2,479 research outputs found
Recent Advances in Transfer Learning for Cross-Dataset Visual Recognition: A Problem-Oriented Perspective
This paper takes a problem-oriented perspective and presents a comprehensive
review of transfer learning methods, both shallow and deep, for cross-dataset
visual recognition. Specifically, it categorises the cross-dataset recognition
into seventeen problems based on a set of carefully chosen data and label
attributes. Such a problem-oriented taxonomy has allowed us to examine how
different transfer learning approaches tackle each problem and how well each
problem has been researched to date. The comprehensive problem-oriented review
of the advances in transfer learning with respect to the problem has not only
revealed the challenges in transfer learning for visual recognition, but also
the problems (e.g. eight of the seventeen problems) that have been scarcely
studied. This survey not only presents an up-to-date technical review for
researchers, but also a systematic approach and a reference for a machine
learning practitioner to categorise a real problem and to look up for a
possible solution accordingly
Learning Cross-domain Semantic-Visual Relation for Transductive Zero-Shot Learning
Zero-Shot Learning (ZSL) aims to learn recognition models for recognizing new
classes without labeled data. In this work, we propose a novel approach dubbed
Transferrable Semantic-Visual Relation (TSVR) to facilitate the cross-category
transfer in transductive ZSL. Our approach draws on an intriguing insight
connecting two challenging problems, i.e. domain adaptation and zero-shot
learning. Domain adaptation aims to transfer knowledge across two different
domains (i.e., source domain and target domain) that share the identical
task/label space. For ZSL, the source and target domains have different
tasks/label spaces. Hence, ZSL is usually considered as a more difficult
transfer setting compared with domain adaptation. Although the existing ZSL
approaches use semantic attributes of categories to bridge the source and
target domains, their performances are far from satisfactory due to the large
domain gap between different categories. In contrast, our method directly
transforms ZSL into a domain adaptation task through redrawing ZSL as
predicting the similarity/dissimilarity labels for the pairs of semantic
attributes and visual features. For this redrawn domain adaptation problem, we
propose to use a domain-specific batch normalization component to reduce the
domain discrepancy of semantic-visual pairs. Experimental results over diverse
ZSL benchmarks clearly demonstrate the superiority of our method
Temporal Model Adaptation for Person Re-Identification
Person re-identification is an open and challenging problem in computer
vision. Majority of the efforts have been spent either to design the best
feature representation or to learn the optimal matching metric. Most approaches
have neglected the problem of adapting the selected features or the learned
model over time. To address such a problem, we propose a temporal model
adaptation scheme with human in the loop. We first introduce a
similarity-dissimilarity learning method which can be trained in an incremental
fashion by means of a stochastic alternating directions methods of multipliers
optimization procedure. Then, to achieve temporal adaptation with limited human
effort, we exploit a graph-based approach to present the user only the most
informative probe-gallery matches that should be used to update the model.
Results on three datasets have shown that our approach performs on par or even
better than state-of-the-art approaches while reducing the manual pairwise
labeling effort by about 80%
Semantic Autoencoder for Zero-Shot Learning
Existing zero-shot learning (ZSL) models typically learn a projection
function from a feature space to a semantic embedding space (e.g.~attribute
space). However, such a projection function is only concerned with predicting
the training seen class semantic representation (e.g.~attribute prediction) or
classification. When applied to test data, which in the context of ZSL contains
different (unseen) classes without training data, a ZSL model typically suffers
from the project domain shift problem. In this work, we present a novel
solution to ZSL based on learning a Semantic AutoEncoder (SAE). Taking the
encoder-decoder paradigm, an encoder aims to project a visual feature vector
into the semantic space as in the existing ZSL models. However, the decoder
exerts an additional constraint, that is, the projection/code must be able to
reconstruct the original visual feature. We show that with this additional
reconstruction constraint, the learned projection function from the seen
classes is able to generalise better to the new unseen classes. Importantly,
the encoder and decoder are linear and symmetric which enable us to develop an
extremely efficient learning algorithm. Extensive experiments on six benchmark
datasets demonstrate that the proposed SAE outperforms significantly the
existing ZSL models with the additional benefit of lower computational cost.
Furthermore, when the SAE is applied to supervised clustering problem, it also
beats the state-of-the-art.Comment: accepted to CVPR201
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