CVApr 11, 2022
Category-Aware Transformer Network for Better Human-Object Interaction DetectionLeizhen Dong, Zhimin Li, Kunlun Xu et al.
Human-Object Interactions (HOI) detection, which aims to localize a human and a relevant object while recognizing their interaction, is crucial for understanding a still image. Recently, transformer-based models have significantly advanced the progress of HOI detection. However, the capability of these models has not been fully explored since the Object Query of the model is always simply initialized as just zeros, which would affect the performance. In this paper, we try to study the issue of promoting transformer-based HOI detectors by initializing the Object Query with category-aware semantic information. To this end, we innovatively propose the Category-Aware Transformer Network (CATN). Specifically, the Object Query would be initialized via category priors represented by an external object detection model to yield better performance. Moreover, such category priors can be further used for enhancing the representation ability of features via the attention mechanism. We have firstly verified our idea via the Oracle experiment by initializing the Object Query with the groundtruth category information. And then extensive experiments have been conducted to show that a HOI detection model equipped with our idea outperforms the baseline by a large margin to achieve a new state-of-the-art result.
IVSep 12, 2022
High-Fidelity Variable-Rate Image Compression via Invertible Activation TransformationShilv Cai, Zhijun Zhang, Liqun Chen et al.
Learning-based methods have effectively promoted the community of image compression. Meanwhile, variational autoencoder (VAE) based variable-rate approaches have recently gained much attention to avoid the usage of a set of different networks for various compression rates. Despite the remarkable performance that has been achieved, these approaches would be readily corrupted once multiple compression/decompression operations are executed, resulting in the fact that image quality would be tremendously dropped and strong artifacts would appear. Thus, we try to tackle the issue of high-fidelity fine variable-rate image compression and propose the Invertible Activation Transformation (IAT) module. We implement the IAT in a mathematical invertible manner on a single rate Invertible Neural Network (INN) based model and the quality level (QLevel) would be fed into the IAT to generate scaling and bias tensors. IAT and QLevel together give the image compression model the ability of fine variable-rate control while better maintaining the image fidelity. Extensive experiments demonstrate that the single rate image compression model equipped with our IAT module has the ability to achieve variable-rate control without any compromise. And our IAT-embedded model obtains comparable rate-distortion performance with recent learning-based image compression methods. Furthermore, our method outperforms the state-of-the-art variable-rate image compression method by a large margin, especially after multiple re-encodings.
44.6CVMay 26
AnchorDiff: Training-Free Concept Grounding for MM-DiTs via Anchor-Based Graph PropagationJian Zhang, Zhijun Zhang
Multi-Modal Diffusion Transformers (MM-DiTs) encode rich representations for training-free concept grounding, but existing attention-based methods often produce overlapping activations on visually confusable concepts, a failure mode we call concept leakage, where target responses spill over to non-target objects. To address this issue, we propose AnchorDiff, a training-free grounding method that decouples semantic localization from structural refinement. AnchorDiff selects a high-confidence anchor from concept-to-image attention map and propagates it as a one-hot seed over a hybrid graph derived from image-to-image self-attention. The graph uses output-space similarity for dense within-object propagation and a row-wise attention gate to suppress cross-object connections. Additionally, we introduce the Multi-Concept Confusion Dataset, which contains images with multiple visually similar concepts and separate masks, enabling explicit evaluation of concept leakage. Experiments show that AnchorDiff achieves strong grounding performance on ImageNet-Segmentation and PascalVOC, while substantially reducing concept leakage on our Multi-Concept Confusion Dataset.
CVOct 4, 2023
A Grammatical Compositional Model for Video Action DetectionZhijun Zhang, Xu Zou, Jiahuan Zhou et al. · pku
Analysis of human actions in videos demands understanding complex human dynamics, as well as the interaction between actors and context. However, these interaction relationships usually exhibit large intra-class variations from diverse human poses or object manipulations, and fine-grained inter-class differences between similar actions. Thus the performance of existing methods is severely limited. Motivated by the observation that interactive actions can be decomposed into actor dynamics and participating objects or humans, we propose to investigate the composite property of them. In this paper, we present a novel Grammatical Compositional Model (GCM) for action detection based on typical And-Or graphs. Our model exploits the intrinsic structures and latent relationships of actions in a hierarchical manner to harness both the compositionality of grammar models and the capability of expressing rich features of DNNs. The proposed model can be readily embodied into a neural network module for efficient optimization in an end-to-end manner. Extensive experiments are conducted on the AVA dataset and the Something-Else task to demonstrate the superiority of our model, meanwhile the interpretability is enhanced through an inference parsing procedure.
CVAug 14, 2023
UniBrain: Unify Image Reconstruction and Captioning All in One Diffusion Model from Human Brain ActivityWeijian Mai, Zhijun Zhang
Image reconstruction and captioning from brain activity evoked by visual stimuli allow researchers to further understand the connection between the human brain and the visual perception system. While deep generative models have recently been employed in this field, reconstructing realistic captions and images with both low-level details and high semantic fidelity is still a challenging problem. In this work, we propose UniBrain: Unify Image Reconstruction and Captioning All in One Diffusion Model from Human Brain Activity. For the first time, we unify image reconstruction and captioning from visual-evoked functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) through a latent diffusion model termed Versatile Diffusion. Specifically, we transform fMRI voxels into text and image latent for low-level information and guide the backward diffusion process through fMRI-based image and text conditions derived from CLIP to generate realistic captions and images. UniBrain outperforms current methods both qualitatively and quantitatively in terms of image reconstruction and reports image captioning results for the first time on the Natural Scenes Dataset (NSD) dataset. Moreover, the ablation experiments and functional region-of-interest (ROI) analysis further exhibit the superiority of UniBrain and provide comprehensive insight for visual-evoked brain decoding.
89.8DSMay 4
Better Diameter Bounds for Efficient Shortcuts and a Structural Criterion for ConstructivenessBernhard Haeupler, Antti Roeyskoe, Zhijun Zhang
All parallel algorithms for directed reachability and shortest paths crucially rely on efficient shortcut constructions. These constructions find directed paths and shortcut them by adding edges, with the goal to reduce the diameter of the graph. A long sequence of works has studied (efficient) shortcut constructions as well as impossibility results on the best diameter and therefore the best parallelism that can be achieved via this approach. This paper introduces a new conceptual tool for this line of research in the form of a simple and natural structural criterion: A shortcut $H$ for a graph $G$ is certified if for any shortcut edge $(u, v) \in H$, there exists a vertex $w$ such that the edges $(u, w)$ and $(w, v)$ are also in $G \cup H$. We show that this criterion captures constructiveness in the following sense: A shortcut $H$ can be constructed in $t$ time by repeatedly spending $\ell$ time on shortcutting a path of length $\ell$, if and only if, there exists a certified shortcut $H' \supseteq H$ of size $\tilde{O}(t)$. Furthermore, all known shortcut constructions with efficient algorithms can be extended to produce certified shortcuts of size $\tilde{O}(m)$. On the other hand, for shortcut constructions for which attempts to find efficient implementations have failed, we can show that this is impossible. We also obtain stronger diameter lower bounds for certified shortcuts and hopsets. For example, no certified shortcut construction with almost-linear size can reduce a graph's diameter below $n^{1/4-o(1)}$. This seems to be the best bound one can hope for with current techniques.
ROApr 17, 2023
Base Placement Optimization for Coverage Mobile Manipulation TasksHuiwen Zhang, Kai Mi, Zhijun Zhang
Base placement optimization (BPO) is a fundamental capability for mobile manipulation and has been researched for decades. However, it is still very challenging for some reasons. First, compared with humans, current robots are extremely inflexible, and therefore have higher requirements on the accuracy of base placements (BPs). Second, the BP and task constraints are coupled with each other. The optimal BP depends on the task constraints, and in BP will affect task constraints in turn. More tricky is that some task constraints are flexible and non-deterministic. Third, except for fulfilling tasks, some other performance metrics such as optimal energy consumption and minimal execution time need to be considered, which makes the BPO problem even more complicated. In this paper, a Scale-like disc (SLD) representation of the workspace is used to decouple task constraints and BPs. To evaluate reachability and return optimal working pose over SLDs, a reachability map (RM) is constructed offline. In order to optimize the objectives of coverage, manipulability, and time cost simultaneously, this paper formulates the BPO as a multi-objective optimization problem (MOOP). Among them, the time optimal objective is modeled as a traveling salesman problem (TSP), which is more in line with the actual situation. The evolutionary method is used to solve the MOOP. Besides, to ensure the validity and optimality of the solution, collision detection is performed on the candidate BPs, and solutions from BPO are further fine-tuned according to the specific given task. Finally, the proposed method is used to solve a real-world toilet coverage cleaning task. Experiments show that the optimized BPs can significantly improve the coverage and efficiency of the task.
89.6DSApr 23
Stronger Directed Low-Diameter Decompositions with Sub-Logarithmic Diameter and SeparationBernhard Haeupler, Richard Hladík, Shengzhe Wang et al.
This paper significantly strengthens directed low-diameter decompositions in several ways. We define and give the first results for separated low-diameter decompositions in directed graphs, tighten and generalize probabilistic guarantees, and prove new independence results between (far away) edges. Our results are the first to give meaningful guarantees for decompositions with small diameters $D = Ω(\log\log n)$ in contrast to the state of the art that only applies to super-logarithmic diameters $D = ω(\log n)$. These results transfer several important and widely used aspects of undirected low-diameter decompositions to the directed setting. All our results are algorithmic -- small modifications to two existing directed low-diameter decompositions [BFHL25; Li25] can be used to sample decompositions with our new guarantees in near-linear time $\tilde{O}(m)$.
CVSep 11, 2024
EMOdiffhead: Continuously Emotional Control in Talking Head Generation via DiffusionJian Zhang, Weijian Mai, Zhijun Zhang
The task of audio-driven portrait animation involves generating a talking head video using an identity image and an audio track of speech. While many existing approaches focus on lip synchronization and video quality, few tackle the challenge of generating emotion-driven talking head videos. The ability to control and edit emotions is essential for producing expressive and realistic animations. In response to this challenge, we propose EMOdiffhead, a novel method for emotional talking head video generation that not only enables fine-grained control of emotion categories and intensities but also enables one-shot generation. Given the FLAME 3D model's linearity in expression modeling, we utilize the DECA method to extract expression vectors, that are combined with audio to guide a diffusion model in generating videos with precise lip synchronization and rich emotional expressiveness. This approach not only enables the learning of rich facial information from emotion-irrelevant data but also facilitates the generation of emotional videos. It effectively overcomes the limitations of emotional data, such as the lack of diversity in facial and background information, and addresses the absence of emotional details in emotion-irrelevant data. Extensive experiments and user studies demonstrate that our approach achieves state-of-the-art performance compared to other emotion portrait animation methods.
AIDec 31, 2023
Brain-Conditional Multimodal Synthesis: A Survey and TaxonomyWeijian Mai, Jian Zhang, Pengfei Fang et al.
In the era of Artificial Intelligence Generated Content (AIGC), conditional multimodal synthesis technologies (e.g., text-to-image, text-to-video, text-to-audio, etc) are gradually reshaping the natural content in the real world. The key to multimodal synthesis technology is to establish the mapping relationship between different modalities. Brain signals, serving as potential reflections of how the brain interprets external information, exhibit a distinctive One-to-Many correspondence with various external modalities. This correspondence makes brain signals emerge as a promising guiding condition for multimodal content synthesis. Brian-conditional multimodal synthesis refers to decoding brain signals back to perceptual experience, which is crucial for developing practical brain-computer interface systems and unraveling complex mechanisms underlying how the brain perceives and comprehends external stimuli. This survey comprehensively examines the emerging field of AIGC-based Brain-conditional Multimodal Synthesis, termed AIGC-Brain, to delineate the current landscape and future directions. To begin, related brain neuroimaging datasets, functional brain regions, and mainstream generative models are introduced as the foundation of AIGC-Brain decoding and analysis. Next, we provide a comprehensive taxonomy for AIGC-Brain decoding models and present task-specific representative work and detailed implementation strategies to facilitate comparison and in-depth analysis. Quality assessments are then introduced for both qualitative and quantitative evaluation. Finally, this survey explores insights gained, providing current challenges and outlining prospects of AIGC-Brain. Being the inaugural survey in this domain, this paper paves the way for the progress of AIGC-Brain research, offering a foundational overview to guide future work.
CVFeb 24, 2022
Effective Actor-centric Human-object Interaction DetectionKunlun Xu, Zhimin Li, Zhijun Zhang et al.
While Human-Object Interaction(HOI) Detection has achieved tremendous advances in recent, it still remains challenging due to complex interactions with multiple humans and objects occurring in images, which would inevitably lead to ambiguities. Most existing methods either generate all human-object pair candidates and infer their relationships by cropped local features successively in a two-stage manner, or directly predict interaction points in a one-stage procedure. However, the lack of spatial configurations or reasoning steps of two- or one- stage methods respectively limits their performance in such complex scenes. To avoid this ambiguity, we propose a novel actor-centric framework. The main ideas are that when inferring interactions: 1) the non-local features of the entire image guided by actor position are obtained to model the relationship between the actor and context, and then 2) we use an object branch to generate pixel-wise interaction area prediction, where the interaction area denotes the object central area. Moreover, we also use an actor branch to get interaction prediction of the actor and propose a novel composition strategy based on center-point indexing to generate the final HOI prediction. Thanks to the usage of the non-local features and the partly-coupled property of the human-objects composition strategy, our proposed framework can detect HOI more accurately especially for complex images. Extensive experimental results show that our method achieves the state-of-the-art on the challenging V-COCO and HICO-DET benchmarks and is more robust especially in multiple persons and/or objects scenes.
CVDec 1, 2021
Learning Oriented Remote Sensing Object Detection via Naive Geometric ComputingYanjie Wang, Xu Zou, Zhijun Zhang et al.
Detecting oriented objects along with estimating their rotation information is one crucial step for analyzing remote sensing images. Despite that many methods proposed recently have achieved remarkable performance, most of them directly learn to predict object directions under the supervision of only one (e.g. the rotation angle) or a few (e.g. several coordinates) groundtruth values individually. Oriented object detection would be more accurate and robust if extra constraints, with respect to proposal and rotation information regression, are adopted for joint supervision during training. To this end, we innovatively propose a mechanism that simultaneously learns the regression of horizontal proposals, oriented proposals, and rotation angles of objects in a consistent manner, via naive geometric computing, as one additional steady constraint (see Figure 1). An oriented center prior guided label assignment strategy is proposed for further enhancing the quality of proposals, yielding better performance. Extensive experiments demonstrate the model equipped with our idea significantly outperforms the baseline by a large margin to achieve a new state-of-the-art result without any extra computational burden during inference. Our proposed idea is simple and intuitive that can be readily implemented. Source codes and trained models are involved in supplementary files.
ROAug 16, 2020
Modification of Gesture-Determined-Dynamic Function with Consideration of Margins for Motion Planning of Humanoid RobotsZhijun Zhang, Lingdong Kong, Yaru Niu et al.
The gesture-determined-dynamic function (GDDF) offers an effective way to handle the control problems of humanoid robots. Specifically, GDDF is utilized to constrain the movements of dual arms of humanoid robots and steer specific gestures to conduct demanding tasks under certain conditions. However, there is still a deficiency in this scheme. Through experiments, we found that the joints of the dual arms, which can be regarded as the redundant manipulators, could exceed their limits slightly at the joint angle level. The performance straightly depends on the parameters designed beforehand for the GDDF, which causes a lack of adaptability to the practical applications of this method. In this paper, a modified scheme of GDDF with consideration of margins (MGDDF) is proposed. This MGDDF scheme is based on quadratic programming (QP) framework, which is widely applied to solving the redundancy resolution problems of robot arms. Moreover, three margins are introduced in the proposed MGDDF scheme to avoid joint limits. With consideration of these margins, the joints of manipulators of the humanoid robots will not exceed their limits, and the potential damages which might be caused by exceeding limits will be completely avoided. Computer simulations conducted on MATLAB further verify the feasibility and superiority of the proposed MGDDF scheme.
LGOct 25, 2019
A Gegenbauer Neural Network with Regularized Weights Direct Determination for ClassificationJie He, Tao Chen, Zhijun Zhang
Single-hidden layer feed forward neural networks (SLFNs) are widely used in pattern classification problems, but a huge bottleneck encountered is the slow speed and poor performance of the traditional iterative gradient-based learning algorithms. Although the famous extreme learning machine (ELM) has successfully addressed the problems of slow convergence, it still has computational robustness problems brought by input weights and biases randomly assigned. Thus, in order to overcome the aforementioned problems, in this paper, a novel type neural network based on Gegenbauer orthogonal polynomials, termed as GNN, is constructed and investigated. This model could overcome the computational robustness problems of ELM, while still has comparable structural simplicity and approximation capability. Based on this, we propose a regularized weights direct determination (R-WDD) based on equality-constrained optimization to determine the optimal output weights. The R-WDD tends to minimize the empirical risks and structural risks of the network, thus to lower the risk of over fitting and improve the generalization ability. This leads us to a the final GNN with R-WDD, which is a unified learning mechanism for binary and multi-class classification problems. Finally, as is verified in the various comparison experiments, GNN with R-WDD tends to have comparable (or even better) generalization performances, computational scalability and efficiency, and classification robustness, compared to least square support vector machine (LS-SVM), ELM with Gaussian kernel.
CVJun 4, 2018
RedNet: Residual Encoder-Decoder Network for indoor RGB-D Semantic SegmentationJindong Jiang, Lunan Zheng, Fei Luo et al.
Indoor semantic segmentation has always been a difficult task in computer vision. In this paper, we propose an RGB-D residual encoder-decoder architecture, named RedNet, for indoor RGB-D semantic segmentation. In RedNet, the residual module is applied to both the encoder and decoder as the basic building block, and the skip-connection is used to bypass the spatial feature between the encoder and decoder. In order to incorporate the depth information of the scene, a fusion structure is constructed, which makes inference on RGB image and depth image separately, and fuses their features over several layers. In order to efficiently optimize the network's parameters, we propose a `pyramid supervision' training scheme, which applies supervised learning over different layers in the decoder, to cope with the problem of gradients vanishing. Experiment results show that the proposed RedNet(ResNet-50) achieves a state-of-the-art mIoU accuracy of 47.8% on the SUN RGB-D benchmark dataset.
CVSep 1, 2017
Weighted Low-rank Tensor Recovery for Hyperspectral Image RestorationYi Chang, Luxin Yan, Houzhang Fang et al.
Hyperspectral imaging, providing abundant spatial and spectral information simultaneously, has attracted a lot of interest in recent years. Unfortunately, due to the hardware limitations, the hyperspectral image (HSI) is vulnerable to various degradations, such noises (random noise, HSI denoising), blurs (Gaussian and uniform blur, HSI deblurring), and down-sampled (both spectral and spatial downsample, HSI super-resolution). Previous HSI restoration methods are designed for one specific task only. Besides, most of them start from the 1-D vector or 2-D matrix models and cannot fully exploit the structurally spectral-spatial correlation in 3-D HSI. To overcome these limitations, in this work, we propose a unified low-rank tensor recovery model for comprehensive HSI restoration tasks, in which non-local similarity between spectral-spatial cubic and spectral correlation are simultaneously captured by 3-order tensors. Further, to improve the capability and flexibility, we formulate it as a weighted low-rank tensor recovery (WLRTR) model by treating the singular values differently, and study its analytical solution. We also consider the exclusive stripe noise in HSI as the gross error by extending WLRTR to robust principal component analysis (WLRTR-RPCA). Extensive experiments demonstrate the proposed WLRTR models consistently outperform state-of-the-arts in typical low level vision HSI tasks, including denoising, destriping, deblurring and super-resolution.
CVMay 21, 2017
Incorporating Depth into both CNN and CRF for Indoor Semantic SegmentationJindong Jiang, Zhijun Zhang, Yongqian Huang et al.
To improve segmentation performance, a novel neural network architecture (termed DFCN-DCRF) is proposed, which combines an RGB-D fully convolutional neural network (DFCN) with a depth-sensitive fully-connected conditional random field (DCRF). First, a DFCN architecture which fuses depth information into the early layers and applies dilated convolution for later contextual reasoning is designed. Then, a depth-sensitive fully-connected conditional random field (DCRF) is proposed and combined with the previous DFCN to refine the preliminary result. Comparative experiments show that the proposed DFCN-DCRF has the best performance compared with most state-of-the-art methods.