1,079 research outputs found
Pose Estimation for Category Specific Multiview Object Localization
We propose an approach to overcome the two main challenges of 3D multiview object detection and localization: The variation of object features due to changes in the viewpoint and the variation in the size and aspect ratio of the object. Our approach proceeds in three steps. Given an initial bounding box of fixed size, we first refine its aspect ratio and size. We can then predict the viewing angle, under the hypothesis that the bounding box actually contains an object instance. Finally, a classifier tuned to this particular viewpoint checks the existence of an instance. As a result, we can find the object instances and estimate their poses, without having to search over all window sizes and potential orientations. We train and evaluate our method on a new object database specifically tailored for this task, containing real-world objects imaged over a wide range of smoothly varying viewpoints and significant lighting changes. We show that the successive estimations of the bounding box and the viewpoint lead to better localization results
3D Object Class Detection in the Wild
Object class detection has been a synonym for 2D bounding box localization
for the longest time, fueled by the success of powerful statistical learning
techniques, combined with robust image representations. Only recently, there
has been a growing interest in revisiting the promise of computer vision from
the early days: to precisely delineate the contents of a visual scene, object
by object, in 3D. In this paper, we draw from recent advances in object
detection and 2D-3D object lifting in order to design an object class detector
that is particularly tailored towards 3D object class detection. Our 3D object
class detection method consists of several stages gradually enriching the
object detection output with object viewpoint, keypoints and 3D shape
estimates. Following careful design, in each stage it constantly improves the
performance and achieves state-ofthe-art performance in simultaneous 2D
bounding box and viewpoint estimation on the challenging Pascal3D+ dataset
Multi-View Priors for Learning Detectors from Sparse Viewpoint Data
While the majority of today's object class models provide only 2D bounding
boxes, far richer output hypotheses are desirable including viewpoint,
fine-grained category, and 3D geometry estimate. However, models trained to
provide richer output require larger amounts of training data, preferably well
covering the relevant aspects such as viewpoint and fine-grained categories. In
this paper, we address this issue from the perspective of transfer learning,
and design an object class model that explicitly leverages correlations between
visual features. Specifically, our model represents prior distributions over
permissible multi-view detectors in a parametric way -- the priors are learned
once from training data of a source object class, and can later be used to
facilitate the learning of a detector for a target class. As we show in our
experiments, this transfer is not only beneficial for detectors based on
basic-level category representations, but also enables the robust learning of
detectors that represent classes at finer levels of granularity, where training
data is typically even scarcer and more unbalanced. As a result, we report
largely improved performance in simultaneous 2D object localization and
viewpoint estimation on a recent dataset of challenging street scenes.Comment: 13 pages, 7 figures, 4 tables, International Conference on Learning
Representations 201
RGB-D-based Action Recognition Datasets: A Survey
Human action recognition from RGB-D (Red, Green, Blue and Depth) data has
attracted increasing attention since the first work reported in 2010. Over this
period, many benchmark datasets have been created to facilitate the development
and evaluation of new algorithms. This raises the question of which dataset to
select and how to use it in providing a fair and objective comparative
evaluation against state-of-the-art methods. To address this issue, this paper
provides a comprehensive review of the most commonly used action recognition
related RGB-D video datasets, including 27 single-view datasets, 10 multi-view
datasets, and 7 multi-person datasets. The detailed information and analysis of
these datasets is a useful resource in guiding insightful selection of datasets
for future research. In addition, the issues with current algorithm evaluation
vis-\'{a}-vis limitations of the available datasets and evaluation protocols
are also highlighted; resulting in a number of recommendations for collection
of new datasets and use of evaluation protocols
Boosted Random ferns for object detection
© 20xx IEEE. Personal use of this material is permitted. Permission from IEEE must be obtained for all other uses, in any current or future media, including reprinting/republishing this material for advertising or promotional purposes, creating new collective works, for resale or redistribution to servers or lists, or reuse of any copyrighted component of this work in other works.In this paper we introduce the Boosted Random Ferns (BRFs) to rapidly build discriminative classifiers for learning and detecting object categories. At the core of our approach we use standard random ferns, but we introduce four main innovations that let us bring ferns from an instance to a category level, and still retain efficiency. First, we define binary features on the histogram of oriented gradients-domain (as opposed to intensity-), allowing for a better representation of intra-class variability. Second, both the positions where ferns are evaluated within the sliding window, and the location of the binary features for each fern are not chosen completely at random, but instead we use a boosting strategy to pick the most discriminative combination of them. This is further enhanced by our third contribution, that is to adapt the boosting strategy to enable sharing of binary features among different ferns, yielding high recognition rates at a low computational cost. And finally, we show that training can be performed online, for sequentially arriving images. Overall, the resulting classifier can be very efficiently trained, densely evaluated for all image locations in about 0.1 seconds, and provides detection rates similar to competing approaches that require expensive and significantly slower processing times. We demonstrate the effectiveness of our approach by thorough experimentation in publicly available datasets in which we compare against state-of-the-art, and for tasks of both 2D detection and 3D multi-view estimation.Peer ReviewedPostprint (author's final draft
RotationNet: Joint Object Categorization and Pose Estimation Using Multiviews from Unsupervised Viewpoints
We propose a Convolutional Neural Network (CNN)-based model "RotationNet,"
which takes multi-view images of an object as input and jointly estimates its
pose and object category. Unlike previous approaches that use known viewpoint
labels for training, our method treats the viewpoint labels as latent
variables, which are learned in an unsupervised manner during the training
using an unaligned object dataset. RotationNet is designed to use only a
partial set of multi-view images for inference, and this property makes it
useful in practical scenarios where only partial views are available. Moreover,
our pose alignment strategy enables one to obtain view-specific feature
representations shared across classes, which is important to maintain high
accuracy in both object categorization and pose estimation. Effectiveness of
RotationNet is demonstrated by its superior performance to the state-of-the-art
methods of 3D object classification on 10- and 40-class ModelNet datasets. We
also show that RotationNet, even trained without known poses, achieves the
state-of-the-art performance on an object pose estimation dataset. The code is
available on https://github.com/kanezaki/rotationnetComment: 24 pages, 23 figures. Accepted to CVPR 201
- …