2,365 research outputs found
Mid-level Deep Pattern Mining
Mid-level visual element discovery aims to find clusters of image patches
that are both representative and discriminative. In this work, we study this
problem from the prospective of pattern mining while relying on the recently
popularized Convolutional Neural Networks (CNNs). Specifically, we find that
for an image patch, activations extracted from the first fully-connected layer
of CNNs have two appealing properties which enable its seamless integration
with pattern mining. Patterns are then discovered from a large number of CNN
activations of image patches through the well-known association rule mining.
When we retrieve and visualize image patches with the same pattern,
surprisingly, they are not only visually similar but also semantically
consistent. We apply our approach to scene and object classification tasks, and
demonstrate that our approach outperforms all previous works on mid-level
visual element discovery by a sizeable margin with far fewer elements being
used. Our approach also outperforms or matches recent works using CNN for these
tasks. Source code of the complete system is available online.Comment: Published in Proc. IEEE Conf. Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition
201
Exemplar Based Deep Discriminative and Shareable Feature Learning for Scene Image Classification
In order to encode the class correlation and class specific information in
image representation, we propose a new local feature learning approach named
Deep Discriminative and Shareable Feature Learning (DDSFL). DDSFL aims to
hierarchically learn feature transformation filter banks to transform raw pixel
image patches to features. The learned filter banks are expected to: (1) encode
common visual patterns of a flexible number of categories; (2) encode
discriminative information; and (3) hierarchically extract patterns at
different visual levels. Particularly, in each single layer of DDSFL, shareable
filters are jointly learned for classes which share the similar patterns.
Discriminative power of the filters is achieved by enforcing the features from
the same category to be close, while features from different categories to be
far away from each other. Furthermore, we also propose two exemplar selection
methods to iteratively select training data for more efficient and effective
learning. Based on the experimental results, DDSFL can achieve very promising
performance, and it also shows great complementary effect to the
state-of-the-art Caffe features.Comment: Pattern Recognition, Elsevier, 201
A Discriminative Representation of Convolutional Features for Indoor Scene Recognition
Indoor scene recognition is a multi-faceted and challenging problem due to
the diverse intra-class variations and the confusing inter-class similarities.
This paper presents a novel approach which exploits rich mid-level
convolutional features to categorize indoor scenes. Traditionally used
convolutional features preserve the global spatial structure, which is a
desirable property for general object recognition. However, we argue that this
structuredness is not much helpful when we have large variations in scene
layouts, e.g., in indoor scenes. We propose to transform the structured
convolutional activations to another highly discriminative feature space. The
representation in the transformed space not only incorporates the
discriminative aspects of the target dataset, but it also encodes the features
in terms of the general object categories that are present in indoor scenes. To
this end, we introduce a new large-scale dataset of 1300 object categories
which are commonly present in indoor scenes. Our proposed approach achieves a
significant performance boost over previous state of the art approaches on five
major scene classification datasets
Expanded Parts Model for Semantic Description of Humans in Still Images
We introduce an Expanded Parts Model (EPM) for recognizing human attributes
(e.g. young, short hair, wearing suit) and actions (e.g. running, jumping) in
still images. An EPM is a collection of part templates which are learnt
discriminatively to explain specific scale-space regions in the images (in
human centric coordinates). This is in contrast to current models which consist
of a relatively few (i.e. a mixture of) 'average' templates. EPM uses only a
subset of the parts to score an image and scores the image sparsely in space,
i.e. it ignores redundant and random background in an image. To learn our
model, we propose an algorithm which automatically mines parts and learns
corresponding discriminative templates together with their respective locations
from a large number of candidate parts. We validate our method on three recent
challenging datasets of human attributes and actions. We obtain convincing
qualitative and state-of-the-art quantitative results on the three datasets.Comment: Accepted for publication in IEEE Transactions on Pattern Analysis and
Machine Intelligence (TPAMI
Fine-Grained Product Class Recognition for Assisted Shopping
Assistive solutions for a better shopping experience can improve the quality
of life of people, in particular also of visually impaired shoppers. We present
a system that visually recognizes the fine-grained product classes of items on
a shopping list, in shelves images taken with a smartphone in a grocery store.
Our system consists of three components: (a) We automatically recognize useful
text on product packaging, e.g., product name and brand, and build a mapping of
words to product classes based on the large-scale GroceryProducts dataset. When
the user populates the shopping list, we automatically infer the product class
of each entered word. (b) We perform fine-grained product class recognition
when the user is facing a shelf. We discover discriminative patches on product
packaging to differentiate between visually similar product classes and to
increase the robustness against continuous changes in product design. (c) We
continuously improve the recognition accuracy through active learning. Our
experiments show the robustness of the proposed method against cross-domain
challenges, and the scalability to an increasing number of products with
minimal re-training.Comment: Accepted at ICCV Workshop on Assistive Computer Vision and Robotics
(ICCV-ACVR) 201
- …