Paper detail

Control Your View: High-Resolution Global Semantic Manipulation in Learned Image Compression

Learned image compression (LIC) integrates deep neural networks (DNNs) to map high-dimensional images into compact latent representations, reducing redundancy and achieving superior rate-distortion (RD) performance in benign settings. Unfortunately, due to inherent vulnerabilities in DNNs, LIC systems are susceptible to adversarial perturbations that lead to downstream deterioration, compression rate degradation, untargeted distortion, and both local semantic manipulation (LSM) and low-resolution ($3\times28\times28$) global semantic manipulation (GSM). However, high-resolution GSM remains unexplored due to its intractability. Notably, the existing project gradient descent (PGD) method achieves near-perfect white-box attacks for classification, segmentation, and other tasks, yet fails to generalize to high-resolution GSM. Our theoretical and empirical analyses reveal that well-performing GSM drives adversarial examples from the Identity Region to the Amplification Region through the Lazying-Oscillating-Refining stages. General $\ell_{\infty}$-bounded attacks fail on high-resolution GSM because their step-size schedules cannot accommodate both the Oscillating and Refining stages. Based on this, we propose the Periodic Geometric Decay schedule that enables $\ell_{\infty}$-bounded high-resolution GSM. To verify our approach, we integrate it with PGD, yielding a minimal variant, PGD$^{2}$-GSM. Extensive experiments on the Kodak $(3\times768\times512)$ demonstrate that our PGD$^{2}$-GSM is the first to stably achieve high-resolution GSM, thereby exposing a novel threat to LIC systems. Code is available at https://github.com/chinaliangjiaming/PGD2-GSM.

preprint2026arXivOpen access
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