596 research outputs found
Adversarial Training in Affective Computing and Sentiment Analysis: Recent Advances and Perspectives
Over the past few years, adversarial training has become an extremely active
research topic and has been successfully applied to various Artificial
Intelligence (AI) domains. As a potentially crucial technique for the
development of the next generation of emotional AI systems, we herein provide a
comprehensive overview of the application of adversarial training to affective
computing and sentiment analysis. Various representative adversarial training
algorithms are explained and discussed accordingly, aimed at tackling diverse
challenges associated with emotional AI systems. Further, we highlight a range
of potential future research directions. We expect that this overview will help
facilitate the development of adversarial training for affective computing and
sentiment analysis in both the academic and industrial communities
Recovering Faces from Portraits with Auxiliary Facial Attributes
Recovering a photorealistic face from an artistic portrait is a challenging
task since crucial facial details are often distorted or completely lost in
artistic compositions. To handle this loss, we propose an Attribute-guided Face
Recovery from Portraits (AFRP) that utilizes a Face Recovery Network (FRN) and
a Discriminative Network (DN). FRN consists of an autoencoder with residual
block-embedded skip-connections and incorporates facial attribute vectors into
the feature maps of input portraits at the bottleneck of the autoencoder. DN
has multiple convolutional and fully-connected layers, and its role is to
enforce FRN to generate authentic face images with corresponding facial
attributes dictated by the input attribute vectors. %Leveraging on the spatial
transformer networks, FRN automatically compensates for misalignments of
portraits. % and generates aligned face images. For the preservation of
identities, we impose the recovered and ground-truth faces to share similar
visual features. Specifically, DN determines whether the recovered image looks
like a real face and checks if the facial attributes extracted from the
recovered image are consistent with given attributes. %Our method can recover
high-quality photorealistic faces from unaligned portraits while preserving the
identity of the face images as well as it can reconstruct a photorealistic face
image with a desired set of attributes. Our method can recover photorealistic
identity-preserving faces with desired attributes from unseen stylized
portraits, artistic paintings, and hand-drawn sketches. On large-scale
synthesized and sketch datasets, we demonstrate that our face recovery method
achieves state-of-the-art results.Comment: 2019 IEEE Winter Conference on Applications of Computer Vision (WACV
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