7,533 research outputs found
Feature Representation for Online Signature Verification
Biometrics systems have been used in a wide range of applications and have
improved people authentication. Signature verification is one of the most
common biometric methods with techniques that employ various specifications of
a signature. Recently, deep learning has achieved great success in many fields,
such as image, sounds and text processing. In this paper, deep learning method
has been used for feature extraction and feature selection.Comment: 10 pages, 10 figures, Submitted to IEEE Transactions on Information
Forensics and Securit
A Comprehensive Study of ImageNet Pre-Training for Historical Document Image Analysis
Automatic analysis of scanned historical documents comprises a wide range of
image analysis tasks, which are often challenging for machine learning due to a
lack of human-annotated learning samples. With the advent of deep neural
networks, a promising way to cope with the lack of training data is to
pre-train models on images from a different domain and then fine-tune them on
historical documents. In the current research, a typical example of such
cross-domain transfer learning is the use of neural networks that have been
pre-trained on the ImageNet database for object recognition. It remains a
mostly open question whether or not this pre-training helps to analyse
historical documents, which have fundamentally different image properties when
compared with ImageNet. In this paper, we present a comprehensive empirical
survey on the effect of ImageNet pre-training for diverse historical document
analysis tasks, including character recognition, style classification,
manuscript dating, semantic segmentation, and content-based retrieval. While we
obtain mixed results for semantic segmentation at pixel-level, we observe a
clear trend across different network architectures that ImageNet pre-training
has a positive effect on classification as well as content-based retrieval
Deep Adaptive Learning for Writer Identification based on Single Handwritten Word Images
There are two types of information in each handwritten word image: explicit
information which can be easily read or derived directly, such as lexical
content or word length, and implicit attributes such as the author's identity.
Whether features learned by a neural network for one task can be used for
another task remains an open question. In this paper, we present a deep
adaptive learning method for writer identification based on single-word images
using multi-task learning. An auxiliary task is added to the training process
to enforce the emergence of reusable features. Our proposed method transfers
the benefits of the learned features of a convolutional neural network from an
auxiliary task such as explicit content recognition to the main task of writer
identification in a single procedure. Specifically, we propose a new adaptive
convolutional layer to exploit the learned deep features. A multi-task neural
network with one or several adaptive convolutional layers is trained
end-to-end, to exploit robust generic features for a specific main task, i.e.,
writer identification. Three auxiliary tasks, corresponding to three explicit
attributes of handwritten word images (lexical content, word length and
character attributes), are evaluated. Experimental results on two benchmark
datasets show that the proposed deep adaptive learning method can improve the
performance of writer identification based on single-word images, compared to
non-adaptive and simple linear-adaptive approaches.Comment: Under view of Pattern Recognitio
- …