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Unifying Color and Texture Transfer for Predictive Appearance Manipulation
Author(s) -
Okura Fumio,
Vanhoey Kenneth,
Bousseau Adrien,
Efros Alexei A.,
Drettakis George
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
computer graphics forum
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.578
H-Index - 120
eISSN - 1467-8659
pISSN - 0167-7055
DOI - 10.1111/cgf.12678
Subject(s) - computer science , artificial intelligence , computer vision , novelty , texture (cosmology) , image (mathematics) , transfer of learning , texture synthesis , transformation (genetics) , tree (set theory) , pattern recognition (psychology) , image texture , image processing , mathematics , mathematical analysis , philosophy , biochemistry , chemistry , theology , gene
Recent color transfer methods use local information to learn the transformation from a source to an exemplar image, and then transfer this appearance change to a target image. These solutions achieve very successful results for general mood changes, e.g., changing the appearance of an image from “sunny” to “overcast”. However, such methods have a hard time creating new image content, such as leaves on a bare tree. Texture transfer, on the other hand, can synthesize such content but tends to destroy image structure. We propose the first algorithm that unifies color and texture transfer, outperforming both by leveraging their respective strengths. A key novelty in our approach resides in teasing apart appearance changes that can be modeled simply as changes in color versus those that require new image content to be generated. Our method starts with an analysis phase which evaluates the success of color transfer by comparing the exemplar with the source . This analysis then drives a selective, iterative texture transfer algorithm that simultaneously predicts the success of color transfer on the target and synthesizes new content where needed. We demonstrate our unified algorithm by transferring large temporal changes between photographs, such as change of season – e.g., leaves on bare trees or piles of snow on a street – and flooding.

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