27 research outputs found

    Fully-Convolutional Siamese Networks for Object Tracking

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    The problem of arbitrary object tracking has traditionally been tackled by learning a model of the object’s appearance exclusively online, using as sole training data the video itself. Despite the success of these methods, their online-only approach inherently limits the richness of the model they can learn. Recently, several attempts have been made to exploit the expressive power of deep convolutional networks. However, when the object to track is not known beforehand, it is necessary to perform Stochastic Gradient Descent online to adapt the weights of the network, severely compromising the speed of the system. In this paper we equip a basic tracking algorithm with a novel fully-convolutional Siamese network trained end-to-end on the ILSVRC15 dataset for object detection in video. Our tracker operates at frame-rates beyond real-time and, despite its extreme simplicity, achieves state-of-the-art performance in multiple benchmarks

    Bayesian Face Revisited: A Joint Formulation

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    Abstract. In this paper, we revisit the classical Bayesian face recognition method by Baback Moghaddam et al. and propose a new joint formulation. The classical Bayesian method models the appearance difference between two faces. We observe that this “difference ” formulation may reduce the separability between classes. Instead, we model two faces jointly with an appropriate prior on the face representation. Our joint formulation leads to an EM-like model learning at the training time and an efficient, closed-formed computation at the test time. Onextensiveexperimental evaluations, our method is superior to the classical Bayesian face and many other supervised approaches. Our method achieved 92.4% test accuracy on the challenging Labeled Face in Wild (LFW) dataset. Comparing with current best commercial system, we reduced the error rate by 10%.
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