Author:
Bao Zhongyun,Fu Gang,Chen Zipei,Xiao Chunxia
Abstract
AbstractIllumination harmonization is an important but challenging task that aims to achieve illumination compatibility between the foreground and background under different illumination conditions. Most current studies mainly focus on achieving seamless integration between the appearance (illumination or visual style) of the foreground object itself and the background scene or producing the foreground shadow. They rarely considered global illumination consistency (i.e., the illumination and shadow of the foreground object). In our work, we introduce “Illuminator”, an image-based illumination editing technique. This method aims to achieve more realistic global illumination harmonization, ensuring consistent illumination and plausible shadows in complex indoor environments. The Illuminator contains a shadow residual generation branch and an object illumination transfer branch. The shadow residual generation branch introduces a novel attention-aware graph convolutional mechanism to achieve reasonable foreground shadow generation. The object illumination transfer branch primarily transfers background illumination to the foreground region. In addition, we construct a real-world indoor illumination harmonization dataset called RIH, which consists of various foreground objects and background scenes captured under diverse illumination conditions for training and evaluating our Illuminator. Our comprehensive experiments, conducted on the RIH dataset and a collection of real-world everyday life photos, validate the effectiveness of our method.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC