Many novel applications in the field of object recognition and pose estimation have been built relying on local invariant features extracted from selected key points of the images. Such keypoints usually lie on high-contrast regions of the image, such as object edges. However, the visual saliency of the those regions is not considered by state-of-the art detection algorithms that assume the user is interested in the whole image. Moreover, the most common approaches discard all the color in- formation by limiting their analysis to monochromatic versions of the input images. In this paper we present the experimental results of the application of a biologically-inspired visual attention model to the problem of local feature selection in landmark and object recognition tasks. The model uses color-information and restricts the matching between the images to the areas showing a strong saliency. The results show that the approach improves the accuracy of the classifier in the object recognition task and preserves a good accuracy in the landmark recognition task when a high percentage of visual features is filtered out. In both cases the reduction of the average numbers of local features result in high efficiency gains during the search phase that typically requires costly searches of candidate images for matches and geometric consistency checks.
Experimenting a visual attention model in the context of CBIR systems
Cardillo FA;Amato G;Falchi F
2013
Abstract
Many novel applications in the field of object recognition and pose estimation have been built relying on local invariant features extracted from selected key points of the images. Such keypoints usually lie on high-contrast regions of the image, such as object edges. However, the visual saliency of the those regions is not considered by state-of-the art detection algorithms that assume the user is interested in the whole image. Moreover, the most common approaches discard all the color in- formation by limiting their analysis to monochromatic versions of the input images. In this paper we present the experimental results of the application of a biologically-inspired visual attention model to the problem of local feature selection in landmark and object recognition tasks. The model uses color-information and restricts the matching between the images to the areas showing a strong saliency. The results show that the approach improves the accuracy of the classifier in the object recognition task and preserves a good accuracy in the landmark recognition task when a high percentage of visual features is filtered out. In both cases the reduction of the average numbers of local features result in high efficiency gains during the search phase that typically requires costly searches of candidate images for matches and geometric consistency checks.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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