Jiahao Hong, Jialong Zuo, Chuchu Han, Ruochen Zheng, Ming Tian, Changxin Gao, Nong Sang
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Recent advancements in unsupervised person re-identification (re-ID) methods have demonstrated high performance by leveraging fine-grained local context, often referred to as part-based methods. However, many existing part-based methods rely on horizontal division to obtain local contexts, leading to misalignment issues caused by various human poses. Moreover, misalignment of semantic information within part features hampers the effectiveness of metric learning, thereby limiting the potential of part-based methods. These challenges result in under-utilization of part features in existing approaches. To address these issues, we introduce the Spatial Cascaded Clustering and Weighted Memory (SCWM) method. SCWM aims to parse and align more accurate local contexts for different human body parts while allowing the memory module to balance hard example mining and noise suppression. Specifically, we first analyze the issues of foreground omissions and spatial confusions in previous methods. We then propose foreground and space corrections to enhance the completeness and reasonableness of human parsing results. Next, we introduce a weighted memory and utilize two weighting strategies. These strategies address hard sample mining for global features and enhance noise resistance for part features, enabling better utilization of both global and part features. Extensive experiments conducted on Market-1501, DukeMTMC-reID and MSMT17 datasets validate the effectiveness of the proposed method over numerous state-of-the-art methods.
期刊介绍:
Image and Vision Computing has as a primary aim the provision of an effective medium of interchange for the results of high quality theoretical and applied research fundamental to all aspects of image interpretation and computer vision. The journal publishes work that proposes new image interpretation and computer vision methodology or addresses the application of such methods to real world scenes. It seeks to strengthen a deeper understanding in the discipline by encouraging the quantitative comparison and performance evaluation of the proposed methodology. The coverage includes: image interpretation, scene modelling, object recognition and tracking, shape analysis, monitoring and surveillance, active vision and robotic systems, SLAM, biologically-inspired computer vision, motion analysis, stereo vision, document image understanding, character and handwritten text recognition, face and gesture recognition, biometrics, vision-based human-computer interaction, human activity and behavior understanding, data fusion from multiple sensor inputs, image databases.