17,088 research outputs found
Multi-View Face Recognition From Single RGBD Models of the Faces
This work takes important steps towards solving the following problem of current interest: Assuming that each individual in a population can be modeled by a single frontal RGBD face image, is it possible to carry out face recognition for such a population using multiple 2D images captured from arbitrary viewpoints? Although the general problem as stated above is extremely challenging, it encompasses subproblems that can be addressed today. The subproblems addressed in this work relate to: (1) Generating a large set of viewpoint dependent face images from a single RGBD frontal image for each individual; (2) using hierarchical approaches based on view-partitioned subspaces to represent the training data; and (3) based on these hierarchical approaches, using a weighted voting algorithm to integrate the evidence collected from multiple images of the same face as recorded from different viewpoints. We evaluate our methods on three datasets: a dataset of 10 people that we created and two publicly available datasets which include a total of 48 people. In addition to providing important insights into the nature of this problem, our results show that we are able to successfully recognize faces with accuracies of 95% or higher, outperforming existing state-of-the-art face recognition approaches based on deep convolutional neural networks
Extrinsic Methods for Coding and Dictionary Learning on Grassmann Manifolds
Sparsity-based representations have recently led to notable results in
various visual recognition tasks. In a separate line of research, Riemannian
manifolds have been shown useful for dealing with features and models that do
not lie in Euclidean spaces. With the aim of building a bridge between the two
realms, we address the problem of sparse coding and dictionary learning over
the space of linear subspaces, which form Riemannian structures known as
Grassmann manifolds. To this end, we propose to embed Grassmann manifolds into
the space of symmetric matrices by an isometric mapping. This in turn enables
us to extend two sparse coding schemes to Grassmann manifolds. Furthermore, we
propose closed-form solutions for learning a Grassmann dictionary, atom by
atom. Lastly, to handle non-linearity in data, we extend the proposed Grassmann
sparse coding and dictionary learning algorithms through embedding into Hilbert
spaces.
Experiments on several classification tasks (gender recognition, gesture
classification, scene analysis, face recognition, action recognition and
dynamic texture classification) show that the proposed approaches achieve
considerable improvements in discrimination accuracy, in comparison to
state-of-the-art methods such as kernelized Affine Hull Method and
graph-embedding Grassmann discriminant analysis.Comment: Appearing in International Journal of Computer Visio
Recognising facial expressions in video sequences
We introduce a system that processes a sequence of images of a front-facing human face and recognises a set of facial expressions. We use an efficient appearance-based face tracker to locate the face in the image sequence and estimate the deformation of its non-rigid components. The tracker works in real-time. It is robust to strong illumination changes and factors out changes in appearance caused by illumination from changes due to face deformation. We adopt a model-based approach for facial expression recognition. In our model, an image of a face is represented by a point in a deformation space. The variability of the classes of images associated to facial expressions are represented by a set of samples which model a low-dimensional manifold in the space of deformations. We introduce a probabilistic procedure based on a nearest-neighbour approach to combine the information provided by the incoming image sequence with the prior information stored in the expression manifold in order to compute a posterior probability associated to a facial expression. In the experiments conducted we show that this system is able to work in an unconstrained environment with strong changes in illumination and face location. It achieves an 89\% recognition rate in a set of 333 sequences from the Cohn-Kanade data base
Efficient illumination independent appearance-based face tracking
One of the major challenges that visual tracking algorithms face nowadays is being
able to cope with changes in the appearance of the target during tracking. Linear
subspace models have been extensively studied and are possibly the most popular
way of modelling target appearance. We introduce a linear subspace representation
in which the appearance of a face is represented by the addition of two approxi-
mately independent linear subspaces modelling facial expressions and illumination
respectively. This model is more compact than previous bilinear or multilinear ap-
proaches. The independence assumption notably simplifies system training. We only
require two image sequences. One facial expression is subject to all possible illumina-
tions in one sequence and the face adopts all facial expressions under one particular
illumination in the other. This simple model enables us to train the system with
no manual intervention. We also revisit the problem of efficiently fitting a linear
subspace-based model to a target image and introduce an additive procedure for
solving this problem. We prove that Matthews and Baker’s Inverse Compositional
Approach makes a smoothness assumption on the subspace basis that is equiva-
lent to Hager and Belhumeur’s, which worsens convergence. Our approach differs
from Hager and Belhumeur’s additive and Matthews and Baker’s compositional ap-
proaches in that we make no smoothness assumptions on the subspace basis. In the
experiments conducted we show that the model introduced accurately represents
the appearance variations caused by illumination changes and facial expressions.
We also verify experimentally that our fitting procedure is more accurate and has
better convergence rate than the other related approaches, albeit at the expense of
a slight increase in computational cost. Our approach can be used for tracking a
human face at standard video frame rates on an average personal computer
Hybrid Bayesian Eigenobjects: Combining Linear Subspace and Deep Network Methods for 3D Robot Vision
We introduce Hybrid Bayesian Eigenobjects (HBEOs), a novel representation for
3D objects designed to allow a robot to jointly estimate the pose, class, and
full 3D geometry of a novel object observed from a single viewpoint in a single
practical framework. By combining both linear subspace methods and deep
convolutional prediction, HBEOs efficiently learn nonlinear object
representations without directly regressing into high-dimensional space. HBEOs
also remove the onerous and generally impractical necessity of input data
voxelization prior to inference. We experimentally evaluate the suitability of
HBEOs to the challenging task of joint pose, class, and shape inference on
novel objects and show that, compared to preceding work, HBEOs offer
dramatically improved performance in all three tasks along with several orders
of magnitude faster runtime performance.Comment: To appear in the International Conference on Intelligent Robots
(IROS) - Madrid, 201
Scalable Dense Non-rigid Structure-from-Motion: A Grassmannian Perspective
This paper addresses the task of dense non-rigid structure-from-motion
(NRSfM) using multiple images. State-of-the-art methods to this problem are
often hurdled by scalability, expensive computations, and noisy measurements.
Further, recent methods to NRSfM usually either assume a small number of sparse
feature points or ignore local non-linearities of shape deformations, and thus
cannot reliably model complex non-rigid deformations. To address these issues,
in this paper, we propose a new approach for dense NRSfM by modeling the
problem on a Grassmann manifold. Specifically, we assume the complex non-rigid
deformations lie on a union of local linear subspaces both spatially and
temporally. This naturally allows for a compact representation of the complex
non-rigid deformation over frames. We provide experimental results on several
synthetic and real benchmark datasets. The procured results clearly demonstrate
that our method, apart from being scalable and more accurate than
state-of-the-art methods, is also more robust to noise and generalizes to
highly non-linear deformations.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figure, 4 tables. Accepted for publication in Conference
on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition (CVPR), 2018, typos fixed and
acknowledgement adde
Comparative Evaluation of Action Recognition Methods via Riemannian Manifolds, Fisher Vectors and GMMs: Ideal and Challenging Conditions
We present a comparative evaluation of various techniques for action
recognition while keeping as many variables as possible controlled. We employ
two categories of Riemannian manifolds: symmetric positive definite matrices
and linear subspaces. For both categories we use their corresponding nearest
neighbour classifiers, kernels, and recent kernelised sparse representations.
We compare against traditional action recognition techniques based on Gaussian
mixture models and Fisher vectors (FVs). We evaluate these action recognition
techniques under ideal conditions, as well as their sensitivity in more
challenging conditions (variations in scale and translation). Despite recent
advancements for handling manifolds, manifold based techniques obtain the
lowest performance and their kernel representations are more unstable in the
presence of challenging conditions. The FV approach obtains the highest
accuracy under ideal conditions. Moreover, FV best deals with moderate scale
and translation changes
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