22,052 research outputs found
SMAN : Stacked Multi-Modal Attention Network for cross-modal image-text retrieval
This article focuses on tackling the task of the cross-modal image-text retrieval which has been an interdisciplinary topic in both computer vision and natural language processing communities. Existing global representation alignment-based methods fail to pinpoint the semantically meaningful portion of images and texts, while the local representation alignment schemes suffer from the huge computational burden for aggregating the similarity of visual fragments and textual words exhaustively. In this article, we propose a stacked multimodal attention network (SMAN) that makes use of the stacked multimodal attention mechanism to exploit the fine-grained interdependencies between image and text, thereby mapping the aggregation of attentive fragments into a common space for measuring cross-modal similarity. Specifically, we sequentially employ intramodal information and multimodal information as guidance to perform multiple-step attention reasoning so that the fine-grained correlation between image and text can be modeled. As a consequence, we are capable of discovering the semantically meaningful visual regions or words in a sentence which contributes to measuring the cross-modal similarity in a more precise manner. Moreover, we present a novel bidirectional ranking loss that enforces the distance among pairwise multimodal instances to be closer. Doing so allows us to make full use of pairwise supervised information to preserve the manifold structure of heterogeneous pairwise data. Extensive experiments on two benchmark datasets demonstrate that our SMAN consistently yields competitive performance compared to state-of-the-art methods
Semantic memory
The Encyclopedia of Human Behavior, Second Edition is a comprehensive three-volume reference source on human action and reaction, and the thoughts, feelings, and physiological functions behind those actions
Deep Cross-Modal Correlation Learning for Audio and Lyrics in Music Retrieval
Deep cross-modal learning has successfully demonstrated excellent performance in cross-modal multimedia retrieval, with the aim of learning joint representations between different data modalities. Unfortunately, little research focuses on cross-modal correlation learning where temporal structures of different data modalities such as audio and lyrics should be taken into account. Stemming from the characteristic of temporal structures of music in nature, we are motivated to learn the deep sequential correlation between audio and lyrics. In this work, we propose a deep cross-modal correlation learning architecture involving two-branch deep neural networks for audio modality and text modality (lyrics). Data in different modalities are converted to the same canonical space where inter modal canonical correlation analysis is utilized as an objective function to calculate the similarity of temporal structures. This is the first study that uses deep architectures for learning the temporal correlation between audio and lyrics. A pre-trained Doc2Vec model followed by fully-connected layers is used to represent lyrics. Two significant contributions are made in the audio branch, as follows: i) We propose an end-to-end network to learn cross-modal correlation between audio and lyrics, where feature extraction and correlation learning are simultaneously performed and joint representation is learned by considering temporal structures. ii) As for feature extraction, we further represent an audio signal by a short sequence of local summaries (VGG16 features) and apply a recurrent neural network to compute a compact feature that better learns temporal structures of music audio. Experimental results, using audio to retrieve lyrics or using lyrics to retrieve audio, verify the effectiveness of the proposed deep correlation learning architectures in cross-modal music retrieval
Deep Sketch Hashing: Fast Free-hand Sketch-Based Image Retrieval
Free-hand sketch-based image retrieval (SBIR) is a specific cross-view
retrieval task, in which queries are abstract and ambiguous sketches while the
retrieval database is formed with natural images. Work in this area mainly
focuses on extracting representative and shared features for sketches and
natural images. However, these can neither cope well with the geometric
distortion between sketches and images nor be feasible for large-scale SBIR due
to the heavy continuous-valued distance computation. In this paper, we speed up
SBIR by introducing a novel binary coding method, named \textbf{Deep Sketch
Hashing} (DSH), where a semi-heterogeneous deep architecture is proposed and
incorporated into an end-to-end binary coding framework. Specifically, three
convolutional neural networks are utilized to encode free-hand sketches,
natural images and, especially, the auxiliary sketch-tokens which are adopted
as bridges to mitigate the sketch-image geometric distortion. The learned DSH
codes can effectively capture the cross-view similarities as well as the
intrinsic semantic correlations between different categories. To the best of
our knowledge, DSH is the first hashing work specifically designed for
category-level SBIR with an end-to-end deep architecture. The proposed DSH is
comprehensively evaluated on two large-scale datasets of TU-Berlin Extension
and Sketchy, and the experiments consistently show DSH's superior SBIR
accuracies over several state-of-the-art methods, while achieving significantly
reduced retrieval time and memory footprint.Comment: This paper will appear as a spotlight paper in CVPR201
Deep Binary Reconstruction for Cross-modal Hashing
With the increasing demand of massive multimodal data storage and
organization, cross-modal retrieval based on hashing technique has drawn much
attention nowadays. It takes the binary codes of one modality as the query to
retrieve the relevant hashing codes of another modality. However, the existing
binary constraint makes it difficult to find the optimal cross-modal hashing
function. Most approaches choose to relax the constraint and perform
thresholding strategy on the real-value representation instead of directly
solving the original objective. In this paper, we first provide a concrete
analysis about the effectiveness of multimodal networks in preserving the
inter- and intra-modal consistency. Based on the analysis, we provide a
so-called Deep Binary Reconstruction (DBRC) network that can directly learn the
binary hashing codes in an unsupervised fashion. The superiority comes from a
proposed simple but efficient activation function, named as Adaptive Tanh
(ATanh). The ATanh function can adaptively learn the binary codes and be
trained via back-propagation. Extensive experiments on three benchmark datasets
demonstrate that DBRC outperforms several state-of-the-art methods in both
image2text and text2image retrieval task.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, accepted by ACM Multimedia 201
- …