1,087 research outputs found
Learning to Find Eye Region Landmarks for Remote Gaze Estimation in Unconstrained Settings
Conventional feature-based and model-based gaze estimation methods have
proven to perform well in settings with controlled illumination and specialized
cameras. In unconstrained real-world settings, however, such methods are
surpassed by recent appearance-based methods due to difficulties in modeling
factors such as illumination changes and other visual artifacts. We present a
novel learning-based method for eye region landmark localization that enables
conventional methods to be competitive to latest appearance-based methods.
Despite having been trained exclusively on synthetic data, our method exceeds
the state of the art for iris localization and eye shape registration on
real-world imagery. We then use the detected landmarks as input to iterative
model-fitting and lightweight learning-based gaze estimation methods. Our
approach outperforms existing model-fitting and appearance-based methods in the
context of person-independent and personalized gaze estimation
Privacy-Preserving Eye Videos using Rubber Sheet Model
Video-based eye trackers estimate gaze based on eye images/videos. As
security and privacy concerns loom over technological advancements, tackling
such challenges is crucial. We present a new approach to handle privacy issues
in eye videos by replacing the current identifiable iris texture with a
different iris template in the video capture pipeline based on the Rubber Sheet
Model. We extend to image blending and median-value representations to
demonstrate that videos can be manipulated without significantly degrading
segmentation and pupil detection accuracy.Comment: Will be published in ETRA 20 Short Papers, June 2-5, 2020, Stuttgart,
Germany Copyright 2020 Association for Computing Machiner
Gait recognition and understanding based on hierarchical temporal memory using 3D gait semantic folding
Gait recognition and understanding systems have shown a wide-ranging application prospect. However, their use of unstructured data from image and video has affected their performance, e.g., they are easily influenced by multi-views, occlusion, clothes, and object carrying conditions. This paper addresses these problems using a realistic 3-dimensional (3D) human structural data and sequential pattern learning framework with top-down attention modulating mechanism based on Hierarchical Temporal Memory (HTM). First, an accurate 2-dimensional (2D) to 3D human body pose and shape semantic parameters estimation method is proposed, which exploits the advantages of an instance-level body parsing model and a virtual dressing method. Second, by using gait semantic folding, the estimated body parameters are encoded using a sparse 2D matrix to construct the structural gait semantic image. In order to achieve time-based gait recognition, an HTM Network is constructed to obtain the sequence-level gait sparse distribution representations (SL-GSDRs). A top-down attention mechanism is introduced to deal with various conditions including multi-views by refining the SL-GSDRs, according to prior knowledge. The proposed gait learning model not only aids gait recognition tasks to overcome the difficulties in real application scenarios but also provides the structured gait semantic images for visual cognition. Experimental analyses on CMU MoBo, CASIA B, TUM-IITKGP, and KY4D datasets show a significant performance gain in terms of accuracy and robustness
QUIS-CAMPI: Biometric Recognition in Surveillance Scenarios
The concerns about individuals security have justified the increasing number of surveillance
cameras deployed both in private and public spaces. However, contrary to popular belief,
these devices are in most cases used solely for recording, instead of feeding intelligent analysis
processes capable of extracting information about the observed individuals. Thus, even though
video surveillance has already proved to be essential for solving multiple crimes, obtaining relevant
details about the subjects that took part in a crime depends on the manual inspection
of recordings. As such, the current goal of the research community is the development of
automated surveillance systems capable of monitoring and identifying subjects in surveillance
scenarios. Accordingly, the main goal of this thesis is to improve the performance of biometric
recognition algorithms in data acquired from surveillance scenarios. In particular, we aim at
designing a visual surveillance system capable of acquiring biometric data at a distance (e.g.,
face, iris or gait) without requiring human intervention in the process, as well as devising biometric
recognition methods robust to the degradation factors resulting from the unconstrained
acquisition process.
Regarding the first goal, the analysis of the data acquired by typical surveillance systems
shows that large acquisition distances significantly decrease the resolution of biometric samples,
and thus their discriminability is not sufficient for recognition purposes. In the literature,
diverse works point out Pan Tilt Zoom (PTZ) cameras as the most practical way for acquiring
high-resolution imagery at a distance, particularly when using a master-slave configuration. In
the master-slave configuration, the video acquired by a typical surveillance camera is analyzed
for obtaining regions of interest (e.g., car, person) and these regions are subsequently imaged
at high-resolution by the PTZ camera. Several methods have already shown that this configuration
can be used for acquiring biometric data at a distance. Nevertheless, these methods
failed at providing effective solutions to the typical challenges of this strategy, restraining its
use in surveillance scenarios. Accordingly, this thesis proposes two methods to support the development
of a biometric data acquisition system based on the cooperation of a PTZ camera
with a typical surveillance camera. The first proposal is a camera calibration method capable
of accurately mapping the coordinates of the master camera to the pan/tilt angles of the PTZ
camera. The second proposal is a camera scheduling method for determining - in real-time -
the sequence of acquisitions that maximizes the number of different targets obtained, while
minimizing the cumulative transition time. In order to achieve the first goal of this thesis,
both methods were combined with state-of-the-art approaches of the human monitoring field
to develop a fully automated surveillance capable of acquiring biometric data at a distance and
without human cooperation, designated as QUIS-CAMPI system.
The QUIS-CAMPI system is the basis for pursuing the second goal of this thesis. The analysis
of the performance of the state-of-the-art biometric recognition approaches shows that these
approaches attain almost ideal recognition rates in unconstrained data. However, this performance
is incongruous with the recognition rates observed in surveillance scenarios. Taking into
account the drawbacks of current biometric datasets, this thesis introduces a novel dataset comprising
biometric samples (face images and gait videos) acquired by the QUIS-CAMPI system at a
distance ranging from 5 to 40 meters and without human intervention in the acquisition process.
This set allows to objectively assess the performance of state-of-the-art biometric recognition
methods in data that truly encompass the covariates of surveillance scenarios. As such, this set
was exploited for promoting the first international challenge on biometric recognition in the wild. This thesis describes the evaluation protocols adopted, along with the results obtained
by the nine methods specially designed for this competition. In addition, the data acquired by
the QUIS-CAMPI system were crucial for accomplishing the second goal of this thesis, i.e., the
development of methods robust to the covariates of surveillance scenarios. The first proposal
regards a method for detecting corrupted features in biometric signatures inferred by a redundancy
analysis algorithm. The second proposal is a caricature-based face recognition approach
capable of enhancing the recognition performance by automatically generating a caricature
from a 2D photo. The experimental evaluation of these methods shows that both approaches
contribute to improve the recognition performance in unconstrained data.A crescente preocupação com a segurança dos indivĂduos tem justificado o crescimento
do nĂşmero de câmaras de vĂdeo-vigilância instaladas tanto em espaços privados como pĂşblicos.
Contudo, ao contrário do que normalmente se pensa, estes dispositivos são, na maior parte dos
casos, usados apenas para gravação, não estando ligados a nenhum tipo de software inteligente
capaz de inferir em tempo real informações sobre os indivĂduos observados. Assim, apesar de a
vĂdeo-vigilância ter provado ser essencial na resolução de diversos crimes, o seu uso está ainda
confinado Ă disponibilização de vĂdeos que tĂŞm que ser manualmente inspecionados para extrair
informações relevantes dos sujeitos envolvidos no crime. Como tal, atualmente, o principal
desafio da comunidade cientĂfica Ă© o desenvolvimento de sistemas automatizados capazes de
monitorizar e identificar indivĂduos em ambientes de vĂdeo-vigilância.
Esta tese tem como principal objetivo estender a aplicabilidade dos sistemas de reconhecimento
biomĂ©trico aos ambientes de vĂdeo-vigilância. De forma mais especifica, pretende-se
1) conceber um sistema de vĂdeo-vigilância que consiga adquirir dados biomĂ©tricos a longas distâncias
(e.g., imagens da cara, Ăris, ou vĂdeos do tipo de passo) sem requerer a cooperação dos
indivĂduos no processo; e 2) desenvolver mĂ©todos de reconhecimento biomĂ©trico robustos aos
fatores de degradação inerentes aos dados adquiridos por este tipo de sistemas.
No que diz respeito ao primeiro objetivo, a análise aos dados adquiridos pelos sistemas tĂpicos
de vĂdeo-vigilância mostra que, devido Ă distância de captura, os traços biomĂ©tricos amostrados
não são suficientemente discriminativos para garantir taxas de reconhecimento aceitáveis.
Na literatura, vários trabalhos advogam o uso de câmaras Pan Tilt Zoom (PTZ) para adquirir
imagens de alta resolução à distância, principalmente o uso destes dispositivos no modo masterslave.
Na configuração master-slave um módulo de análise inteligente seleciona zonas de interesse
(e.g. carros, pessoas) a partir do vĂdeo adquirido por uma câmara de vĂdeo-vigilância
e a câmara PTZ é orientada para adquirir em alta resolução as regiões de interesse. Diversos
métodos já mostraram que esta configuração pode ser usada para adquirir dados biométricos
à distância, ainda assim estes não foram capazes de solucionar alguns problemas relacionados
com esta estratĂ©gia, impedindo assim o seu uso em ambientes de vĂdeo-vigilância. Deste modo,
esta tese propõe dois métodos para permitir a aquisição de dados biométricos em ambientes de
vĂdeo-vigilância usando uma câmara PTZ assistida por uma câmara tĂpica de vĂdeo-vigilância. O
primeiro é um método de calibração capaz de mapear de forma exata as coordenadas da câmara
master para o ângulo da câmara PTZ (slave) sem o auxĂlio de outros dispositivos Ăłticos. O
segundo método determina a ordem pela qual um conjunto de sujeitos vai ser observado pela
câmara PTZ. O método proposto consegue determinar em tempo-real a sequência de observações
que maximiza o nĂşmero de diferentes sujeitos observados e simultaneamente minimiza o
tempo total de transição entre sujeitos. De modo a atingir o primeiro objetivo desta tese, os
dois métodos propostos foram combinados com os avanços alcançados na área da monitorização
de humanos para assim desenvolver o primeiro sistema de vĂdeo-vigilância completamente automatizado
e capaz de adquirir dados biométricos a longas distâncias sem requerer a cooperação
dos indivĂduos no processo, designado por sistema QUIS-CAMPI.
O sistema QUIS-CAMPI representa o ponto de partida para iniciar a investigação relacionada
com o segundo objetivo desta tese. A análise do desempenho dos métodos de reconhecimento
biométrico do estado-da-arte mostra que estes conseguem obter taxas de reconhecimento
quase perfeitas em dados adquiridos sem restrições (e.g., taxas de reconhecimento
maiores do que 99% no conjunto de dados LFW). Contudo, este desempenho nĂŁo Ă© corroborado pelos resultados observados em ambientes de vĂdeo-vigilância, o que sugere que os conjuntos
de dados atuais nĂŁo contĂŞm verdadeiramente os fatores de degradação tĂpicos dos ambientes de
vĂdeo-vigilância. Tendo em conta as vulnerabilidades dos conjuntos de dados biomĂ©tricos atuais,
esta tese introduz um novo conjunto de dados biomĂ©tricos (imagens da face e vĂdeos do tipo de
passo) adquiridos pelo sistema QUIS-CAMPI a uma distância máxima de 40m e sem a cooperação
dos sujeitos no processo de aquisição. Este conjunto permite avaliar de forma objetiva o desempenho
dos mĂ©todos do estado-da-arte no reconhecimento de indivĂduos em imagens/vĂdeos
capturados num ambiente real de vĂdeo-vigilância. Como tal, este conjunto foi utilizado para
promover a primeira competição de reconhecimento biométrico em ambientes não controlados.
Esta tese descreve os protocolos de avaliação usados, assim como os resultados obtidos por 9
métodos especialmente desenhados para esta competição. Para além disso, os dados adquiridos
pelo sistema QUIS-CAMPI foram essenciais para o desenvolvimento de dois métodos para
aumentar a robustez aos fatores de degradação observados em ambientes de vĂdeo-vigilância. O
primeiro Ă© um mĂ©todo para detetar caracterĂsticas corruptas em assinaturas biomĂ©tricas atravĂ©s
da análise da redundância entre subconjuntos de caracterĂsticas. O segundo Ă© um mĂ©todo de
reconhecimento facial baseado em caricaturas automaticamente geradas a partir de uma Ăşnica
foto do sujeito. As experiências realizadas mostram que ambos os métodos conseguem reduzir
as taxas de erro em dados adquiridos de forma nĂŁo controlada
Deep into the Eyes: Applying Machine Learning to improve Eye-Tracking
Eye-tracking has been an active research area with applications in personal and behav- ioral studies, medical diagnosis, virtual reality, and mixed reality applications. Improving the robustness, generalizability, accuracy, and precision of eye-trackers while maintaining privacy is crucial. Unfortunately, many existing low-cost portable commercial eye trackers suffer from signal artifacts and a low signal-to-noise ratio. These trackers are highly depen- dent on low-level features such as pupil edges or diffused bright spots in order to precisely localize the pupil and corneal reflection. As a result, they are not reliable for studying eye movements that require high precision, such as microsaccades, smooth pursuit, and ver- gence. Additionally, these methods suffer from reflective artifacts, occlusion of the pupil boundary by the eyelid and often require a manual update of person-dependent parame- ters to identify the pupil region. In this dissertation, I demonstrate (I) a new method to improve precision while maintaining the accuracy of head-fixed eye trackers by combin- ing velocity information from iris textures across frames with position information, (II) a generalized semantic segmentation framework for identifying eye regions with a further extension to identify ellipse fits on the pupil and iris, (III) a data-driven rendering pipeline to generate a temporally contiguous synthetic dataset for use in many eye-tracking ap- plications, and (IV) a novel strategy to preserve privacy in eye videos captured as part of the eye-tracking process. My work also provides the foundation for future research by addressing critical questions like the suitability of using synthetic datasets to improve eye-tracking performance in real-world applications, and ways to improve the precision of future commercial eye trackers with improved camera specifications
Comparative Study of Different Window Sizes Setting in Median Filter for Off-angle Iris Recognition
Iris recognition is one of the most popular biometric recognition that has increased in the number of acceptance user gradually because of the reliability and accuracy provided by this system. However, this accuracy is highly correlated with the quality of iris image captured. Thus, a poor quality of the image captured required an enhancement technique. This study aims to identify the optimum window size for the median filter. Identifying the optimum window size setting required template matching value result of the off-angle iris recognition. The lowest value obtained showed that the window size applied was optimized. The result of this study demonstrated, for WVU-OA dataset for 15 degrees off-angle iris of right and left eyes, the window size of [5 5] and [7 7] respectively are optimum to maximize the median filter function. Meanwhile, for 30 degrees off-angle iris of right and left eyes data, the optimum windows size proposed are [7 7] and [5 5] respectively. On the other hand, analysis using UBIRIS dataset showed that the optimum window size for 30 degrees off-angle iris, both right and left eye is [7 7] which is able to maximize the performance of the median filter. In conclusion, the effective value to be applied to all dataset are [5 5] and [7 7] because in most cases it provides a better template matching compared to without applying the filtering method
Pose Independent Face Recognition by Localizing Local Binary Patterns via Deformation Components
In this paper we address the problem of pose independent face recognition with a gallery set containing one frontal face image per enrolled subject while the probe set is composed by just a face image undergoing pose variations. The approach uses a set of aligned 3D models to learn deformation components using a 3D Morph able Model (3DMM). This further allows fitting a 3DMM efficiently on an image using a Ridge regression solution, regularized on the face space estimated via PCA. Then the approach describes each profile face by computing Local Binary Pattern (LBP) histograms localized on each deformed vertex, projected on a rendered frontal view. In the experimental result we evaluate the proposed method on the CMU Multi-PIE to assess face recognition algorithm across pose. We show how our process leads to higher performance than regular baselines reporting high recognition rate considering a range of facial poses in the probe set, up to ±45°. Finally we remark that our approach can handle continuous pose variations and it is comparable with recent state-of-the-art approaches
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