6,394 research outputs found
Latent Fisher Discriminant Analysis
Linear Discriminant Analysis (LDA) is a well-known method for dimensionality
reduction and classification. Previous studies have also extended the
binary-class case into multi-classes. However, many applications, such as
object detection and keyframe extraction cannot provide consistent
instance-label pairs, while LDA requires labels on instance level for training.
Thus it cannot be directly applied for semi-supervised classification problem.
In this paper, we overcome this limitation and propose a latent variable Fisher
discriminant analysis model. We relax the instance-level labeling into
bag-level, is a kind of semi-supervised (video-level labels of event type are
required for semantic frame extraction) and incorporates a data-driven prior
over the latent variables. Hence, our method combines the latent variable
inference and dimension reduction in an unified bayesian framework. We test our
method on MUSK and Corel data sets and yield competitive results compared to
the baseline approach. We also demonstrate its capacity on the challenging
TRECVID MED11 dataset for semantic keyframe extraction and conduct a
human-factors ranking-based experimental evaluation, which clearly demonstrates
our proposed method consistently extracts more semantically meaningful
keyframes than challenging baselines.Comment: 12 page
Kernel discriminant analysis and clustering with parsimonious Gaussian process models
This work presents a family of parsimonious Gaussian process models which
allow to build, from a finite sample, a model-based classifier in an infinite
dimensional space. The proposed parsimonious models are obtained by
constraining the eigen-decomposition of the Gaussian processes modeling each
class. This allows in particular to use non-linear mapping functions which
project the observations into infinite dimensional spaces. It is also
demonstrated that the building of the classifier can be directly done from the
observation space through a kernel function. The proposed classification method
is thus able to classify data of various types such as categorical data,
functional data or networks. Furthermore, it is possible to classify mixed data
by combining different kernels. The methodology is as well extended to the
unsupervised classification case. Experimental results on various data sets
demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed method
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