113 research outputs found
Compressively Sensed Image Recognition
Compressive Sensing (CS) theory asserts that sparse signal reconstruction is
possible from a small number of linear measurements. Although CS enables
low-cost linear sampling, it requires non-linear and costly reconstruction.
Recent literature works show that compressive image classification is possible
in CS domain without reconstruction of the signal. In this work, we introduce a
DCT base method that extracts binary discriminative features directly from CS
measurements. These CS measurements can be obtained by using (i) a random or a
pseudo-random measurement matrix, or (ii) a measurement matrix whose elements
are learned from the training data to optimize the given classification task.
We further introduce feature fusion by concatenating Bag of Words (BoW)
representation of our binary features with one of the two state-of-the-art
CNN-based feature vectors. We show that our fused feature outperforms the
state-of-the-art in both cases.Comment: 6 pages, submitted/accepted, EUVIP 201
Compressive Visual Question Answering
abstract: Compressive sensing theory allows to sense and reconstruct signals/images with lower sampling rate than Nyquist rate. Applications in resource constrained environment stand to benefit from this theory, opening up many possibilities for new applications at the same time. The traditional inference pipeline for computer vision sequence reconstructing the image from compressive measurements. However,the reconstruction process is a computationally expensive step that also provides poor results at high compression rate. There have been several successful attempts to perform inference tasks directly on compressive measurements such as activity recognition. In this thesis, I am interested to tackle a more challenging vision problem - Visual question answering (VQA) without reconstructing the compressive images. I investigate the feasibility of this problem with a series of experiments, and I evaluate proposed methods on a VQA dataset and discuss promising results and direction for future work.Dissertation/ThesisMasters Thesis Computer Engineering 201
Computer Vision from Spatial-Multiplexing Cameras at Low Measurement Rates
abstract: In UAVs and parking lots, it is typical to first collect an enormous number of pixels using conventional imagers. This is followed by employment of expensive methods to compress by throwing away redundant data. Subsequently, the compressed data is transmitted to a ground station. The past decade has seen the emergence of novel imagers called spatial-multiplexing cameras, which offer compression at the sensing level itself by providing an arbitrary linear measurements of the scene instead of pixel-based sampling. In this dissertation, I discuss various approaches for effective information extraction from spatial-multiplexing measurements and present the trade-offs between reliability of the performance and computational/storage load of the system. In the first part, I present a reconstruction-free approach to high-level inference in computer vision, wherein I consider the specific case of activity analysis, and show that using correlation filters, one can perform effective action recognition and localization directly from a class of spatial-multiplexing cameras, called compressive cameras, even at very low measurement rates of 1\%. In the second part, I outline a deep learning based non-iterative and real-time algorithm to reconstruct images from compressively sensed (CS) measurements, which can outperform the traditional iterative CS reconstruction algorithms in terms of reconstruction quality and time complexity, especially at low measurement rates. To overcome the limitations of compressive cameras, which are operated with random measurements and not particularly tuned to any task, in the third part of the dissertation, I propose a method to design spatial-multiplexing measurements, which are tuned to facilitate the easy extraction of features that are useful in computer vision tasks like object tracking. The work presented in the dissertation provides sufficient evidence to high-level inference in computer vision at extremely low measurement rates, and hence allows us to think about the possibility of revamping the current day computer systems.Dissertation/ThesisDoctoral Dissertation Electrical Engineering 201
Properties of spatial coupling in compressed sensing
In this paper we address a series of open questions about the construction of
spatially coupled measurement matrices in compressed sensing. For hardware
implementations one is forced to depart from the limiting regime of parameters
in which the proofs of the so-called threshold saturation work. We investigate
quantitatively the behavior under finite coupling range, the dependence on the
shape of the coupling interaction, and optimization of the so-called seed to
minimize distance from optimality. Our analysis explains some of the properties
observed empirically in previous works and provides new insight on spatially
coupled compressed sensing.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figure
- …