4,578 research outputs found
Deep Learning Face Representation by Joint Identification-Verification
The key challenge of face recognition is to develop effective feature
representations for reducing intra-personal variations while enlarging
inter-personal differences. In this paper, we show that it can be well solved
with deep learning and using both face identification and verification signals
as supervision. The Deep IDentification-verification features (DeepID2) are
learned with carefully designed deep convolutional networks. The face
identification task increases the inter-personal variations by drawing DeepID2
extracted from different identities apart, while the face verification task
reduces the intra-personal variations by pulling DeepID2 extracted from the
same identity together, both of which are essential to face recognition. The
learned DeepID2 features can be well generalized to new identities unseen in
the training data. On the challenging LFW dataset, 99.15% face verification
accuracy is achieved. Compared with the best deep learning result on LFW, the
error rate has been significantly reduced by 67%
A Unified Framework for Compositional Fitting of Active Appearance Models
Active Appearance Models (AAMs) are one of the most popular and
well-established techniques for modeling deformable objects in computer vision.
In this paper, we study the problem of fitting AAMs using Compositional
Gradient Descent (CGD) algorithms. We present a unified and complete view of
these algorithms and classify them with respect to three main characteristics:
i) cost function; ii) type of composition; and iii) optimization method.
Furthermore, we extend the previous view by: a) proposing a novel Bayesian cost
function that can be interpreted as a general probabilistic formulation of the
well-known project-out loss; b) introducing two new types of composition,
asymmetric and bidirectional, that combine the gradients of both image and
appearance model to derive better conver- gent and more robust CGD algorithms;
and c) providing new valuable insights into existent CGD algorithms by
reinterpreting them as direct applications of the Schur complement and the
Wiberg method. Finally, in order to encourage open research and facilitate
future comparisons with our work, we make the implementa- tion of the
algorithms studied in this paper publicly available as part of the Menpo
Project.Comment: 39 page
Joint & Progressive Learning from High-Dimensional Data for Multi-Label Classification
Despite the fact that nonlinear subspace learning techniques (e.g. manifold
learning) have successfully applied to data representation, there is still room
for improvement in explainability (explicit mapping), generalization
(out-of-samples), and cost-effectiveness (linearization). To this end, a novel
linearized subspace learning technique is developed in a joint and progressive
way, called \textbf{j}oint and \textbf{p}rogressive \textbf{l}earning
str\textbf{a}teg\textbf{y} (J-Play), with its application to multi-label
classification. The J-Play learns high-level and semantically meaningful
feature representation from high-dimensional data by 1) jointly performing
multiple subspace learning and classification to find a latent subspace where
samples are expected to be better classified; 2) progressively learning
multi-coupled projections to linearly approach the optimal mapping bridging the
original space with the most discriminative subspace; 3) locally embedding
manifold structure in each learnable latent subspace. Extensive experiments are
performed to demonstrate the superiority and effectiveness of the proposed
method in comparison with previous state-of-the-art methods.Comment: accepted in ECCV 201
- …