adversarial gaming in the re-ID system to enhance its resistance to occlusion noise. Without bells and whistles, ETNDNet has three key highlights: (i) it does not require any external modules with parameters, (ii) it effectively handles various issues caused by occlusion from obstacles and non-target pedestrians, and (iii) it designs the first GAN-based adversarial defense paradigm for occluded person re-ID. Extensive experiments on five public datasets fully demonstrate the effectiveness, superiority, and practicality of the proposed ETNDNet. The code will be released at \url{https://github.com/nengdong96/ETNDNet}.
CVOct 5, 2022
Centralized Feature Pyramid for Object DetectionYu Quan, Dong Zhang, Liyan Zhang et al.
Visual feature pyramid has shown its superiority in both effectiveness and efficiency in a wide range of applications. However, the existing methods exorbitantly concentrate on the inter-layer feature interactions but ignore the intra-layer feature regulations, which are empirically proved beneficial. Although some methods try to learn a compact intra-layer feature representation with the help of the attention mechanism or the vision transformer, they ignore the neglected corner regions that are important for dense prediction tasks. To address this problem, in this paper, we propose a Centralized Feature Pyramid (CFP) for object detection, which is based on a globally explicit centralized feature regulation. Specifically, we first propose a spatial explicit visual center scheme, where a lightweight MLP is used to capture the globally long-range dependencies and a parallel learnable visual center mechanism is used to capture the local corner regions of the input images. Based on this, we then propose a globally centralized regulation for the commonly-used feature pyramid in a top-down fashion, where the explicit visual center information obtained from the deepest intra-layer feature is used to regulate frontal shallow features. Compared to the existing feature pyramids, CFP not only has the ability to capture the global long-range dependencies, but also efficiently obtain an all-round yet discriminative feature representation. Experimental results on the challenging MS-COCO validate that our proposed CFP can achieve the consistent performance gains on the state-of-the-art YOLOv5 and YOLOX object detection baselines.
CVOct 19, 2022
CLIP-Driven Fine-grained Text-Image Person Re-identificationShuanglin Yan, Neng Dong, Liyan Zhang et al.
TIReID aims to retrieve the image corresponding to the given text query from a pool of candidate images. Existing methods employ prior knowledge from single-modality pre-training to facilitate learning, but lack multi-modal correspondences. Besides, due to the substantial gap between modalities, existing methods embed the original modal features into the same latent space for cross-modal alignment. However, feature embedding may lead to intra-modal information distortion. Recently, CLIP has attracted extensive attention from researchers due to its powerful semantic concept learning capacity and rich multi-modal knowledge, which can help us solve the above problems. Accordingly, in the paper, we propose a CLIP-driven Fine-grained information excavation framework (CFine) to fully utilize the powerful knowledge of CLIP for TIReID. To transfer the multi-modal knowledge effectively, we perform fine-grained information excavation to mine intra-modal discriminative clues and inter-modal correspondences. Specifically, we first design a multi-grained global feature learning module to fully mine intra-modal discriminative local information, which can emphasize identity-related discriminative clues by enhancing the interactions between global image (text) and informative local patches (words). Secondly, cross-grained feature refinement (CFR) and fine-grained correspondence discovery (FCD) modules are proposed to establish the cross-grained and fine-grained interactions between modalities, which can filter out non-modality-shared image patches/words and mine cross-modal correspondences from coarse to fine. CFR and FCD are removed during inference to save computational costs. Note that the above process is performed in the original modality space without further feature embedding. Extensive experiments on multiple benchmarks demonstrate the superior performance of our method on TIReID.
CVAug 30, 2022
Image-Specific Information Suppression and Implicit Local Alignment for Text-based Person SearchShuanglin Yan, Hao Tang, Liyan Zhang et al.
Text-based person search (TBPS) is a challenging task that aims to search pedestrian images with the same identity from an image gallery given a query text. In recent years, TBPS has made remarkable progress and state-of-the-art methods achieve superior performance by learning local fine-grained correspondence between images and texts. However, most existing methods rely on explicitly generated local parts to model fine-grained correspondence between modalities, which is unreliable due to the lack of contextual information or the potential introduction of noise. Moreover, existing methods seldom consider the information inequality problem between modalities caused by image-specific information. To address these limitations, we propose an efficient joint Multi-level Alignment Network (MANet) for TBPS, which can learn aligned image/text feature representations between modalities at multiple levels, and realize fast and effective person search. Specifically, we first design an image-specific information suppression module, which suppresses image background and environmental factors by relation-guided localization and channel attention filtration respectively. This module effectively alleviates the information inequality problem and realizes the alignment of information volume between images and texts. Secondly, we propose an implicit local alignment module to adaptively aggregate all pixel/word features of image/text to a set of modality-shared semantic topic centers and implicitly learn the local fine-grained correspondence between modalities without additional supervision and cross-modal interactions. And a global alignment is introduced as a supplement to the local perspective. The cooperation of global and local alignment modules enables better semantic alignment between modalities. Extensive experiments on multiple databases demonstrate the effectiveness and superiority of our MANet.
CVApr 18, 2023Code
Coupling Global Context and Local Contents for Weakly-Supervised Semantic SegmentationChunyan Wang, Dong Zhang, Liyan Zhang et al.
Thanks to the advantages of the friendly annotations and the satisfactory performance, Weakly-Supervised Semantic Segmentation (WSSS) approaches have been extensively studied. Recently, the single-stage WSSS was awakened to alleviate problems of the expensive computational costs and the complicated training procedures in multi-stage WSSS. However, results of such an immature model suffer from problems of background incompleteness and object incompleteness. We empirically find that they are caused by the insufficiency of the global object context and the lack of the local regional contents, respectively. Under these observations, we propose a single-stage WSSS model with only the image-level class label supervisions, termed as Weakly Supervised Feature Coupling Network (WS-FCN), which can capture the multi-scale context formed from the adjacent feature grids, and encode the fine-grained spatial information from the low-level features into the high-level ones. Specifically, a flexible context aggregation module is proposed to capture the global object context in different granular spaces. Besides, a semantically consistent feature fusion module is proposed in a bottom-up parameter-learnable fashion to aggregate the fine-grained local contents. Based on these two modules, WS-FCN lies in a self-supervised end-to-end training fashion. Extensive experimental results on the challenging PASCAL VOC 2012 and MS COCO 2014 demonstrate the effectiveness and efficiency of WS-FCN, which can achieve state-of-the-art results by 65.02\% and 64.22\% mIoU on PASCAL VOC 2012 val set and test set, 34.12\% mIoU on MS COCO 2014 val set, respectively. The code and weight have been released at:https://github.com/ChunyanWang1/ws-fcn.
CVNov 7, 2023Code
Multi-view Information Integration and Propagation for Occluded Person Re-identificationNeng Dong, Shuanglin Yan, Hao Tang et al.
Occluded person re-identification (re-ID) presents a challenging task due to occlusion perturbations. Although great efforts have been made to prevent the model from being disturbed by occlusion noise, most current solutions only capture information from a single image, disregarding the rich complementary information available in multiple images depicting the same pedestrian. In this paper, we propose a novel framework called Multi-view Information Integration and Propagation (MVI$^{2}$P). Specifically, realizing the potential of multi-view images in effectively characterizing the occluded target pedestrian, we integrate feature maps of which to create a comprehensive representation. During this process, to avoid introducing occlusion noise, we develop a CAMs-aware Localization module that selectively integrates information contributing to the identification. Additionally, considering the divergence in the discriminative nature of different images, we design a probability-aware Quantification module to emphatically integrate highly reliable information. Moreover, as multiple images with the same identity are not accessible in the testing stage, we devise an Information Propagation (IP) mechanism to distill knowledge from the comprehensive representation to that of a single occluded image. Extensive experiments and analyses have unequivocally demonstrated the effectiveness and superiority of the proposed MVI$^{2}$P. The code will be released at \url{https://github.com/nengdong96/MVIIP}.
CVJan 23, 2023
Triplet Contrastive Representation Learning for Unsupervised Vehicle Re-identificationFei Shen, Xiaoyu Du, Liyan Zhang et al.
Part feature learning is critical for fine-grained semantic understanding in vehicle re-identification. However, existing approaches directly model part features and global features, which can easily lead to serious gradient vanishing issues due to their unequal feature information and unreliable pseudo-labels for unsupervised vehicle re-identification. To address this problem, in this paper, we propose a simple Triplet Contrastive Representation Learning (TCRL) framework which leverages cluster features to bridge the part features and global features for unsupervised vehicle re-identification. Specifically, TCRL devises three memory banks to store the instance/cluster features and proposes a Proxy Contrastive Loss (PCL) to make contrastive learning between adjacent memory banks, thus presenting the associations between the part and global features as a transition of the part-cluster and cluster-global associations. Since the cluster memory bank copes with all the vehicle features, it can summarize them into a discriminative feature representation. To deeply exploit the instance/cluster information, TCRL proposes two additional loss functions. For the instance-level feature, a Hybrid Contrastive Loss (HCL) re-defines the sample correlations by approaching the positive instance features and pushing the all negative instance features away. For the cluster-level feature, a Weighted Regularization Cluster Contrastive Loss (WRCCL) refines the pseudo labels by penalizing the mislabeled images according to the instance similarity. Extensive experiments show that TCRL outperforms many state-of-the-art unsupervised vehicle re-identification approaches.
CVOct 17, 2023
Learning Comprehensive Representations with Richer Self for Text-to-Image Person Re-IdentificationShuanglin Yan, Neng Dong, Jun Liu et al.
Text-to-image person re-identification (TIReID) retrieves pedestrian images of the same identity based on a query text. However, existing methods for TIReID typically treat it as a one-to-one image-text matching problem, only focusing on the relationship between image-text pairs within a view. The many-to-many matching between image-text pairs across views under the same identity is not taken into account, which is one of the main reasons for the poor performance of existing methods. To this end, we propose a simple yet effective framework, called LCR$^2$S, for modeling many-to-many correspondences of the same identity by learning comprehensive representations for both modalities from a novel perspective. We construct a support set for each image (text) by using other images (texts) under the same identity and design a multi-head attentional fusion module to fuse the image (text) and its support set. The resulting enriched image and text features fuse information from multiple views, which are aligned to train a "richer" TIReID model with many-to-many correspondences. Since the support set is unavailable during inference, we propose to distill the knowledge learned by the "richer" model into a lightweight model for inference with a single image/text as input. The lightweight model focuses on semantic association and reasoning of multi-view information, which can generate a comprehensive representation containing multi-view information with only a single-view input to perform accurate text-to-image retrieval during inference. In particular, we use the intra-modal features and inter-modal semantic relations of the "richer" model to supervise the lightweight model to inherit its powerful capability. Extensive experiments demonstrate the effectiveness of LCR$^2$S, and it also achieves new state-of-the-art performance on three popular TIReID datasets.
23.7CVMar 21Code
Lean Learning Beyond Clouds: Efficient Discrepancy-Conditioned Optical-SAR Fusion for Semantic SegmentationChenxing Meng, Wuzhou Quan, Yingjie Cai et al.
Cloud occlusion severely degrades the semantic integrity of optical remote sensing imagery. While incorporating Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) provides complementary observations, achieving efficient global modeling and reliable cross-modal fusion under cloud interference remains challenging. Existing methods rely on dense global attention to capture long-range dependencies, yet such aggregation indiscriminately propagates cloud-induced noise. Improving robustness typically entails enlarging model capacity, which further increases computational overhead. Given the large-scale and high-resolution nature of remote sensing applications, such computational demands hinder practical deployment, leading to an efficiency-reliability trade-off. To address this dilemma, we propose EDC, an efficiency-oriented and discrepancy-conditioned optical-SAR semantic segmentation framework. A tri-stream encoder with Carrier Tokens enables compact global context modeling with reduced complexity. To prevent noise contamination, we introduce a Discrepancy-Conditioned Hybrid Fusion (DCHF) mechanism that selectively suppresses unreliable regions during global aggregation. In addition, an auxiliary cloud removal branch with teacher-guided distillation enhances semantic consistency under occlusion. Extensive experiments demonstrate that EDC achieves superior accuracy and efficiency, improving mIoU by 0.56\% and 0.88\% on M3M-CR and WHU-OPT-SAR, respectively, while reducing the number of parameters by 46.7\% and accelerating inference by 1.98$\times$. Our implementation is available at https://github.com/mengcx0209/EDC.
59.6CVMar 16Code
M2IR: Proactive All-in-One Image Restoration via Mamba-style Modulation and Mixture-of-ExpertsShiwei Wang, Yongzhen Wang, Bingwen Hu et al.
While Transformer-based architectures have dominated recent advances in all-in-one image restoration, they remain fundamentally reactive: propagating degradations rather than proactively suppressing them. In the absence of explicit suppression mechanisms, degraded signals interfere with feature learning, compelling the decoder to balance artifact removal and detail preservation, thereby increasing model complexity and limiting adaptability. To address these challenges, we propose M2IR, a novel restoration framework that proactively regulates degradation propagation during the encoding stage and efficiently eliminates residual degradations during decoding. Specifically, the Mamba-Style Transformer (MST) block performs pixel-wise selective state modulation to mitigate degradations while preserving structural integrity. In parallel, the Adaptive Degradation Expert Collaboration (ADEC) module utilizes degradation-specific experts guided by a DA-CLIP-driven router and complemented by a shared expert to eliminate residual degradations through targeted and cooperative restoration. By integrating the MST block and ADEC module, M2IR transitions from passive reaction to active degradation control, effectively harnessing learned representations to achieve superior generalization, enhanced adaptability, and refined recovery of fine-grained details across diverse all-in-one image restoration benchmarks. Our source codes are available at https://github.com/Im34v/M2IR.
CVSep 29, 2023
Prototype-guided Cross-modal Completion and Alignment for Incomplete Text-based Person Re-identificationTiantian Gong, Guodong Du, Junsheng Wang et al.
Traditional text-based person re-identification (ReID) techniques heavily rely on fully matched multi-modal data, which is an ideal scenario. However, due to inevitable data missing and corruption during the collection and processing of cross-modal data, the incomplete data issue is usually met in real-world applications. Therefore, we consider a more practical task termed the incomplete text-based ReID task, where person images and text descriptions are not completely matched and contain partially missing modality data. To this end, we propose a novel Prototype-guided Cross-modal Completion and Alignment (PCCA) framework to handle the aforementioned issues for incomplete text-based ReID. Specifically, we cannot directly retrieve person images based on a text query on missing modality data. Therefore, we propose the cross-modal nearest neighbor construction strategy for missing data by computing the cross-modal similarity between existing images and texts, which provides key guidance for the completion of missing modal features. Furthermore, to efficiently complete the missing modal features, we construct the relation graphs with the aforementioned cross-modal nearest neighbor sets of missing modal data and the corresponding prototypes, which can further enhance the generated missing modal features. Additionally, for tighter fine-grained alignment between images and texts, we raise a prototype-aware cross-modal alignment loss that can effectively reduce the modality heterogeneity gap for better fine-grained alignment in common space. Extensive experimental results on several benchmarks with different missing ratios amply demonstrate that our method can consistently outperform state-of-the-art text-image ReID approaches.
CVDec 13, 2021Code
Semantically Contrastive Learning for Low-light Image EnhancementDong Liang, Ling Li, Mingqiang Wei et al.
Low-light image enhancement (LLE) remains challenging due to the unfavorable prevailing low-contrast and weak-visibility problems of single RGB images. In this paper, we respond to the intriguing learning-related question -- if leveraging both accessible unpaired over/underexposed images and high-level semantic guidance, can improve the performance of cutting-edge LLE models? Here, we propose an effective semantically contrastive learning paradigm for LLE (namely SCL-LLE). Beyond the existing LLE wisdom, it casts the image enhancement task as multi-task joint learning, where LLE is converted into three constraints of contrastive learning, semantic brightness consistency, and feature preservation for simultaneously ensuring the exposure, texture, and color consistency. SCL-LLE allows the LLE model to learn from unpaired positives (normal-light)/negatives (over/underexposed), and enables it to interact with the scene semantics to regularize the image enhancement network, yet the interaction of high-level semantic knowledge and the low-level signal prior is seldom investigated in previous methods. Training on readily available open data, extensive experiments demonstrate that our method surpasses the state-of-the-arts LLE models over six independent cross-scenes datasets. Moreover, SCL-LLE's potential to benefit the downstream semantic segmentation under extremely dark conditions is discussed. Source Code: https://github.com/LingLIx/SCL-LLE.
CVMar 21, 2021Code
Learning Calibrated-Guidance for Object Detection in Aerial ImagesZongqi Wei, Dong Liang, Dong Zhang et al.
Object detection is one of the most fundamental yet challenging research topics in the domain of computer vision. Recently, the study on this topic in aerial images has made tremendous progress. However, complex background and worse imaging quality are obvious problems in aerial object detection. Most state-of-the-art approaches tend to develop elaborate attention mechanisms for the space-time feature calibrations with arduous computational complexity, while surprisingly ignoring the importance of feature calibrations in channel-wise. In this work, we propose a simple yet effective Calibrated-Guidance (CG) scheme to enhance channel communications in a feature transformer fashion, which can adaptively determine the calibration weights for each channel based on the global feature affinity correlations. Specifically, for a given set of feature maps, CG first computes the feature similarity between each channel and the remaining channels as the intermediary calibration guidance. Then, re-representing each channel by aggregating all the channels weighted together via the guidance operation. Our CG is a general module that can be plugged into any deep neural networks, which is named as CG-Net. To demonstrate its effectiveness and efficiency, extensive experiments are carried out on both oriented object detection task and horizontal object detection task in aerial images. Experimental results on two challenging benchmarks (DOTA and HRSC2016) demonstrate that our CG-Net can achieve the new state-of-the-art performance in accuracy with a fair computational overhead. The source code has been open sourced at https://github.com/WeiZongqi/CG-Net
CVNov 23, 2020Code
Graph Attention TrackingDongyan Guo, Yanyan Shao, Ying Cui et al.
Siamese network based trackers formulate the visual tracking task as a similarity matching problem. Almost all popular Siamese trackers realize the similarity learning via convolutional feature cross-correlation between a target branch and a search branch. However, since the size of target feature region needs to be pre-fixed, these cross-correlation base methods suffer from either reserving much adverse background information or missing a great deal of foreground information. Moreover, the global matching between the target and search region also largely neglects the target structure and part-level information. In this paper, to solve the above issues, we propose a simple target-aware Siamese graph attention network for general object tracking. We propose to establish part-to-part correspondence between the target and the search region with a complete bipartite graph, and apply the graph attention mechanism to propagate target information from the template feature to the search feature. Further, instead of using the pre-fixed region cropping for template-feature-area selection, we investigate a target-aware area selection mechanism to fit the size and aspect ratio variations of different objects. Experiments on challenging benchmarks including GOT-10k, UAV123, OTB-100 and LaSOT demonstrate that the proposed SiamGAT outperforms many state-of-the-art trackers and achieves leading performance. Code is available at: https://git.io/SiamGAT
CVOct 29, 2024
Discriminative Pedestrian Features and Gated Channel Attention for Clothes-Changing Person Re-IdentificationYongkang Ding, Rui Mao, Hanyue Zhu et al.
In public safety and social life, the task of Clothes-Changing Person Re-Identification (CC-ReID) has become increasingly significant. However, this task faces considerable challenges due to appearance changes caused by clothing alterations. Addressing this issue, this paper proposes an innovative method for disentangled feature extraction, effectively extracting discriminative features from pedestrian images that are invariant to clothing. This method leverages pedestrian parsing techniques to identify and retain features closely associated with individual identity while disregarding the variable nature of clothing attributes. Furthermore, this study introduces a gated channel attention mechanism, which, by adjusting the network's focus, aids the model in more effectively learning and emphasizing features critical for pedestrian identity recognition. Extensive experiments conducted on two standard CC-ReID datasets validate the effectiveness of the proposed approach, with performance surpassing current leading solutions. The Top-1 accuracy under clothing change scenarios on the PRCC and VC-Clothes datasets reached 64.8% and 83.7%, respectively.
CRJun 20, 2025
CUBA: Controlled Untargeted Backdoor Attack against Deep Neural NetworksYinghao Wu, Liyan Zhang
Backdoor attacks have emerged as a critical security threat against deep neural networks in recent years. The majority of existing backdoor attacks focus on targeted backdoor attacks, where trigger is strongly associated to specific malicious behavior. Various backdoor detection methods depend on this inherent property and shows effective results in identifying and mitigating such targeted attacks. However, a purely untargeted attack in backdoor scenarios is, in some sense, self-weakening, since the target nature is what makes backdoor attacks so powerful. In light of this, we introduce a novel Constrained Untargeted Backdoor Attack (CUBA), which combines the flexibility of untargeted attacks with the intentionality of targeted attacks. The compromised model, when presented with backdoor images, will classify them into random classes within a constrained range of target classes selected by the attacker. This combination of randomness and determinedness enables the proposed untargeted backdoor attack to natively circumvent existing backdoor defense methods. To implement the untargeted backdoor attack under controlled flexibility, we propose to apply logit normalization on cross-entropy loss with flipped one-hot labels. By constraining the logit during training, the compromised model will show a uniform distribution across selected target classes, resulting in controlled untargeted attack. Extensive experiments demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed CUBA on different datasets.
CRJul 1, 2025
BadViM: Backdoor Attack against Vision MambaYinghao Wu, Liyan Zhang
Vision State Space Models (SSMs), particularly architectures like Vision Mamba (ViM), have emerged as promising alternatives to Vision Transformers (ViTs). However, the security implications of this novel architecture, especially their vulnerability to backdoor attacks, remain critically underexplored. Backdoor attacks aim to embed hidden triggers into victim models, causing the model to misclassify inputs containing these triggers while maintaining normal behavior on clean inputs. This paper investigates the susceptibility of ViM to backdoor attacks by introducing BadViM, a novel backdoor attack framework specifically designed for Vision Mamba. The proposed BadViM leverages a Resonant Frequency Trigger (RFT) that exploits the frequency sensitivity patterns of the victim model to create stealthy, distributed triggers. To maximize attack efficacy, we propose a Hidden State Alignment loss that strategically manipulates the internal representations of model by aligning the hidden states of backdoor images with those of target classes. Extensive experimental results demonstrate that BadViM achieves superior attack success rates while maintaining clean data accuracy. Meanwhile, BadViM exhibits remarkable resilience against common defensive measures, including PatchDrop, PatchShuffle and JPEG compression, which typically neutralize normal backdoor attacks.
CVMay 1, 2025
Diverse Semantics-Guided Feature Alignment and Decoupling for Visible-Infrared Person Re-IdentificationNeng Dong, Shuanglin Yan, Liyan Zhang et al.
Visible-Infrared Person Re-Identification (VI-ReID) is a challenging task due to the large modality discrepancy between visible and infrared images, which complicates the alignment of their features into a suitable common space. Moreover, style noise, such as illumination and color contrast, reduces the identity discriminability and modality invariance of features. To address these challenges, we propose a novel Diverse Semantics-guided Feature Alignment and Decoupling (DSFAD) network to align identity-relevant features from different modalities into a textual embedding space and disentangle identity-irrelevant features within each modality. Specifically, we develop a Diverse Semantics-guided Feature Alignment (DSFA) module, which generates pedestrian descriptions with diverse sentence structures to guide the cross-modality alignment of visual features. Furthermore, to filter out style information, we propose a Semantic Margin-guided Feature Decoupling (SMFD) module, which decomposes visual features into pedestrian-related and style-related components, and then constrains the similarity between the former and the textual embeddings to be at least a margin higher than that between the latter and the textual embeddings. Additionally, to prevent the loss of pedestrian semantics during feature decoupling, we design a Semantic Consistency-guided Feature Restitution (SCFR) module, which further excavates useful information for identification from the style-related features and restores it back into the pedestrian-related features, and then constrains the similarity between the features after restitution and the textual embeddings to be consistent with that between the features before decoupling and the textual embeddings. Extensive experiments on three VI-ReID datasets demonstrate the superiority of our DSFAD.
CVDec 11, 2024
Embedding and Enriching Explicit Semantics for Visible-Infrared Person Re-IdentificationNeng Dong, Shuanglin Yan, Liyan Zhang et al.
Visible-infrared person re-identification (VIReID) retrieves pedestrian images with the same identity across different modalities. Existing methods learn visual content solely from images, lacking the capability to sense high-level semantics. In this paper, we propose an Embedding and Enriching Explicit Semantics (EEES) framework to learn semantically rich cross-modality pedestrian representations. Our method offers several contributions. First, with the collaboration of multiple large language-vision models, we develop Explicit Semantics Embedding (ESE), which automatically supplements language descriptions for pedestrians and aligns image-text pairs into a common space, thereby learning visual content associated with explicit semantics. Second, recognizing the complementarity of multi-view information, we present Cross-View Semantics Compensation (CVSC), which constructs multi-view image-text pair representations, establishes their many-to-many matching, and propagates knowledge to single-view representations, thus compensating visual content with its missing cross-view semantics. Third, to eliminate noisy semantics such as conflicting color attributes in different modalities, we design Cross-Modality Semantics Purification (CMSP), which constrains the distance between inter-modality image-text pair representations to be close to that between intra-modality image-text pair representations, further enhancing the modality-invariance of visual content. Finally, experimental results demonstrate the effectiveness and superiority of the proposed EEES.
CVSep 29, 2019
Spatiotemporal Co-attention Recurrent Neural Networks for Human-Skeleton Motion PredictionXiangbo Shu, Liyan Zhang, Guo-Jun Qi et al.
Human motion prediction aims to generate future motions based on the observed human motions. Witnessing the success of Recurrent Neural Networks (RNN) in modeling the sequential data, recent works utilize RNN to model human-skeleton motion on the observed motion sequence and predict future human motions. However, these methods did not consider the existence of the spatial coherence among joints and the temporal evolution among skeletons, which reflects the crucial characteristics of human motion in spatiotemporal space. To this end, we propose a novel Skeleton-joint Co-attention Recurrent Neural Networks (SC-RNN) to capture the spatial coherence among joints, and the temporal evolution among skeletons simultaneously on a skeleton-joint co-attention feature map in spatiotemporal space. First, a skeleton-joint feature map is constructed as the representation of the observed motion sequence. Second, we design a new Skeleton-joint Co-Attention (SCA) mechanism to dynamically learn a skeleton-joint co-attention feature map of this skeleton-joint feature map, which can refine the useful observed motion information to predict one future motion. Third, a variant of GRU embedded with SCA collaboratively models the human-skeleton motion and human-joint motion in spatiotemporal space by regarding the skeleton-joint co-attention feature map as the motion context. Experimental results on human motion prediction demonstrate the proposed method outperforms the related methods.
CVJun 4, 2017
Personalized Age Progression with Bi-level Aging Dictionary LearningXiangbo Shu, Jinhui Tang, Zechao Li et al.
Age progression is defined as aesthetically re-rendering the aging face at any future age for an individual face. In this work, we aim to automatically render aging faces in a personalized way. Basically, for each age group, we learn an aging dictionary to reveal its aging characteristics (e.g., wrinkles), where the dictionary bases corresponding to the same index yet from two neighboring aging dictionaries form a particular aging pattern cross these two age groups, and a linear combination of all these patterns expresses a particular personalized aging process. Moreover, two factors are taken into consideration in the dictionary learning process. First, beyond the aging dictionaries, each person may have extra personalized facial characteristics, e.g. mole, which are invariant in the aging process. Second, it is challenging or even impossible to collect faces of all age groups for a particular person, yet much easier and more practical to get face pairs from neighboring age groups. To this end, we propose a novel Bi-level Dictionary Learning based Personalized Age Progression (BDL-PAP) method. Here, bi-level dictionary learning is formulated to learn the aging dictionaries based on face pairs from neighboring age groups. Extensive experiments well demonstrate the advantages of the proposed BDL-PAP over other state-of-the-arts in term of personalized age progression, as well as the performance gain for cross-age face verification by synthesizing aging faces.