3 research outputs found
A review of content-based video retrieval techniques for person identification
The rise of technology spurs the advancement in the surveillance field. Many commercial spaces reduced the patrol guard in favor of Closed-Circuit Television (CCTV) installation and even some countries already used surveillance drone which has greater mobility. In recent years, the CCTV Footage have also been used for crime investigation by law enforcement such as in Boston Bombing 2013 incident. However, this led us into producing huge unmanageable footage collection, the common issue of Big Data era. While there is more information to identify a potential suspect, the massive size of data needed to go over manually is a very laborious task. Therefore, some researchers proposed using Content-Based Video Retrieval (CBVR) method to enable to query a specific feature of an object or a human. Due to the limitations like visibility and quality of video footage, only certain features are selected for recognition based on Chicago Police Department guidelines. This paper presents the comprehensive reviews on CBVR techniques used for clothing, gender and ethnic recognition of the person of interest and how can it be applied in crime investigation. From the findings, the three recognition types can be combined to create a Content-Based Video Retrieval system for person identification
A Federated Approach for Fine-Grained Classification of Fashion Apparel
As online retail services proliferate and are pervasive in modern lives,
applications for classifying fashion apparel features from image data are
becoming more indispensable. Online retailers, from leading companies to
start-ups, can leverage such applications in order to increase profit margin
and enhance the consumer experience. Many notable schemes have been proposed to
classify fashion items, however, the majority of which focused upon classifying
basic-level categories, such as T-shirts, pants, skirts, shoes, bags, and so
forth. In contrast to most prior efforts, this paper aims to enable an in-depth
classification of fashion item attributes within the same category. Beginning
with a single dress, we seek to classify the type of dress hem, the hem length,
and the sleeve length. The proposed scheme is comprised of three major stages:
(a) localization of a target item from an input image using semantic
segmentation, (b) detection of human key points (e.g., point of shoulder) using
a pre-trained CNN and a bounding box, and (c) three phases to classify the
attributes using a combination of algorithmic approaches and deep neural
networks. The experimental results demonstrate that the proposed scheme is
highly effective, with all categories having average precision of above 93.02%,
and outperforms existing Convolutional Neural Networks (CNNs)-based schemes.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figures, 5 tables, submitted to IEEE ACCESS (under
review