Spatially-Consistent Feature Matching and Learning for Heritage Image Analysis

Progress in the digitization of cultural assets leads to online databases that become too large for a human to analyze. Moreover, some analyses might be challenging, even for experts. In this paper, we explore two applications of computer vision to analyze historical data: watermark recognition and...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
Veröffentlicht in:International journal of computer vision 2022-05, Vol.130 (5), p.1325-1339
Hauptverfasser: Shen, Xi, Champenois, Robin, Ginosar, Shiry, Pastrolin, Ilaria, Rousselot, Morgane, Bounou, Oumayma, Monnier, Tom, Gidaris, Spyros, Bougard, François, Raverdy, Pierre-Guillaume, Limon, Marie-Françoise, Bénévent, Christine, Smith, Marc, Poncet, Olivier, Bender, K., Joyeux-Prunel, Béatrice, Honig, Elizabeth, Efros, Alexei A., Aubry, Mathieu
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:Volltext
Tags: Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:Progress in the digitization of cultural assets leads to online databases that become too large for a human to analyze. Moreover, some analyses might be challenging, even for experts. In this paper, we explore two applications of computer vision to analyze historical data: watermark recognition and one-shot repeated pattern detection in artwork collections. Both problems present computer vision challenges which we believe to be representative of the ones encountered in cultural heritage applications: limited supervision is available, the tasks are fine-grained recognition, and the data comes in several different modalities. Both applications are also highly practical, as recognizing watermarks makes it possible to date and locate documents, while detecting repeated patterns allows exploring visual links between artworks. We demonstrate on both tasks the benefits of relying on deep mid-level features. More precisely, we define an image similarity score based on geometric verification of mid-level features and show how spatial consistency can be used to fine-tune out-of-the-box features for the target dataset with weak or no supervision. This paper relates and extends our previous works (Shen et al. in Discovering visual patterns in art collections with spatially-consistent feature learning, 2019; Shen et al. in Large-scale historical watermark recognition dataset and a new consistency-based approach, 2020). Our code and data are available at http://imagine.enpc.fr/~shenx/HisImgAnalysis/ .
ISSN:0920-5691
1573-1405
DOI:10.1007/s11263-022-01576-x