4 research outputs found

    Voronoi-Based Compact Image Descriptors: Efficient Region-of-Interest Retrieval With VLAD and Deep-Learning-Based Descriptors

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    We investigate the problem of image retrieval based on visual queries when the latter comprise arbitrary regionsof- interest (ROI) rather than entire images. Our proposal is a compact image descriptor that combines the state-of-the-art in content-based descriptor extraction with a multi-level, Voronoibased spatial partitioning of each dataset image. The proposed multi-level Voronoi-based encoding uses a spatial hierarchical K-means over interest-point locations, and computes a contentbased descriptor over each cell. In order to reduce the matching complexity with minimal or no sacrifice in retrieval performance: (i) we utilize the tree structure of the spatial hierarchical Kmeans to perform a top-to-bottom pruning for local similarity maxima; (ii) we propose a new image similarity score that combines relevant information from all partition levels into a single measure for similarity; (iii) we combine our proposal with a novel and efficient approach for optimal bit allocation within quantized descriptor representations. By deriving both a Voronoi-based VLAD descriptor (termed as Fast-VVLAD) and a Voronoi-based deep convolutional neural network (CNN) descriptor (termed as Fast-VDCNN), we demonstrate that our Voronoi-based framework is agnostic to the descriptor basis, and can easily be slotted into existing frameworks. Via a range of ROI queries in two standard datasets, it is shown that the Voronoibased descriptors achieve comparable or higher mean Average Precision against conventional grid-based spatial search, while offering more than two-fold reduction in complexity. Finally, beyond ROI queries, we show that Voronoi partitioning improves the geometric invariance of compact CNN descriptors, thereby resulting in competitive performance to the current state-of-theart on whole image retrieval

    Statistical and Dynamical Modeling of Riemannian Trajectories with Application to Human Movement Analysis

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    abstract: The data explosion in the past decade is in part due to the widespread use of rich sensors that measure various physical phenomenon -- gyroscopes that measure orientation in phones and fitness devices, the Microsoft Kinect which measures depth information, etc. A typical application requires inferring the underlying physical phenomenon from data, which is done using machine learning. A fundamental assumption in training models is that the data is Euclidean, i.e. the metric is the standard Euclidean distance governed by the L-2 norm. However in many cases this assumption is violated, when the data lies on non Euclidean spaces such as Riemannian manifolds. While the underlying geometry accounts for the non-linearity, accurate analysis of human activity also requires temporal information to be taken into account. Human movement has a natural interpretation as a trajectory on the underlying feature manifold, as it evolves smoothly in time. A commonly occurring theme in many emerging problems is the need to \emph{represent, compare, and manipulate} such trajectories in a manner that respects the geometric constraints. This dissertation is a comprehensive treatise on modeling Riemannian trajectories to understand and exploit their statistical and dynamical properties. Such properties allow us to formulate novel representations for Riemannian trajectories. For example, the physical constraints on human movement are rarely considered, which results in an unnecessarily large space of features, making search, classification and other applications more complicated. Exploiting statistical properties can help us understand the \emph{true} space of such trajectories. In applications such as stroke rehabilitation where there is a need to differentiate between very similar kinds of movement, dynamical properties can be much more effective. In this regard, we propose a generalization to the Lyapunov exponent to Riemannian manifolds and show its effectiveness for human activity analysis. The theory developed in this thesis naturally leads to several benefits in areas such as data mining, compression, dimensionality reduction, classification, and regression.Dissertation/ThesisDoctoral Dissertation Electrical Engineering 201

    From Pixels to Spikes: Efficient Multimodal Learning in the Presence of Domain Shift

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    Computer vision aims to provide computers with a conceptual understanding of images or video by learning a high-level representation. This representation is typically derived from the pixel domain (i.e., RGB channels) for tasks such as image classification or action recognition. In this thesis, we explore how RGB inputs can either be pre-processed or supplemented with other compressed visual modalities, in order to improve the accuracy-complexity tradeoff for various computer vision tasks. Beginning with RGB-domain data only, we propose a multi-level, Voronoi based spatial partitioning of images, which are individually processed by a convolutional neural network (CNN), to improve the scale invariance of the embedding. We combine this with a novel and efficient approach for optimal bit allocation within the quantized cell representations. We evaluate this proposal on the content-based image retrieval task, which constitutes finding similar images in a dataset to a given query. We then move to the more challenging domain of action recognition, where a video sequence is classified according to its constituent action. In this case, we demonstrate how the RGB modality can be supplemented with a flow modality, comprising motion vectors extracted directly from the video codec. The motion vectors (MVs) are used both as input to a CNN and as an activity sensor for providing selective macroblock (MB) decoding of RGB frames instead of full-frame decoding. We independently train two CNNs on RGB and MV correspondences and then fuse their scores during inference, demonstrating faster end-to-end processing and competitive classification accuracy to recent work. In order to explore the use of more efficient sensing modalities, we replace the MV stream with a neuromorphic vision sensing (NVS) stream for action recognition. NVS hardware mimics the biological retina and operates with substantially lower power and at significantly higher sampling rates than conventional active pixel sensing (APS) cameras. Due to the lack of training data in this domain, we generate emulated NVS frames directly from consecutive RGB frames and use these to train a teacher-student framework that additionally leverages on the abundance of optical flow training data. In the final part of this thesis, we introduce a novel unsupervised domain adaptation method for further minimizing the domain shift between emulated (source) and real (target) NVS data domains
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