5,406 research outputs found
Unsupervised Joint Object Discovery and Segmentation in Internet Images
International audienceWe present a new unsupervised algorithm to discover and segment out common objects from large and diverse image collections. In contrast to previous co-segmentation methods, our algorithm performs well even in the presence of significant amounts of noise images (images not containing a common object), as typical for datasets collected from Internet search. The key insight to our algorithm is that common object patterns should be salient within each image, while being sparse with respect to smooth transformations across images. We propose to use dense correspondences between images to capture the sparsity and visual variability of the common object over the entire database, which enables us to ignore noise objects that may be salient within their own images but do not commonly occur in others. We performed extensive numerical evaluation on established co-segmentation datasets, as well as several new datasets generated using Internet search. Our approach is able to effectively segment out the common object for diverse object categories, while naturally identifying images where the common object is not present
Unsupervised Object Discovery and Localization in the Wild: Part-based Matching with Bottom-up Region Proposals
This paper addresses unsupervised discovery and localization of dominant
objects from a noisy image collection with multiple object classes. The setting
of this problem is fully unsupervised, without even image-level annotations or
any assumption of a single dominant class. This is far more general than
typical colocalization, cosegmentation, or weakly-supervised localization
tasks. We tackle the discovery and localization problem using a part-based
region matching approach: We use off-the-shelf region proposals to form a set
of candidate bounding boxes for objects and object parts. These regions are
efficiently matched across images using a probabilistic Hough transform that
evaluates the confidence for each candidate correspondence considering both
appearance and spatial consistency. Dominant objects are discovered and
localized by comparing the scores of candidate regions and selecting those that
stand out over other regions containing them. Extensive experimental
evaluations on standard benchmarks demonstrate that the proposed approach
significantly outperforms the current state of the art in colocalization, and
achieves robust object discovery in challenging mixed-class datasets.Comment: CVPR 201
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
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