Feature Space Reduction for Face Recognition with Dual Linear Discriminant Analysis

Author(s):  
Krzysztof Kucharski ◽  
Władysław Skarbek ◽  
Mirosław Bober
2013 ◽  
Vol 2013 ◽  
pp. 1-9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wen-Sheng Chen ◽  
Chu Zhang ◽  
Shengyong Chen

Fisher linear discriminant analysis (FLDA) is a classic linear feature extraction and dimensionality reduction approach for face recognition. It is known that geometric distribution weight information of image data plays an important role in machine learning approaches. However, FLDA does not employ the geometric distribution weight information of facial images in the training stage. Hence, its recognition accuracy will be affected. In order to enhance the classification power of FLDA method, this paper utilizes radial basis function (RBF) with fractional order to model the geometric distribution weight information of the training samples and proposes a novel geometric distribution weight information based Fisher discriminant criterion. Subsequently, a geometric distribution weight information based LDA (GLDA) algorithm is developed and successfully applied to face recognition. Two publicly available face databases, namely, ORL and FERET databases, are selected for evaluation. Compared with some LDA-based algorithms, experimental results exhibit that our GLDA approach gives superior performance.


2017 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-9
Author(s):  
Fandiansyah Fandiansyah ◽  
Jayanti Yusmah Sari ◽  
Ika Putri Ningrum

Face recognition is one of the biometric system that mostly used for individual recognition in the absent machine or access control. This is because the face is the most visible part of human anatomy and serves as the first distinguishing factor of a human being. Feature extraction and classification are the key to face recognition, as they are to any pattern classification task. In this paper, we describe a face recognition method based on Linear Discriminant Analysis (LDA) and k-Nearest Neighbor classifier. LDA used for feature extraction, which directly extracts the proper features from image matrices with the objective of maximizing between-class variations and minimizing within-class variations. The features of a testing image will be compared to the features of database image using K-Nearest Neighbor classifier. The experiments in this paper are performed by using using 66 face images of 22 different people. The experimental result shows that the recognition accuracy is up to 98.33%. Index Terms—face recognition, k nearest neighbor, linear discriminant analysis.


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