21,914 research outputs found
Discriminative Scale Space Tracking
Accurate scale estimation of a target is a challenging research problem in
visual object tracking. Most state-of-the-art methods employ an exhaustive
scale search to estimate the target size. The exhaustive search strategy is
computationally expensive and struggles when encountered with large scale
variations. This paper investigates the problem of accurate and robust scale
estimation in a tracking-by-detection framework. We propose a novel scale
adaptive tracking approach by learning separate discriminative correlation
filters for translation and scale estimation. The explicit scale filter is
learned online using the target appearance sampled at a set of different
scales. Contrary to standard approaches, our method directly learns the
appearance change induced by variations in the target scale. Additionally, we
investigate strategies to reduce the computational cost of our approach.
Extensive experiments are performed on the OTB and the VOT2014 datasets.
Compared to the standard exhaustive scale search, our approach achieves a gain
of 2.5% in average overlap precision on the OTB dataset. Additionally, our
method is computationally efficient, operating at a 50% higher frame rate
compared to the exhaustive scale search. Our method obtains the top rank in
performance by outperforming 19 state-of-the-art trackers on OTB and 37
state-of-the-art trackers on VOT2014.Comment: To appear in TPAMI. This is the journal extension of the
VOT2014-winning DSST tracking metho
Learning Adaptive Discriminative Correlation Filters via Temporal Consistency Preserving Spatial Feature Selection for Robust Visual Tracking
With efficient appearance learning models, Discriminative Correlation Filter
(DCF) has been proven to be very successful in recent video object tracking
benchmarks and competitions. However, the existing DCF paradigm suffers from
two major issues, i.e., spatial boundary effect and temporal filter
degradation. To mitigate these challenges, we propose a new DCF-based tracking
method. The key innovations of the proposed method include adaptive spatial
feature selection and temporal consistent constraints, with which the new
tracker enables joint spatial-temporal filter learning in a lower dimensional
discriminative manifold. More specifically, we apply structured spatial
sparsity constraints to multi-channel filers. Consequently, the process of
learning spatial filters can be approximated by the lasso regularisation. To
encourage temporal consistency, the filter model is restricted to lie around
its historical value and updated locally to preserve the global structure in
the manifold. Last, a unified optimisation framework is proposed to jointly
select temporal consistency preserving spatial features and learn
discriminative filters with the augmented Lagrangian method. Qualitative and
quantitative evaluations have been conducted on a number of well-known
benchmarking datasets such as OTB2013, OTB50, OTB100, Temple-Colour, UAV123 and
VOT2018. The experimental results demonstrate the superiority of the proposed
method over the state-of-the-art approaches
Learning feed-forward one-shot learners
One-shot learning is usually tackled by using generative models or
discriminative embeddings. Discriminative methods based on deep learning, which
are very effective in other learning scenarios, are ill-suited for one-shot
learning as they need large amounts of training data. In this paper, we propose
a method to learn the parameters of a deep model in one shot. We construct the
learner as a second deep network, called a learnet, which predicts the
parameters of a pupil network from a single exemplar. In this manner we obtain
an efficient feed-forward one-shot learner, trained end-to-end by minimizing a
one-shot classification objective in a learning to learn formulation. In order
to make the construction feasible, we propose a number of factorizations of the
parameters of the pupil network. We demonstrate encouraging results by learning
characters from single exemplars in Omniglot, and by tracking visual objects
from a single initial exemplar in the Visual Object Tracking benchmark.Comment: The first three authors contributed equally, and are listed in
alphabetical orde
Efficient Asymmetric Co-Tracking using Uncertainty Sampling
Adaptive tracking-by-detection approaches are popular for tracking arbitrary
objects. They treat the tracking problem as a classification task and use
online learning techniques to update the object model. However, these
approaches are heavily invested in the efficiency and effectiveness of their
detectors. Evaluating a massive number of samples for each frame (e.g.,
obtained by a sliding window) forces the detector to trade the accuracy in
favor of speed. Furthermore, misclassification of borderline samples in the
detector introduce accumulating errors in tracking. In this study, we propose a
co-tracking based on the efficient cooperation of two detectors: a rapid
adaptive exemplar-based detector and another more sophisticated but slower
detector with a long-term memory. The sampling labeling and co-learning of the
detectors are conducted by an uncertainty sampling unit, which improves the
speed and accuracy of the system. We also introduce a budgeting mechanism which
prevents the unbounded growth in the number of examples in the first detector
to maintain its rapid response. Experiments demonstrate the efficiency and
effectiveness of the proposed tracker against its baselines and its superior
performance against state-of-the-art trackers on various benchmark videos.Comment: Submitted to IEEE ICSIPA'201
Bags of Affine Subspaces for Robust Object Tracking
We propose an adaptive tracking algorithm where the object is modelled as a
continuously updated bag of affine subspaces, with each subspace constructed
from the object's appearance over several consecutive frames. In contrast to
linear subspaces, affine subspaces explicitly model the origin of subspaces.
Furthermore, instead of using a brittle point-to-subspace distance during the
search for the object in a new frame, we propose to use a subspace-to-subspace
distance by representing candidate image areas also as affine subspaces.
Distances between subspaces are then obtained by exploiting the non-Euclidean
geometry of Grassmann manifolds. Experiments on challenging videos (containing
object occlusions, deformations, as well as variations in pose and
illumination) indicate that the proposed method achieves higher tracking
accuracy than several recent discriminative trackers.Comment: in International Conference on Digital Image Computing: Techniques
and Applications, 201
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