3,876 research outputs found
2D Face Recognition System Based on Selected Gabor Filters and Linear Discriminant Analysis LDA
We present a new approach for face recognition system. The method is based on
2D face image features using subset of non-correlated and Orthogonal Gabor
Filters instead of using the whole Gabor Filter Bank, then compressing the
output feature vector using Linear Discriminant Analysis (LDA). The face image
has been enhanced using multi stage image processing technique to normalize it
and compensate for illumination variation. Experimental results show that the
proposed system is effective for both dimension reduction and good recognition
performance when compared to the complete Gabor filter bank. The system has
been tested using CASIA, ORL and Cropped YaleB 2D face images Databases and
achieved average recognition rate of 98.9 %
On Robust Face Recognition via Sparse Encoding: the Good, the Bad, and the Ugly
In the field of face recognition, Sparse Representation (SR) has received
considerable attention during the past few years. Most of the relevant
literature focuses on holistic descriptors in closed-set identification
applications. The underlying assumption in SR-based methods is that each class
in the gallery has sufficient samples and the query lies on the subspace
spanned by the gallery of the same class. Unfortunately, such assumption is
easily violated in the more challenging face verification scenario, where an
algorithm is required to determine if two faces (where one or both have not
been seen before) belong to the same person. In this paper, we first discuss
why previous attempts with SR might not be applicable to verification problems.
We then propose an alternative approach to face verification via SR.
Specifically, we propose to use explicit SR encoding on local image patches
rather than the entire face. The obtained sparse signals are pooled via
averaging to form multiple region descriptors, which are then concatenated to
form an overall face descriptor. Due to the deliberate loss spatial relations
within each region (caused by averaging), the resulting descriptor is robust to
misalignment & various image deformations. Within the proposed framework, we
evaluate several SR encoding techniques: l1-minimisation, Sparse Autoencoder
Neural Network (SANN), and an implicit probabilistic technique based on
Gaussian Mixture Models. Thorough experiments on AR, FERET, exYaleB, BANCA and
ChokePoint datasets show that the proposed local SR approach obtains
considerably better and more robust performance than several previous
state-of-the-art holistic SR methods, in both verification and closed-set
identification problems. The experiments also show that l1-minimisation based
encoding has a considerably higher computational than the other techniques, but
leads to higher recognition rates
Relative Facial Action Unit Detection
This paper presents a subject-independent facial action unit (AU) detection
method by introducing the concept of relative AU detection, for scenarios where
the neutral face is not provided. We propose a new classification objective
function which analyzes the temporal neighborhood of the current frame to
decide if the expression recently increased, decreased or showed no change.
This approach is a significant change from the conventional absolute method
which decides about AU classification using the current frame, without an
explicit comparison with its neighboring frames. Our proposed method improves
robustness to individual differences such as face scale and shape, age-related
wrinkles, and transitions among expressions (e.g., lower intensity of
expressions). Our experiments on three publicly available datasets (Extended
Cohn-Kanade (CK+), Bosphorus, and DISFA databases) show significant improvement
of our approach over conventional absolute techniques. Keywords: facial action
coding system (FACS); relative facial action unit detection; temporal
information;Comment: Accepted at IEEE Winter Conference on Applications of Computer
Vision, Steamboat Springs Colorado, USA, 201
Iris Recognition Using Scattering Transform and Textural Features
Iris recognition has drawn a lot of attention since the mid-twentieth
century. Among all biometric features, iris is known to possess a rich set of
features. Different features have been used to perform iris recognition in the
past. In this paper, two powerful sets of features are introduced to be used
for iris recognition: scattering transform-based features and textural
features. PCA is also applied on the extracted features to reduce the
dimensionality of the feature vector while preserving most of the information
of its initial value. Minimum distance classifier is used to perform template
matching for each new test sample. The proposed scheme is tested on a
well-known iris database, and showed promising results with the best accuracy
rate of 99.2%
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