PULSE: Self-Supervised Photo Upsampling via Latent Space Exploration of Generative Models.
Code accompanying CVPR'20 paper of the same title. Paper link: https://arxiv.org/pdf/2003.03808.pdf
We have noticed a lot of concern that PULSE will be used to identify individuals whose faces have been blurred out. We want to emphasize that this is impossible - PULSE makes imaginary faces of people who do not exist, which should not be confused for real people. It will not help identify or reconstruct the original image.
We also want to address concerns of bias in PULSE. We have now included a new section in the paper and an accompanying model card directly addressing this bias.
- PULSE: Self-Supervised Photo Upsampling via Latent Space Exploration of Generative Models
- Table of Contents
Given a low-resolution input image, PULSE searches the outputs of a generative model (here, StyleGAN) for high-resolution images that are perceptually realistic and downscale correctly.
The main file of interest for applying PULSE is run.py
. A full list of arguments with descriptions can be found in that file; here we describe those relevant to getting started.
You will need to install cmake first (required for dlib, which is used for face alignment). Currently the code only works with CUDA installed (and therefore requires an appropriate GPU) and has been tested on Linux and Windows. For the full set of required Python packages, create a Conda environment from the provided YAML, e.g.
conda create -f pulse.yml
or (Anaconda on Windows):
conda env create -n pulse -f pulse.yml
conda activate pulse
In some environments (e.g. on Windows),
you may have to edit the pulse.yml to remove the version specific hash
on each dependency and remove any dependency that still throws an error
after running conda env create...
(such as readline)
dependencies
- blas=1.0=mkl
...
to
dependencies
- blas=1.0
...
Finally, you will need an internet
connection the first time you run the code as it will automatically
download the relevant pretrained model from Google Drive (if it has
already been downloaded, it will use the local copy). In the event that
the public Google Drive is out of capacity, add the files to your own
Google Drive instead; get the share URL and replace the ID in the https://drive.google.com/uc?=ID links in align_face.py
and PULSE.py
with the new file ids from the share URL given by your own Drive file.
By default, input data for run.py
should be placed in ./input/
(though this can be modified). However, this assumes faces have already
been aligned and downscaled. If you have data that is not already in
this form, place it in realpics
and run align_face.py
which will automatically do this for you. (Again, all directories can
be changed by command line arguments if more convenient.) You will at
this stage pic a downscaling factor.
Note that if your data begins at a low resolution already,
downscaling it further will retain very little information. In this
case, you may wish to bicubically upsample (usually, to 1024x1024) and
allow align_face.py
to downscale for you.
Once your data is appropriately formatted, all you need to do is
python run.py
from https://github.com/adamian98/pulse
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