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Semi-supervised face frontalization in the wild

  • Zhihong Zhang
  • , Ruiyang Liang
  • , Xu Chen*
  • , Xuexin Xu
  • , Guosheng Hu
  • , Wangmeng Zuo
  • , Edwin R. Hancock
  • *Corresponding author for this work
  • Xiamen University
  • AnyVision
  • School of Computer Science and Technology, Harbin Institute of Technology
  • University of York

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Synthesizing a frontal view face from a single nonfrontal image, i.e. face frontalization, is a task of practical importance in a wide range of facial image analysis applications. However, to train the frontalization model in a supervised manner, most existing face frontalization methods rely on the availability of nonfrontal-frontal face pairs (typically from the Multi-PIE dataset) captured in a constrained environment. Such approaches, in return, limit the generalizability of their application to unconstrained scenarios. Unfortunately, although a large amount of in-The-wild face datasets are available, they cannot easily be utilized for face frontalization training since the nonfrontal and frontal facial images are not paired. To train a frontalization network which generalizes well to both constrained and unconstrained environments, we propose a semi-supervised learning framework which effectively uses both (labeled) indoor and (unlabeled) outdoor faces. Specifically, to achieve this goal, this article presents a Cycle-Consistent Face Frontalization Generative Adversarial Network (CCFF-GAN) which consists of both (1) the supervised and (2) the unsupervised components. For (1), we use the indoor paired (labeled) data to learn a roughly accurate frontalization network which may not generalize well to outdoor (in-The-wild) scenarios. For (2), to cope with the generalization issue, the unsupervised part uses the unpaired (unlabeled) images under the perceptual cycle consistency constraint in the semantic feature space to generalize the network from controlled (indoor) to uncontrolled (outdoor) environment. Extensive experiments demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed method in comparison with the state-of-The-Art face frontalization methods, especially under the in-The-wild scenarios.

Original languageEnglish
Article number9201316
Pages (from-to)909-922
Number of pages14
JournalIEEE Transactions on Information Forensics and Security
Volume16
DOIs
StatePublished - 2021
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Face frontalization
  • face recognition
  • face synthesis

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