23,536 research outputs found
Deep Sketch-Photo Face Recognition Assisted by Facial Attributes
In this paper, we present a deep coupled framework to address the problem of
matching sketch image against a gallery of mugshots. Face sketches have the
essential in- formation about the spatial topology and geometric details of
faces while missing some important facial attributes such as ethnicity, hair,
eye, and skin color. We propose a cou- pled deep neural network architecture
which utilizes facial attributes in order to improve the sketch-photo
recognition performance. The proposed Attribute-Assisted Deep Con- volutional
Neural Network (AADCNN) method exploits the facial attributes and leverages the
loss functions from the facial attributes identification and face verification
tasks in order to learn rich discriminative features in a common em- bedding
subspace. The facial attribute identification task increases the inter-personal
variations by pushing apart the embedded features extracted from individuals
with differ- ent facial attributes, while the verification task reduces the
intra-personal variations by pulling together all the fea- tures that are
related to one person. The learned discrim- inative features can be well
generalized to new identities not seen in the training data. The proposed
architecture is able to make full use of the sketch and complementary fa- cial
attribute information to train a deep model compared to the conventional
sketch-photo recognition methods. Exten- sive experiments are performed on
composite (E-PRIP) and semi-forensic (IIIT-D semi-forensic) datasets. The
results show the superiority of our method compared to the state- of-the-art
models in sketch-photo recognition algorithm
Review of Face Detection Systems Based Artificial Neural Networks Algorithms
Face detection is one of the most relevant applications of image processing
and biometric systems. Artificial neural networks (ANN) have been used in the
field of image processing and pattern recognition. There is lack of literature
surveys which give overview about the studies and researches related to the
using of ANN in face detection. Therefore, this research includes a general
review of face detection studies and systems which based on different ANN
approaches and algorithms. The strengths and limitations of these literature
studies and systems were included also.Comment: 16 pages, 12 figures, 1 table, IJMA Journa
Person Recognition in Personal Photo Collections
Recognising persons in everyday photos presents major challenges (occluded
faces, different clothing, locations, etc.) for machine vision. We propose a
convnet based person recognition system on which we provide an in-depth
analysis of informativeness of different body cues, impact of training data,
and the common failure modes of the system. In addition, we discuss the
limitations of existing benchmarks and propose more challenging ones. Our
method is simple and is built on open source and open data, yet it improves the
state of the art results on a large dataset of social media photos (PIPA).Comment: Accepted to ICCV 2015, revise
Training methods for facial image comparison: a literature review
This literature review was commissioned to explore the psychological literature relating to facial image comparison with a particular emphasis on whether individuals can be trained to improve performance on this task. Surprisingly few studies have addressed this question directly. As a consequence, this review has been extended to cover training of face recognition and training of different kinds of perceptual comparisons where we are of the opinion that the methodologies or findings of such studies are informative. The majority of studies of face processing have examined face recognition, which relies heavily on memory. This may be memory for a face that was learned recently (e.g. minutes or hours previously) or for a face learned longer ago, perhaps after many exposures (e.g. friends, family members, celebrities). Successful face recognition, irrespective of the type of face, relies on the ability to retrieve the to-berecognised face from long-term memory. This memory is then compared to the physically present image to reach a recognition decision. In contrast, in face matching task two physical representations of a face (live, photographs, movies) are compared and so long-term memory is not involved. Because the comparison is between two present stimuli rather than between a present stimulus and a memory, one might expect that face matching, even if not an easy task, would be easier to do and easier to learn than face recognition. In support of this, there is evidence that judgment tasks where a presented stimulus must be judged by a remembered standard are generally more cognitively demanding than judgments that require comparing two presented stimuli Davies & Parasuraman, 1982; Parasuraman & Davies, 1977; Warm and Dember, 1998). Is there enough overlap between face recognition and matching that it is useful to look at the literature recognition? No study has directly compared face recognition and face matching, so we turn to research in which people decided whether two non-face stimuli were the same or different. In these studies, accuracy of comparison is not always better when the comparator is present than when it is remembered. Further, all perceptual factors that were found to affect comparisons of simultaneously presented objects also affected comparisons of successively presented objects in qualitatively the same way. Those studies involved judgments about colour (Newhall, Burnham & Clark, 1957; Romero, Hita & Del Barco, 1986), and shape (Larsen, McIlhagga & Bundesen, 1999; Lawson, Bülthoff & Dumbell, 2003; Quinlan, 1995). Although one must be cautious in generalising from studies of object processing to studies of face processing (see, e.g., section comparing face processing to object processing), from these kinds of studies there is no evidence to suggest that there are qualitative differences in the perceptual aspects of how recognition and matching are done. As a result, this review will include studies of face recognition skill as well as face matching skill. The distinction between face recognition involving memory and face matching not involving memory is clouded in many recognition studies which require observers to decide which of many presented faces matches a remembered face (e.g., eyewitness studies). And of course there are other forensic face-matching tasks that will require comparison to both presented and remembered comparators (e.g., deciding whether any person in a video showing a crowd is the target person). For this reason, too, we choose to include studies of face recognition as well as face matching in our revie
Review of Person Re-identification Techniques
Person re-identification across different surveillance cameras with disjoint
fields of view has become one of the most interesting and challenging subjects
in the area of intelligent video surveillance. Although several methods have
been developed and proposed, certain limitations and unresolved issues remain.
In all of the existing re-identification approaches, feature vectors are
extracted from segmented still images or video frames. Different similarity or
dissimilarity measures have been applied to these vectors. Some methods have
used simple constant metrics, whereas others have utilised models to obtain
optimised metrics. Some have created models based on local colour or texture
information, and others have built models based on the gait of people. In
general, the main objective of all these approaches is to achieve a
higher-accuracy rate and lowercomputational costs. This study summarises
several developments in recent literature and discusses the various available
methods used in person re-identification. Specifically, their advantages and
disadvantages are mentioned and compared.Comment: Published 201
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Surveying Wildlife in the Chilterns
This guide grew out of a series of workshops for volunteers within the Chilterns Commons Project. It focuses on surveying wildlife on particular sites, such as the Chiltern commons, rather than surveying across the wider landscape, but we hope that the ideas suggested here will be of use to anyone wanting to know how to get more involved in wildlife surveys
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