Muhammad Huzaifa

CV
h-index28
7papers
32citations
Novelty46%
AI Score38

7 Papers

CVJul 22, 2024Code
Test-Time Low Rank Adaptation via Confidence Maximization for Zero-Shot Generalization of Vision-Language Models

Raza Imam, Hanan Gani, Muhammad Huzaifa et al.

The conventional modus operandi for adapting pre-trained vision-language models (VLMs) during test-time involves tuning learnable prompts, ie, test-time prompt tuning. This paper introduces Test-Time Low-rank adaptation (TTL) as an alternative to prompt tuning for zero-shot generalization of large-scale VLMs. Taking inspiration from recent advancements in efficiently fine-tuning large language models, TTL offers a test-time parameter-efficient adaptation approach that updates the attention weights of the transformer encoder by maximizing prediction confidence. The self-supervised confidence maximization objective is specified using a weighted entropy loss that enforces consistency among predictions of augmented samples. TTL introduces only a small amount of trainable parameters for low-rank adapters in the model space while keeping the prompts and backbone frozen. Extensive experiments on a variety of natural distribution and cross-domain tasks show that TTL can outperform other techniques for test-time optimization of VLMs in strict zero-shot settings. Specifically, TTL outperforms test-time prompt tuning baselines with a significant improvement on average. Our code is available at at https://github.com/Razaimam45/TTL-Test-Time-Low-Rank-Adaptation.

CVSep 6, 2024
Towards Energy-Efficiency by Navigating the Trilemma of Energy, Latency, and Accuracy

Boyuan Tian, Yihan Pang, Muhammad Huzaifa et al.

Extended Reality (XR) enables immersive experiences through untethered headsets but suffers from stringent battery and resource constraints. Energy-efficient design is crucial to ensure both longevity and high performance in XR devices. However, latency and accuracy are often prioritized over energy, leading to a gap in achieving energy efficiency. This paper examines scene reconstruction, a key building block for immersive XR experiences, and demonstrates how energy efficiency can be achieved by navigating the trilemma of energy, latency, and accuracy. We explore three classes of energy-oriented optimizations, covering the algorithm, execution, and data, that reveal a broad design space through configurable parameters. Our resulting 72 designs expose a wide range of latency and energy trade-offs, with a smaller range of accuracy loss. We identify a Pareto-optimal curve and show that the designs on the curve are achievable only through synergistic co-optimization of all three optimization classes and by considering the latency and accuracy needs of downstream scene reconstruction consumers. Our analysis covering various use cases and measurements on an embedded class system shows that, relative to the baseline, our designs offer energy benefits of up to 60X with potential latency range of 4X slowdown to 2X speedup. Detailed exploration of a use case across representative data sequences from ScanNet showed about 25X energy savings with 1.5X latency reduction and negligible reconstruction quality loss.

CVMar 7, 2024Code
ObjectCompose: Evaluating Resilience of Vision-Based Models on Object-to-Background Compositional Changes

Hashmat Shadab Malik, Muhammad Huzaifa, Muzammal Naseer et al.

Given the large-scale multi-modal training of recent vision-based models and their generalization capabilities, understanding the extent of their robustness is critical for their real-world deployment. In this work, we evaluate the resilience of current vision-based models against diverse object-to-background context variations. The majority of robustness evaluation methods have introduced synthetic datasets to induce changes to object characteristics (viewpoints, scale, color) or utilized image transformation techniques (adversarial changes, common corruptions) on real images to simulate shifts in distributions. Recent works have explored leveraging large language models and diffusion models to generate changes in the background. However, these methods either lack in offering control over the changes to be made or distort the object semantics, making them unsuitable for the task. Our method, on the other hand, can induce diverse object-to-background changes while preserving the original semantics and appearance of the object. To achieve this goal, we harness the generative capabilities of text-to-image, image-to-text, and image-to-segment models to automatically generate a broad spectrum of object-to-background changes. We induce both natural and adversarial background changes by either modifying the textual prompts or optimizing the latents and textual embedding of text-to-image models. We produce various versions of standard vision datasets (ImageNet, COCO), incorporating either diverse and realistic backgrounds into the images or introducing color, texture, and adversarial changes in the background. We conduct extensive experiments to analyze the robustness of vision-based models against object-to-background context variations across diverse tasks. Code https://github.com/Muhammad-Huzaifaa/ObjectCompose.

CVFeb 10, 2024Code
Domain Adaptable Fine-Tune Distillation Framework For Advancing Farm Surveillance

Raza Imam, Muhammad Huzaifa, Nabil Mansour et al.

In this study, we propose an automated framework for camel farm monitoring, introducing two key contributions: the Unified Auto-Annotation framework and the Fine-Tune Distillation framework. The Unified Auto-Annotation approach combines two models, GroundingDINO (GD), and Segment-Anything-Model (SAM), to automatically annotate raw datasets extracted from surveillance videos. Building upon this foundation, the Fine-Tune Distillation framework conducts fine-tuning of student models using the auto-annotated dataset. This process involves transferring knowledge from a large teacher model to a student model, resembling a variant of Knowledge Distillation. The Fine-Tune Distillation framework aims to be adaptable to specific use cases, enabling the transfer of knowledge from the large models to the small models, making it suitable for domain-specific applications. By leveraging our raw dataset collected from Al-Marmoom Camel Farm in Dubai, UAE, and a pre-trained teacher model, GroundingDINO, the Fine-Tune Distillation framework produces a lightweight deployable model, YOLOv8. This framework demonstrates high performance and computational efficiency, facilitating efficient real-time object detection. Our code is available at \href{https://github.com/Razaimam45/Fine-Tune-Distillation}{https://github.com/Razaimam45/Fine-Tune-Distillation}

CVSep 29, 2025
VisualOverload: Probing Visual Understanding of VLMs in Really Dense Scenes

Paul Gavrikov, Wei Lin, M. Jehanzeb Mirza et al.

Is basic visual understanding really solved in state-of-the-art VLMs? We present VisualOverload, a slightly different visual question answering (VQA) benchmark comprising 2,720 question-answer pairs, with privately held ground-truth responses. Unlike prior VQA datasets that typically focus on near global image understanding, VisualOverload challenges models to perform simple, knowledge-free vision tasks in densely populated (or, overloaded) scenes. Our dataset consists of high-resolution scans of public-domain paintings that are populated with multiple figures, actions, and unfolding subplots set against elaborately detailed backdrops. We manually annotated these images with questions across six task categories to probe for a thorough understanding of the scene. We hypothesize that current benchmarks overestimate the performance of VLMs, and encoding and reasoning over details is still a challenging task for them, especially if they are confronted with densely populated scenes. Indeed, we observe that even the best model (o3) out of 37 tested models only achieves 19.6% accuracy on our hardest test split and overall 69.5% accuracy on all questions. Beyond a thorough evaluation, we complement our benchmark with an error analysis that reveals multiple failure modes, including a lack of counting skills, failure in OCR, and striking logical inconsistencies under complex tasks. Altogether, VisualOverload exposes a critical gap in current vision models and offers a crucial resource for the community to develop better models. Benchmark: http://paulgavrikov.github.io/visualoverload

CVNov 28, 2024
EFSA: Episodic Few-Shot Adaptation for Text-to-Image Retrieval

Muhammad Huzaifa, Yova Kementchedjhieva

Text-to-image retrieval is a critical task for managing diverse visual content, but common benchmarks for the task rely on small, single-domain datasets that fail to capture real-world complexity. Pre-trained vision-language models tend to perform well with easy negatives but struggle with hard negatives--visually similar yet incorrect images--especially in open-domain scenarios. To address this, we introduce Episodic Few-Shot Adaptation (EFSA), a novel test-time framework that adapts pre-trained models dynamically to a query's domain by fine-tuning on top-k retrieved candidates and synthetic captions generated for them. EFSA improves performance across diverse domains while preserving generalization, as shown in evaluations on queries from eight highly distinct visual domains and an open-domain retrieval pool of over one million images. Our work highlights the potential of episodic few-shot adaptation to enhance robustness in the critical and understudied task of open-domain text-to-image retrieval.

CVMay 14, 2023
On enhancing the robustness of Vision Transformers: Defensive Diffusion

Raza Imam, Muhammad Huzaifa, Mohammed El-Amine Azz

Privacy and confidentiality of medical data are of utmost importance in healthcare settings. ViTs, the SOTA vision model, rely on large amounts of patient data for training, which raises concerns about data security and the potential for unauthorized access. Adversaries may exploit vulnerabilities in ViTs to extract sensitive patient information and compromising patient privacy. This work address these vulnerabilities to ensure the trustworthiness and reliability of ViTs in medical applications. In this work, we introduced a defensive diffusion technique as an adversarial purifier to eliminate adversarial noise introduced by attackers in the original image. By utilizing the denoising capabilities of the diffusion model, we employ a reverse diffusion process to effectively eliminate the adversarial noise from the attack sample, resulting in a cleaner image that is then fed into the ViT blocks. Our findings demonstrate the effectiveness of the diffusion model in eliminating attack-agnostic adversarial noise from images. Additionally, we propose combining knowledge distillation with our framework to obtain a lightweight student model that is both computationally efficient and robust against gray box attacks. Comparison of our method with a SOTA baseline method, SEViT, shows that our work is able to outperform the baseline. Extensive experiments conducted on a publicly available Tuberculosis X-ray dataset validate the computational efficiency and improved robustness achieved by our proposed architecture.