5 research outputs found

    Kernel and Classifier Level Fusion for Image Classification.

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    Automatic understanding of visual information is one of the main requirements for a complete artificial intelligence system and an essential component of autonomous robots. State-of-the-art image recognition approaches are based on different local descriptors, each capturing some properties of the image such as intensity, color and texture. Each set of local descriptors is represented by a codebook and gives rise to a separate feature channel. For classification the feature channels are combined by using multiple kernel learning (MKL), early fusion or classifier level fusion approaches. Due to the importance of complementary information in fusion techniques, there is an increasing demand for diverse feature channels. The first part of the thesis focuses on the ways to encode information from images that is complementary to the state-of-the-art local features. To address this issue we present a novel image representation which can encode the structure of an object and propose three descriptors based on this representation. In the state-of-the-art recognition system the kernels are often computed independently of each other and thus may be highly informative yet redundant. Proper selection and fusion of the kernels is, therefore, crucial to maximize the performance and to address the efficiency issues in visual recognition applications. We address this issue in second part of the thesis where, we propose novel techniques to fuse feature channels for object and pattern recognition. We present an extensive evaluation of the fusion methods on four object recognition datasets and achieve state-of-the-art results on all of them. We also present results on four bioinformatics datasets to demonstrate that the proposed fusion methods work for a variety of pattern recognition problems, provided that we have multiple feature channels

    Kernel and Classifier Level Fusion for Image Classification.

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    Automatic understanding of visual information is one of the main requirements for a complete artificial intelligence system and an essential component of autonomous robots. State-of-the-art image recognition approaches are based on different local descriptors, each capturing some properties of the image such as intensity, color and texture. Each set of local descriptors is represented by a codebook and gives rise to a separate feature channel. For classification the feature channels are combined by using multiple kernel learning (MKL), early fusion or classifier level fusion approaches. Due to the importance of complementary information in fusion techniques, there is an increasing demand for diverse feature channels. The first part of the thesis focuses on the ways to encode information from images that is complementary to the state-of-the-art local features. To address this issue we present a novel image representation which can encode the structure of an object and propose three descriptors based on this representation. In the state-of-the-art recognition system the kernels are often computed independently of each other and thus may be highly informative yet redundant. Proper selection and fusion of the kernels is, therefore, crucial to maximize the performance and to address the efficiency issues in visual recognition applications. We address this issue in second part of the thesis where, we propose novel techniques to fuse feature channels for object and pattern recognition. We present an extensive evaluation of the fusion methods on four object recognition datasets and achieve state-of-the-art results on all of them. We also present results on four bioinformatics datasets to demonstrate that the proposed fusion methods work for a variety of pattern recognition problems, provided that we have multiple feature channels

    Sensitivity of Age Estimation Systems to Demographic Factors and Image Quality: Achievements and Challenges

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    Recently, impressively growing efforts have been devoted to the challenging task of facial age estimation. The improvements in performance achieved by new algorithms are measured on several benchmarking test databases with different characteristics to check on consistency. While thisis a valuable methodology in itself, a significant issue in the most age estimation related studies is that the reported results lack an assessment of intrinsic system uncertainty. Hence, a more in-depth view is required to examine the robustness of age estimation systems in different scenarios.The purpose of this paper is to conduct an evaluative and comparative analysis of different age estimation systems to identify trends, as well as the points of their critical vulnerability. In particular, we investigate four age estimation systems, including the online Microsoft service, two best state-of-the-art approaches advocated in the literature, as well as a novel age estimation algorithm. We analyse the effect of different internal and external factors, including gender, ethnicity, expression, makeup, illumination conditions, quality and resolution of the face images, on the performance of these age estimation systems. The goal of this sensitivity analysis is to provide the biometrics community with the insight and understanding of the criticalsubject-, camera- and environmental-based factors that affect the overall performance of the age estimation system under study

    A Novel Ground Metric for Optimal Transport based Chronological Age Estimation

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    —Label distribution Learning (LDL) is the state-of-the-art approach to deal with a number of real-world applications , such as chronological age estimation from a face image, where there is an inherent similarity among adjacent age labels. LDL takes into account the semantic similarity by assigning a label distribution to each instance. The well-known Kullback–Leibler (KL) divergence is the widely used loss function for the LDL framework. However, the KL divergence does not fully and effectively capture the semantic similarity among age labels, thus leading to the sub-optimal performance. In this paper, we propose a novel loss function based on optimal transport theory for the LDL-based age estimation. A ground metric function plays an important role in the optimal transport formulation. It should be carefully determined based on underlying geometric structure of the label space of the application in-hand. The label space in the age estimation problem has a specific geometric structure, i.e. closer ages have more inherent semantic relationship. Inspired by this, we devise a novel ground metric function, which enables the loss function to increase the influence of highly correlated ages; thus exploiting the semantic similarity among ages more effectively than the existing loss functions. We then use the proposed loss function, namely γ–Wasserstein loss, for training a deep neural network (DNN). This leads to a notoriously computationally expensive and non-convex optimisa-tion problem. Following the standard methodology, we formulate the optimisation function as a convex problem and then use an efficient iterative algorithm to update the parameters of the DNN. Extensive experiments in age estimation on different benchmark datasets validate the effectiveness of the proposed method, which consistently outperforms state-of-the-art approaches

    NPT-Loss: Demystifying face recognition losses with Nearest Proxies Triplet

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    Face recognition (FR) using deep convolutional neural networks (DCNNs) has seen remarkable success in recent years. One key ingredient of DCNN-based FR is the design of a loss function that ensures discrimination between various identities. The state-of-the-art (SOTA) solutions utilise normalised Softmax loss with additive and/or multiplicative margins. Despite being popular and effective, these losses are justified only intuitively with little theoretical explanations. In this work, we show that under the LogSumExp (LSE) approximation, the SOTA Softmax losses become equivalent to a proxy-triplet loss that focuses on nearest-neighbour negative proxies only. This motivates us to propose a variant of the proxy-triplet loss, entitled Nearest Proxies Triplet (NPT) loss, which unlike SOTA solutions, converges for a wider range of hyper-parameters and offers flexibility in proxy selection and thus outperforms SOTA techniques. We generalise many SOTA losses into a single framework and give theoretical justifications for the assertion that minimising the proposed loss ensures a minimum separability between all identities. We also show that the proposed loss has an implicit mechanism of hard-sample mining. We conduct extensive experiments using various DCNN architectures on a number of FR benchmarks to demonstrate the efficacy of the proposed scheme over SOTA methods
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