1,305 research outputs found
Scalable Image Retrieval by Sparse Product Quantization
Fast Approximate Nearest Neighbor (ANN) search technique for high-dimensional
feature indexing and retrieval is the crux of large-scale image retrieval. A
recent promising technique is Product Quantization, which attempts to index
high-dimensional image features by decomposing the feature space into a
Cartesian product of low dimensional subspaces and quantizing each of them
separately. Despite the promising results reported, their quantization approach
follows the typical hard assignment of traditional quantization methods, which
may result in large quantization errors and thus inferior search performance.
Unlike the existing approaches, in this paper, we propose a novel approach
called Sparse Product Quantization (SPQ) to encoding the high-dimensional
feature vectors into sparse representation. We optimize the sparse
representations of the feature vectors by minimizing their quantization errors,
making the resulting representation is essentially close to the original data
in practice. Experiments show that the proposed SPQ technique is not only able
to compress data, but also an effective encoding technique. We obtain
state-of-the-art results for ANN search on four public image datasets and the
promising results of content-based image retrieval further validate the
efficacy of our proposed method.Comment: 12 page
Similarity Search Over Graphs Using Localized Spectral Analysis
This paper provides a new similarity detection algorithm. Given an input set
of multi-dimensional data points, where each data point is assumed to be
multi-dimensional, and an additional reference data point for similarity
finding, the algorithm uses kernel method that embeds the data points into a
low dimensional manifold. Unlike other kernel methods, which consider the
entire data for the embedding, our method selects a specific set of kernel
eigenvectors. The eigenvectors are chosen to separate between the data points
and the reference data point so that similar data points can be easily
identified as being distinct from most of the members in the dataset.Comment: Published in SampTA 201
Hashing for Similarity Search: A Survey
Similarity search (nearest neighbor search) is a problem of pursuing the data
items whose distances to a query item are the smallest from a large database.
Various methods have been developed to address this problem, and recently a lot
of efforts have been devoted to approximate search. In this paper, we present a
survey on one of the main solutions, hashing, which has been widely studied
since the pioneering work locality sensitive hashing. We divide the hashing
algorithms two main categories: locality sensitive hashing, which designs hash
functions without exploring the data distribution and learning to hash, which
learns hash functions according the data distribution, and review them from
various aspects, including hash function design and distance measure and search
scheme in the hash coding space
Optimized Cartesian -Means
Product quantization-based approaches are effective to encode
high-dimensional data points for approximate nearest neighbor search. The space
is decomposed into a Cartesian product of low-dimensional subspaces, each of
which generates a sub codebook. Data points are encoded as compact binary codes
using these sub codebooks, and the distance between two data points can be
approximated efficiently from their codes by the precomputed lookup tables.
Traditionally, to encode a subvector of a data point in a subspace, only one
sub codeword in the corresponding sub codebook is selected, which may impose
strict restrictions on the search accuracy. In this paper, we propose a novel
approach, named Optimized Cartesian -Means (OCKM), to better encode the data
points for more accurate approximate nearest neighbor search. In OCKM, multiple
sub codewords are used to encode the subvector of a data point in a subspace.
Each sub codeword stems from different sub codebooks in each subspace, which
are optimally generated with regards to the minimization of the distortion
errors. The high-dimensional data point is then encoded as the concatenation of
the indices of multiple sub codewords from all the subspaces. This can provide
more flexibility and lower distortion errors than traditional methods.
Experimental results on the standard real-life datasets demonstrate the
superiority over state-of-the-art approaches for approximate nearest neighbor
search.Comment: to appear in IEEE TKDE, accepted in Apr. 201
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