Abstract :
Algorithms for discrete energy minimization are of fundamental importance in computer vision. In this paper, we focus on the recent technique proposed by Wainwright et al. (Nov. 2005)- tree-reweighted max-product message passing (TRW). It was inspired by the problem of maximizing a lower bound on the energy. However, the algorithm is not guaranteed to increase this bound - it may actually go down. In addition, TRW does not always converge. We develop a modification of this algorithm which we call sequential tree-reweighted message passing. Its main property is that the bound is guaranteed not to decrease. We also give a weak tree agreement condition which characterizes local maxima of the bound with respect to TRW algorithms. We prove that our algorithm has a limit point that achieves weak tree agreement. Finally, we show that, our algorithm requires half as much memory as traditional message passing approaches. Experimental results demonstrate that on certain synthetic and real problems, our algorithm outperforms both the ordinary belief propagation and tree-reweighted algorithm in (M. J. Wainwright, et al., Nov. 2005). In addition, on stereo problems with Potts interactions, we obtain a lower energy than graph cuts
Keywords :
computer vision; message passing; trees (mathematics); computer vision; convergent tree-reweighted message passing; discrete energy minimization; max-product message passing; Belief propagation; Computer vision; Image restoration; Labeling; Markov random fields; Message passing; Minimization methods; NP-hard problem; Stereo vision; Tree graphs; Energy minimization; Markov random fields; belief propagation; early vision; graph algorithms; message passing; stereo.; Algorithms; Artificial Intelligence; Energy Transfer; Image Enhancement; Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted; Information Storage and Retrieval; Pattern Recognition, Automated;