12,567 research outputs found
Deep Adaptive Feature Embedding with Local Sample Distributions for Person Re-identification
Person re-identification (re-id) aims to match pedestrians observed by
disjoint camera views. It attracts increasing attention in computer vision due
to its importance to surveillance system. To combat the major challenge of
cross-view visual variations, deep embedding approaches are proposed by
learning a compact feature space from images such that the Euclidean distances
correspond to their cross-view similarity metric. However, the global Euclidean
distance cannot faithfully characterize the ideal similarity in a complex
visual feature space because features of pedestrian images exhibit unknown
distributions due to large variations in poses, illumination and occlusion.
Moreover, intra-personal training samples within a local range are robust to
guide deep embedding against uncontrolled variations, which however, cannot be
captured by a global Euclidean distance. In this paper, we study the problem of
person re-id by proposing a novel sampling to mine suitable \textit{positives}
(i.e. intra-class) within a local range to improve the deep embedding in the
context of large intra-class variations. Our method is capable of learning a
deep similarity metric adaptive to local sample structure by minimizing each
sample's local distances while propagating through the relationship between
samples to attain the whole intra-class minimization. To this end, a novel
objective function is proposed to jointly optimize similarity metric learning,
local positive mining and robust deep embedding. This yields local
discriminations by selecting local-ranged positive samples, and the learned
features are robust to dramatic intra-class variations. Experiments on
benchmarks show state-of-the-art results achieved by our method.Comment: Published on Pattern Recognitio
Visual Saliency Based on Multiscale Deep Features
Visual saliency is a fundamental problem in both cognitive and computational
sciences, including computer vision. In this CVPR 2015 paper, we discover that
a high-quality visual saliency model can be trained with multiscale features
extracted using a popular deep learning architecture, convolutional neural
networks (CNNs), which have had many successes in visual recognition tasks. For
learning such saliency models, we introduce a neural network architecture,
which has fully connected layers on top of CNNs responsible for extracting
features at three different scales. We then propose a refinement method to
enhance the spatial coherence of our saliency results. Finally, aggregating
multiple saliency maps computed for different levels of image segmentation can
further boost the performance, yielding saliency maps better than those
generated from a single segmentation. To promote further research and
evaluation of visual saliency models, we also construct a new large database of
4447 challenging images and their pixelwise saliency annotation. Experimental
results demonstrate that our proposed method is capable of achieving
state-of-the-art performance on all public benchmarks, improving the F-Measure
by 5.0% and 13.2% respectively on the MSRA-B dataset and our new dataset
(HKU-IS), and lowering the mean absolute error by 5.7% and 35.1% respectively
on these two datasets.Comment: To appear in CVPR 201
Crossing Generative Adversarial Networks for Cross-View Person Re-identification
Person re-identification (\textit{re-id}) refers to matching pedestrians
across disjoint yet non-overlapping camera views. The most effective way to
match these pedestrians undertaking significant visual variations is to seek
reliably invariant features that can describe the person of interest
faithfully. Most of existing methods are presented in a supervised manner to
produce discriminative features by relying on labeled paired images in
correspondence. However, annotating pair-wise images is prohibitively expensive
in labors, and thus not practical in large-scale networked cameras. Moreover,
seeking comparable representations across camera views demands a flexible model
to address the complex distributions of images. In this work, we study the
co-occurrence statistic patterns between pairs of images, and propose to
crossing Generative Adversarial Network (Cross-GAN) for learning a joint
distribution for cross-image representations in a unsupervised manner. Given a
pair of person images, the proposed model consists of the variational
auto-encoder to encode the pair into respective latent variables, a proposed
cross-view alignment to reduce the view disparity, and an adversarial layer to
seek the joint distribution of latent representations. The learned latent
representations are well-aligned to reflect the co-occurrence patterns of
paired images. We empirically evaluate the proposed model against challenging
datasets, and our results show the importance of joint invariant features in
improving matching rates of person re-id with comparison to semi/unsupervised
state-of-the-arts.Comment: 12 pages. arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1702.03431 by
other author
Pedestrian Attribute Recognition: A Survey
Recognizing pedestrian attributes is an important task in computer vision
community due to it plays an important role in video surveillance. Many
algorithms has been proposed to handle this task. The goal of this paper is to
review existing works using traditional methods or based on deep learning
networks. Firstly, we introduce the background of pedestrian attributes
recognition (PAR, for short), including the fundamental concepts of pedestrian
attributes and corresponding challenges. Secondly, we introduce existing
benchmarks, including popular datasets and evaluation criterion. Thirdly, we
analyse the concept of multi-task learning and multi-label learning, and also
explain the relations between these two learning algorithms and pedestrian
attribute recognition. We also review some popular network architectures which
have widely applied in the deep learning community. Fourthly, we analyse
popular solutions for this task, such as attributes group, part-based,
\emph{etc}. Fifthly, we shown some applications which takes pedestrian
attributes into consideration and achieve better performance. Finally, we
summarized this paper and give several possible research directions for
pedestrian attributes recognition. The project page of this paper can be found
from the following website:
\url{https://sites.google.com/view/ahu-pedestrianattributes/}.Comment: Check our project page for High Resolution version of this survey:
https://sites.google.com/view/ahu-pedestrianattributes
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