HCAICVApr 15

Creo: From One-Shot Image Generation to Progressive, Co-Creative Ideation

MIT
arXiv:2604.1395618.1h-index: 9
Predicted impact top 9% in HC · last 90 daysOriginality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

For users of generative AI systems, Creo addresses the problem of limited controllability and premature commitment in one-shot text-to-image generation.

Creo introduces a multi-stage text-to-image system that progresses from rough sketches to high-resolution outputs, enabling incremental user control and reducing premature anchoring. In a comparative study, participants reported stronger ownership over Creo outputs, and embedding-based analysis showed Creo outputs are less homogeneous than one-shot results.

Text-to-image (T2I) systems enable rapid generation of high-fidelity imagery but are misaligned with how visual ideas develop. T2I systems generate outputs that make implicit visual decisions on behalf of the user, often introduce fine-grained details that can anchor users prematurely and limit their ability to keep options open early on, and cause unintended changes during editing that are difficult to correct and reduce users' sense of control. To address these concerns, we present Creo, a multi-stage T2I system that scaffolds image generation by progressing from rough sketches to high-resolution outputs, exposing intermediary abstractions where users can make incremental changes. Sketch-like abstractions invite user editing and allow users to keep design options open when ideas are still forming due to their provisional nature. Each stage in Creo can be modified with manual changes and AI-assisted operations, enabling fine-grained, step-wise control through a locking mechanism that preserves prior decisions so subsequent edits affect only specified regions or attributes. Users remain in the loop, making and verifying decisions across stages, while the system applies diffs instead of regenerating full images, reducing drift as fidelity increases. A comparative study with a one-shot baseline shows that participants felt stronger ownership over Creo outputs, as they were able to trace their decisions in building up the image. Furthermore, embedding-based analysis indicates that Creo outputs are less homogeneous than one-shot results. These findings suggest that multi-stage generation, combined with intermediate control and decision locking, is a key design principle for improving controllability, user agency, creativity, and output diversity in generative systems.

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