12,866 research outputs found
Deep Adaptive Feature Embedding with Local Sample Distributions for Person Re-identification
Person re-identification (re-id) aims to match pedestrians observed by
disjoint camera views. It attracts increasing attention in computer vision due
to its importance to surveillance system. To combat the major challenge of
cross-view visual variations, deep embedding approaches are proposed by
learning a compact feature space from images such that the Euclidean distances
correspond to their cross-view similarity metric. However, the global Euclidean
distance cannot faithfully characterize the ideal similarity in a complex
visual feature space because features of pedestrian images exhibit unknown
distributions due to large variations in poses, illumination and occlusion.
Moreover, intra-personal training samples within a local range are robust to
guide deep embedding against uncontrolled variations, which however, cannot be
captured by a global Euclidean distance. In this paper, we study the problem of
person re-id by proposing a novel sampling to mine suitable \textit{positives}
(i.e. intra-class) within a local range to improve the deep embedding in the
context of large intra-class variations. Our method is capable of learning a
deep similarity metric adaptive to local sample structure by minimizing each
sample's local distances while propagating through the relationship between
samples to attain the whole intra-class minimization. To this end, a novel
objective function is proposed to jointly optimize similarity metric learning,
local positive mining and robust deep embedding. This yields local
discriminations by selecting local-ranged positive samples, and the learned
features are robust to dramatic intra-class variations. Experiments on
benchmarks show state-of-the-art results achieved by our method.Comment: Published on Pattern Recognitio
Person Re-identification by Local Maximal Occurrence Representation and Metric Learning
Person re-identification is an important technique towards automatic search
of a person's presence in a surveillance video. Two fundamental problems are
critical for person re-identification, feature representation and metric
learning. An effective feature representation should be robust to illumination
and viewpoint changes, and a discriminant metric should be learned to match
various person images. In this paper, we propose an effective feature
representation called Local Maximal Occurrence (LOMO), and a subspace and
metric learning method called Cross-view Quadratic Discriminant Analysis
(XQDA). The LOMO feature analyzes the horizontal occurrence of local features,
and maximizes the occurrence to make a stable representation against viewpoint
changes. Besides, to handle illumination variations, we apply the Retinex
transform and a scale invariant texture operator. To learn a discriminant
metric, we propose to learn a discriminant low dimensional subspace by
cross-view quadratic discriminant analysis, and simultaneously, a QDA metric is
learned on the derived subspace. We also present a practical computation method
for XQDA, as well as its regularization. Experiments on four challenging person
re-identification databases, VIPeR, QMUL GRID, CUHK Campus, and CUHK03, show
that the proposed method improves the state-of-the-art rank-1 identification
rates by 2.2%, 4.88%, 28.91%, and 31.55% on the four databases, respectively.Comment: This paper has been accepted by CVPR 2015. For source codes and
extracted features please visit
http://www.cbsr.ia.ac.cn/users/scliao/projects/lomo_xqda
- …