12,934 research outputs found
A novel object tracking algorithm based on compressed sensing and entropy of information
Acknowledgments This research is supported by (1) the Ph.D. Programs Foundation of Ministry of Education of China under Grant no. 20120061110045, (2) the Science and Technology Development Projects of Jilin Province of China under Grant no. 20150204007G X, and (3) the Key Laboratory for Symbol Computation and Knowledge Engineering of the National Education Ministry of China.Peer reviewedPublisher PD
Real-time detection and tracking of multiple objects with partial decoding in H.264/AVC bitstream domain
In this paper, we show that we can apply probabilistic spatiotemporal
macroblock filtering (PSMF) and partial decoding processes to effectively
detect and track multiple objects in real time in H.264|AVC bitstreams with
stationary background. Our contribution is that our method cannot only show
fast processing time but also handle multiple moving objects that are
articulated, changing in size or internally have monotonous color, even though
they contain a chaotic set of non-homogeneous motion vectors inside. In
addition, our partial decoding process for H.264|AVC bitstreams enables to
improve the accuracy of object trajectories and overcome long occlusion by
using extracted color information.Comment: SPIE Real-Time Image and Video Processing Conference 200
Discriminative Scale Space Tracking
Accurate scale estimation of a target is a challenging research problem in
visual object tracking. Most state-of-the-art methods employ an exhaustive
scale search to estimate the target size. The exhaustive search strategy is
computationally expensive and struggles when encountered with large scale
variations. This paper investigates the problem of accurate and robust scale
estimation in a tracking-by-detection framework. We propose a novel scale
adaptive tracking approach by learning separate discriminative correlation
filters for translation and scale estimation. The explicit scale filter is
learned online using the target appearance sampled at a set of different
scales. Contrary to standard approaches, our method directly learns the
appearance change induced by variations in the target scale. Additionally, we
investigate strategies to reduce the computational cost of our approach.
Extensive experiments are performed on the OTB and the VOT2014 datasets.
Compared to the standard exhaustive scale search, our approach achieves a gain
of 2.5% in average overlap precision on the OTB dataset. Additionally, our
method is computationally efficient, operating at a 50% higher frame rate
compared to the exhaustive scale search. Our method obtains the top rank in
performance by outperforming 19 state-of-the-art trackers on OTB and 37
state-of-the-art trackers on VOT2014.Comment: To appear in TPAMI. This is the journal extension of the
VOT2014-winning DSST tracking metho
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