401,342 research outputs found

    A WAVELET-DOMAIN LOCAL DOMINANT FEATURE SELECTION SCHEME FOR FACE RECOGNITION

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    Abstract: In this paper, a multi-resolution feature extraction algorithm for face recognition is proposed based on two-dimensional discrete wavelet transform (2D-DWT), which efficiently exploits the local spatial variations in a face image. For the purpose of feature extraction, instead of considering the entire face image, an entropybased local band selection criterion is developed, which selects high-informative horizontal segments from the face image. In order to capture the local spatial variations within these high-informative horizontal bands precisely, the horizontal band is segmented into several small spatial modules. Dominant wavelet coefficients corresponding to each local region residing inside those horizontal bands are selected as features. In the selection of the dominant coefficients, a histogram-based threshold criterion is proposed, which not only drastically reduces the feature dimension but also provides high within-class compactness and high between-class separability. A principal component analysis is performed to further reduce the dimensionality of the feature space. Extensive experimentation is carried out upon standard face databases and a very high degree of recognition accuracy is achieved by the proposed method in comparison to those obtained by some of the existing methods

    Learning Large Margin Sparse Embeddings for Open Set Medical Diagnosis

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    Fueled by deep learning, computer-aided diagnosis achieves huge advances. However, out of controlled lab environments, algorithms could face multiple challenges. Open set recognition (OSR), as an important one, states that categories unseen in training could appear in testing. In medical fields, it could derive from incompletely collected training datasets and the constantly emerging new or rare diseases. OSR requires an algorithm to not only correctly classify known classes, but also recognize unknown classes and forward them to experts for further diagnosis. To tackle OSR, we assume that known classes could densely occupy small parts of the embedding space and the remaining sparse regions could be recognized as unknowns. Following it, we propose Open Margin Cosine Loss (OMCL) unifying two mechanisms. The former, called Margin Loss with Adaptive Scale (MLAS), introduces angular margin for reinforcing intra-class compactness and inter-class separability, together with an adaptive scaling factor to strengthen the generalization capacity. The latter, called Open-Space Suppression (OSS), opens the classifier by recognizing sparse embedding space as unknowns using proposed feature space descriptors. Besides, since medical OSR is still a nascent field, two publicly available benchmark datasets are proposed for comparison. Extensive ablation studies and feature visualization demonstrate the effectiveness of each design. Compared with state-of-the-art methods, MLAS achieves superior performances, measured by ACC, AUROC, and OSCR

    Subspace-Based Holistic Registration for Low-Resolution Facial Images

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    Subspace-based holistic registration is introduced as an alternative to landmark-based face registration, which has a poor performance on low-resolution images, as obtained in camera surveillance applications. The proposed registration method finds the alignment by maximizing the similarity score between a probe and a gallery image. We use a novel probabilistic framework for both user-independent as well as user-specific face registration. The similarity is calculated using the probability that the face image is correctly aligned in a face subspace, but additionally we take the probability into account that the face is misaligned based on the residual error in the dimensions perpendicular to the face subspace. We perform extensive experiments on the FRGCv2 database to evaluate the impact that the face registration methods have on face recognition. Subspace-based holistic registration on low-resolution images can improve face recognition in comparison with landmark-based registration on high-resolution images. The performance of the tested face recognition methods after subspace-based holistic registration on a low-resolution version of the FRGC database is similar to that after manual registration
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