a neural representation of sketch drawings: Difference between revisions
(37 intermediate revisions by 20 users not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
== Introduction == | == Introduction == | ||
In this paper, | In this paper, the authors present a recurrent neural network, sketch-rnn, that can be used to construct stroke-based drawings. Besides new robust training methods, they also outline a framework for conditional and unconditional sketch generation. | ||
Neural networks have been heavily used as image generation tools. For example, Generative Adversarial Networks, Variational Inference, and Autoregressive models have been used. Most of those models are designed to generate pixels to construct images. | Neural networks have been heavily used as image generation tools. For example, Generative Adversarial Networks, Variational Inference, and Autoregressive models have been used. Most of those models are designed to generate pixels to construct images. People, however, learn to draw using sequences of strokes as opposed to the simultaneous generation of pixels. The authors propose a new generative model that creates vector images so that it might generalize abstract concepts in a manner more similar to how humans do. | ||
The model is trained with hand-drawn sketches as input sequences. The model is able to produce sketches in vector format. In the conditional generation model, they also explore the latent space representation for vector images and discuss a few future applications of this model. The model and dataset are now available as an open source project ([https://magenta.tensorflow.org/sketch_rnn link]). | The model is trained with hand-drawn sketches as input sequences. The model is able to produce sketches in vector format. In the conditional generation model, they also explore the latent space representation for vector images and discuss a few future applications of this model. The model and dataset are now available as an open source project ([https://magenta.tensorflow.org/sketch_rnn link]). | ||
Line 14: | Line 14: | ||
For a visual comparison of raster and vector images, see this [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-Fs2t6P5AjY video]. As mentioned, vector images are generally simpler and more abstract, whereas raster images generally are used to store detailed images. | For a visual comparison of raster and vector images, see this [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-Fs2t6P5AjY video]. As mentioned, vector images are generally simpler and more abstract, whereas raster images generally are used to store detailed images. | ||
For this paper, the important distinction between the two is that the encoding of images in the model will be inherently more abstract because of the vector representation. The intuition is that generating abstract representations is more effective using a vector representation. | For this paper, the important distinction between the two is that the encoding of images in the model will be inherently more abstract because of the vector representation. The intuition is that generating abstract representations is more effective using a vector representation. | ||
== Related Work == | == Related Work == | ||
There are some works in the history that used a similar approach to generate images such as Portrait Drawing by Paul the Robot and some reinforcement learning approaches. They work more like a mimic of digitized photographs. There are also some Neural networks based approaches, but those are mostly dealing with pixel images. Little work is done on vector images generation. There are models that use Hidden Markov Models or Mixture Density Networks to generate human sketches, continuous data points or vectorized Kanji characters. | There are some works in the history that used a similar approach to generate images such as Portrait Drawing by Paul the Robot [26, 28] and some reinforcement learning approaches[28], Reinforcement Learning to discover a set of paint brush strokes that can best represent a given input photograph. They work more like a mimic of digitized photographs, rather than develop generative models of vector images. There are also some Neural networks based approaches, but those are mostly dealing with pixel images. Little work is done on vector images generation. There are models that use Hidden Markov Models [25] or Mixture Density Networks [2] to generate human sketches, continuous data points (modelling Chinese characters as a sequence of pen stroke actions) or vectorized Kanji characters [9,29]. | ||
Neural Network-based approaches are able to generate latent space representation of vector images, which follows a Gaussian distribution. The generated output of these networks is trained to match the Gaussian distribution by minimizing a given loss function. Using this idea, previous works attempted to generate a sequence-to-Sequence model with Variational Auto-encoder to model sentences into latent space and using probabilistic program induction to model Omniglot dataset. Variational Auto-encoders differ from regular encoders in that there is an intermediary “sampling step” between the encoder and decoder. Simply connecting the two would NOT guarantee that encoded parameters can be viewed as parameters of a normal distribution representing a latent space. In VAEs, the output of the encoder is physically put into an intermediary step that uses it as normal parameters and provides a sample. In this way, the encoding is penalized as if it were the parameters of some Normal Distribution. | |||
One of the limiting factors that the authors mention in the field of generative vector drawings is the lack of availability of publicly available datasets. Previous datasets such as the Sketch data with 20k vector sketches was explored for feature extraction techniques. The Sketchy dataset consisting of 70k vector sketches along with pixel images was used for large-scale exploration of human sketches. The ShadowDraw system that used 30k raster images along with extracted vectorized features is an interactive system | |||
that predicts what a finished drawing looks like based on a set of incomplete brush strokes from the | |||
user while the sketch is being drawn. In all the cases, the datasets are comparatively small. The dataset proposed in this work uses a much larger dataset and has been made publicly available, and is one of the major contributions of this paper. | |||
== Major Contributions == | |||
This paper makes the following major contributions: Authors outline a framework for both unconditional and | |||
conditional generation of vector images composed of a sequence of lines. The recurrent neural | |||
network-based generative model is capable of producing sketches of common objects in a vector | |||
format. The paper develops a training procedure unique to vector images to make the training more robust. The paper also made available | |||
a large dataset of hand drawn vector images to encourage further development of generative modeling | |||
for vector images, and also release an implementation of our model as an open source project | |||
== Methodology == | == Methodology == | ||
=== Dataset === | === Dataset === | ||
QuickDraw is a dataset with 50 million vector drawings collected by an online game [https://quickdraw.withgoogle.com/# Quick Draw!], where the players are required to draw objects belonging to a particular object class in less than 20 seconds. It contains hundreds of classes, each class has 70k training samples, 2.5k validation samples and 2.5k test samples. | QuickDraw is a dataset with 50 million vector drawings collected by an online game [https://quickdraw.withgoogle.com/# Quick Draw!], where the players are required to draw objects belonging to a particular object class in less than 20 seconds. It contains hundreds of classes, each class has 70k training samples, 2.5k validation samples, and 2.5k test samples. | ||
The data format of each sample is a representation of a pen stroke action event. The Origin is the initial coordinate of the drawing. The sketches are points in a list. Each point consists of 5 elements <math> (\Delta x, \Delta y, p_{1}, p_{2}, p_{3})</math> where x and y are the offset distance in x and y directions from the previous point. The parameters <math>p_{1}, p_{2}, p_{3}</math> represent three possible states in binary one-hot representation where <math>p_{1}</math> indicates the pen is touching the paper, <math>p_{2}</math> indicates the pen will be lifted from here, and <math>p_{3}</math> represents the drawing has ended. | The data format of each sample is a representation of a pen stroke action event. The Origin is the initial coordinate of the drawing. The sketches are points in a list. Each point consists of 5 elements <math> (\Delta x, \Delta y, p_{1}, p_{2}, p_{3})</math> where x and y are the offset distance in x and y directions from the previous point. The parameters <math>p_{1}, p_{2}, p_{3}</math> represent three possible states in binary one-hot representation where <math>p_{1}</math> indicates the pen is touching the paper, <math>p_{2}</math> indicates the pen will be lifted from here, and <math>p_{3}</math> represents the drawing has ended. | ||
Line 32: | Line 42: | ||
[[File:sketchfig2.png|700px|center]] | [[File:sketchfig2.png|700px|center]] | ||
The model is a Sequence-to-Sequence Variational Autoencoder(VAE). The encoder is a bidirectional RNN | The model is a Sequence-to-Sequence Variational Autoencoder(VAE). | ||
==== Encoder ==== | |||
The encoder is a bidirectional RNN. The input is a sketch sequence denoted by <math>S =\{S_0, S_1, ... S_{N_{s}}\}</math> and a reversed sketch sequence denoted by <math>S_{reverse} = \{S_{N_{s}},S_{N_{s}-1}, ... S_0\}</math>. The final hidden layer representations of the two encoded sequences <math>(h_{ \rightarrow}, h_{ \leftarrow})</math> are concatenated to form a latent vector, <math>h</math>, of size <math>N_{z}</math>, | |||
\begin{split} | |||
&h_{ \rightarrow} = encode_{ \rightarrow }(S), \\ | |||
&h_{ \leftarrow} = encode_{ \leftarrow }(S_{reverse}), \\ | |||
&h = [h_{\rightarrow}; h_{\leftarrow}]. | |||
\end{split} | |||
\ | Then the authors project <math>h</math> into two vectors <math>\mu</math> and <math>\hat{\sigma}</math> of size <math>N_{z}</math>. The projection is performed using a fully connected layer. These two vectors are the parameters of the latent space Gaussian distribution that will estimate the distribution of the input data. Because standard deviations cannot be negative, an exponential function is used to convert it to all positive values. Next, a random variable with mean <math>\mu</math> and standard deviation <math>\sigma</math> is constructed by scaling a normalized IID Gaussian, <math>\mathcal{N}(0,I)</math>, | ||
\begin{split} | |||
& \mu = W_\mu h + b_\mu, \\ | |||
\end{ | & \hat \sigma = W_\sigma h + b_\sigma, \\ | ||
& \sigma = exp( \frac{\hat \sigma}{2}), \\ | |||
& z = \mu + \sigma \odot \mathcal{N}(0,I). | |||
\end{split} | |||
Note that <math>z</math> is not deterministic but a random vector that can be conditioned on an input sketch sequence. | |||
z | |||
==== Decoder ==== | |||
The decoder is an autoregressive RNN. The initial hidden and cell states are generated using <math>[h_0;c_0] = \tanh(W_z z + b_z)</math>. Here, <math>c_0</math> is utilized if applicable (eg. if an LSTM decoder is used). <math>S_0</math> is defined as <math>(0,0,1,0,0)</math> (the pen is touching the paper at location 0, 0). | |||
For each step <math>i</math> in the decoder, the input <math>x_i</math> is the concatenation of the previous point <math>S_{i-1}</math> and the latent vector <math>z</math>. The outputs of the RNN decoder <math>y_i</math> are parameters for a probability distribution that will generate the next point <math>S_i</math>. | |||
The authors model <math>(\Delta x,\Delta y)</math> as a Gaussian mixture model (GMM) with <math>M</math> normal distributions and model the ground truth data <math>(p_1, p_2, p_3)</math> as a categorical distribution <math>(q_1, q_2, q_3)</math> where <math>q_1, q_2\ \text{and}\ q_3</math> sum up to 1, | |||
\begin{align*} | \begin{align*} | ||
Line 58: | Line 76: | ||
\end{align*} | \end{align*} | ||
Where <math>\mathcal{N}(\Delta x,\Delta y | \mu_{x,j}, \mu_{y,j}, \sigma_{x,j},\sigma_{y,j}, \rho _{xy,j})</math> is a bi-variate Normal Distribution, with parameters means <math>\mu_x, \mu_y</math>, standard deviations <math>\sigma_x, \sigma_y</math> and correlation parameter <math>\rho_{xy}</math>. There are <math>M</math> such distributions. <math>\Pi</math> is a categorical distribution vector of length <math>M</math>. Collectively these form the mixture weights of the Gaussian Mixture model. | |||
The output vector <math>y_i</math> is generated using a fully-connected forward propagation in the hidden state of the RNN. | The output vector <math>y_i</math> is generated using a fully-connected forward propagation in the hidden state of the RNN. | ||
\begin{ | \begin{split} | ||
x_i = [S_{i-1}; z], | &x_i = [S_{i-1}; z], \\ | ||
[h_i; c_i] = forward(x_i,[h_{i-1}; c_{i-1}]), | &[h_i; c_i] = forward(x_i,[h_{i-1}; c_{i-1}]), \\ | ||
y_i = W_y h_i + b_y, | &y_i = W_y h_i + b_y, \\ | ||
y_i \in \mathbb{R}^{6M+3}. | &y_i \in \mathbb{R}^{6M+3}. \\ | ||
\end{ | \end{split} | ||
The output consists the probability distribution of the next data point. | The output consists the probability distribution of the next data point. | ||
Line 103: | Line 121: | ||
\end{align*} | \end{align*} | ||
The softmax parameters of the categorical distribution and also the <math>\sigma</math> parameters of the bivariate normal distribution are controlled by the math parameter <math>\tau</math>.This controls the level of randomness in the samples. | |||
The <math>\tau</math> ranges from 0 to 1. When <math>\tau = 0</math> the output will be deterministic as the sample will consist of the points on the peak of the probability density function. | The <math>\tau</math> ranges from 0 to 1. When <math>\tau = 0</math> the output will be deterministic as the sample will consist of the points on the peak of the probability density function. | ||
=== Unconditional Generation === | === Unconditional Generation === | ||
There is a special case that only the decoder RNN module is trained. The decoder RNN could work as a standalone autoregressive model without latent variables. In this case, initial states are 0, the input <math>x_i</math> is only <math>S_{i-1}</math> or <math>S_{i-1}^{'}</math>. In the Figure 3, generating sketches unconditionally from the temperature parameter | There is a special case that only the decoder RNN module is trained. The decoder RNN could work as a standalone autoregressive model without latent variables. In this case, initial states are 0, the input <math>x_i</math> is only <math>S_{i-1}</math> or <math>S_{i-1}^{'}</math>. In the Figure 3, generating sketches unconditionally from the temperature parameter <math>\tau = 0.2</math> at the top in blue, to <math>\tau = 0.9</math> at the bottom in red. | ||
[[File:sketchfig3.png|700px|center]] | [[File:sketchfig3.png|700px|center]] | ||
Line 124: | Line 143: | ||
Both terms are normalized by <math>N_{max}</math>. | Both terms are normalized by <math>N_{max}</math>. | ||
<math>L_{KL}</math> measures the difference between the distribution of the latent vector <math>z</math> and an | <math>L_{KL}</math> measures the difference between the distribution of the latent vector <math>z</math> and an i.i.d. Gaussian vector with zero mean and unit variance. | ||
\begin{align*} | \begin{align*} | ||
Line 136: | Line 155: | ||
\end{align*} | \end{align*} | ||
When <math>w_{KL} = 0</math>, the model becomes a standalone unconditional generator. Specially, | When <math>w_{KL} = 0</math>, the model becomes a standalone unconditional generator. Specially, there will be no <math>L_{KL} </math> term as we only optimize for <math>L_{R} </math>. By removing the <math>L_{KL} </math> term the model approaches a pure autoencoder, meaning it sacrifices the ability to enforce a prior over the latent space and gains better reconstruction loss metrics. | ||
While the aforementioned loss function could be used, it was found that annealing the KL term (as shown below) in the loss function produces better results. | |||
<center><math> | |||
\eta_{step} = 1 - (1 - \eta_{min})R^{step} | |||
</math></center> | |||
<center><math> | |||
Loss_{train} = L_R + w_{KL} \eta_{step} max(L_{KL}, KL_{min}) | |||
</math></center> | |||
As shown in Figure 4, the <math>L_{R} </math> metric for the standalone decoder model is actually an upper bound for different models using a latent vector. The reason is the unconditional model does not access to the entire sketch it needs to generate. | |||
[[File:s.png|600px|thumb|center|Figure 4. Tradeoff between <math>L_{R} </math> and <math>L_{KL} </math>, for two models trained on single class datasets (left). | |||
Validation Loss Graph for models trained on the Yoga dataset using various <math>w_{KL} </math>. (right)]] | |||
== Experiments == | == Experiments == | ||
The authors experiment with the sketch-rnn model using different settings and recorded both losses. They used a Long Short-Term Memory(LSTM) model as an encoder and a HyperLSTM as a decoder. They also conduct multi-class datasets. The result is as follows. | The authors experiment with the sketch-rnn model using different settings and recorded both losses. They used a Long Short-Term Memory(LSTM) model as an encoder and a HyperLSTM as a decoder. HyperLSTM is a type of RNN cell that excels at sequence generation tasks. The ability for HyperLSTM to spontaneously augment its own weights enables it to adapt to many different regimes | ||
in a large diverse dataset. They also conduct multi-class datasets. The result is as follows. | |||
[[File:sketchtable1.png|700px]] | [[File:sketchtable1.png|700px|center]] | ||
We could see the trade-off between <math>L_R</math> and <math>L_{KL}</math> in this table clearly. Furthermore, <math>L_R</math> decreases as <math>w_{KL} </math> is halfed. | We could see the trade-off between <math>L_R</math> and <math>L_{KL}</math> in this table clearly. Furthermore, <math>L_R</math> decreases as <math>w_{KL} </math> is halfed. | ||
=== Conditional Reconstruction === | === Conditional Reconstruction === | ||
The authors assess the reconstructed sketch with a given sketch with different <math>\tau</math> values. We could see that with high <math>\tau</math> value on the right, the reconstructed sketches are more random. | The authors assess the reconstructed sketch with a given sketch with different <math>\tau</math> values. We could see that with high <math>\tau</math> value on the right, the reconstructed sketches are more random. The reconstructed sketches have similar properties as the input image , and occasionally add or remove few minor details. | ||
[[File:sketchfig5.png|700px|center]] | [[File:sketchfig5.png|700px|center]] | ||
Line 153: | Line 188: | ||
=== Latent Space Interpolation === | === Latent Space Interpolation === | ||
The authors visualize the reconstruction sketches while interpolating between latent vectors using different <math>w_{KL}</math> values. | The authors visualize the reconstruction sketches while interpolating between latent vectors using different <math>w_{KL}</math> values. As Gaussian prior is enforced on the latent space, fewer gaps are expected in the latent space between two encoded vectors. A model trained using higher <math>w_{KL}</math> is expected to produce images that are close to the data manifold. To show this authors trained several models using various values of <math>w_{KL}</math> and showed through experimentation that with high <math>w_{KL}</math> values, the generated images are more coherently interpolated. | ||
[[File:sketchfig6.png|700px|center]] | [[File:sketchfig6.png|700px|center]] | ||
=== Sketch Drawing Analogies === | === Sketch Drawing Analogies === | ||
Since the latent vector <math>z</math> encode conceptual features of a sketch, those features can also be used to augment other sketches that do not have these features. This is possible when models are trained with low <math>L_{KL}</math> values. | Since the latent vector <math>z</math> encode conceptual features of a sketch, those features can also be used to augment other sketches that do not have these features. This is possible when models are trained with low <math>L_{KL}</math> values. Given the smoothness of the latent space, where any interpolated vector between two latent vectors results in a coherent sketch, we can perform vector arithmetic on the latent vectors encoded from different sketches and explore how the model organizes the latent space to represent different concepts in the manifold of generated sketches. For instance, we can subtract the latent vector of an encoded pig head from the latent vector of a full pig, to arrive at a vector that represents a body. Adding this difference to the latent vector of a cat head results in a full cat (i.e. cat head + body = full cat). | ||
=== Predicting Different Endings of Incomplete Sketches === | === Predicting Different Endings of Incomplete Sketches === | ||
This model is able to predict an incomplete sketch by encoding the sketch into hidden state <math>h</math> using the decoder and then using <math>h</math> as an initial hidden state to generate the remaining sketch. The authors train on individual classes by using decoder-only models and set τ = 0.8 to complete samples. Figure 7 shows the results. | This model is able to predict an incomplete sketch by encoding the sketch into hidden state <math>h</math> using the decoder and then using <math>h</math> as an initial hidden state to generate the remaining sketch. The authors train on individual classes by using decoder-only models and set <math>τ = 0.8</math> to complete samples. Figure 7 shows the results. | ||
[[File:sketchfig7.png|700px|center]] | [[File:sketchfig7.png|700px|center]] | ||
== Limitations == | |||
Although sketch-rnn can model a large variety of sketch drawings, there are several limitations in the current approach. For most single-class datasets, sketch-rnn is capable of modeling around 300 data points. The model becomes increasingly difficult to train beyond this length. For the author's dataset, the Ramer-Douglas-Peucker algorithm is used to simplify the strokes of sketch data to less than 200 data points. | |||
For more complicated classes of images, such as mermaids or lobsters, the reconstruction loss metrics are not as good compared to simpler classes such as ants, faces or firetrucks. The models trained on these more challenging image classes tend to draw smoother, more circular line segments that do not resemble individual sketches, but rather resemble an averaging of many sketches in the training set. This smoothness may be analogous to the blurriness effect produced by a Variational Autoencoder that is trained on pixel images. Depending on the use case of the model, smooth circular lines can be viewed as aesthetically pleasing and a desirable property. | |||
While both conditional and unconditional models are capable of training on datasets of several classes, sketch-rnn is ineffective at modeling a large number of classes simultaneously. The samples generated will be incoherent, with different classes are shown in the same sketch. | |||
== Applications and Future Work == | == Applications and Future Work == | ||
Line 180: | Line 223: | ||
sketch of the object composed of a minimal number of lines to be a more interesting problem. | sketch of the object composed of a minimal number of lines to be a more interesting problem. | ||
Moreover, it would be interesting to see how varying loss will be represented as a drawing. Some exotic form of loss function may change the way that the network behaves, which can lead to various applications. | |||
== Conclusion == | == Conclusion == | ||
The paper presents a methodology to model sketch drawings using recurrent neural networks. The sketch-rnn model that can encode and decode sketches, generate and complete unfinished sketches is introduced in this paper. In addition, Authors demonstrated how to both interpolate between latent spaces from a different class, and use it to augment sketches or generate similar looking sketches. Furthermore, the importance of enforcing a prior distribution on latent vector while interpolating coherent sketch generations is shown. Finally, a large sketch drawings dataset for future research work is created. | |||
== Critique == | == Critique == | ||
This paper presents both a novel large dataset of sketches and a new RNN architecture to generate new sketches. Although its exciting to read about, many improvements can be done. | |||
* | * The performance of the decoder model can hardly be evaluated. The authors present the performance of the decoder by showing the generated sketches, it is clear and straightforward, however, not very efficient. It would be great if the authors could present a way, or a metric to evaluate how well the sketches are generated rather than printing them out and evaluate with human judgment. The authors didn't present an evaluation of the algorithms either. They provided <math>L_R</math> and <math>L_{KL}</math> for reference, however, a lower loss doesn't represent a better performance. Training loss alone likely does not capture the quality of a sketch. | ||
* | * The authors have not mentioned details on training details such as learning rate, training time, parameter size, and so on. | ||
* | * The approach presented in the paper is innovative and make a clever use of a significantly large training database. The same framework could be used for assisting a wide range of professionals into a semi-automatic support system that can augment human capabilities for tasks such as graphic design, report preparation, or even journalism. | ||
* | * Algorithm lacks comparison to the prior state of the art on standard metrics, which made the novelty unclear. Using strokes as inputs is a novel and innovative move, however, the paper does not provide a baseline or any comparison with other methods or algorithms. Some other researches were mentioned in the paper, using similar and smaller datasets. It would be great if the authors could use some basic or existing methods a baseline and compare with the new algorithm. | ||
* | * Besides the comparison with other algorithms, it would also be great if the authors could remove or replace some component of the algorithm in the model to show if one part is necessary, or what made them decide to include a specific component in the algorithm. | ||
* The authors did not present better complexity and deeper mathematical analysis on the algorithms in the paper. It also does not include comparison using some more standard metrics compare to previous results. Therefore, it lacks some algorithmic contribution. It would be better to include some more formal analysis on the algorithmic side. | |||
* The authors proposed a few future applications for the model, however, the current output seems somehow not very close to their descriptions. But I do believe that this is a very good beginning, with the release of the sketch dataset, it must attract more scholars to research and improve with it! | |||
* As they said their model can become increasingly difficult to train on with increased size. | |||
== References == | == References == | ||
Line 236: | Line 274: | ||
# Saul Simhon and Gregory Dudek. Sketch interpretation and refinement using statistical models. In Proceedings of the Fifteenth Eurographics Conference on Rendering Techniques, EGSR’04, pp. 23–32, Aire-la-Ville, Switzerland, Switzerland, 2004. Eurographics Association. ISBN 3-905673-12-6. doi: 10.2312/EGWR/EGSR04/023-032. URL http://dx.doi.org/10.2312/EGWR/EGSR04/023-032. | # Saul Simhon and Gregory Dudek. Sketch interpretation and refinement using statistical models. In Proceedings of the Fifteenth Eurographics Conference on Rendering Techniques, EGSR’04, pp. 23–32, Aire-la-Ville, Switzerland, Switzerland, 2004. Eurographics Association. ISBN 3-905673-12-6. doi: 10.2312/EGWR/EGSR04/023-032. URL http://dx.doi.org/10.2312/EGWR/EGSR04/023-032. | ||
# Patrick Tresset and Frederic Fol Leymarie. Portrait drawing by paul the robot. Comput. Graph.,37(5):348–363, August 2013. ISSN 0097-8493. doi: 10.1016/j.cag.2013.01.012. URL http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cag.2013.01.012. | # Patrick Tresset and Frederic Fol Leymarie. Portrait drawing by paul the robot. Comput. Graph.,37(5):348–363, August 2013. ISSN 0097-8493. doi: 10.1016/j.cag.2013.01.012. URL http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cag.2013.01.012. | ||
# T. White. Sampling Generative Networks. ArXiv e-prints, September 2016. | # T. White. Sampling Generative Networks. [https://arxiv.org/abs/1609.04468 ArXiv e-prints], September 2016. | ||
#Ning Xie, Hirotaka Hachiya, and Masashi Sugiyama. Artist agent: A reinforcement learning approach to automatic stroke generation in oriental ink painting. In ICML. icml.cc / Omnipress, 2012. URL http://dblp.uni-trier.de/db/conf/icml/icml2012.html#XieHS12. | #Ning Xie, Hirotaka Hachiya, and Masashi Sugiyama. Artist agent: A reinforcement learning approach to automatic stroke generation in oriental ink painting. In ICML. icml.cc / Omnipress, 2012. URL http://dblp.uni-trier.de/db/conf/icml/icml2012.html#XieHS12. | ||
# Xu-Yao Zhang, Fei Yin, Yan-Ming Zhang, Cheng-Lin Liu, and Yoshua Bengio. Drawing and Recognizing Chinese Characters with Recurrent Neural Network. CoRR, abs/1606.06539, 2016. URL http://arxiv.org/abs/1606.06539. | # Xu-Yao Zhang, Fei Yin, Yan-Ming Zhang, Cheng-Lin Liu, and Yoshua Bengio. Drawing and Recognizing Chinese Characters with Recurrent Neural Network. CoRR, abs/1606.06539, 2016. URL http://arxiv.org/abs/1606.06539. |
Latest revision as of 23:40, 16 December 2018
Introduction
In this paper, the authors present a recurrent neural network, sketch-rnn, that can be used to construct stroke-based drawings. Besides new robust training methods, they also outline a framework for conditional and unconditional sketch generation.
Neural networks have been heavily used as image generation tools. For example, Generative Adversarial Networks, Variational Inference, and Autoregressive models have been used. Most of those models are designed to generate pixels to construct images. People, however, learn to draw using sequences of strokes as opposed to the simultaneous generation of pixels. The authors propose a new generative model that creates vector images so that it might generalize abstract concepts in a manner more similar to how humans do.
The model is trained with hand-drawn sketches as input sequences. The model is able to produce sketches in vector format. In the conditional generation model, they also explore the latent space representation for vector images and discuss a few future applications of this model. The model and dataset are now available as an open source project (link).
Terminology
Pixel images, also referred to as raster or bitmap images are files that encode image data as a set of pixels. These are the most common image type, with extensions such as .png, .jpg, .bmp.
Vector images are files that encode image data as paths between points. SVG and EPS file types are used to store vector images.
For a visual comparison of raster and vector images, see this video. As mentioned, vector images are generally simpler and more abstract, whereas raster images generally are used to store detailed images.
For this paper, the important distinction between the two is that the encoding of images in the model will be inherently more abstract because of the vector representation. The intuition is that generating abstract representations is more effective using a vector representation.
Related Work
There are some works in the history that used a similar approach to generate images such as Portrait Drawing by Paul the Robot [26, 28] and some reinforcement learning approaches[28], Reinforcement Learning to discover a set of paint brush strokes that can best represent a given input photograph. They work more like a mimic of digitized photographs, rather than develop generative models of vector images. There are also some Neural networks based approaches, but those are mostly dealing with pixel images. Little work is done on vector images generation. There are models that use Hidden Markov Models [25] or Mixture Density Networks [2] to generate human sketches, continuous data points (modelling Chinese characters as a sequence of pen stroke actions) or vectorized Kanji characters [9,29].
Neural Network-based approaches are able to generate latent space representation of vector images, which follows a Gaussian distribution. The generated output of these networks is trained to match the Gaussian distribution by minimizing a given loss function. Using this idea, previous works attempted to generate a sequence-to-Sequence model with Variational Auto-encoder to model sentences into latent space and using probabilistic program induction to model Omniglot dataset. Variational Auto-encoders differ from regular encoders in that there is an intermediary “sampling step” between the encoder and decoder. Simply connecting the two would NOT guarantee that encoded parameters can be viewed as parameters of a normal distribution representing a latent space. In VAEs, the output of the encoder is physically put into an intermediary step that uses it as normal parameters and provides a sample. In this way, the encoding is penalized as if it were the parameters of some Normal Distribution.
One of the limiting factors that the authors mention in the field of generative vector drawings is the lack of availability of publicly available datasets. Previous datasets such as the Sketch data with 20k vector sketches was explored for feature extraction techniques. The Sketchy dataset consisting of 70k vector sketches along with pixel images was used for large-scale exploration of human sketches. The ShadowDraw system that used 30k raster images along with extracted vectorized features is an interactive system that predicts what a finished drawing looks like based on a set of incomplete brush strokes from the user while the sketch is being drawn. In all the cases, the datasets are comparatively small. The dataset proposed in this work uses a much larger dataset and has been made publicly available, and is one of the major contributions of this paper.
Major Contributions
This paper makes the following major contributions: Authors outline a framework for both unconditional and conditional generation of vector images composed of a sequence of lines. The recurrent neural network-based generative model is capable of producing sketches of common objects in a vector format. The paper develops a training procedure unique to vector images to make the training more robust. The paper also made available a large dataset of hand drawn vector images to encourage further development of generative modeling for vector images, and also release an implementation of our model as an open source project
Methodology
Dataset
QuickDraw is a dataset with 50 million vector drawings collected by an online game Quick Draw!, where the players are required to draw objects belonging to a particular object class in less than 20 seconds. It contains hundreds of classes, each class has 70k training samples, 2.5k validation samples, and 2.5k test samples.
The data format of each sample is a representation of a pen stroke action event. The Origin is the initial coordinate of the drawing. The sketches are points in a list. Each point consists of 5 elements [math]\displaystyle{ (\Delta x, \Delta y, p_{1}, p_{2}, p_{3}) }[/math] where x and y are the offset distance in x and y directions from the previous point. The parameters [math]\displaystyle{ p_{1}, p_{2}, p_{3} }[/math] represent three possible states in binary one-hot representation where [math]\displaystyle{ p_{1} }[/math] indicates the pen is touching the paper, [math]\displaystyle{ p_{2} }[/math] indicates the pen will be lifted from here, and [math]\displaystyle{ p_{3} }[/math] represents the drawing has ended.
Sketch-RNN
The model is a Sequence-to-Sequence Variational Autoencoder(VAE).
Encoder
The encoder is a bidirectional RNN. The input is a sketch sequence denoted by [math]\displaystyle{ S =\{S_0, S_1, ... S_{N_{s}}\} }[/math] and a reversed sketch sequence denoted by [math]\displaystyle{ S_{reverse} = \{S_{N_{s}},S_{N_{s}-1}, ... S_0\} }[/math]. The final hidden layer representations of the two encoded sequences [math]\displaystyle{ (h_{ \rightarrow}, h_{ \leftarrow}) }[/math] are concatenated to form a latent vector, [math]\displaystyle{ h }[/math], of size [math]\displaystyle{ N_{z} }[/math],
\begin{split} &h_{ \rightarrow} = encode_{ \rightarrow }(S), \\ &h_{ \leftarrow} = encode_{ \leftarrow }(S_{reverse}), \\ &h = [h_{\rightarrow}; h_{\leftarrow}]. \end{split}
Then the authors project [math]\displaystyle{ h }[/math] into two vectors [math]\displaystyle{ \mu }[/math] and [math]\displaystyle{ \hat{\sigma} }[/math] of size [math]\displaystyle{ N_{z} }[/math]. The projection is performed using a fully connected layer. These two vectors are the parameters of the latent space Gaussian distribution that will estimate the distribution of the input data. Because standard deviations cannot be negative, an exponential function is used to convert it to all positive values. Next, a random variable with mean [math]\displaystyle{ \mu }[/math] and standard deviation [math]\displaystyle{ \sigma }[/math] is constructed by scaling a normalized IID Gaussian, [math]\displaystyle{ \mathcal{N}(0,I) }[/math],
\begin{split} & \mu = W_\mu h + b_\mu, \\ & \hat \sigma = W_\sigma h + b_\sigma, \\ & \sigma = exp( \frac{\hat \sigma}{2}), \\ & z = \mu + \sigma \odot \mathcal{N}(0,I). \end{split}
Note that [math]\displaystyle{ z }[/math] is not deterministic but a random vector that can be conditioned on an input sketch sequence.
Decoder
The decoder is an autoregressive RNN. The initial hidden and cell states are generated using [math]\displaystyle{ [h_0;c_0] = \tanh(W_z z + b_z) }[/math]. Here, [math]\displaystyle{ c_0 }[/math] is utilized if applicable (eg. if an LSTM decoder is used). [math]\displaystyle{ S_0 }[/math] is defined as [math]\displaystyle{ (0,0,1,0,0) }[/math] (the pen is touching the paper at location 0, 0).
For each step [math]\displaystyle{ i }[/math] in the decoder, the input [math]\displaystyle{ x_i }[/math] is the concatenation of the previous point [math]\displaystyle{ S_{i-1} }[/math] and the latent vector [math]\displaystyle{ z }[/math]. The outputs of the RNN decoder [math]\displaystyle{ y_i }[/math] are parameters for a probability distribution that will generate the next point [math]\displaystyle{ S_i }[/math].
The authors model [math]\displaystyle{ (\Delta x,\Delta y) }[/math] as a Gaussian mixture model (GMM) with [math]\displaystyle{ M }[/math] normal distributions and model the ground truth data [math]\displaystyle{ (p_1, p_2, p_3) }[/math] as a categorical distribution [math]\displaystyle{ (q_1, q_2, q_3) }[/math] where [math]\displaystyle{ q_1, q_2\ \text{and}\ q_3 }[/math] sum up to 1,
\begin{align*} p(\Delta x, \Delta y) = \sum_{j=1}^{M} \Pi_j \mathcal{N}(\Delta x,\Delta y | \mu_{x,j}, \mu_{y,j}, \sigma_{x,j},\sigma_{y,j}, \rho _{xy,j}), where \sum_{j=1}^{M}\Pi_j = 1 \end{align*}
Where [math]\displaystyle{ \mathcal{N}(\Delta x,\Delta y | \mu_{x,j}, \mu_{y,j}, \sigma_{x,j},\sigma_{y,j}, \rho _{xy,j}) }[/math] is a bi-variate Normal Distribution, with parameters means [math]\displaystyle{ \mu_x, \mu_y }[/math], standard deviations [math]\displaystyle{ \sigma_x, \sigma_y }[/math] and correlation parameter [math]\displaystyle{ \rho_{xy} }[/math]. There are [math]\displaystyle{ M }[/math] such distributions. [math]\displaystyle{ \Pi }[/math] is a categorical distribution vector of length [math]\displaystyle{ M }[/math]. Collectively these form the mixture weights of the Gaussian Mixture model.
The output vector [math]\displaystyle{ y_i }[/math] is generated using a fully-connected forward propagation in the hidden state of the RNN.
\begin{split} &x_i = [S_{i-1}; z], \\ &[h_i; c_i] = forward(x_i,[h_{i-1}; c_{i-1}]), \\ &y_i = W_y h_i + b_y, \\ &y_i \in \mathbb{R}^{6M+3}. \\ \end{split}
The output consists the probability distribution of the next data point.
\begin{align*} [(\hat\Pi_1\ \mu_x\ \mu_y\ \hat\sigma_x\ \hat\sigma_y\ \hat\rho_{xy})_1\ (\hat\Pi_1\ \mu_x\ \mu_y\ \hat\sigma_x\ \hat\sigma_y\ \hat\rho_{xy})_2\ ...\ (\hat\Pi_1\ \mu_x\ \mu_y\ \hat\sigma_x\ \hat\sigma_y\ \hat\rho_{xy})_M\ (\hat{q_1}\ \hat{q_2}\ \hat{q_3})] = y_i \end{align*}
[math]\displaystyle{ \exp }[/math] and [math]\displaystyle{ \tanh }[/math] operations are applied to ensure that the standard deviations are non-negative and the correlation value is between -1 and 1.
\begin{align*} \sigma_x = \exp (\hat \sigma_x),\ \sigma_y = \exp (\hat \sigma_y),\ \rho_{xy} = \tanh(\hat \rho_{xy}). \end{align*}
Categorical distribution probabilities for [math]\displaystyle{ (p_1, p_2, p_3) }[/math] using [math]\displaystyle{ (q_1, q_2, q_3) }[/math] can be obtained as :
\begin{align*} q_k = \frac{\exp{(\hat q_k)}}{ \sum\nolimits_{j = 1}^{3} \exp {(\hat q_j)}}, k \in \left\{1,2,3\right\}, \Pi _k = \frac{\exp{(\hat \Pi_k)}}{ \sum\nolimits_{j = 1}^{M} \exp {(\hat \Pi_j)}}, k \in \left\{1,...,M\right\}. \end{align*}
It is hard for the model to decide when to stop drawing because the probabilities of the three events [math]\displaystyle{ (p_1, p_2, p_3) }[/math] are very unbalanced. Researchers in the past have used different weights for each pen event probability, but the authors found this approach lacking elegance and inadequate. They define a hyperparameter representing the max length of the longest sketch in the training set denoted by [math]\displaystyle{ N_{max} }[/math], and set the [math]\displaystyle{ S_i }[/math] to be [math]\displaystyle{ (0, 0, 0, 0, 1) }[/math] for [math]\displaystyle{ i \gt N_s }[/math].
The outcome sample [math]\displaystyle{ S_i^{'} }[/math] can be generated in each time step during sample process and fed as input for the next time step. The process will stop when [math]\displaystyle{ p_3 = 1 }[/math] or [math]\displaystyle{ i = N_{max} }[/math]. The output is not deterministic but conditioned random sequences. The level of randomness can be controlled using a temperature parameter [math]\displaystyle{ \tau }[/math].
\begin{align*} \hat q_k \rightarrow \frac{\hat q_k}{\tau}, \hat \Pi_k \rightarrow \frac{\hat \Pi_k}{\tau}, \sigma_x^2 \rightarrow \sigma_x^2\tau, \sigma_y^2 \rightarrow \sigma_y^2\tau. \end{align*}
The softmax parameters of the categorical distribution and also the [math]\displaystyle{ \sigma }[/math] parameters of the bivariate normal distribution are controlled by the math parameter [math]\displaystyle{ \tau }[/math].This controls the level of randomness in the samples. The [math]\displaystyle{ \tau }[/math] ranges from 0 to 1. When [math]\displaystyle{ \tau = 0 }[/math] the output will be deterministic as the sample will consist of the points on the peak of the probability density function.
Unconditional Generation
There is a special case that only the decoder RNN module is trained. The decoder RNN could work as a standalone autoregressive model without latent variables. In this case, initial states are 0, the input [math]\displaystyle{ x_i }[/math] is only [math]\displaystyle{ S_{i-1} }[/math] or [math]\displaystyle{ S_{i-1}^{'} }[/math]. In the Figure 3, generating sketches unconditionally from the temperature parameter [math]\displaystyle{ \tau = 0.2 }[/math] at the top in blue, to [math]\displaystyle{ \tau = 0.9 }[/math] at the bottom in red.
Training
The training process is the same as a Variational Autoencoder. The loss function is the sum of Reconstruction Loss [math]\displaystyle{ L_R }[/math] and the Kullback-Leibler Divergence Loss [math]\displaystyle{ L_{KL} }[/math]. The reconstruction loss [math]\displaystyle{ L_R }[/math] can be obtained with generated parameters of pdf and training data [math]\displaystyle{ S }[/math]. It is the sum of the [math]\displaystyle{ L_s }[/math] and [math]\displaystyle{ L_p }[/math], which are the log loss of the offset [math]\displaystyle{ (\Delta x, \Delta y) }[/math] and the pen state [math]\displaystyle{ (p_1, p_2, p_3) }[/math].
\begin{align*} L_s = - \frac{1 }{N_{max}} \sum_{i = 1}^{N_s} \log(\sum_{i = 1}^{M} \Pi_{j,i} \mathcal{N}(\Delta x,\Delta y | \mu_{x,j,i}, \mu_{y,j,i}, \sigma_{x,j,i},\sigma_{y,j,i}, \rho _{xy,j,i})), \end{align*} \begin{align*} L_p = - \frac{1 }{N_{max}} \sum_{i = 1}^{N_{max}} \sum_{k = 1}^{3} p_{k,i} \log (q_{k,i}), L_R = L_s + L_p. \end{align*}
Both terms are normalized by [math]\displaystyle{ N_{max} }[/math].
[math]\displaystyle{ L_{KL} }[/math] measures the difference between the distribution of the latent vector [math]\displaystyle{ z }[/math] and an i.i.d. Gaussian vector with zero mean and unit variance.
\begin{align*} L_{KL} = - \frac{1}{2 N_z} (1+\hat \sigma - \mu^2 - \exp(\hat \sigma)) \end{align*}
The overall loss is weighted as:
\begin{align*} Loss = L_R + w_{KL} L_{KL} \end{align*}
When [math]\displaystyle{ w_{KL} = 0 }[/math], the model becomes a standalone unconditional generator. Specially, there will be no [math]\displaystyle{ L_{KL} }[/math] term as we only optimize for [math]\displaystyle{ L_{R} }[/math]. By removing the [math]\displaystyle{ L_{KL} }[/math] term the model approaches a pure autoencoder, meaning it sacrifices the ability to enforce a prior over the latent space and gains better reconstruction loss metrics.
While the aforementioned loss function could be used, it was found that annealing the KL term (as shown below) in the loss function produces better results.
As shown in Figure 4, the [math]\displaystyle{ L_{R} }[/math] metric for the standalone decoder model is actually an upper bound for different models using a latent vector. The reason is the unconditional model does not access to the entire sketch it needs to generate.
Experiments
The authors experiment with the sketch-rnn model using different settings and recorded both losses. They used a Long Short-Term Memory(LSTM) model as an encoder and a HyperLSTM as a decoder. HyperLSTM is a type of RNN cell that excels at sequence generation tasks. The ability for HyperLSTM to spontaneously augment its own weights enables it to adapt to many different regimes in a large diverse dataset. They also conduct multi-class datasets. The result is as follows.
We could see the trade-off between [math]\displaystyle{ L_R }[/math] and [math]\displaystyle{ L_{KL} }[/math] in this table clearly. Furthermore, [math]\displaystyle{ L_R }[/math] decreases as [math]\displaystyle{ w_{KL} }[/math] is halfed.
Conditional Reconstruction
The authors assess the reconstructed sketch with a given sketch with different [math]\displaystyle{ \tau }[/math] values. We could see that with high [math]\displaystyle{ \tau }[/math] value on the right, the reconstructed sketches are more random. The reconstructed sketches have similar properties as the input image , and occasionally add or remove few minor details.
They also experiment on inputting a sketch from a different class. The output will still keep some features from the class that the model is trained on.
Latent Space Interpolation
The authors visualize the reconstruction sketches while interpolating between latent vectors using different [math]\displaystyle{ w_{KL} }[/math] values. As Gaussian prior is enforced on the latent space, fewer gaps are expected in the latent space between two encoded vectors. A model trained using higher [math]\displaystyle{ w_{KL} }[/math] is expected to produce images that are close to the data manifold. To show this authors trained several models using various values of [math]\displaystyle{ w_{KL} }[/math] and showed through experimentation that with high [math]\displaystyle{ w_{KL} }[/math] values, the generated images are more coherently interpolated.
Sketch Drawing Analogies
Since the latent vector [math]\displaystyle{ z }[/math] encode conceptual features of a sketch, those features can also be used to augment other sketches that do not have these features. This is possible when models are trained with low [math]\displaystyle{ L_{KL} }[/math] values. Given the smoothness of the latent space, where any interpolated vector between two latent vectors results in a coherent sketch, we can perform vector arithmetic on the latent vectors encoded from different sketches and explore how the model organizes the latent space to represent different concepts in the manifold of generated sketches. For instance, we can subtract the latent vector of an encoded pig head from the latent vector of a full pig, to arrive at a vector that represents a body. Adding this difference to the latent vector of a cat head results in a full cat (i.e. cat head + body = full cat).
Predicting Different Endings of Incomplete Sketches
This model is able to predict an incomplete sketch by encoding the sketch into hidden state [math]\displaystyle{ h }[/math] using the decoder and then using [math]\displaystyle{ h }[/math] as an initial hidden state to generate the remaining sketch. The authors train on individual classes by using decoder-only models and set [math]\displaystyle{ τ = 0.8 }[/math] to complete samples. Figure 7 shows the results.
Limitations
Although sketch-rnn can model a large variety of sketch drawings, there are several limitations in the current approach. For most single-class datasets, sketch-rnn is capable of modeling around 300 data points. The model becomes increasingly difficult to train beyond this length. For the author's dataset, the Ramer-Douglas-Peucker algorithm is used to simplify the strokes of sketch data to less than 200 data points.
For more complicated classes of images, such as mermaids or lobsters, the reconstruction loss metrics are not as good compared to simpler classes such as ants, faces or firetrucks. The models trained on these more challenging image classes tend to draw smoother, more circular line segments that do not resemble individual sketches, but rather resemble an averaging of many sketches in the training set. This smoothness may be analogous to the blurriness effect produced by a Variational Autoencoder that is trained on pixel images. Depending on the use case of the model, smooth circular lines can be viewed as aesthetically pleasing and a desirable property.
While both conditional and unconditional models are capable of training on datasets of several classes, sketch-rnn is ineffective at modeling a large number of classes simultaneously. The samples generated will be incoherent, with different classes are shown in the same sketch.
Applications and Future Work
The authors believe this model can assist artists by suggesting how to finish a sketch, helping them to find interesting intersections between different drawings or objects, or generating a lot of similar but different designs. In the simplest use, pattern designers can apply sketch-rnn to generate a large number of similar, but unique designs for textile or wallpaper prints. The creative designers can also come up with abstract designs which enables them to resonate more with their target audience
This model may also find its place on teaching students how to draw. Even with the simple sketches in QuickDraw, the authors of this work have become much more proficient at drawing animals, insects, and various sea creatures after conducting these experiments. When the model is trained with a high [math]\displaystyle{ w_{KL} }[/math] and sampled with a low [math]\displaystyle{ \tau }[/math], it may help to turn a poor sketch into a more aesthetical one. Latent vector augmentation could also help to create a better drawing by inputting user-rating data during training processes.
The authors conclude by providing the following future directions to this work:
- Investigate using user-rating data to augmenting the latent vector in the direction that maximizes the aesthetics of the drawing.
- Look into combining variations of sequence-generation models with unsupervised, cross-domain pixel image generation models.
It's exciting that they manage to combine this model with other unsupervised, cross-domain pixel image generation models to create photorealistic images from sketches.
The authors have also mentioned the opposite direction of converting a photograph of an object into an unrealistic, but similar looking sketch of the object composed of a minimal number of lines to be a more interesting problem.
Moreover, it would be interesting to see how varying loss will be represented as a drawing. Some exotic form of loss function may change the way that the network behaves, which can lead to various applications.
Conclusion
The paper presents a methodology to model sketch drawings using recurrent neural networks. The sketch-rnn model that can encode and decode sketches, generate and complete unfinished sketches is introduced in this paper. In addition, Authors demonstrated how to both interpolate between latent spaces from a different class, and use it to augment sketches or generate similar looking sketches. Furthermore, the importance of enforcing a prior distribution on latent vector while interpolating coherent sketch generations is shown. Finally, a large sketch drawings dataset for future research work is created.
Critique
This paper presents both a novel large dataset of sketches and a new RNN architecture to generate new sketches. Although its exciting to read about, many improvements can be done.
- The performance of the decoder model can hardly be evaluated. The authors present the performance of the decoder by showing the generated sketches, it is clear and straightforward, however, not very efficient. It would be great if the authors could present a way, or a metric to evaluate how well the sketches are generated rather than printing them out and evaluate with human judgment. The authors didn't present an evaluation of the algorithms either. They provided [math]\displaystyle{ L_R }[/math] and [math]\displaystyle{ L_{KL} }[/math] for reference, however, a lower loss doesn't represent a better performance. Training loss alone likely does not capture the quality of a sketch.
- The authors have not mentioned details on training details such as learning rate, training time, parameter size, and so on.
- The approach presented in the paper is innovative and make a clever use of a significantly large training database. The same framework could be used for assisting a wide range of professionals into a semi-automatic support system that can augment human capabilities for tasks such as graphic design, report preparation, or even journalism.
- Algorithm lacks comparison to the prior state of the art on standard metrics, which made the novelty unclear. Using strokes as inputs is a novel and innovative move, however, the paper does not provide a baseline or any comparison with other methods or algorithms. Some other researches were mentioned in the paper, using similar and smaller datasets. It would be great if the authors could use some basic or existing methods a baseline and compare with the new algorithm.
- Besides the comparison with other algorithms, it would also be great if the authors could remove or replace some component of the algorithm in the model to show if one part is necessary, or what made them decide to include a specific component in the algorithm.
- The authors did not present better complexity and deeper mathematical analysis on the algorithms in the paper. It also does not include comparison using some more standard metrics compare to previous results. Therefore, it lacks some algorithmic contribution. It would be better to include some more formal analysis on the algorithmic side.
- The authors proposed a few future applications for the model, however, the current output seems somehow not very close to their descriptions. But I do believe that this is a very good beginning, with the release of the sketch dataset, it must attract more scholars to research and improve with it!
- As they said their model can become increasingly difficult to train on with increased size.
References
- Jimmy L. Ba, Jamie R. Kiros, and Geoffrey E. Hinton. Layer normalization. NIPS, 2016.
- Christopher M. Bishop. Mixture density networks. Technical Report, 1994. URL http://publications.aston.ac.uk/373/.
- Samuel R. Bowman, Luke Vilnis, Oriol Vinyals, Andrew M. Dai, Rafal Józefowicz, and Samy Bengio. Generating Sentences from a Continuous Space. CoRR, abs/1511.06349, 2015. URL http://arxiv.org/abs/1511.06349.
- H. Dong, P. Neekhara, C. Wu, and Y. Guo. Unsupervised Image-to-Image Translation with Generative Adversarial Networks. ArXiv e-prints, January 2017.
- David H. Douglas and Thomas K. Peucker. Algorithms for the reduction of the number of points required to represent a digitized line or its caricature. Cartographica: The International Journal for Geographic Information and Geovisualization, 10(2):112–122, October 1973. doi: 10.3138/fm57-6770-u75u-7727. URL http://dx.doi.org/10.3138/fm57-6770-u75u-7727.
- Mathias Eitz, James Hays, and Marc Alexa. How Do Humans Sketch Objects? ACM Trans. Graph.(Proc. SIGGRAPH), 31(4):44:1–44:10, 2012.
- I. Goodfellow. NIPS 2016 Tutorial: Generative Adversarial Networks. ArXiv e-prints, December 2016.
- Alex Graves. Generating sequences with recurrent neural networks. arXiv:1308.0850, 2013.
- David Ha. Recurrent Net Dreams Up Fake Chinese Characters in Vector Format with TensorFlow, 2015.
- David Ha, Andrew M. Dai, and Quoc V. Le. HyperNetworks. In ICLR, 2017.
- Sepp Hochreiter and Juergen Schmidhuber. Long short-term memory. Neural Computation, 1997.
- P. Isola, J.-Y. Zhu, T. Zhou, and A. A. Efros. Image-to-Image Translation with Conditional Adversarial Networks. ArXiv e-prints, November 2016.
- Jonas Jongejan, Henry Rowley, Takashi Kawashima, Jongmin Kim, and Nick Fox-Gieg. The Quick, Draw! - A.I. Experiment. https://quickdraw.withgoogle.com/, 2016. URL https: //quickdraw.withgoogle.com/.
- C. Kaae Sønderby, T. Raiko, L. Maaløe, S. Kaae Sønderby, and O. Winther. Ladder Variational Autoencoders. ArXiv e-prints, February 2016.
- T. Kim, M. Cha, H. Kim, J. Lee, and J. Kim. Learning to Discover cross-domain Relations with Generative Adversarial Networks. ArXiv e-prints, March 2017.
- D. P Kingma and M. Welling. Auto-Encoding Variational Bayes. ArXiv e-prints, December 2013.
- Diederik Kingma and Jimmy Ba. Adam: A method for stochastic optimization. In ICLR, 2015.
- Diederik P. Kingma, Tim Salimans, and Max Welling. Improving variational inference with inverse autoregressive flow. CoRR, abs/1606.04934, 2016. URL http://arxiv.org/abs/1606.04934.
- Brenden M. Lake, Ruslan Salakhutdinov, and Joshua B. Tenenbaum. Human level concept learning through probabilistic program induction. Science, 350(6266):1332–1338, December 2015. ISSN 1095-9203. doi: 10.1126/science.aab3050. URL http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/science.aab3050.
- Yong Jae Lee, C. Lawrence Zitnick, and Michael F. Cohen. Shadowdraw: Real-time user guidance for freehand drawing. In ACM SIGGRAPH 2011 Papers, SIGGRAPH ’11, pp. 27:1–27:10, New York, NY, USA, 2011. ACM. ISBN 978-1-4503-0943-1. doi: 10.1145/1964921.1964922. URL http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1964921.1964922.
- M.-Y. Liu, T. Breuel, and J. Kautz. Unsupervised Image-to-Image Translation Networks. ArXiv e-prints, March 2017.
- S. Reed, A. van den Oord, N. Kalchbrenner, S. Gómez Colmenarejo, Z. Wang, D. Belov, and N. de Freitas. Parallel Multiscale Autoregressive Density Estimation. ArXiv e-prints, March 2017.
- Patsorn Sangkloy, Nathan Burnell, Cusuh Ham, and James Hays. The Sketchy Database: Learning to Retrieve Badly Drawn Bunnies. ACM Trans. Graph., 35(4):119:1–119:12, July 2016. ISSN 0730-0301. doi: 10.1145/2897824.2925954. URL http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/2897824.2925954.
- Mike Schuster, Kuldip K. Paliwal, and A. General. Bidirectional recurrent neural networks. IEEE Transactions on Signal Processing, 1997.
- Saul Simhon and Gregory Dudek. Sketch interpretation and refinement using statistical models. In Proceedings of the Fifteenth Eurographics Conference on Rendering Techniques, EGSR’04, pp. 23–32, Aire-la-Ville, Switzerland, Switzerland, 2004. Eurographics Association. ISBN 3-905673-12-6. doi: 10.2312/EGWR/EGSR04/023-032. URL http://dx.doi.org/10.2312/EGWR/EGSR04/023-032.
- Patrick Tresset and Frederic Fol Leymarie. Portrait drawing by paul the robot. Comput. Graph.,37(5):348–363, August 2013. ISSN 0097-8493. doi: 10.1016/j.cag.2013.01.012. URL http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cag.2013.01.012.
- T. White. Sampling Generative Networks. ArXiv e-prints, September 2016.
- Ning Xie, Hirotaka Hachiya, and Masashi Sugiyama. Artist agent: A reinforcement learning approach to automatic stroke generation in oriental ink painting. In ICML. icml.cc / Omnipress, 2012. URL http://dblp.uni-trier.de/db/conf/icml/icml2012.html#XieHS12.
- Xu-Yao Zhang, Fei Yin, Yan-Ming Zhang, Cheng-Lin Liu, and Yoshua Bengio. Drawing and Recognizing Chinese Characters with Recurrent Neural Network. CoRR, abs/1606.06539, 2016. URL http://arxiv.org/abs/1606.06539.