6,549 research outputs found
A Comprehensive Performance Evaluation of Deformable Face Tracking "In-the-Wild"
Recently, technologies such as face detection, facial landmark localisation
and face recognition and verification have matured enough to provide effective
and efficient solutions for imagery captured under arbitrary conditions
(referred to as "in-the-wild"). This is partially attributed to the fact that
comprehensive "in-the-wild" benchmarks have been developed for face detection,
landmark localisation and recognition/verification. A very important technology
that has not been thoroughly evaluated yet is deformable face tracking
"in-the-wild". Until now, the performance has mainly been assessed
qualitatively by visually assessing the result of a deformable face tracking
technology on short videos. In this paper, we perform the first, to the best of
our knowledge, thorough evaluation of state-of-the-art deformable face tracking
pipelines using the recently introduced 300VW benchmark. We evaluate many
different architectures focusing mainly on the task of on-line deformable face
tracking. In particular, we compare the following general strategies: (a)
generic face detection plus generic facial landmark localisation, (b) generic
model free tracking plus generic facial landmark localisation, as well as (c)
hybrid approaches using state-of-the-art face detection, model free tracking
and facial landmark localisation technologies. Our evaluation reveals future
avenues for further research on the topic.Comment: E. Antonakos and P. Snape contributed equally and have joint second
authorshi
Unconstrained Face Verification using Deep CNN Features
In this paper, we present an algorithm for unconstrained face verification
based on deep convolutional features and evaluate it on the newly released
IARPA Janus Benchmark A (IJB-A) dataset. The IJB-A dataset includes real-world
unconstrained faces from 500 subjects with full pose and illumination
variations which are much harder than the traditional Labeled Face in the Wild
(LFW) and Youtube Face (YTF) datasets. The deep convolutional neural network
(DCNN) is trained using the CASIA-WebFace dataset. Extensive experiments on the
IJB-A dataset are provided
A Proximity-Aware Hierarchical Clustering of Faces
In this paper, we propose an unsupervised face clustering algorithm called
"Proximity-Aware Hierarchical Clustering" (PAHC) that exploits the local
structure of deep representations. In the proposed method, a similarity measure
between deep features is computed by evaluating linear SVM margins. SVMs are
trained using nearest neighbors of sample data, and thus do not require any
external training data. Clusters are then formed by thresholding the similarity
scores. We evaluate the clustering performance using three challenging
unconstrained face datasets, including Celebrity in Frontal-Profile (CFP),
IARPA JANUS Benchmark A (IJB-A), and JANUS Challenge Set 3 (JANUS CS3)
datasets. Experimental results demonstrate that the proposed approach can
achieve significant improvements over state-of-the-art methods. Moreover, we
also show that the proposed clustering algorithm can be applied to curate a set
of large-scale and noisy training dataset while maintaining sufficient amount
of images and their variations due to nuisance factors. The face verification
performance on JANUS CS3 improves significantly by finetuning a DCNN model with
the curated MS-Celeb-1M dataset which contains over three million face images
Deep Extreme Multi-label Learning
Extreme multi-label learning (XML) or classification has been a practical and
important problem since the boom of big data. The main challenge lies in the
exponential label space which involves possible label sets especially
when the label dimension is huge, e.g., in millions for Wikipedia labels.
This paper is motivated to better explore the label space by originally
establishing an explicit label graph. In the meanwhile, deep learning has been
widely studied and used in various classification problems including
multi-label classification, however it has not been properly introduced to XML,
where the label space can be as large as in millions. In this paper, we propose
a practical deep embedding method for extreme multi-label classification, which
harvests the ideas of non-linear embedding and graph priors-based label space
modeling simultaneously. Extensive experiments on public datasets for XML show
that our method performs competitive against state-of-the-art result
Dense 3D Face Correspondence
We present an algorithm that automatically establishes dense correspondences
between a large number of 3D faces. Starting from automatically detected sparse
correspondences on the outer boundary of 3D faces, the algorithm triangulates
existing correspondences and expands them iteratively by matching points of
distinctive surface curvature along the triangle edges. After exhausting
keypoint matches, further correspondences are established by generating evenly
distributed points within triangles by evolving level set geodesic curves from
the centroids of large triangles. A deformable model (K3DM) is constructed from
the dense corresponded faces and an algorithm is proposed for morphing the K3DM
to fit unseen faces. This algorithm iterates between rigid alignment of an
unseen face followed by regularized morphing of the deformable model. We have
extensively evaluated the proposed algorithms on synthetic data and real 3D
faces from the FRGCv2, Bosphorus, BU3DFE and UND Ear databases using
quantitative and qualitative benchmarks. Our algorithm achieved dense
correspondences with a mean localisation error of 1.28mm on synthetic faces and
detected anthropometric landmarks on unseen real faces from the FRGCv2
database with 3mm precision. Furthermore, our deformable model fitting
algorithm achieved 98.5% face recognition accuracy on the FRGCv2 and 98.6% on
Bosphorus database. Our dense model is also able to generalize to unseen
datasets.Comment: 24 Pages, 12 Figures, 6 Tables and 3 Algorithm
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