An Invariant Feature Representation for shape Retrieval

Author(s):  
Han ShuiHua ◽  
Yang ShuangYuan
Author(s):  
Sandesh Ghimire ◽  
Satyananda Kashyap ◽  
Joy T. Wu ◽  
Alexandros Karargyris ◽  
Mehdi Moradi

2015 ◽  
Vol 2015 ◽  
pp. 1-9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nouman Qadeer ◽  
Dongting Hu ◽  
Xiabi Liu ◽  
Shahzad Anwar ◽  
Malik Saad Sultan

In computer vision, image retrieval remained a significant problem and recent resurgent of image retrieval also relies on other postprocessing methods to improve the accuracy instead of solely relying on good feature representation. Our method addressed the shape retrieval of binary images. This paper proposes a new integration scheme to best utilize feature representation along with contextual information. For feature representation we used articulation invariant representation; dynamic programming is then utilized for better shape matching followed by manifold learning based postprocessing modified mutualkNN graph to further improve the similarity score. We conducted extensive experiments on widely used MPEG-7 database of shape images by so-called bulls-eye score with and without normalization of modified mutualkNN graph which clearly indicates the importance of normalization. Finally, our method demonstrated better results compared to other methods. We also computed the computational time with another graph transduction method which clearly shows that our method is computationally very fast. Furthermore, to show consistency of postprocessing method, we also performed experiments on challenging ORL and YALE face datasets and improved baseline results.


Author(s):  
Kumbala Reddy ◽  
◽  
Gullipalli Naidu ◽  
Bulusu Vardhan ◽  
◽  
...  

Sensors ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 19 (17) ◽  
pp. 3703 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yang Tao ◽  
Chunyan Li ◽  
Zhifang Liang ◽  
Haocheng Yang ◽  
Juan Xu

Electronic nose (E-nose), a kind of instrument which combines with the gas sensor and the corresponding pattern recognition algorithm, is used to detect the type and concentration of gases. However, the sensor drift will occur in realistic application scenario of E-nose, which makes a variation of data distribution in feature space and causes a decrease in prediction accuracy. Therefore, studies on the drift compensation algorithms are receiving increasing attention in the field of the E-nose. In this paper, a novel method, namely Wasserstein Distance Learned Feature Representations (WDLFR), is put forward for drift compensation, which is based on the domain invariant feature representation learning. It regards a neural network as a domain discriminator to measure the empirical Wasserstein distance between the source domain (data without drift) and target domain (drift data). The WDLFR minimizes Wasserstein distance by optimizing the feature extractor in an adversarial manner. The Wasserstein distance for domain adaption has good gradient and generalization bound. Finally, the experiments are conducted on a real dataset of E-nose from the University of California, San Diego (UCSD). The experimental results demonstrate that the effectiveness of the proposed method outperforms all compared drift compensation methods, and the WDLFR succeeds in significantly reducing the sensor drift.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document