2,428 research outputs found
ForestHash: Semantic Hashing With Shallow Random Forests and Tiny Convolutional Networks
Hash codes are efficient data representations for coping with the ever
growing amounts of data. In this paper, we introduce a random forest semantic
hashing scheme that embeds tiny convolutional neural networks (CNN) into
shallow random forests, with near-optimal information-theoretic code
aggregation among trees. We start with a simple hashing scheme, where random
trees in a forest act as hashing functions by setting `1' for the visited tree
leaf, and `0' for the rest. We show that traditional random forests fail to
generate hashes that preserve the underlying similarity between the trees,
rendering the random forests approach to hashing challenging. To address this,
we propose to first randomly group arriving classes at each tree split node
into two groups, obtaining a significantly simplified two-class classification
problem, which can be handled using a light-weight CNN weak learner. Such
random class grouping scheme enables code uniqueness by enforcing each class to
share its code with different classes in different trees. A non-conventional
low-rank loss is further adopted for the CNN weak learners to encourage code
consistency by minimizing intra-class variations and maximizing inter-class
distance for the two random class groups. Finally, we introduce an
information-theoretic approach for aggregating codes of individual trees into a
single hash code, producing a near-optimal unique hash for each class. The
proposed approach significantly outperforms state-of-the-art hashing methods
for image retrieval tasks on large-scale public datasets, while performing at
the level of other state-of-the-art image classification techniques while
utilizing a more compact and efficient scalable representation. This work
proposes a principled and robust procedure to train and deploy in parallel an
ensemble of light-weight CNNs, instead of simply going deeper.Comment: Accepted to ECCV 201
A General Two-Step Approach to Learning-Based Hashing
Most existing approaches to hashing apply a single form of hash function, and
an optimization process which is typically deeply coupled to this specific
form. This tight coupling restricts the flexibility of the method to respond to
the data, and can result in complex optimization problems that are difficult to
solve. Here we propose a flexible yet simple framework that is able to
accommodate different types of loss functions and hash functions. This
framework allows a number of existing approaches to hashing to be placed in
context, and simplifies the development of new problem-specific hashing
methods. Our framework decomposes hashing learning problem into two steps: hash
bit learning and hash function learning based on the learned bits. The first
step can typically be formulated as binary quadratic problems, and the second
step can be accomplished by training standard binary classifiers. Both problems
have been extensively studied in the literature. Our extensive experiments
demonstrate that the proposed framework is effective, flexible and outperforms
the state-of-the-art.Comment: 13 pages. Appearing in Int. Conf. Computer Vision (ICCV) 201
Video retrieval based on deep convolutional neural network
Recently, with the enormous growth of online videos, fast video retrieval
research has received increasing attention. As an extension of image hashing
techniques, traditional video hashing methods mainly depend on hand-crafted
features and transform the real-valued features into binary hash codes. As
videos provide far more diverse and complex visual information than images,
extracting features from videos is much more challenging than that from images.
Therefore, high-level semantic features to represent videos are needed rather
than low-level hand-crafted methods. In this paper, a deep convolutional neural
network is proposed to extract high-level semantic features and a binary hash
function is then integrated into this framework to achieve an end-to-end
optimization. Particularly, our approach also combines triplet loss function
which preserves the relative similarity and difference of videos and
classification loss function as the optimization objective. Experiments have
been performed on two public datasets and the results demonstrate the
superiority of our proposed method compared with other state-of-the-art video
retrieval methods
Hashing for Similarity Search: A Survey
Similarity search (nearest neighbor search) is a problem of pursuing the data
items whose distances to a query item are the smallest from a large database.
Various methods have been developed to address this problem, and recently a lot
of efforts have been devoted to approximate search. In this paper, we present a
survey on one of the main solutions, hashing, which has been widely studied
since the pioneering work locality sensitive hashing. We divide the hashing
algorithms two main categories: locality sensitive hashing, which designs hash
functions without exploring the data distribution and learning to hash, which
learns hash functions according the data distribution, and review them from
various aspects, including hash function design and distance measure and search
scheme in the hash coding space
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