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+FAME:

Face Association through Model Evolution

Pinar Duygulu (CMU, Hacettepe University)Eren Golge (Bilkent University)

+Yale dataset:10 subjects, 9 poses, 64 illuminations

Labelled Faces in the wild13323 Faces of 5749 celebritiesPubFig dataset60,000 images of 200 people

Social Face Classification 4.4 million labeled faces from4,030 people

+Labeling for how many?

+Search web for faces of a query name

+Use this set to learn models

+Variations and sub-categories

+Irrelevant people

+Find category related images in the set of weakly labeled images

+Our previous work: Densest component Most similar set of faces as a subgraph

Assumption:

The most similar subset of faces among the faces associated with a name will be the correct faces

Drawback:

Finds a single subset

Ozkan, D., Duygulu, P., ”Interesting Faces: A Graph Based Approach for Finding People in News”, Pattern Recognition, 2010Ozkan, D., Duygulu, P., ”A Graph Based Approach for Naming Faces in News Photos”, CVPR, 2006Ozkan, D., Duygulu, P., ”Finding People Frequently Appearing in News”, CIVR, 2006

+Our previous work: Concept Maps Grouping and outlier removal

Golge, E., Duygulu, P., “Concept Maps: Mining Noisy Web Data for Concept Learning ”, accepted to ECCV 2014

+Our previous work: Concept Maps Grouping and outlier removal

Assumption:

Faces of a single person can have sub-categories

Outliers are different than the queried person

Drawback:

Eliminates strange looks not in groups as well

+

FAME Face Association through Model Evolution

Capture discriminative and representative category images through iterative data cleansing

Separate category instances versus random images.

Agnostic data refining method against Irrelevancy.

Evade Sub-Grouping using very high dimensional representations.

+Overview of FAME

First discern category candidates (CC) from random set (RS). Define category references(CR) inside CC . Second discern CR from CC. Define spurious instances (SI) against CR and eliminate. Re-Iterate

+Step 1

Discerning category from random set Learn a linear model M1 betweencategory

candidates CC and random set RS. Take the most confidently classified

instances as the category references CR.

+Step 2

Discerning category references from others Another model M2 between category references CR and other category candidates.

+Step 3

Define spurious instances SI against category references CR.

Eliminate SI.

+FAME

+Eliminations by iteration

+Eliminations by iteration

+High Dimensional Representation

High dimensions help a category linearly separable from others despite of category modularity.

+Feature learning

Coates, Adam, Andrew Y. Ng, and Honglak Lee. "An analysis of single-layer networks in unsupervised feature learning." International Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Statistics. 2011.

+

Raw pixel LBP encoded outliers

+Implementation details

FAME Data refining : L1 Logistic Regression with Gauss-Seidel algorithm

[1] Final Classifier: L1 Linear SVM with Grafting[2]. At each iteration 5 images are eliminated.

Feature Learning Augment train data with horizontally flipped images. Re-size each gray-level image 60px height. Contrast Normalization to random patches. ZCA whitening with Ɛ=0.5. Receptive field (patch) size 6x6 pixels 1 pixel stride with k=2400 words. Final feature vector has 5x2400 dimensions.

[1] Shirish Krishnaj Shevade and S Sathiya Keerthi. A simple and efficient algorithm for gene selection using sparse logistic regression. Bioinformatics,19(17):2246–2253, 2003.[2] Simon Perkins, Kevin Lacker, and JFAMEs Theiler. Grafting: Fast, incremental feature selection by gradient descent in function space. The Journal of Machine Learning Research, 3:1333–1356, 2003.

+Datasets

PubFig83 Subset of PubFig with 83 celebrities at least 100 images for each.

N. Pinto, Z. Stone, T. Zickler, and D. Cox, “Scaling up biologically-inspired computer vision: A case study in unconstrained face recognition on facebook,” in Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition Workshops (CVPRW), 2011.

+Datasets

FAN-Large EASY subset: faces larger than 60x70 px, 138

categories. ALL: no constraint, 365 categories.

M. Ozcan, J. Luo, V. Ferrari, and B. Caputo, “A large-scale database of images and captions for automatic face naming.,” in BMVC, pp. 1–11, 2011.

+ Results on PubFig83

N. Pinto, Z. Stone, T. Zickler, and D. Cox, “Scaling up biologically-inspired computer vision: A case study in unconstrained face recognition on facebook,” in Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition Workshops (CVPRW), 2011 IEEE Computer Society Conference on, pp. 35–42, IEEE, 2011

B. C. Becker and E. G. Ortiz, “Evaluating open-universe face identification on the web,” in Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition Workshops (CVPRW), 2013 IEEE Conference on, pp. 904–911, IEEE, 2013.

No data refining, only our classification pipeline.Models are trained on the training set of the given dataset~5% improvement on State of Art

+Evaluations

+False versus true outlier elimination

+Cross validation accuracies

+Number of eliminations versus accuracy

+Models learned from weakly labeled set

Baseline: all images collected for the query are used AME-M1 : Only M1 classifier which removes against

global negatives AME-SVM : with SVM as the final classifier AME-LR : the proposed method

S. Singh, A. Gupta, and A. A. Efros, “Unsupervised discovery of mid-level discriminative patches,” in European Conference Computer Vision (ECCV), 2012.

+Summary

A method to build training sets from weakly-labeled images

Iterative pruning removes the outliers which are the least confident instances

High dimensional feature representation handles the variations

+

TUBITAK 112E174

CHIST-ERA MUCKE

US Department of Defense, U. S. Army Research Office (W911NF-13-1-0277)

National Science Foundation Grant No. IIS-1251187

Thanks

+Use annotated control set as a start point.

Fergus et. al. [1], OPTIMOL, Li and Fei-Fei [2] We use fully autonomous framework.

Use Textual Captions Berg and Forsyth [3] We use only visual content

Discriminative image cues Efros et al. [4] “Discriminative Patches”, Q. Li et al.[5]

We use single computer with faster and better results.

[1] Fergus, R., Fei-Fei, L., Perona, P., Zisserman, A.: Learning object categories from google’s image search. In: Computer Vision, 2005. ICCV 2005[2] Berg, T.L., Berg, A.C., Edwards, J., Maire, M., White, R., Teh, Y.W., Learned-Miller, E.G., Forsyth, D.A.: NFAMEs and faces in the news. In: IEEE Conference on Computer VisionPattern Recognition (CVPR). Volume 2. (2004) 848–854[3] Li, L.J., Fei-Fei, L.: Optimol: automatic online picture collection via incremental model learning. International journal of computer vision 88(2) (2010) 147–168[4] Li, Q., Wu, J., & Tu, Z. Harvesting Mid-level Visual Concepts from Large-scale Internet Images.

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