This is a reference implementation of the softmax splatting operator, which has been proposed in Softmax Splatting for Video Frame Interpolation [1], using PyTorch. Softmax splatting is a well-motivated approach for differentiable forward warping. It uses a translational invariant importance metric to disambiguate cases where multiple source pixels map to the same target pixel. Should you be making use of our work, please cite our paper [1].
For our previous work on SepConv, see: https://github.com/sniklaus/revisiting-sepconv
The softmax splatting is implemented in CUDA using CuPy, which is why CuPy is a required dependency. It can be installed using pip install cupy
or alternatively using one of the provided binary packages as outlined in the CuPy repository.
If you plan to process videos, then please also make sure to have pip install moviepy
installed.
To run it on your own pair of frames, use the following command.
python run.py --model lf --one ./images/one.png --two ./images/two.png --out ./out.png
To run in on a video, use the following command.
python run.py --model lf --video ./videos/car-turn.mp4 --out ./out.mp4
For a quick benchmark using examples from the Middlebury benchmark for optical flow, run python benchmark_middlebury.py
. You can use it to easily verify that the provided implementation runs as expected.
We provide a small script to replicate the third figure of our paper [1]. You can simply run the following to obtain the comparison between summation splatting, average splatting, linear splatting, and softmax splatting.
The example script is using OpenCV to load and display images, as well as to read the provided optical flow file. An easy way to install OpenCV for Python is using the pip install opencv-contrib-python
package.
import cv2
import numpy
import torch
import run
import softsplat # the custom softmax splatting layer
##########################################################
torch.set_grad_enabled(False) # make sure to not compute gradients for computational performance
torch.backends.cudnn.enabled = True # make sure to use cudnn for computational performance
##########################################################
tenOne = torch.FloatTensor(numpy.ascontiguousarray(cv2.imread(filename='./images/one.png', flags=-1).transpose(2, 0, 1)[None, :, :, :].astype(numpy.float32) * (1.0 / 255.0))).cuda()
tenTwo = torch.FloatTensor(numpy.ascontiguousarray(cv2.imread(filename='./images/two.png', flags=-1).transpose(2, 0, 1)[None, :, :, :].astype(numpy.float32) * (1.0 / 255.0))).cuda()
tenFlow = torch.FloatTensor(numpy.ascontiguousarray(run.read_flo('./images/flow.flo').transpose(2, 0, 1)[None, :, :, :])).cuda()
tenMetric = torch.nn.functional.l1_loss(input=tenOne, target=run.backwarp(tenIn=tenTwo, tenFlow=tenFlow), reduction='none').mean([1], True)
for intTime, fltTime in enumerate(numpy.linspace(0.0, 1.0, 11).tolist()):
tenSummation = softsplat.softsplat(tenIn=tenOne, tenFlow=tenFlow * fltTime, tenMetric=None, strMode='sum')
tenAverage = softsplat.softsplat(tenIn=tenOne, tenFlow=tenFlow * fltTime, tenMetric=None, strMode='avg')
tenLinear = softsplat.softsplat(tenIn=tenOne, tenFlow=tenFlow * fltTime, tenMetric=(0.3 - tenMetric).clip(0.001, 1.0), strMode='linear') # finding a good linearly metric is difficult, and it is not invariant to translations
tenSoftmax = softsplat.softsplat(tenIn=tenOne, tenFlow=tenFlow * fltTime, tenMetric=(-20.0 * tenMetric).clip(-20.0, 20.0), strMode='soft') # -20.0 is a hyperparameter, called 'alpha' in the paper, that could be learned using a torch.Parameter
cv2.imshow(winname='summation', mat=tenSummation[0, :, :, :].cpu().numpy().transpose(1, 2, 0))
cv2.imshow(winname='average', mat=tenAverage[0, :, :, :].cpu().numpy().transpose(1, 2, 0))
cv2.imshow(winname='linear', mat=tenLinear[0, :, :, :].cpu().numpy().transpose(1, 2, 0))
cv2.imshow(winname='softmax', mat=tenSoftmax[0, :, :, :].cpu().numpy().transpose(1, 2, 0))
cv2.waitKey(delay=0)
# end
In our paper, we propose to use 4K video clips from Xiph to evaluate video frame interpolation on high-resolution footage. Please see the supplementary benchmark_xiph.py
on how to reproduce the shown metrics.
The provided implementation is strictly for academic purposes only. Should you be interested in using our technology for any commercial use, please feel free to contact us.
[1] @inproceedings{Niklaus_CVPR_2020,
author = {Simon Niklaus and Feng Liu},
title = {Softmax Splatting for Video Frame Interpolation},
booktitle = {IEEE Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition},
year = {2020}
}
The video above uses materials under a Creative Common license as detailed at the end.