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Semantic Concept Co-Occurrence Patterns for Image Annotation and Retrieval.
Describing visual image contents by semantic concepts is an effective and straightforward way to facilitate various high level applications. Inferring semantic concepts from low-level pictorial feature analysis is challenging due to the semantic gap problem, while manually labeling concepts is unwise because of a large number of images in both online and offline collections. In this paper, we present a novel approach to automatically generate intermediate image descriptors by exploiting concept co-occurrence patterns in the pre-labeled training set that renders it possible to depict complex scene images semantically. Our work is motivated by the fact that multiple concepts that frequently co-occur across images form patterns which could provide contextual cues for individual concept inference. We discover the co-occurrence patterns as hierarchical communities by graph modularity maximization in a network with nodes and edges representing concepts and co-occurrence relationships separately. A random walk process working on the inferred concept probabilities with the discovered co-occurrence patterns is applied to acquire the refined concept signature representation. Through experiments in automatic image annotation and semantic image retrieval on several challenging datasets, we demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed concept co-occurrence patterns as well as the concept signature representation in comparison with state-of-the-art approaches
A Review of Codebook Models in Patch-Based Visual Object Recognition
The codebook model-based approach, while ignoring any structural aspect in vision, nonetheless provides state-of-the-art performances on current datasets. The key role of a visual codebook is to provide a way to map the low-level features into a fixed-length vector in histogram space to which standard classifiers can be directly applied. The discriminative power of such a visual codebook determines the quality of the codebook model, whereas the size of the codebook controls the complexity of the model. Thus, the construction of a codebook is an important step which is usually done by cluster analysis. However, clustering is a process that retains regions of high density in a distribution and it follows that the resulting codebook need not have discriminant properties. This is also recognised as a computational bottleneck of such systems. In our recent work, we proposed a resource-allocating codebook, to constructing a discriminant codebook in a one-pass design procedure that slightly outperforms more traditional approaches at drastically reduced computing times. In this review we survey several approaches that have been proposed over the last decade with their use of feature detectors, descriptors, codebook construction schemes, choice of classifiers in recognising objects, and datasets that were used in evaluating the proposed methods
Evaluation of Output Embeddings for Fine-Grained Image Classification
Image classification has advanced significantly in recent years with the
availability of large-scale image sets. However, fine-grained classification
remains a major challenge due to the annotation cost of large numbers of
fine-grained categories. This project shows that compelling classification
performance can be achieved on such categories even without labeled training
data. Given image and class embeddings, we learn a compatibility function such
that matching embeddings are assigned a higher score than mismatching ones;
zero-shot classification of an image proceeds by finding the label yielding the
highest joint compatibility score. We use state-of-the-art image features and
focus on different supervised attributes and unsupervised output embeddings
either derived from hierarchies or learned from unlabeled text corpora. We
establish a substantially improved state-of-the-art on the Animals with
Attributes and Caltech-UCSD Birds datasets. Most encouragingly, we demonstrate
that purely unsupervised output embeddings (learned from Wikipedia and improved
with fine-grained text) achieve compelling results, even outperforming the
previous supervised state-of-the-art. By combining different output embeddings,
we further improve results.Comment: @inproceedings {ARWLS15, title = {Evaluation of Output Embeddings for
Fine-Grained Image Classification}, booktitle = {IEEE Computer Vision and
Pattern Recognition}, year = {2015}, author = {Zeynep Akata and Scott Reed
and Daniel Walter and Honglak Lee and Bernt Schiele}
Semantic Visual Localization
Robust visual localization under a wide range of viewing conditions is a
fundamental problem in computer vision. Handling the difficult cases of this
problem is not only very challenging but also of high practical relevance,
e.g., in the context of life-long localization for augmented reality or
autonomous robots. In this paper, we propose a novel approach based on a joint
3D geometric and semantic understanding of the world, enabling it to succeed
under conditions where previous approaches failed. Our method leverages a novel
generative model for descriptor learning, trained on semantic scene completion
as an auxiliary task. The resulting 3D descriptors are robust to missing
observations by encoding high-level 3D geometric and semantic information.
Experiments on several challenging large-scale localization datasets
demonstrate reliable localization under extreme viewpoint, illumination, and
geometry changes
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