2,314 research outputs found
Infrared face recognition: a comprehensive review of methodologies and databases
Automatic face recognition is an area with immense practical potential which
includes a wide range of commercial and law enforcement applications. Hence it
is unsurprising that it continues to be one of the most active research areas
of computer vision. Even after over three decades of intense research, the
state-of-the-art in face recognition continues to improve, benefitting from
advances in a range of different research fields such as image processing,
pattern recognition, computer graphics, and physiology. Systems based on
visible spectrum images, the most researched face recognition modality, have
reached a significant level of maturity with some practical success. However,
they continue to face challenges in the presence of illumination, pose and
expression changes, as well as facial disguises, all of which can significantly
decrease recognition accuracy. Amongst various approaches which have been
proposed in an attempt to overcome these limitations, the use of infrared (IR)
imaging has emerged as a particularly promising research direction. This paper
presents a comprehensive and timely review of the literature on this subject.
Our key contributions are: (i) a summary of the inherent properties of infrared
imaging which makes this modality promising in the context of face recognition,
(ii) a systematic review of the most influential approaches, with a focus on
emerging common trends as well as key differences between alternative
methodologies, (iii) a description of the main databases of infrared facial
images available to the researcher, and lastly (iv) a discussion of the most
promising avenues for future research.Comment: Pattern Recognition, 2014. arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap
with arXiv:1306.160
Deep Perceptual Mapping for Thermal to Visible Face Recognition
Cross modal face matching between the thermal and visible spectrum is a much
de- sired capability for night-time surveillance and security applications. Due
to a very large modality gap, thermal-to-visible face recognition is one of the
most challenging face matching problem. In this paper, we present an approach
to bridge this modality gap by a significant margin. Our approach captures the
highly non-linear relationship be- tween the two modalities by using a deep
neural network. Our model attempts to learn a non-linear mapping from visible
to thermal spectrum while preserving the identity in- formation. We show
substantive performance improvement on a difficult thermal-visible face
dataset. The presented approach improves the state-of-the-art by more than 10%
in terms of Rank-1 identification and bridge the drop in performance due to the
modality gap by more than 40%.Comment: BMVC 2015 (oral
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