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Bridging Modalities: An Analysis of Cross-Modal Wasserstein Adversarial Translation Networks and Their Theoretical Foundations

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  • Joseph Tafataona Mtetwa

    (Department of Electrical and Electronics Engineering, University of Johannesburg, Johannesburg 2006, South Africa)

  • Kingsley A. Ogudo

    (Department of Electrical and Electronics Engineering, University of Johannesburg, Johannesburg 2006, South Africa)

  • Sameerchand Pudaruth

    (ICT Department, University of Mauritius, Reduit 80837, Mauritius)

Abstract

What if machines could seamlessly translate between the visual richness of images and the semantic depth of language with mathematical precision? This paper presents a theoretical and empirical analysis of five novel cross-modal Wasserstein adversarial translation networks that challenge conventional approaches to cross-modal understanding. Unlike traditional generative models that rely on stochastic noise, our frameworks learn deterministic translation mappings that preserve semantic fidelity across modalities through rigorous mathematical foundations. We systematically examine: (1) cross-modality consistent dual-critical networks; (2) Wasserstein cycle consistency; (3) multi-scale Wasserstein distance; (4) regularization through modality invariance; and (5) Wasserstein information bottleneck. Each approach employs adversarial training with Wasserstein distances to establish theoretically grounded translation functions between heterogeneous data representations. Through mathematical analysis—including information-theoretic frameworks, differential geometry, and convergence guarantees—we establish the theoretical foundations underlying cross-modal translation. Our empirical evaluation across MS-COCO, Flickr30K, and Conceptual Captions datasets, including comparisons with transformer-based baselines, reveals that our proposed multi-scale Wasserstein cycle consistent (MS-WCC) framework achieves remarkable performance gains—12.1% average improvement in FID scores and 8.0% enhancement in cross-modal translation accuracy—compared to state-of-the-art methods, while maintaining superior computational efficiency. These results demonstrate that principled mathematical approaches to cross-modal translation can significantly advance machine understanding of multimodal data, opening new possibilities for applications requiring seamless communication between visual and textual domains.

Suggested Citation

  • Joseph Tafataona Mtetwa & Kingsley A. Ogudo & Sameerchand Pudaruth, 2025. "Bridging Modalities: An Analysis of Cross-Modal Wasserstein Adversarial Translation Networks and Their Theoretical Foundations," Mathematics, MDPI, vol. 13(16), pages 1-32, August.
  • Handle: RePEc:gam:jmathe:v:13:y:2025:i:16:p:2545-:d:1720716
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