16,255 research outputs found
Semantic Instance Annotation of Street Scenes by 3D to 2D Label Transfer
Semantic annotations are vital for training models for object recognition,
semantic segmentation or scene understanding. Unfortunately, pixelwise
annotation of images at very large scale is labor-intensive and only little
labeled data is available, particularly at instance level and for street
scenes. In this paper, we propose to tackle this problem by lifting the
semantic instance labeling task from 2D into 3D. Given reconstructions from
stereo or laser data, we annotate static 3D scene elements with rough bounding
primitives and develop a model which transfers this information into the image
domain. We leverage our method to obtain 2D labels for a novel suburban video
dataset which we have collected, resulting in 400k semantic and instance image
annotations. A comparison of our method to state-of-the-art label transfer
baselines reveals that 3D information enables more efficient annotation while
at the same time resulting in improved accuracy and time-coherent labels.Comment: 10 pages in Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition
(CVPR), 201
Fine-graind Image Classification via Combining Vision and Language
Fine-grained image classification is a challenging task due to the large
intra-class variance and small inter-class variance, aiming at recognizing
hundreds of sub-categories belonging to the same basic-level category. Most
existing fine-grained image classification methods generally learn part
detection models to obtain the semantic parts for better classification
accuracy. Despite achieving promising results, these methods mainly have two
limitations: (1) not all the parts which obtained through the part detection
models are beneficial and indispensable for classification, and (2)
fine-grained image classification requires more detailed visual descriptions
which could not be provided by the part locations or attribute annotations. For
addressing the above two limitations, this paper proposes the two-stream model
combining vision and language (CVL) for learning latent semantic
representations. The vision stream learns deep representations from the
original visual information via deep convolutional neural network. The language
stream utilizes the natural language descriptions which could point out the
discriminative parts or characteristics for each image, and provides a flexible
and compact way of encoding the salient visual aspects for distinguishing
sub-categories. Since the two streams are complementary, combining the two
streams can further achieves better classification accuracy. Comparing with 12
state-of-the-art methods on the widely used CUB-200-2011 dataset for
fine-grained image classification, the experimental results demonstrate our CVL
approach achieves the best performance.Comment: 9 pages, to appear in CVPR 201
Visual Landmark Recognition from Internet Photo Collections: A Large-Scale Evaluation
The task of a visual landmark recognition system is to identify photographed
buildings or objects in query photos and to provide the user with relevant
information on them. With their increasing coverage of the world's landmark
buildings and objects, Internet photo collections are now being used as a
source for building such systems in a fully automatic fashion. This process
typically consists of three steps: clustering large amounts of images by the
objects they depict; determining object names from user-provided tags; and
building a robust, compact, and efficient recognition index. To this date,
however, there is little empirical information on how well current approaches
for those steps perform in a large-scale open-set mining and recognition task.
Furthermore, there is little empirical information on how recognition
performance varies for different types of landmark objects and where there is
still potential for improvement. With this paper, we intend to fill these gaps.
Using a dataset of 500k images from Paris, we analyze each component of the
landmark recognition pipeline in order to answer the following questions: How
many and what kinds of objects can be discovered automatically? How can we best
use the resulting image clusters to recognize the object in a query? How can
the object be efficiently represented in memory for recognition? How reliably
can semantic information be extracted? And finally: What are the limiting
factors in the resulting pipeline from query to semantics? We evaluate how
different choices of methods and parameters for the individual pipeline steps
affect overall system performance and examine their effects for different query
categories such as buildings, paintings or sculptures
Joint Video and Text Parsing for Understanding Events and Answering Queries
We propose a framework for parsing video and text jointly for understanding
events and answering user queries. Our framework produces a parse graph that
represents the compositional structures of spatial information (objects and
scenes), temporal information (actions and events) and causal information
(causalities between events and fluents) in the video and text. The knowledge
representation of our framework is based on a spatial-temporal-causal And-Or
graph (S/T/C-AOG), which jointly models possible hierarchical compositions of
objects, scenes and events as well as their interactions and mutual contexts,
and specifies the prior probabilistic distribution of the parse graphs. We
present a probabilistic generative model for joint parsing that captures the
relations between the input video/text, their corresponding parse graphs and
the joint parse graph. Based on the probabilistic model, we propose a joint
parsing system consisting of three modules: video parsing, text parsing and
joint inference. Video parsing and text parsing produce two parse graphs from
the input video and text respectively. The joint inference module produces a
joint parse graph by performing matching, deduction and revision on the video
and text parse graphs. The proposed framework has the following objectives:
Firstly, we aim at deep semantic parsing of video and text that goes beyond the
traditional bag-of-words approaches; Secondly, we perform parsing and reasoning
across the spatial, temporal and causal dimensions based on the joint S/T/C-AOG
representation; Thirdly, we show that deep joint parsing facilitates subsequent
applications such as generating narrative text descriptions and answering
queries in the forms of who, what, when, where and why. We empirically
evaluated our system based on comparison against ground-truth as well as
accuracy of query answering and obtained satisfactory results
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