6,227 research outputs found

    WarpNet: Weakly Supervised Matching for Single-view Reconstruction

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    We present an approach to matching images of objects in fine-grained datasets without using part annotations, with an application to the challenging problem of weakly supervised single-view reconstruction. This is in contrast to prior works that require part annotations, since matching objects across class and pose variations is challenging with appearance features alone. We overcome this challenge through a novel deep learning architecture, WarpNet, that aligns an object in one image with a different object in another. We exploit the structure of the fine-grained dataset to create artificial data for training this network in an unsupervised-discriminative learning approach. The output of the network acts as a spatial prior that allows generalization at test time to match real images across variations in appearance, viewpoint and articulation. On the CUB-200-2011 dataset of bird categories, we improve the AP over an appearance-only network by 13.6%. We further demonstrate that our WarpNet matches, together with the structure of fine-grained datasets, allow single-view reconstructions with quality comparable to using annotated point correspondences.Comment: to appear in IEEE Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition (CVPR) 201

    Knowledge Transfer for Melanoma Screening with Deep Learning

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    Knowledge transfer impacts the performance of deep learning -- the state of the art for image classification tasks, including automated melanoma screening. Deep learning's greed for large amounts of training data poses a challenge for medical tasks, which we can alleviate by recycling knowledge from models trained on different tasks, in a scheme called transfer learning. Although much of the best art on automated melanoma screening employs some form of transfer learning, a systematic evaluation was missing. Here we investigate the presence of transfer, from which task the transfer is sourced, and the application of fine tuning (i.e., retraining of the deep learning model after transfer). We also test the impact of picking deeper (and more expensive) models. Our results favor deeper models, pre-trained over ImageNet, with fine-tuning, reaching an AUC of 80.7% and 84.5% for the two skin-lesion datasets evaluated.Comment: 4 page

    Regularizing Deep Networks by Modeling and Predicting Label Structure

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    We construct custom regularization functions for use in supervised training of deep neural networks. Our technique is applicable when the ground-truth labels themselves exhibit internal structure; we derive a regularizer by learning an autoencoder over the set of annotations. Training thereby becomes a two-phase procedure. The first phase models labels with an autoencoder. The second phase trains the actual network of interest by attaching an auxiliary branch that must predict output via a hidden layer of the autoencoder. After training, we discard this auxiliary branch. We experiment in the context of semantic segmentation, demonstrating this regularization strategy leads to consistent accuracy boosts over baselines, both when training from scratch, or in combination with ImageNet pretraining. Gains are also consistent over different choices of convolutional network architecture. As our regularizer is discarded after training, our method has zero cost at test time; the performance improvements are essentially free. We are simply able to learn better network weights by building an abstract model of the label space, and then training the network to understand this abstraction alongside the original task.Comment: to appear at CVPR 201
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