12,823 research outputs found
Improving face gender classification by adding deliberately misaligned faces to the training data
A novel method of face gender classifier construction is proposed and evaluated. Previously, researchers have assumed that a computationally expensive face alignment step (in which the face image is transformed so that facial landmarks such as the eyes, nose, chin, etc, are in uniform locations in the image) is required in order to maximize the accuracy of predictions on new face images. We, however, argue that this step is not necessary, and that machine learning classifiers can be made robust to face misalignments by automatically expanding the training data with examples of faces that have been deliberately misaligned (for example, translated or rotated). To test our hypothesis, we evaluate this automatic training dataset expansion method with two types of image classifier, the first based on weak features such as Local Binary Pattern histograms, and the second based on SIFT keypoints. Using a benchmark face gender classification dataset recently proposed in the literature, we obtain a state-of-the-art accuracy of 92.5%, thus validating our approach
Dense 3D Face Correspondence
We present an algorithm that automatically establishes dense correspondences
between a large number of 3D faces. Starting from automatically detected sparse
correspondences on the outer boundary of 3D faces, the algorithm triangulates
existing correspondences and expands them iteratively by matching points of
distinctive surface curvature along the triangle edges. After exhausting
keypoint matches, further correspondences are established by generating evenly
distributed points within triangles by evolving level set geodesic curves from
the centroids of large triangles. A deformable model (K3DM) is constructed from
the dense corresponded faces and an algorithm is proposed for morphing the K3DM
to fit unseen faces. This algorithm iterates between rigid alignment of an
unseen face followed by regularized morphing of the deformable model. We have
extensively evaluated the proposed algorithms on synthetic data and real 3D
faces from the FRGCv2, Bosphorus, BU3DFE and UND Ear databases using
quantitative and qualitative benchmarks. Our algorithm achieved dense
correspondences with a mean localisation error of 1.28mm on synthetic faces and
detected anthropometric landmarks on unseen real faces from the FRGCv2
database with 3mm precision. Furthermore, our deformable model fitting
algorithm achieved 98.5% face recognition accuracy on the FRGCv2 and 98.6% on
Bosphorus database. Our dense model is also able to generalize to unseen
datasets.Comment: 24 Pages, 12 Figures, 6 Tables and 3 Algorithm
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