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Consistent visual words mining with adaptive sampling
Author(s) -
Pierre Letessier,
Olivier Buisson,
Alexis Joly
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
hal (le centre pour la communication scientifique directe)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.1145/1991996.1992045
Subject(s) - computer science , hash function , search engine indexing , artificial intelligence , ranking (information retrieval) , cluster analysis , feature (linguistics) , matching (statistics) , pattern recognition (psychology) , data mining , process (computing) , sampling (signal processing) , object (grammar) , machine learning , computer vision , mathematics , philosophy , linguistics , statistics , computer security , filter (signal processing) , operating system
International audienceState-of-the-art large-scale object retrieval systems usually combine efficient Bag-of-Words indexing models with a spatial verification re-ranking stage to improve query performance. In this paper we propose to directly discover spatially verified visual words as a batch process. Contrary to previous related methods based on feature sets hashing or clustering, we suggest not trading recall for efficiency by sticking on an accurate two-stage matching strategy. The problem then rather becomes a sampling issue: how to effectively and efficiently select relevant query regions while minimizing the number of tentative probes? We therefore introduce an adaptive weighted sampling scheme, starting with some prior distribution and iteratively converging to unvisited regions. Interestingly, the proposed paradigm is generalizable to any input prior distribution, including specific visual concept detectors or efficient hashing-based methods. We show in the experiments that the proposed method allows to discover highly interpretable visual words while providing excellent recall and image representativity

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