Foley sound synthesis is crucial for multimedia production, enhancing user experience by synchronizing audio and video both temporally and semantically. Recent studies on automating this labor-intensive process through video-to-sound generation face significant challenges. Systems lacking explicit temporal features suffer from poor alignment and controllability, while timestamp-based models require costly and subjective human annotation. We propose Video-Foley, a video-to-sound system using Root Mean Square (RMS) as an intuitive condition with semantic timbre prompts (audio or text). RMS, a frame-level intensity envelope closely related to audio semantics, acts as a temporal event feature to guide audio generation from video. The annotation-free self-supervised learning framework consists of two stages, Video2RMS and RMS2Sound, incorporating novel ideas including RMS discretization and RMS-ControlNet with a pretrained text-to-audio model. Our extensive evaluation shows that Video-Foley achieves state-of-the-art performance in audio-visual alignment and controllability for sound timing, intensity, timbre, and nuance. Source code, model weights and demos are available on our companion website. (https://jnwnlee.github.io/video-foley-demo)
Video-Foley: Two-Stage Video-To-Sound Generation via Temporal Event Condition For Foley Sound
Video-Foley achieves top performance in video-to-sound generation by using RMS for temporal control and semantic timbre prompts without human annotation.
- Year
- 2024
- Venue
- arXiv 2024
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- 4
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- Abstract onlyARXIV-DEFAULT
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- arxiv.org/abs/2408.11915v2ARXIV-DEFAULT
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