Official implementation of Deep Burst Super-Resolution

Overview

Deep-Burst-SR

Official implementation of Deep Burst Super-Resolution

Publication: Deep Burst Super-Resolution. Goutam Bhat, Martin Danelljan, Luc Van Gool, and Radu Timofte. CVPR 2021 [Arxiv]

Overview

While single-image super-resolution (SISR) has attracted substantial interest in recent years, the proposed approaches are limited to learning image priors in order to add high frequency details. In contrast, multi-frame superresolution (MFSR) offers the possibility of reconstructing rich details by combining signal information from multiple shifted images. This key advantage, along with the increasing popularity of burst photography, have made MFSR an important problem for real-world applications. We propose a novel architecture for the burst superresolution task. Our network takes multiple noisy RAW images as input, and generates a denoised, super-resolved RGB image as output. This is achieved by explicitly aligning deep embeddings of the input frames using pixel-wise optical flow. The information from all frames are then adaptively merged using an attention-based fusion module. In order to enable training and evaluation on real-world data, we additionally introduce the BurstSR dataset, consisting of smartphone bursts and high-resolution DSLR ground-truth.

dbsr overview figure [Comparison of our Deep Burst SR apporach with Single Image baseline for 4x super-resolution of RAW burst captured from Samsung Galaxy S8]

Table of Contents

Installation

Clone the Git repository.

git clone https://github.com/goutamgmb/deep-burst-sr.git

Install dependencies

Run the installation script to install all the dependencies. You need to provide the conda install path (e.g. ~/anaconda3) and the name for the created conda environment (here env-dbsr).

bash install.sh conda_install_path env-dbsr

This script will also download the default DBSR networks and create default environment settings.

Update environment settings

The environment setting file admin/local.py contains the paths for pre-trained networks, datasets etc. Update the paths in local.py according to your local environment.

Toolkit Overview

The toolkit consists of the following sub-modules.

  • admin: Includes functions for loading networks, tensorboard etc. and also contains environment settings.
  • data: Contains functions for generating synthetic bursts, camera pipeline, processing data (e.g. loading images, data augmentations).
  • data_specs: Information about train/val splits of different datasets.
  • dataset: Contains integration of datasets such as BurstSR, SyntheticBurst, ZurichRAW2RGB.
  • evaluation: Scripts to run and evaluate models on standard datasets.
  • external: External dependencies, e.g. PWCNet.
  • models: Contains different layers and network definitions.
  • util_scripts: Util scripts to e.g. download datasets.
  • utils: General utility functions for e.g. plotting, data type conversions, loading networks.

Datasets

The toolkit provides integration for following datasets which can be used to train/evaluate the models.

Zurich RAW to RGB Canon set

The RGB images from the training split of the Zurich RAW to RGB mapping dataset can be used to generate synthetic bursts for training using the SyntheticBurstProcessing class in data/processing.py.

Preparation: Download the Zurich RAW to RGB canon set from here and unpack the zip folder. Set the zurichraw2rgb_dir variable in admin/local.py to point to the unpacked dataset directory.

SyntheticBurst validation set

The pre-generated synthetic validation set used for evaluating the models. The dataset contains 300 synthetic bursts, each containing 14 RAW images. The synthetic bursts are generated from the RGB images from the test split of the Zurich RAW to RGB mapping dataset. The dataset can be loaded using SyntheticBurstVal class in dataset/synthetic_burst_val_set.py file.

Preparation: Downloaded the dataset here and unpack the zip file. Set the synburstval_dir variable in admin/local.py to point to the unpacked dataset directory.

BurstSR dataset (cropped)

The BurstSR dataset containing RAW bursts captured from Samsung Galaxy S8 and corresponding HR ground truths captured using a DSLR camera. This is the pre-processed version of the dataset that contains roughly aligned crops from the original images. The dataset can be loaded using BurstSRDataset class in dataset/burstsr_dataset.py file. Please check the DBSR paper for more details.

Preparation: The dataset has been split into 10 parts and can be downloaded and unpacked using the util_scripts/download_burstsr_dataset.py script. Set the burstsr_dir variable in admin/local.py to point to the unpacked BurstSR dataset directory.

BurstSR dataset (full)

The BurstSR dataset containing RAW bursts captured from Samsung Galaxy S8 and corresponding HR ground truths captured using a DSLR camera. This is the raw version of the dataset containing the full burst images in dng format.

Preparation: The dataset can be downloaded and unpacked using the util_scripts/download_raw_burstsr_data.py script.

Evaluation

You can run the trained model on RAW bursts to generate HR RGB images and compute the quality of predictions using the evaluation module.

Note: Please prepare the necessary datasets as explained in Datasets section before running the models.

Evaluate on SyntheticBurst validation set

You can evaluate the models on SyntheticBurst validation set using evaluation/synburst package. First create an experiment setting in evaluation/synburst/experiments containing the list of models to evaluate. You can start with the provided setting dbsr_default.py as a reference. Please refer to network_param.py for examples on how to specify a model for evaluation.

Save network predictions

You can save the predictions of a model on bursts from SyntheticBurst dataset by running

python evaluation/synburst/save_results.py EXPERIMENT_NAME

Here, EXPERIMENT_NAME is the name of the experiment setting you want to use (e.g. dbsr_default). The script will save the predictions of the model in the directory pointed by the save_data_path variable in admin/local.py.

Note The network predictions are saved in linear sensor color space (i.e. color space of input RAW burst), as 16 bit pngs.

Compute performance metrics

You can obtain the standard performance metrics (e.g. PSNR, MS-SSIM, LPIPS) using the compute_score.py script

python evaluation/synburst/compute_score.py EXPERIMENT_NAME

Here, EXPERIMENT_NAME is the name of the experiment setting you want to use (e.g. dbsr_default). The script will run the models to generate the predictions and compute the scores. In case you want to compute performance metrics for results saved using save_results.py, you can run compute_score.py with additonal --load_saved argument.

python evaluation/synburst/compute_score.py EXPERIMENT_NAME --load_saved

In this case, the script will load pre-saved predictions whenever available. If saved predictions are not available, it will run the model to first generate the predictions and then compute the scores.

Qualitative comparison

You can perform qualitative analysis of the model by visualizing the saved network predictions, along with ground truth, in sRGB format using the visualize_results.py script.

python evaluation/synburst/visualize_results.py EXPERIMENT_NAME

Here, EXPERIMENT_NAME is the name of the experiment setting containing the list of models you want to use (e.g. dbsr_default). The script will display the predictions of each model in sRGB format, along with the ground truth. You can toggle between images, zoom in on particular image regions using the UI. See visualize_results.py for details.

Note: You need to first save the network predictions using save_results.py script, before you can visualize them using visualize_results.py.

Evaluate on BurstSR validation set

You can evaluate the models on BurstSR validation set using evaluation/burstsr package. First create an experiment setting in evaluation/burstsr/experiments containing the list of models to evaluate. You can start with the provided setting dbsr_default.py as a reference. Please refer to network_param.py for examples on how to specify a model for evaluation.

Save network predictions

You can save the predictions of a model on bursts from BurstSR val dataset by running

python evaluation/burstsr/save_results.py EXPERIMENT_NAME

Here, EXPERIMENT_NAME is the name of the experiment setting you want to use (e.g. dbsr_default). The script will save the predictions of the model in the directory pointed by the save_data_path variable in admin/local.py.

Note The network predictions are saved in linear sensor color space (i.e. color space of input RAW burst), as 16 bit pngs.

Compute performance metrics

You can obtain the standard performance metrics (e.g. PSNR, MS-SSIM, LPIPS) after spatial and color alignment (see paper for details) using the compute_score.py script

python evaluation/burstsr/compute_score.py EXPERIMENT_NAME

Here, EXPERIMENT_NAME is the name of the experiment setting you want to use (e.g. dbsr_default). The script will run the models to generate the predictions and compute the scores. In case you want to compute performance metrics for results saved using save_results.py, you can run compute_score.py with additonal --load_saved argument.

python evaluation/burstsr/compute_score.py EXPERIMENT_NAME --load_saved

In this case, the script will load pre-saved predictions whenever available. If saved predictions are not available, it will run the model to first generate the predictions and then compute the scores.

Qualitative comparison

You can perform qualitative analysis of the model by visualizing the saved network predictions, along with ground truth, in sRGB format using the visualize_results.py script.

python evaluation/burstsr/visualize_results.py EXPERIMENT_NAME

Here, EXPERIMENT_NAME is the name of the experiment setting containing the list of models you want to use (e.g. dbsr_default). The script will display the predictions of each model in sRGB format, along with the ground truth. You can toggle between images, zoom in on particular image regions using the UI. See visualize_results.py for details.

Note: You need to first save the network predictions using save_results.py script, before you can visualize them using visualize_results.py.

Model Zoo

Here, we provide pre-trained network weights and report their performance.

Note: The models have been retrained using the cleaned up code, and thus can have small performance differences compared to the models used for the paper.

SyntheticBurst models

The models are evaluated using all 14 burst images.

Model PSNR MS-SSIM LPIPS Links Notes
CVPR2021 39.09 0.945 0.084 - CVPR2021 results
dbsr_synthetic_default 39.17 0.946 0.081 model Official retrained model
BurstSR models

The models are evaluated using all 14 burst images. The metrics are computed after spatial and color alignment, as described in DBSR paper.

Model PSNR MS-SSIM LPIPS Links Notes
CVPR2021 47.76 0.984 0.030 - CVPR2021 results
dbsr_burstsr_default 47.70 0.984 0.029 model Official retrained model

Training

We are still waiting for approval from our project sponsors to release the training codes. Hopefully we can soon release it. Meanwhile, please free to contact us in case of any questions regarding training.

Acknowledgement

The toolkit uses code from the following projects:

Owner
Goutam Bhat
Goutam Bhat
This is a deep learning-based method to segment deep brain structures and a brain mask from T1 weighted MRI.

DBSegment This tool generates 30 deep brain structures segmentation, as well as a brain mask from T1-Weighted MRI. The whole procedure should take ~1

Luxembourg Neuroimaging (Platform OpNeuroImg) 2 Oct 25, 2022
Repository For Programmers Seeking a platform to show their skills

Programming-Nerds Repository For Programmers Seeking Pull Requests In hacktoberfest ❓ What's Hacktoberfest 2021? Hacktoberfest is the easiest way to g

42 Oct 29, 2022
DrQ-v2: Improved Data-Augmented Reinforcement Learning

DrQ-v2: Improved Data-Augmented RL Agent Method DrQ-v2 is a model-free off-policy algorithm for image-based continuous control. DrQ-v2 builds on DrQ,

Facebook Research 234 Jan 01, 2023
The Official TensorFlow Implementation for SPatchGAN (ICCV2021)

SPatchGAN: Official TensorFlow Implementation Paper "SPatchGAN: A Statistical Feature Based Discriminator for Unsupervised Image-to-Image Translation"

39 Dec 30, 2022
A python script to dump all the challenges locally of a CTFd-based Capture the Flag.

A python script to dump all the challenges locally of a CTFd-based Capture the Flag. Features Connects and logins to a remote CTFd instance. Dumps all

Podalirius 77 Dec 07, 2022
A Pytorch implementation of CVPR 2021 paper "RSG: A Simple but Effective Module for Learning Imbalanced Datasets"

RSG: A Simple but Effective Module for Learning Imbalanced Datasets (CVPR 2021) A Pytorch implementation of our CVPR 2021 paper "RSG: A Simple but Eff

120 Dec 12, 2022
Reference implementation for Deep Unsupervised Learning using Nonequilibrium Thermodynamics

Diffusion Probabilistic Models This repository provides a reference implementation of the method described in the paper: Deep Unsupervised Learning us

Jascha Sohl-Dickstein 238 Jan 02, 2023
Codebase to experiment with a hybrid Transformer that combines conditional sequence generation with regression

Regression Transformer Codebase to experiment with a hybrid Transformer that combines conditional sequence generation with regression . Development se

International Business Machines 27 Jan 05, 2023
The fastai deep learning library

Welcome to fastai fastai simplifies training fast and accurate neural nets using modern best practices Important: This documentation covers fastai v2,

fast.ai 23.2k Jan 07, 2023
A benchmark dataset for mesh multi-label-classification based on cube engravings introduced in MeshCNN

Double Cube Engravings This script creates a dataset for multi-label mesh clasification, with an intentionally difficult setup for point cloud classif

Yotam Erel 1 Nov 30, 2021
the code of the paper: Recurrent Multi-view Alignment Network for Unsupervised Surface Registration (CVPR 2021)

RMA-Net This repo is the implementation of the paper: Recurrent Multi-view Alignment Network for Unsupervised Surface Registration (CVPR 2021). Paper

Wanquan Feng 205 Nov 09, 2022
N-Omniglot is a large neuromorphic few-shot learning dataset

N-Omniglot [Paper] || [Dataset] N-Omniglot is a large neuromorphic few-shot learning dataset. It reconstructs strokes of Omniglot as videos and uses D

11 Dec 05, 2022
Implementation for our AAAI2021 paper (Entity Structure Within and Throughout: Modeling Mention Dependencies for Document-Level Relation Extraction).

SSAN Introduction This is the pytorch implementation of the SSAN model (see our AAAI2021 paper: Entity Structure Within and Throughout: Modeling Menti

benfeng 69 Nov 15, 2022
Generate indoor scenes with Transformers

SceneFormer: Indoor Scene Generation with Transformers Initial code release for the Sceneformer paper, contains models, train and test scripts for the

Chandan Yeshwanth 110 Dec 06, 2022
PyTorch Implementation of Sparse DETR

Sparse DETR By Byungseok Roh*, Jaewoong Shin*, Wuhyun Shin*, and Saehoon Kim at Kakao Brain. (*: Equal contribution) This repository is an official im

Kakao Brain 113 Dec 28, 2022
Tensorforce: a TensorFlow library for applied reinforcement learning

Tensorforce: a TensorFlow library for applied reinforcement learning Introduction Tensorforce is an open-source deep reinforcement learning framework,

Tensorforce 3.2k Jan 02, 2023
The official codes of "Semi-supervised Models are Strong Unsupervised Domain Adaptation Learners".

SSL models are Strong UDA learners Introduction This is the official code of paper "Semi-supervised Models are Strong Unsupervised Domain Adaptation L

Yabin Zhang 26 Dec 26, 2022
PyTorch implementation of 1712.06087 "Zero-Shot" Super-Resolution using Deep Internal Learning

Unofficial PyTorch implementation of "Zero-Shot" Super-Resolution using Deep Internal Learning Unofficial Implementation of 1712.06087 "Zero-Shot" Sup

Jacob Gildenblat 196 Nov 27, 2022
Conditional Generative Adversarial Networks (CGAN) for Mobility Data Fusion

This code implements the paper, Kim et al. (2021). Imputing Qualitative Attributes for Trip Chains Extracted from Smart Card Data Using a Conditional Generative Adversarial Network. Transportation Re

Eui-Jin Kim 2 Feb 03, 2022