Cross-Domain Face Synthesis using a Controllable GAN
This work addresses the challenge of improving face recognition performance in video surveillance by generating synthetic data that better matches target domain conditions, though it is incremental as it builds on existing GAN and 3D modeling techniques.
The paper tackles the problem of domain shift in face recognition by proposing a cross-domain face synthesis approach using a Controllable GAN, which integrates a 3D face model to generate realistic synthetic faces under controlled poses, resulting in higher accuracy compared to state-of-the-art methods on datasets like Chokepoint and COX-S2V.
The performance of face recognition (FR) systems applied in video surveillance has been shown to improve when the design data is augmented through synthetic face generation. This is true, for instance, with pair-wise matchers (e.g., deep Siamese networks) that typically rely on a reference gallery with one still image per individual. However, generating synthetic images in the source domain may not improve the performance during operations due to the domain shift w.r.t. the target domain. Moreover, despite the emergence of Generative Adversarial Networks (GANs) for realistic synthetic generation, it is often difficult to control the conditions under which synthetic faces are generated. In this paper, a cross-domain face synthesis approach is proposed that integrates a new Controllable GAN (C-GAN). It employs an off-the-shelf 3D face model as a simulator to generate face images under various poses. The simulated images and noise are input to the C-GAN for realism refinement which employs an additional adversarial game as a third player to preserve the identity and specific facial attributes of the refined images. This allows generating realistic synthetic face images that reflects capture conditions in the target domain while controlling the GAN output to generate faces under desired pose conditions. Experiments were performed using videos from the Chokepoint and COX-S2V datasets, and a deep Siamese network for FR with a single reference still per person. Results indicate that the proposed approach can provide a higher level of accuracy compared to the current state-of-the-art approaches for synthetic data augmentation.