Learning a Discriminative Model for the Perception of Realism in Composite Images
Abstract
What makes an image appear realistic? In this work, we are answering this question from a data-driven perspective by learning the perception of visual realism directly from large amounts of data. In particular, we train a Convolutional Neural Network (CNN) model that distinguishes natural photographs from automatically generated composite images. The model learns to predict visual realism of a scene in terms of color, lighting and texture compatibility, without any human annotations pertaining to it. Our model outperforms previous works that rely on hand-crafted heuristics, for the task of classifying realistic vs. unrealistic photos. Furthermore, we apply our learned model to compute optimal parameters of a compositing method, to maximize the visual realism score predicted by our CNN model. We demonstrate its advantage against existing methods via a human perception study.
BibTeX
@conference{Zhu-2015-125698,author = {Jun-Yan Zhu and Philipp Krähenbühl and Eli Shechtman and and Alexei A. Efros},
title = {Learning a Discriminative Model for the Perception of Realism in Composite Images},
booktitle = {Proceedings of (ICCV) International Conference on Computer Vision},
year = {2015},
month = {December},
pages = {3943 - 3951},
}