14,635 research outputs found
A Joint Intensity and Depth Co-Sparse Analysis Model for Depth Map Super-Resolution
High-resolution depth maps can be inferred from low-resolution depth
measurements and an additional high-resolution intensity image of the same
scene. To that end, we introduce a bimodal co-sparse analysis model, which is
able to capture the interdependency of registered intensity and depth
information. This model is based on the assumption that the co-supports of
corresponding bimodal image structures are aligned when computed by a suitable
pair of analysis operators. No analytic form of such operators exist and we
propose a method for learning them from a set of registered training signals.
This learning process is done offline and returns a bimodal analysis operator
that is universally applicable to natural scenes. We use this to exploit the
bimodal co-sparse analysis model as a prior for solving inverse problems, which
leads to an efficient algorithm for depth map super-resolution.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figure
End-to-end 3D face reconstruction with deep neural networks
Monocular 3D facial shape reconstruction from a single 2D facial image has
been an active research area due to its wide applications. Inspired by the
success of deep neural networks (DNN), we propose a DNN-based approach for
End-to-End 3D FAce Reconstruction (UH-E2FAR) from a single 2D image. Different
from recent works that reconstruct and refine the 3D face in an iterative
manner using both an RGB image and an initial 3D facial shape rendering, our
DNN model is end-to-end, and thus the complicated 3D rendering process can be
avoided. Moreover, we integrate in the DNN architecture two components, namely
a multi-task loss function and a fusion convolutional neural network (CNN) to
improve facial expression reconstruction. With the multi-task loss function, 3D
face reconstruction is divided into neutral 3D facial shape reconstruction and
expressive 3D facial shape reconstruction. The neutral 3D facial shape is
class-specific. Therefore, higher layer features are useful. In comparison, the
expressive 3D facial shape favors lower or intermediate layer features. With
the fusion-CNN, features from different intermediate layers are fused and
transformed for predicting the 3D expressive facial shape. Through extensive
experiments, we demonstrate the superiority of our end-to-end framework in
improving the accuracy of 3D face reconstruction.Comment: Accepted to CVPR1
Rain Removal in Traffic Surveillance: Does it Matter?
Varying weather conditions, including rainfall and snowfall, are generally
regarded as a challenge for computer vision algorithms. One proposed solution
to the challenges induced by rain and snowfall is to artificially remove the
rain from images or video using rain removal algorithms. It is the promise of
these algorithms that the rain-removed image frames will improve the
performance of subsequent segmentation and tracking algorithms. However, rain
removal algorithms are typically evaluated on their ability to remove synthetic
rain on a small subset of images. Currently, their behavior is unknown on
real-world videos when integrated with a typical computer vision pipeline. In
this paper, we review the existing rain removal algorithms and propose a new
dataset that consists of 22 traffic surveillance sequences under a broad
variety of weather conditions that all include either rain or snowfall. We
propose a new evaluation protocol that evaluates the rain removal algorithms on
their ability to improve the performance of subsequent segmentation, instance
segmentation, and feature tracking algorithms under rain and snow. If
successful, the de-rained frames of a rain removal algorithm should improve
segmentation performance and increase the number of accurately tracked
features. The results show that a recent single-frame-based rain removal
algorithm increases the segmentation performance by 19.7% on our proposed
dataset, but it eventually decreases the feature tracking performance and
showed mixed results with recent instance segmentation methods. However, the
best video-based rain removal algorithm improves the feature tracking accuracy
by 7.72%.Comment: Published in IEEE Transactions on Intelligent Transportation System
A convex formulation for hyperspectral image superresolution via subspace-based regularization
Hyperspectral remote sensing images (HSIs) usually have high spectral
resolution and low spatial resolution. Conversely, multispectral images (MSIs)
usually have low spectral and high spatial resolutions. The problem of
inferring images which combine the high spectral and high spatial resolutions
of HSIs and MSIs, respectively, is a data fusion problem that has been the
focus of recent active research due to the increasing availability of HSIs and
MSIs retrieved from the same geographical area.
We formulate this problem as the minimization of a convex objective function
containing two quadratic data-fitting terms and an edge-preserving regularizer.
The data-fitting terms account for blur, different resolutions, and additive
noise. The regularizer, a form of vector Total Variation, promotes
piecewise-smooth solutions with discontinuities aligned across the
hyperspectral bands.
The downsampling operator accounting for the different spatial resolutions,
the non-quadratic and non-smooth nature of the regularizer, and the very large
size of the HSI to be estimated lead to a hard optimization problem. We deal
with these difficulties by exploiting the fact that HSIs generally "live" in a
low-dimensional subspace and by tailoring the Split Augmented Lagrangian
Shrinkage Algorithm (SALSA), which is an instance of the Alternating Direction
Method of Multipliers (ADMM), to this optimization problem, by means of a
convenient variable splitting. The spatial blur and the spectral linear
operators linked, respectively, with the HSI and MSI acquisition processes are
also estimated, and we obtain an effective algorithm that outperforms the
state-of-the-art, as illustrated in a series of experiments with simulated and
real-life data.Comment: IEEE Trans. Geosci. Remote Sens., to be publishe
End-to-End Photo-Sketch Generation via Fully Convolutional Representation Learning
Sketch-based face recognition is an interesting task in vision and multimedia
research, yet it is quite challenging due to the great difference between face
photos and sketches. In this paper, we propose a novel approach for
photo-sketch generation, aiming to automatically transform face photos into
detail-preserving personal sketches. Unlike the traditional models synthesizing
sketches based on a dictionary of exemplars, we develop a fully convolutional
network to learn the end-to-end photo-sketch mapping. Our approach takes whole
face photos as inputs and directly generates the corresponding sketch images
with efficient inference and learning, in which the architecture are stacked by
only convolutional kernels of very small sizes. To well capture the person
identity during the photo-sketch transformation, we define our optimization
objective in the form of joint generative-discriminative minimization. In
particular, a discriminative regularization term is incorporated into the
photo-sketch generation, enhancing the discriminability of the generated person
sketches against other individuals. Extensive experiments on several standard
benchmarks suggest that our approach outperforms other state-of-the-art methods
in both photo-sketch generation and face sketch verification.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures. Proceeding in ACM International Conference on
Multimedia Retrieval (ICMR), 201
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