Title :
Biologically plausible detection of amorphous objects in the wild
Author :
Han, Sunhyoung ; Vasconcelos, Nuno
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Univ. of California, San Diego, CA, USA
Abstract :
The problem of amorphous object detection is investigated. A dataset of amorphous objects, Panda bears, with no defined shape or distinctive edge configurations is introduced. A biologically plausible amorphous object detector, based on discriminant saliency templates, is then proposed. The detector is based on the principles of discriminant saliency, and implemented with a hierarchical architecture of two layers. The first computes a feature-based top-down saliency measure tuned for object detection. The second relies on a similar saliency measure, but based on saliency templates, selected from the responses of the first layer. This architecture is shown to have a number of interesting properties for amorphous object detection, including the ability to detect objects characterized by the absence of features, and an interpretation as discriminant blob detection. Extensive experimental evaluation shows that it substantially outperforms state-of-the-art approaches for non-amorphous object detection, such as deformable parts models, sparse coded pyramid matching, detection based on the bag-of-features architecture, and the Viola and Jones approach. This brings into question some currently popular beliefs about object detection, which are discussed.
Keywords :
image matching; object detection; zoology; Panda bears; bag-of-features architecture; biologically plausible amorphous object detector; deformable parts models; discriminant blob detection; discriminant saliency templates; feature-based top-down saliency measure; nonamorphous object detection; similar saliency measure; sparse coded pyramid matching; Detectors; Feature extraction; Image edge detection; Object detection; Shape; Training; Visualization;
Conference_Titel :
Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition Workshops (CVPRW), 2011 IEEE Computer Society Conference on
Conference_Location :
Colorado Springs, CO
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4577-0529-8
DOI :
10.1109/CVPRW.2011.5981770