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TOFlow: Video Enhancement with Task-Oriented Flow

This repository is based on our IJCV publication TOFlow: Video Enhancement with Task-Oriented Flow (PDF). It contains pre-trained models and a demo code. It also includes the description and download scripts for the Vimeo-90K dataset we collected. If you used this code or dataset in your work, please cite:

@article{xue2019video,
  title={Video Enhancement with Task-Oriented Flow},
  author={Xue, Tianfan and Chen, Baian and Wu, Jiajun and Wei, Donglai and Freeman, William T},
  journal={International Journal of Computer Vision (IJCV)},
  volume={127},
  number={8},
  pages={1106--1125},
  year={2019},
  publisher={Springer}
}

Video Demo

IMAGE ALT TEXT

If you cannot access YouTube, please download 1080p video from here.

Prerequisites

Torch

Our implementation is based on Torch 7 (http://torch.ch).

CUDA [optional]

CUDA is suggested (https://developer.nvidia.com/cuda-toolkit) for fast inference. The demo code is still runnable without CUDA, but much slower.

Matlab [optional]

We use Matlab for generating video denoising/super-resolution dataset and quantitative evaluation require Matlab installation (https://www.mathworks.com/products/matlab.html). It is not necessary for the demo code.

FFmpeg [optional]

We use FFmpeg (http://ffmpeg.org) for generating video deblocking dataset. It is not necessary for the demo code.

Installation

Our current release has been tested on Ubuntu 14.04.

Clone the repository

git clone https://github.com/anchen1011/toflow.git

Install dependency

cd toflow/src/stnbhwd
luarocks make

This will install 'stn' package for Lua. The list of components:

require 'stn'
nn.AffineGridGeneratorBHWD(height, width)
-- takes B x 2 x 3 affine transform matrices as input, 
-- outputs a height x width grid in normalized [-1,1] coordinates
-- output layout is B,H,W,2 where the first coordinate in the 4th dimension is y, and the second is x
nn.BilinearSamplerBHWD()
-- takes a table {inputImages, grids} as inputs
-- outputs the interpolated images according to the grids
-- inputImages is a batch of samples in BHWD layout
-- grids is a batch of grids (output of AffineGridGeneratorBHWD)
-- output is also BHWD
nn.AffineTransformMatrixGenerator(useRotation, useScale, useTranslation)
-- takes a B x nbParams tensor as inputs
-- nbParams depends on the contrained transformation
-- The parameters for the selected transformation(s) should be supplied in the
-- following order: rotationAngle, scaleFactor, translationX, translationY
-- If no transformation is specified, it generates a generic affine transformation (nbParams = 6)
-- outputs B x 2 x 3 affine transform matrices

Download pretrained models (104MB)

cd ../../
./download_models.sh

Run Demo Code

cd src
th demo.lua -mode interp -inpath ../data/example/low_frame_rate
th demo.lua -mode denoise -inpath ../data/example/noisy
th demo.lua -mode deblock -inpath ../data/example/block
th demo.lua -mode sr -inpath ../data/example/blur

There are a few options in demo.lua:

nocuda: Set this option when CUDA is not available.

gpuId: GPU device ID.

mode: There are four options:

  • 'interp': temporal frame interpolation
  • 'denoise': video denoising
  • 'deblock': video deblocking
  • 'sr': video super-resolution

inpath: The path to the input sequence.

outpath: The path to where the result stores (default is ../demo_output).

Vimeo-90K Dataset

We also build a large-scale, high-quality video dataset, Vimeo-90K, designed for the following four video processing tasks: temporal frame interpolation, video denoising, video deblocking, and video super-resolution.

Vimeo-90K is built upon 5,846 selected videos downloaded from vimeo.com, which covers large variaty of scenes and actions. This video set is a subset of Vimeo-90K dataset is a subset of AoT dataset and all video links are here.

This image cannot be displayed. Please open this link in another browser: https://github.com/anchen1011/toflow/raw/master/data/doc/dataset.png

We further chop these videos to 89,800 video clips and build two datasets from these clips:

Triplet dataset for temporal frame interpolation

The triplet dataset consists of 73171 3-frame sequences with a fixed resolution of 448 x 256, extracted from 15k selected video clips from Vimeo-90K. This dataset is designed for temporal frame interpolation. Download links are:

Test set only: zip (1.7GB).

Both training and test set: zip (33GB).

Septuplet dataset for video denoising, super-resolution, and deblocking

The septuplet dataset consists of 91701 7-frame sequences with fixed resolution 448 x 256, extracted from 39k selected video clips from Vimeo-90k. This dataset is designed to video denoising, deblocking, and super-resolution.

The test set for video denoising: zip (16GB).

The test set for video deblocking: zip (11GB).

The test set for video super-resolution: zip (6GB).

The original test set (not downsampled or downgraded by noise): zip (15GB).

The original training + test set (consists of 91701 sequences, which are not downsampled or downgraded by noise): zip (82GB).

Generate Testing Sequences

See src/generate_testing_sample for the functions to generate noisy/low-resolution sequences.

To generate noisy sequences with Matlab under src/generate_testing_sample, run

add_noise_to_input(data_path, output_path);

and the results will be stored under output_path

To generate blur sequences with Matlab, run

blur_input(data_path, output_path);

and the results will be stored under output_path

Blocky sequences are compressed by FFmpeg. Our test set is generated with the following configuration:

ffmpeg -i *.png -q 20 -vcodec jpeg2000 -format j2k name.mov 

Run Quantitative Evaluation

Download all four Vimeo testsets (52G)

./download_testset.sh

Run inference on Vimeo testsets

cd src
th demo_vimeo90k.lua -mode interp
th demo_vimeo90k.lua -mode denoise
th demo_vimeo90k.lua -mode deblock
th demo_vimeo90k.lua -mode sr

Evaluation

We use three metrics to evaluate the performance of our algorithm: PSNR, SSIM, and Abs metrics. To run evaluation, execute following commands in Matlab:

cd src/evaluation
evaluate(output_dir, target_dir);

For example, to evaluate results generated in the previous step, run

cd src/evaluation
evaluate('../../output/interp', '../../data/vimeo_interp_test/target', 'interp')
evaluate('../../output/denoise', '../../data/vimeo_test_clean/sequences', 'denoise')
evaluate('../../output/deblock', '../../data/vimeo_test_clean/sequences', 'deblock')
evaluate('../../output/sr', '../../data/vimeo_test_clean/sequences', 'sr')

It is assumed that our datasets are unzipped under data/ and not renamed. It is also assumed that results are put under [output_root]/[task_name] e.g. output/sr output/interp output/denoise output/deblock, with exactly the same subfolder structure as our datasets.

References

  1. Our warping code is based on qassemoquab/stnbhwd.
  2. Our flow utilities and transformation utilities are based on anuragranj/spynet
  3. There is an unofficial PyTorch implementation by coldog2333/pytoflow