Spatial-Semantic Collaborative Cropping for User Generated Content

Authors

  • Yukun Su South China University of Technology Tencent
  • Yiwen Cao South China University of Technology
  • Jingliang Deng South China University of Technology
  • Fengyun Rao Tencent
  • Qingyao Wu South China University of Technology Key Laboratory of Big Data and Intelligent Robot, Ministry of Education

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1609/aaai.v38i5.28303

Keywords:

CV: Applications, CV: Computational Photography, Image & Video Synthesis

Abstract

A large amount of User Generated Content (UGC) is uploaded to the Internet daily and displayed to people world-widely through the client side (mobile and PC). This requires the cropping algorithms to produce the aesthetic thumbnail within a specific aspect ratio on different devices. However, existing image cropping works mainly focus on landmark or landscape images, which fail to model the relations among the multi-objects with the complex background in UGC. Besides, previous methods merely consider the aesthetics of the cropped images while ignoring the content integrity, which is crucial for UGC cropping. In this paper, we propose a Spatial-Semantic Collaborative cropping network (S2CNet) for arbitrary user generated content accompanied by a new cropping benchmark. Specifically, we first mine the visual genes of the potential objects. Then, the suggested adaptive attention graph recasts this task as a procedure of information association over visual nodes. The underlying spatial and semantic relations are ultimately centralized to the crop candidate through differentiable message passing, which helps our network efficiently to preserve both the aesthetics and the content integrity. Extensive experiments on the proposed UGCrop5K and other public datasets demonstrate the superiority of our approach over state-of-the-art counterparts.

Published

2024-03-24

How to Cite

Su, Y., Cao, Y., Deng, J., Rao, F., & Wu, Q. (2024). Spatial-Semantic Collaborative Cropping for User Generated Content. Proceedings of the AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence, 38(5), 4988-4997. https://doi.org/10.1609/aaai.v38i5.28303

Issue

Section

AAAI Technical Track on Computer Vision IV