Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
147 lines (107 loc) · 7.85 KB

README.md

File metadata and controls

147 lines (107 loc) · 7.85 KB

Rewriting a Deep Generative Model

In this paper, we ask if a deep network can be reprogrammed to follow different rules, by enabling a user to directly change the weights, instead of training with a data set.


Directly rewriting the weights of a StyleGANv2 to reprogram horses to have hats.

What is model rewriting?

We present the task of model rewriting, which aims to add, remove, and alter the semantic and physical rules of a pre-trained deep network. While modern image editing tools achieve a user-specified goal by manipulating individual input images, we enable a user to synthesize an unbounded number of new images by editing a generative model to carry out modified rules.

Why rewrite a model?

There are two reasons to want to rewrite a deep network directly:

  1. To gain insight about how a deep network organizes its knowledge.
  2. To enable creative users to quickly make novel models for which there is no existing data set.

Model rewriting envisions a way to construct deep networks according to a user's intentions. Rather than limiting networks to imitating data that we already have, rewriting allows deep networks to model a world that follows new rules that a user wishes to have.

Rewriting a Deep Generative Model.
David Bau, Steven Liu, Tongzhou Wang, Jun-Yan Zhu, Antonio Torralba.
ECCV 2020 (oral).
MIT CSAIL and Adobe Research.


2 minute
Video Preview

ECCV 2020
Preprint

ECCV 2020
Talk Video

Presentation
Slides

Website

Demo Colab
Notebook

Our method rewrites the weights of a generator to change generative rules. Instead of editing individual images, our method edits the generator, so an infinite set of images can be potentially synthesized and manipulated using the altered rules. Rules can be changed in various ways, such as removing patterns like watermarks, adding objects such as people, or replacing definitions such as making trees grow out of towers.

Our method is based on the hypothesis that the weights of a generator act as linear associative memory. A layer stores a map between keys, which denote meaningful context, and values, which determine output.

Example Results

The results below show changes of a single rule within StyleGANv2. In each case, four examples chosen by the user (center of the top row) establish the context for the rule begin rewritten, and the "copy and paste" examples (left and right of top row) indicate how the user wishes to change the model.

The grid below shows pairs of outputs: for each pair, the first is the output of the original unmodified StyleGANv2. The second is the output of the modified StyleGANv2, applying the user's intention using our method.


First: changing the rule defining kids' eyebrows to make them look like a bushy mustache.


Altering the rule for pointy tower tops to make them into trees.


Changing the rule for tops of horses heads, to put hats on horses.


Changing frowns into smiles.


Removing the main window in a building by changing the rule to draw a blank wall.

Tips

The code runs using PyTorch.

  • The method and interface can be found in /rewrite
  • Notebooks are in /notebooks: see rewriting-interface.ipynb for the demonstration UI.
  • Quantitative experiments in /metrics, dissection utilities in /utils. Experiments from section 5.1 can be repoduced by /experiments.sh, and section 5.2 can be reproduced by /watermarks.sh. The experiment in section 5.3 runs in ithe notebook /notebooks/reflection-rule-change.ipynb.

Setup

It's designed to use a recent version of PyTorch (1.4+) on python (3.6), using cuda 10.1 and cudnn 7.6.0. Run setup/setup_renv.sh to create a conda environment that has the needed dependencies.

Rewriting your own models

To edit your own models, do the following:

# Resolution (size) and style dimensionality (style_dim and n_mlp) are
# the architecture dimensions as you trained them.  The truncation trick can be
# applied here if desired (truncation=1.0 if not).
# Note that mconv='seq' splits apart the optimized modulated convolution into
# separate operations that the rewriter can examine the underlying
# convolution directly.
model = SeqStyleGAN2(size=256, style_dim=512, n_mlp=8, truncation=0.5, mconv='seq')

# load the exponential moving average model weights, put it on the GPU.
state_dict = torch.load('your_model.pt')
model.load_state_dict(state_dict['g_ema'], latent_avg=state_dict['latent_avg'])
model.cuda()
  • Create a ganrewrite.SeqStyleGanRewriter instance to edit your model
layernum = 8 # or which ever layer you wish to modify
sample_size = 1000 # a small sample of images for computing statistics
zds = zdataset.z_dataset_for_model(model, size=sample_size)
gw = SeqStyleGanRewriter(
    model, zds, layernum,
    cachedir='experiments')
  • Finally, to specify and create changes, you can use the rewriteapp.GanRewriteApp interface (assumes you are running in a notebook. This interface can be used to try edits and save and load json files with stored model edit specifications.
savedir = 'masks'
interface = rewriteapp.GanRewriteApp(gw, size=256, mask_dir=savedir, num_canvases=32)
  • To bulk-generate images from an edited model (notebook UI not needed), you can do the following, then sample the output of the modified model as usual. See metrics/sample_edited.py for an example.
saved_edit = 'masks/my_edit.json'
gw.apply_edit(json.load(saved_edit), rank=1)