2,066 research outputs found
Object Discovery via Cohesion Measurement
Color and intensity are two important components in an image. Usually, groups
of image pixels, which are similar in color or intensity, are an informative
representation for an object. They are therefore particularly suitable for
computer vision tasks, such as saliency detection and object proposal
generation. However, image pixels, which share a similar real-world color, may
be quite different since colors are often distorted by intensity. In this
paper, we reinvestigate the affinity matrices originally used in image
segmentation methods based on spectral clustering. A new affinity matrix, which
is robust to color distortions, is formulated for object discovery. Moreover, a
Cohesion Measurement (CM) for object regions is also derived based on the
formulated affinity matrix. Based on the new Cohesion Measurement, a novel
object discovery method is proposed to discover objects latent in an image by
utilizing the eigenvectors of the affinity matrix. Then we apply the proposed
method to both saliency detection and object proposal generation. Experimental
results on several evaluation benchmarks demonstrate that the proposed CM based
method has achieved promising performance for these two tasks.Comment: 14 pages, 14 figure
Backtracking Spatial Pyramid Pooling (SPP)-based Image Classifier for Weakly Supervised Top-down Salient Object Detection
Top-down saliency models produce a probability map that peaks at target
locations specified by a task/goal such as object detection. They are usually
trained in a fully supervised setting involving pixel-level annotations of
objects. We propose a weakly supervised top-down saliency framework using only
binary labels that indicate the presence/absence of an object in an image.
First, the probabilistic contribution of each image region to the confidence of
a CNN-based image classifier is computed through a backtracking strategy to
produce top-down saliency. From a set of saliency maps of an image produced by
fast bottom-up saliency approaches, we select the best saliency map suitable
for the top-down task. The selected bottom-up saliency map is combined with the
top-down saliency map. Features having high combined saliency are used to train
a linear SVM classifier to estimate feature saliency. This is integrated with
combined saliency and further refined through a multi-scale
superpixel-averaging of saliency map. We evaluate the performance of the
proposed weakly supervised topdown saliency and achieve comparable performance
with fully supervised approaches. Experiments are carried out on seven
challenging datasets and quantitative results are compared with 40 closely
related approaches across 4 different applications.Comment: 14 pages, 7 figure
Object Discovery From a Single Unlabeled Image by Mining Frequent Itemset With Multi-scale Features
TThe goal of our work is to discover dominant objects in a very general
setting where only a single unlabeled image is given. This is far more
challenge than typical co-localization or weakly-supervised localization tasks.
To tackle this problem, we propose a simple but effective pattern mining-based
method, called Object Location Mining (OLM), which exploits the advantages of
data mining and feature representation of pre-trained convolutional neural
networks (CNNs). Specifically, we first convert the feature maps from a
pre-trained CNN model into a set of transactions, and then discovers frequent
patterns from transaction database through pattern mining techniques. We
observe that those discovered patterns, i.e., co-occurrence highlighted
regions, typically hold appearance and spatial consistency. Motivated by this
observation, we can easily discover and localize possible objects by merging
relevant meaningful patterns. Extensive experiments on a variety of benchmarks
demonstrate that OLM achieves competitive localization performance compared
with the state-of-the-art methods. We also evaluate our approach compared with
unsupervised saliency detection methods and achieves competitive results on
seven benchmark datasets. Moreover, we conduct experiments on fine-grained
classification to show that our proposed method can locate the entire object
and parts accurately, which can benefit to improving the classification results
significantly
S4Net: Single Stage Salient-Instance Segmentation
We consider an interesting problem-salient instance segmentation in this
paper. Other than producing bounding boxes, our network also outputs
high-quality instance-level segments. Taking into account the
category-independent property of each target, we design a single stage salient
instance segmentation framework, with a novel segmentation branch. Our new
branch regards not only local context inside each detection window but also its
surrounding context, enabling us to distinguish the instances in the same scope
even with obstruction. Our network is end-to-end trainable and runs at a fast
speed (40 fps when processing an image with resolution 320x320). We evaluate
our approach on a publicly available benchmark and show that it outperforms
other alternative solutions. We also provide a thorough analysis of the design
choices to help readers better understand the functions of each part of our
network. The source code can be found at
\url{https://github.com/RuochenFan/S4Net}
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