61.7SDApr 10
MAGE: Modality-Agnostic Music Generation and EditingMuhammad Usama Saleem, Tejasvi Ravi, Tianyu Xu et al.
Multimodal music creation requires models that can both generate audio from high-level cues and edit existing mixtures in a targeted manner. Yet most multimodal music systems are built for a single task and a fixed prompting interface, making their conditioning brittle when guidance is ambiguous, temporally misaligned, or partially missing. Common additive fusion or feature concatenation further weakens cross-modal grounding, often causing prompt drift and spurious musical content during generation and editing. We propose MAGE, a modality-agnostic framework that unifies multimodal music generation and mixture-grounded editing within a single continuous latent formulation. At its core, MAGE uses a Controlled Multimodal FluxFormer, a flow-based Transformer that learns controllable latent trajectories for synthesis and editing under any available subset of conditions. To improve grounding, we introduce Audio-Visual Nexus Alignment to select temporally consistent visual evidence for the audio timeline, and a cross-gated modulation mechanism that applies multiplicative control from aligned visual and textual cues to the audio latents, suppressing unsupported components rather than injecting them. Finally, we train with a dynamic modality-masking curriculum that exposes the model to text-only, visual-only, joint multimodal, and mixture-guided settings, enabling robust inference under missing modalities without training separate models. Experiments on the MUSIC benchmark show that MAGE supports effective multimodal-guided music generation and targeted editing, achieving competitive quality while offering a lightweight and flexible interface tailored to practical music workflows.
75.4CVApr 13
LiveGesture Streamable Co-Speech Gesture Generation ModelMuhammad Usama Saleem, Mayur Jagdishbhai Patel, Ekkasit Pinyoanuntapong et al.
We propose LiveGesture, the first fully streamable, speech-driven full-body gesture generation framework that operates with zero look-ahead and supports arbitrary sequence length. Unlike existing co-speech gesture methods, which are designed for offline generation and either treat body regions independently or entangle all joints within a single model, LiveGesture is built from the ground up for causal, region-coordinated motion generation. LiveGesture consists of two main modules: the Streamable Vector Quantized Motion Tokenizer (SVQ) and the Hierarchical Autoregressive Transformer (HAR). The SVQ tokenizer converts the motion sequence of each body region into causal, discrete motion tokens, enabling real-time, streamable token decoding. On top of SVQ, HAR employs region-expert autoregressive (xAR) transformers to model expressive, fine-grained motion dynamics for each body region. A causal spatio-temporal fusion module (xAR Fusion) then captures and integrates correlated motion dynamics across regions. Both xAR and xAR Fusion are conditioned on live, continuously arriving audio signals encoded by a streamable causal audio encoder. To enhance robustness under streaming noise and prediction errors, we introduce autoregressive masking training, which leverages uncertainty-guided token masking and random region masking to expose the model to imperfect, partially erroneous histories during training. Experiments on the BEAT2 dataset demonstrate that LiveGesture produces coherent, diverse, and beat-synchronous full-body gestures in real time, matching or surpassing state-of-the-art offline methods under true zero look-ahead conditions.
46.7CVMar 20
Monocular Models are Strong Learners for Multi-View Human Mesh RecoveryHaoyu Xie, Shengkai Xu, Cheng Guo et al.
Multi-view human mesh recovery (HMR) is broadly deployed in diverse domains where high accuracy and strong generalization are essential. Existing approaches can be broadly grouped into geometry-based and learning-based methods. However, geometry-based methods (e.g., triangulation) rely on cumbersome camera calibration, while learning-based approaches often generalize poorly to unseen camera configurations due to the lack of multi-view training data, limiting their performance in real-world scenarios. To enable calibration-free reconstruction that generalizes to arbitrary camera setups, we propose a training-free framework that leverages pretrained single-view HMR models as strong priors, eliminating the need for multi-view training data. Our method first constructs a robust and consistent multi-view initialization from single-view predictions, and then refines it via test-time optimization guided by multi-view consistency and anatomical constraints. Extensive experiments demonstrate state-of-the-art performance on standard benchmarks, surpassing multi-view models trained with explicit multi-view supervision.
CVMar 28, 2024
BAMM: Bidirectional Autoregressive Motion ModelEkkasit Pinyoanuntapong, Muhammad Usama Saleem, Pu Wang et al.
Generating human motion from text has been dominated by denoising motion models either through diffusion or generative masking process. However, these models face great limitations in usability by requiring prior knowledge of the motion length. Conversely, autoregressive motion models address this limitation by adaptively predicting motion endpoints, at the cost of degraded generation quality and editing capabilities. To address these challenges, we propose Bidirectional Autoregressive Motion Model (BAMM), a novel text-to-motion generation framework. BAMM consists of two key components: (1) a motion tokenizer that transforms 3D human motion into discrete tokens in latent space, and (2) a masked self-attention transformer that autoregressively predicts randomly masked tokens via a hybrid attention masking strategy. By unifying generative masked modeling and autoregressive modeling, BAMM captures rich and bidirectional dependencies among motion tokens, while learning the probabilistic mapping from textual inputs to motion outputs with dynamically-adjusted motion sequence length. This feature enables BAMM to simultaneously achieving high-quality motion generation with enhanced usability and built-in motion editability. Extensive experiments on HumanML3D and KIT-ML datasets demonstrate that BAMM surpasses current state-of-the-art methods in both qualitative and quantitative measures. Our project page is available at https://exitudio.github.io/BAMM-page
CVOct 14, 2024
MaskControl: Spatio-Temporal Control for Masked Motion SynthesisEkkasit Pinyoanuntapong, Muhammad Usama Saleem, Korrawe Karunratanakul et al.
Recent advances in motion diffusion models have enabled spatially controllable text-to-motion generation. However, these models struggle to achieve high-precision control while maintaining high-quality motion generation. To address these challenges, we propose MaskControl, the first approach to introduce controllability to the generative masked motion model. Our approach introduces two key innovations. First, \textit{Logits Regularizer} implicitly perturbs logits at training time to align the distribution of motion tokens with the controlled joint positions, while regularizing the categorical token prediction to ensure high-fidelity generation. Second, \textit{Logit Optimization} explicitly optimizes the predicted logits during inference time, directly reshaping the token distribution that forces the generated motion to accurately align with the controlled joint positions. Moreover, we introduce \textit{Differentiable Expectation Sampling (DES)} to combat the non-differential distribution sampling process encountered by logits regularizer and optimization. Extensive experiments demonstrate that MaskControl outperforms state-of-the-art methods, achieving superior motion quality (FID decreases by ~77\%) and higher control precision (average error 0.91 vs. 1.08). Additionally, MaskControl enables diverse applications, including any-joint-any-frame control, body-part timeline control, and zero-shot objective control. Video visualization can be found at https://www.ekkasit.com/ControlMM-page/
CVJan 14, 2025
BioPose: Biomechanically-accurate 3D Pose Estimation from Monocular VideosFarnoosh Koleini, Muhammad Usama Saleem, Pu Wang et al.
Recent advancements in 3D human pose estimation from single-camera images and videos have relied on parametric models, like SMPL. However, these models oversimplify anatomical structures, limiting their accuracy in capturing true joint locations and movements, which reduces their applicability in biomechanics, healthcare, and robotics. Biomechanically accurate pose estimation, on the other hand, typically requires costly marker-based motion capture systems and optimization techniques in specialized labs. To bridge this gap, we propose BioPose, a novel learning-based framework for predicting biomechanically accurate 3D human pose directly from monocular videos. BioPose includes three key components: a Multi-Query Human Mesh Recovery model (MQ-HMR), a Neural Inverse Kinematics (NeurIK) model, and a 2D-informed pose refinement technique. MQ-HMR leverages a multi-query deformable transformer to extract multi-scale fine-grained image features, enabling precise human mesh recovery. NeurIK treats the mesh vertices as virtual markers, applying a spatial-temporal network to regress biomechanically accurate 3D poses under anatomical constraints. To further improve 3D pose estimations, a 2D-informed refinement step optimizes the query tokens during inference by aligning the 3D structure with 2D pose observations. Experiments on benchmark datasets demonstrate that BioPose significantly outperforms state-of-the-art methods. Project website: \url{https://m-usamasaleem.github.io/publication/BioPose/BioPose.html}.
GRApr 6, 2025
Walk Before You Dance: High-fidelity and Editable Dance Synthesis via Generative Masked Motion PriorForam N Shah, Parshwa Shah, Muhammad Usama Saleem et al.
Recent advances in dance generation have enabled the automatic synthesis of 3D dance motions. However, existing methods still face significant challenges in simultaneously achieving high realism, precise dance-music synchronization, diverse motion expression, and physical plausibility. To address these limitations, we propose a novel approach that leverages a generative masked text-to-motion model as a distribution prior to learn a probabilistic mapping from diverse guidance signals, including music, genre, and pose, into high-quality dance motion sequences. Our framework also supports semantic motion editing, such as motion inpainting and body part modification. Specifically, we introduce a multi-tower masked motion model that integrates a text-conditioned masked motion backbone with two parallel, modality-specific branches: a music-guidance tower and a pose-guidance tower. The model is trained using synchronized and progressive masked training, which allows effective infusion of the pretrained text-to-motion prior into the dance synthesis process while enabling each guidance branch to optimize independently through its own loss function, mitigating gradient interference. During inference, we introduce classifier-free logits guidance and pose-guided token optimization to strengthen the influence of music, genre, and pose signals. Extensive experiments demonstrate that our method sets a new state of the art in dance generation, significantly advancing both the quality and editability over existing approaches. Project Page available at https://foram-s1.github.io/DanceMosaic/
CVDec 19, 2024
GenHMR: Generative Human Mesh RecoveryMuhammad Usama Saleem, Ekkasit Pinyoanuntapong, Pu Wang et al.
Human mesh recovery (HMR) is crucial in many computer vision applications; from health to arts and entertainment. HMR from monocular images has predominantly been addressed by deterministic methods that output a single prediction for a given 2D image. However, HMR from a single image is an ill-posed problem due to depth ambiguity and occlusions. Probabilistic methods have attempted to address this by generating and fusing multiple plausible 3D reconstructions, but their performance has often lagged behind deterministic approaches. In this paper, we introduce GenHMR, a novel generative framework that reformulates monocular HMR as an image-conditioned generative task, explicitly modeling and mitigating uncertainties in the 2D-to-3D mapping process. GenHMR comprises two key components: (1) a pose tokenizer to convert 3D human poses into a sequence of discrete tokens in a latent space, and (2) an image-conditional masked transformer to learn the probabilistic distributions of the pose tokens, conditioned on the input image prompt along with randomly masked token sequence. During inference, the model samples from the learned conditional distribution to iteratively decode high-confidence pose tokens, thereby reducing 3D reconstruction uncertainties. To further refine the reconstruction, a 2D pose-guided refinement technique is proposed to directly fine-tune the decoded pose tokens in the latent space, which forces the projected 3D body mesh to align with the 2D pose clues. Experiments on benchmark datasets demonstrate that GenHMR significantly outperforms state-of-the-art methods. Project website can be found at https://m-usamasaleem.github.io/publication/GenHMR/GenHMR.html
CVDec 18, 2024
MaskHand: Generative Masked Modeling for Robust Hand Mesh Reconstruction in the WildMuhammad Usama Saleem, Ekkasit Pinyoanuntapong, Mayur Jagdishbhai Patel et al.
Reconstructing a 3D hand mesh from a single RGB image is challenging due to complex articulations, self-occlusions, and depth ambiguities. Traditional discriminative methods, which learn a deterministic mapping from a 2D image to a single 3D mesh, often struggle with the inherent ambiguities in 2D-to-3D mapping. To address this challenge, we propose MaskHand, a novel generative masked model for hand mesh recovery that synthesizes plausible 3D hand meshes by learning and sampling from the probabilistic distribution of the ambiguous 2D-to-3D mapping process. MaskHand consists of two key components: (1) a VQ-MANO, which encodes 3D hand articulations as discrete pose tokens in a latent space, and (2) a Context-Guided Masked Transformer that randomly masks out pose tokens and learns their joint distribution, conditioned on corrupted token sequence, image context, and 2D pose cues. This learned distribution facilitates confidence-guided sampling during inference, producing mesh reconstructions with low uncertainty and high precision. Extensive evaluations on benchmark and real-world datasets demonstrate that MaskHand achieves state-of-the-art accuracy, robustness, and realism in 3D hand mesh reconstruction. Project website: https://m-usamasaleem.github.io/publication/MaskHand/MaskHand.html.