Haoyun Feng

2papers

2 Papers

8.7CVMay 17
A Conditional U-Net Pipeline with Pre- and Post-Processing for Aerial RGB-to-Thermal Image Translation

Tseten Sherpa, Sikandar Ali, Shubham Parab et al.

Paired RGB-thermal data has shown significant utility across a range of applications, including image fusion, object tracking, and anomaly detection; however, its broader adoption is constrained by the limited availability of aligned RGB-thermal image pairs. RGB-to-thermal (and vice versa) image translation has emerged as a practical solution to this challenge. Prior approaches including conditional generative adversarial networks (cGANs) such as ThermalGAN and Scalable Interpolant Transformer (SiT)-based architectures such as ThermalGen have demonstrated strong potential for aerial-to-thermal image translation. In this work, we explore alternative architectures that prioritize simplicity while maintaining performance. Specifically, we propose a conditional U-Net that incorporates weather data at the bottleneck layer, complemented by targeted preprocessing and post-processing techniques applied within the Pix2Pix GAN architecture. We utilize a training set of 612 paired RGB and thermal images, and evaluate over 5-fold cross-validation, ultimately testing on a held-out test set. Our conditional U-Net model performed best, with a peak signal-to-noise ratio (PSNR) of 14.5485, structural similarity index measure (SSIM) of 0.8095, and learned perceptual image patch similarity (LPIPS) of 0.1666. These results outperformed the base ThermalGen model, which attained PSNR, SSIM, and LPIPS scores of 7.56, 0.2444, and 0.6317 respectively. We find that while saturation boost and contrast enhancement for preprocessing and Gaussian blur for post-processing provide observable improvements, the incorporation of conditioning data was most effective. Our findings cement the potential of integrating auxiliary metadata into thermal image generation, suggesting that such information can serve as a proxy for environmental conditions critical to accurate thermal reconstruction.

LGDec 1, 2019
Cascading Hybrid Bandits: Online Learning to Rank for Relevance and Diversity

Chang Li, Haoyun Feng, Maarten de Rijke

Relevance ranking and result diversification are two core areas in modern recommender systems. Relevance ranking aims at building a ranked list sorted in decreasing order of item relevance, while result diversification focuses on generating a ranked list of items that covers a broad range of topics. In this paper, we study an online learning setting that aims to recommend a ranked list with $K$ items that maximizes the ranking utility, i.e., a list whose items are relevant and whose topics are diverse. We formulate it as the cascade hybrid bandits (CHB) problem. CHB assumes the cascading user behavior, where a user browses the displayed list from top to bottom, clicks the first attractive item, and stops browsing the rest. We propose a hybrid contextual bandit approach, called CascadeHybrid, for solving this problem. CascadeHybrid models item relevance and topical diversity using two independent functions and simultaneously learns those functions from user click feedback. We conduct experiments to evaluate CascadeHybrid on two real-world recommendation datasets: MovieLens and Yahoo music datasets. Our experimental results show that CascadeHybrid outperforms the baselines. In addition, we prove theoretical guarantees on the $n$-step performance demonstrating the soundness of CascadeHybrid.