Head Rotation in Denoising Diffusion Models
Denoising Diffusion Models (DDM) are emerging as the cutting-edge technology in the realm of deep generative modeling, challenging the dominance of Generative Adversarial Networks. However, effectively exploring the latent space's semantics and identifying compelling trajectories for manipulating and editing important attributes of the generated samples remains challenging, primarily due to the high-dimensional nature of the latent space. In this study, we specifically concentrate on face rotation, which is known to be one of the most intricate editing operations. By leveraging a recent embedding technique for Denoising Diffusion Implicit Models (DDIM), we achieve, in many cases, noteworthy manipulations encompassing a wide rotation angle of ± 30^o, preserving the distinct characteristics of the individual. Our methodology exploits the computation of trajectories approximating clouds of latent representations of dataset samples with different yaw rotations through linear regression. Specific trajectories are obtained by restricting the analysis to subsets of data sharing significant attributes with the source image. One of these attributes is the light provenance: a byproduct of our research is a labeling of CelebA, categorizing images into three major groups based on the illumination direction: left, center, and right.
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