Yeqi He

2papers

2 Papers

24.9CVMar 24
Few-Shot Generative Model Adaption via Identity Injection and Preservation

Yeqi He, Liang Li, Jiehua Zhang et al.

Training generative models with limited data presents severe challenges of mode collapse. A common approach is to adapt a large pretrained generative model upon a target domain with very few samples (fewer than 10), known as few-shot generative model adaptation. However, existing methods often suffer from forgetting source domain identity knowledge during adaptation, which degrades the quality of generated images in the target domain. To address this, we propose Identity Injection and Preservation (I$^2$P), which leverages identity injection and consistency alignment to preserve the source identity knowledge. Specifically, we first introduce an identity injection module that integrates source domain identity knowledge into the target domain's latent space, ensuring the generated images retain key identity knowledge of the source domain. Second, we design an identity substitution module, which includes a style-content decoupler and a reconstruction modulator, to further enhance source domain identity preservation. We enforce identity consistency constraints by aligning features from identity substitution, thereby preserving identity knowledge. Both quantitative and qualitative experiments show that our method achieves substantial improvements over state-of-the-art methods on multiple public datasets and 5 metrics.

37.2CVMar 25
HAM: A Training-Free Style Transfer Approach via Heterogeneous Attention Modulation for Diffusion Models

Yeqi He, Liang Li, Zhiwen Yang et al.

Diffusion models have demonstrated remarkable performance in image generation, particularly within the domain of style transfer. Prevailing style transfer approaches typically leverage pre-trained diffusion models' robust feature extraction capabilities alongside external modular control pathways to explicitly impose style guidance signals. However, these methods often fail to capture complex style reference or retain the identity of user-provided content images, thus falling into the trap of style-content balance. Thus, we propose a training-free style transfer approach via $\textbf{h}$eterogeneous $\textbf{a}$ttention $\textbf{m}$odulation ($\textbf{HAM}$) to protect identity information during image/text-guided style reference transfer, thereby addressing the style-content trade-off challenge. Specifically, we first introduces style noise initialization to initialize latent noise for diffusion. Then, during the diffusion process, it innovatively employs HAM for different attention mechanisms, including Global Attention Regulation (GAR) and Local Attention Transplantation (LAT), which better preserving the details of the content image while capturing complex style references. Our approach is validated through a series of qualitative and quantitative experiments, achieving state-of-the-art performance on multiple quantitative metrics.