Optimization of Robust Loss Functions for Weakly-Labeled Image Taxonomies
The recently proposed ImageNet dataset consists of several million images, each annotated with a single object category. These annotations may be imperfect, in the sense that many images contain multiple objects belonging to the label vocabulary. In other words, we have a multi-label problem but the...
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Veröffentlicht in: | International journal of computer vision 2013-09, Vol.104 (3), p.343-361 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The recently proposed
ImageNet
dataset consists of several million images, each annotated with a single object category. These annotations may be imperfect, in the sense that many images contain
multiple
objects belonging to the label vocabulary. In other words, we have a multi-label problem but the annotations include only a single label (which is not necessarily the most prominent). Such a setting motivates the use of a
robust
evaluation measure, which allows for a limited number of labels to be predicted and, so long as one of the predicted labels is correct, the overall prediction should be considered correct. This is indeed the type of evaluation measure used to assess algorithm performance in a recent competition on ImageNet data. Optimizing such types of performance measures presents several hurdles even with existing structured output learning methods. Indeed, many of the current state-of-the-art methods optimize the prediction of only a single output label, ignoring this ‘structure’ altogether. In this paper, we show how to directly optimize continuous surrogates of such performance measures using structured output learning techniques with latent variables. We use the output of existing binary classifiers as input features in a new learning stage which optimizes the structured loss corresponding to the robust performance measure. We present empirical evidence that this allows us to ‘boost’ the performance of binary classification on a variety of weakly-supervised labeling problems defined on image taxonomies. |
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ISSN: | 0920-5691 1573-1405 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s11263-012-0561-4 |