3,362 research outputs found
Context-Aware Zero-Shot Recognition
We present a novel problem setting in zero-shot learning, zero-shot object
recognition and detection in the context. Contrary to the traditional zero-shot
learning methods, which simply infers unseen categories by transferring
knowledge from the objects belonging to semantically similar seen categories,
we aim to understand the identity of the novel objects in an image surrounded
by the known objects using the inter-object relation prior. Specifically, we
leverage the visual context and the geometric relationships between all pairs
of objects in a single image, and capture the information useful to infer
unseen categories. We integrate our context-aware zero-shot learning framework
into the traditional zero-shot learning techniques seamlessly using a
Conditional Random Field (CRF). The proposed algorithm is evaluated on both
zero-shot region classification and zero-shot detection tasks. The results on
Visual Genome (VG) dataset show that our model significantly boosts performance
with the additional visual context compared to traditional methods
Segmentation-Aware Convolutional Networks Using Local Attention Masks
We introduce an approach to integrate segmentation information within a
convolutional neural network (CNN). This counter-acts the tendency of CNNs to
smooth information across regions and increases their spatial precision. To
obtain segmentation information, we set up a CNN to provide an embedding space
where region co-membership can be estimated based on Euclidean distance. We use
these embeddings to compute a local attention mask relative to every neuron
position. We incorporate such masks in CNNs and replace the convolution
operation with a "segmentation-aware" variant that allows a neuron to
selectively attend to inputs coming from its own region. We call the resulting
network a segmentation-aware CNN because it adapts its filters at each image
point according to local segmentation cues. We demonstrate the merit of our
method on two widely different dense prediction tasks, that involve
classification (semantic segmentation) and regression (optical flow). Our
results show that in semantic segmentation we can match the performance of
DenseCRFs while being faster and simpler, and in optical flow we obtain clearly
sharper responses than networks that do not use local attention masks. In both
cases, segmentation-aware convolution yields systematic improvements over
strong baselines. Source code for this work is available online at
http://cs.cmu.edu/~aharley/segaware
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