Learning Discriminative Chamfer Regularization
نویسندگان
چکیده
Chamfer matching is an effective and widely used technique for detecting objects or parts thereof by their shape. However, a serious limitation is its susceptibility to background clutter. The primary reason for this is that the presence of individual model points in a query image is measured independently. A match with the object model is then represented by the sum of all the individual model point distance transformations. Consequently, i) all object pixels are treated as being independent and equally relevant, and ii) the model contour (the foreground) is prone to accidental matches with background clutter. As demonstrated by Attneave [1], and various experiments on illusionary contours, object boundary pixels are not all equally important due to their statistical interdependence. Moreover, in dense background clutter the points on the model have a high likelihood to find good spurious matches [1, 3]. However, any arbitrary model would match to such a cluttered region, which consequently gives rise to matches with high accidentalness. Chamfer matching only matches the template contour and thus fails to discount the matching score by the accidentalness, i.e., the likelihood that this is a spurious match. We take account of the fact that boundary pixels are not all equally important by applying a discriminative approach to chamfer distance computation, thereby increasing its robustness. Let T = {ti} and Q = {q j} be the sets of template and query edge map respectively. Let φ(ti) denote the edge orientation of the edge point ti. For a given location x of the template in the query image, directional chamfer matching [2] finds the best q j ∈ Q for each ti ∈ T , thus resulting in a matching cost p (T,Q) i (x). p i (x) = min q j∈Q |(ti +x)−q j|+λ |φ(ti +x)−φ(q j)| (1) Adjacent template pixels are statistically dependent and, thus, we do average (1) over the direct neighbors of pixel i. The resulting p̄i are then used to learn the importance of contour pixels. While learning the weights for individual pixels improves the robustness of template matching, chamfer matching is still prone to accidental responses in spurious background clutter. To estimate the accidentalness of a match, a small dictionary of simple background contours Tbg is utilized. Rather than placing background contours at a fixed single location, i.e., at the center of the model contour as in [3], background elements are trained to focus at locations where, relative to the foreground, typically accidental matches occur. Let d DCM (x) denote the directional chamfer distance between Q and T with a relative displacement x. To measure where clutter typically interferes with the model contour we compute dbg ) DCM between each background contour Tbg and the object template T . We consider placements of the background contour with better (lower) chamfer matching score to be more important since they occur on or close to the model contour. In order to weight these matching locations higher we create a mask M(Tbg,T )(x)
منابع مشابه
Max-Margin Regularization for Reducing Accidentalness in Chamfer Matching
Standard chamfer matching techniques and their state-ofthe-art extensions are utilizing object contours which only measure the mere sum of location and orientation differences of contour pixels. In our approach we are increasing the specificity of the model contour by learning the relative importance of all model points instead of treating them as independent. However, chamfer matching is still...
متن کاملDiscriminatively regularized least-squares classification
Over the past decades, regularization theory is widely applied in various areas of machine learning to derive a large family of novel algorithms. Traditionally, regularization focuses on smoothing only, and does not fully utilize the underlying discriminative knowledge which is vital for classification. In this paper, we propose a novel regularization algorithm in the least-squares sense, calle...
متن کاملMulti-Task Learning for Improved Discriminative Training in SMT
Multi-task learning has been shown to be effective in various applications, including discriminative SMT. We present an experimental evaluation of the question whether multi-task learning depends on a “natural” division of data into tasks that balance shared and individual knowledge, or whether its inherent regularization makes multi-task learning a broadly applicable remedy against overfitting...
متن کاملSegmenting Glioma in Multi-Modal Images using a Generative-Discriminative Model for Brain Lesion Segmentation
In this paper, we evaluate a generative-discriminative approach for multi-modal tumor segmentation that builds – in its generative part – on a generative statistical model for tumor appearance in multi-dimensional images [1] by using a “latent” tumor class [2, 3], and – in its discriminative part – on a machine learning approach based on a random forest using long-range features that is capable...
متن کاملJoint Feature Selection in Distributed Stochastic Learning for Large-Scale Discriminative Training in SMT
With a few exceptions, discriminative training in statistical machine translation (SMT) has been content with tuning weights for large feature sets on small development data. Evidence from machine learning indicates that increasing the training sample size results in better prediction. The goal of this paper is to show that this common wisdom can also be brought to bear upon SMT. We deploy loca...
متن کاملذخیره در منابع من
با ذخیره ی این منبع در منابع من، دسترسی به آن را برای استفاده های بعدی آسان تر کنید
عنوان ژورنال:
دوره شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2012