4,201 research outputs found
Oriented Response Networks
Deep Convolution Neural Networks (DCNNs) are capable of learning
unprecedentedly effective image representations. However, their ability in
handling significant local and global image rotations remains limited. In this
paper, we propose Active Rotating Filters (ARFs) that actively rotate during
convolution and produce feature maps with location and orientation explicitly
encoded. An ARF acts as a virtual filter bank containing the filter itself and
its multiple unmaterialised rotated versions. During back-propagation, an ARF
is collectively updated using errors from all its rotated versions. DCNNs using
ARFs, referred to as Oriented Response Networks (ORNs), can produce
within-class rotation-invariant deep features while maintaining inter-class
discrimination for classification tasks. The oriented response produced by ORNs
can also be used for image and object orientation estimation tasks. Over
multiple state-of-the-art DCNN architectures, such as VGG, ResNet, and STN, we
consistently observe that replacing regular filters with the proposed ARFs
leads to significant reduction in the number of network parameters and
improvement in classification performance. We report the best results on
several commonly used benchmarks.Comment: Accepted in CVPR 2017. Source code available at http://yzhou.work/OR
A Hybrid Deep Learning Approach for Texture Analysis
Texture classification is a problem that has various applications such as
remote sensing and forest species recognition. Solutions tend to be custom fit
to the dataset used but fails to generalize. The Convolutional Neural Network
(CNN) in combination with Support Vector Machine (SVM) form a robust selection
between powerful invariant feature extractor and accurate classifier. The
fusion of experts provides stability in classification rates among different
datasets
Learning to Extract Motion from Videos in Convolutional Neural Networks
This paper shows how to extract dense optical flow from videos with a
convolutional neural network (CNN). The proposed model constitutes a potential
building block for deeper architectures to allow using motion without resorting
to an external algorithm, \eg for recognition in videos. We derive our network
architecture from signal processing principles to provide desired invariances
to image contrast, phase and texture. We constrain weights within the network
to enforce strict rotation invariance and substantially reduce the number of
parameters to learn. We demonstrate end-to-end training on only 8 sequences of
the Middlebury dataset, orders of magnitude less than competing CNN-based
motion estimation methods, and obtain comparable performance to classical
methods on the Middlebury benchmark. Importantly, our method outputs a
distributed representation of motion that allows representing multiple,
transparent motions, and dynamic textures. Our contributions on network design
and rotation invariance offer insights nonspecific to motion estimation
Convolutional Neural Network on Three Orthogonal Planes for Dynamic Texture Classification
Dynamic Textures (DTs) are sequences of images of moving scenes that exhibit
certain stationarity properties in time such as smoke, vegetation and fire. The
analysis of DT is important for recognition, segmentation, synthesis or
retrieval for a range of applications including surveillance, medical imaging
and remote sensing. Deep learning methods have shown impressive results and are
now the new state of the art for a wide range of computer vision tasks
including image and video recognition and segmentation. In particular,
Convolutional Neural Networks (CNNs) have recently proven to be well suited for
texture analysis with a design similar to a filter bank approach. In this
paper, we develop a new approach to DT analysis based on a CNN method applied
on three orthogonal planes x y , xt and y t . We train CNNs on spatial frames
and temporal slices extracted from the DT sequences and combine their outputs
to obtain a competitive DT classifier. Our results on a wide range of commonly
used DT classification benchmark datasets prove the robustness of our approach.
Significant improvement of the state of the art is shown on the larger
datasets.Comment: 19 pages, 10 figure
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