V-Bridge: Bridging Video Generative Priors to Versatile Few-shot Image Restoration
Abstract
Video generative models can be adapted for image restoration tasks with minimal training data by treating restoration as a progressive generative process.
Large-scale video generative models are trained on vast and diverse visual data, enabling them to internalize rich structural, semantic, and dynamic priors of the visual world. While these models have demonstrated impressive generative capability, their potential as general-purpose visual learners remains largely untapped. In this work, we introduce V-Bridge, a framework that bridges this latent capacity to versatile few-shot image restoration tasks. We reinterpret image restoration not as a static regression problem, but as a progressive generative process, and leverage video models to simulate the gradual refinement from degraded inputs to high-fidelity outputs. Surprisingly, with only 1,000 multi-task training samples (less than 2% of existing restoration methods), pretrained video models can be induced to perform competitive image restoration, achieving multiple tasks with a single model, rivaling specialized architectures designed explicitly for this purpose. Our findings reveal that video generative models implicitly learn powerful and transferable restoration priors that can be activated with only extremely limited data, challenging the traditional boundary between generative modeling and low-level vision, and opening a new design paradigm for foundation models in visual tasks.
Community
Large-scale video generative models are trained on vast and diverse visual data, enabling them to internalize rich structural, semantic, and dynamic priors of the visual world. While these models have demonstrated impressive generative capability, their potential as general-purpose visual learners remains largely untapped. In this work, we introduce V-Bridge, a framework that bridges this latent capacity to versatile few-shot image restoration tasks. We reinterpret image restoration not as a static regression problem, but as a progressive generative process, and leverage video models to simulate the gradual refinement from degraded inputs to high-fidelity outputs. Surprisingly, with only 1,000 multi-task training samples (less than 2% of existing restoration methods), pretrained video models can be induced to perform competitive image restoration, achieving multiple tasks with a single model, rivaling specialized architectures designed explicitly for this purpose. Our findings reveal that video generative models implicitly learn powerful and transferable restoration priors that can be activated with only extremely limited data, challenging the traditional boundary between generative modeling and low-level vision, and opening a new design paradigm for foundation models in visual tasks.
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