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Collaborating Authors

 Spadaro, Gabriele


GABIC: Graph-based Attention Block for Image Compression

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

While standardized codecs like JPEG and HEVC-intra represent the industry standard in image compression, neural Learned Image Compression (LIC) codecs represent a promising alternative. In detail, integrating attention mechanisms from Vision Transformers into LIC models has shown improved compression efficiency. However, extra efficiency often comes at the cost of aggregating redundant features. This work proposes a Graph-based Attention Block for Image Compression (GABIC), a method to reduce feature redundancy based on a k-Nearest Neighbors enhanced attention mechanism. Our experiments show that GABIC outperforms comparable methods, particularly at high bit rates, enhancing compression performance.


WiGNet: Windowed Vision Graph Neural Network

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

In recent years, Graph Neural Networks (GNNs) have demonstrated strong adaptability to various real-world challenges, with architectures such as Vision GNN (ViG) achieving state-of-the-art performance in several computer vision tasks. However, their practical applicability is hindered by the computational complexity of constructing the graph, which scales quadratically with the image size. In this paper, we introduce a novel Windowed vision Graph neural Network (WiGNet) model for efficient image processing. WiGNet explores a different strategy from previous works by partitioning the image into windows and constructing a graph within each window. Therefore, our model uses graph convolutions instead of the typical 2D convolution or self-attention mechanism. WiGNet effectively manages computational and memory complexity for large image sizes. We evaluate our method in the ImageNet-1k benchmark dataset and test the adaptability of WiGNet using the CelebA-HQ dataset as a downstream task with higher-resolution images. In both of these scenarios, our method achieves competitive results compared to previous vision GNNs while keeping memory and computational complexity at bay. WiGNet offers a promising solution toward the deployment of vision GNNs in real-world applications. We publicly released the code at https://github.com/EIDOSLAB/WiGNet.