5,748 research outputs found
Learning Spatial-Aware Regressions for Visual Tracking
In this paper, we analyze the spatial information of deep features, and
propose two complementary regressions for robust visual tracking. First, we
propose a kernelized ridge regression model wherein the kernel value is defined
as the weighted sum of similarity scores of all pairs of patches between two
samples. We show that this model can be formulated as a neural network and thus
can be efficiently solved. Second, we propose a fully convolutional neural
network with spatially regularized kernels, through which the filter kernel
corresponding to each output channel is forced to focus on a specific region of
the target. Distance transform pooling is further exploited to determine the
effectiveness of each output channel of the convolution layer. The outputs from
the kernelized ridge regression model and the fully convolutional neural
network are combined to obtain the ultimate response. Experimental results on
two benchmark datasets validate the effectiveness of the proposed method.Comment: To appear in CVPR201
Land cover mapping at very high resolution with rotation equivariant CNNs: towards small yet accurate models
In remote sensing images, the absolute orientation of objects is arbitrary.
Depending on an object's orientation and on a sensor's flight path, objects of
the same semantic class can be observed in different orientations in the same
image. Equivariance to rotation, in this context understood as responding with
a rotated semantic label map when subject to a rotation of the input image, is
therefore a very desirable feature, in particular for high capacity models,
such as Convolutional Neural Networks (CNNs). If rotation equivariance is
encoded in the network, the model is confronted with a simpler task and does
not need to learn specific (and redundant) weights to address rotated versions
of the same object class. In this work we propose a CNN architecture called
Rotation Equivariant Vector Field Network (RotEqNet) to encode rotation
equivariance in the network itself. By using rotating convolutions as building
blocks and passing only the the values corresponding to the maximally
activating orientation throughout the network in the form of orientation
encoding vector fields, RotEqNet treats rotated versions of the same object
with the same filter bank and therefore achieves state-of-the-art performances
even when using very small architectures trained from scratch. We test RotEqNet
in two challenging sub-decimeter resolution semantic labeling problems, and
show that we can perform better than a standard CNN while requiring one order
of magnitude less parameters
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