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Cross-domain Correspondence Learning for Exemplar-based Image Translation

Content provided by Bo Zhang, the co-author of the paper Cross-domain Correspondence Learning for Exemplar-based Image Translation.

We present a general framework for exemplar-based image translation, which synthesizes a photo-realistic image from the input in a distinct domain (e.g., semantic segmentation mask, or edge map, or pose keypoints), given an exemplar image. The output has the style (e.g., color, texture) in consistency with the semantically corresponding objects in the exemplar. Our method is superior to state-of-the-art methods in terms of image quality significantly, with the image style faithful to the exemplar with semantic consistency. Moreover, we show the utility of our method for several applications.

What’s New: We propose to jointly learn the cross domain correspondence and the image translation, where both tasks facilitate each other and thus can be learned with weak supervision.

How It Works: In order to achieve better controllability and higher image translation quality, our method allows uses to provide an example image, such that the output has the style (e.g., color, texture) in consistency with the semantically corresponding objects in the exemplar. We propose to jointly learn the cross-domain correspondence and the image translation, where both tasks facilitate each other and thus can be learned with weak supervision. We prove that the proposed method not only improves the translation quality, but also obtains the cross-domain dense correspondence for the first time.

Key Insights: Explicitly setup the cross-domain correspondence helps improve the image translation quality. During the joint training, correspondence can be established with weak supervision.

The paper Cross-domain Correspondence Learning for Exemplar-based Image Translation is on arXiv. Click here to visit the project website.


Meet the authors Pan Zhang, Bo Zhang, Dong Chen, Lu Yuan, Fang Wen from University of Science and Technology of China, Microsoft Research Asia and Microsoft Cloud+AI.

Microsoft Research Asia (MSRA), Microsoft’s fundamental research arm in the Asia Pacific region and the company’s largest research institute outside the United States, was founded in 1998 in Beijing. Through collaboration with the best talents from Asia and across the globe, MSRA has grown into a world-class research lab, conducting both basic and applied research.

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