Seeking the strongest rigid detector
The current state of the art solutions for object detection describe each class by a set of models trained on discovered sub-classes (so called 'components'), with each model itself composed of collections of interrelated parts (deformable models). These detectors build upon the now classi...
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Format: | Tagungsbericht |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The current state of the art solutions for object detection describe each class by a set of models trained on discovered sub-classes (so called 'components'), with each model itself composed of collections of interrelated parts (deformable models). These detectors build upon the now classic Histogram of Oriented Gradients+linear SVM combo. Abstract In this paper we revisit some of the core assumptions in HOG+SVM and show that by properly designing the feature pooling, feature selection, preprocessing, and training methods, it is possible to reach top quality, at least for pedestrian detections, using a single rigid component. Abstract We provide experiments for a large design space, that give insights into the design of classifiers, as well as relevant information for practitioners. Our best detector is fully feed-forward, has a single unified architecture, uses only histograms of oriented gradients and colour information in monocular static images, and improves over 23 other methods on the INRIA, ETH and Caltech-USA datasets, reducing the average miss-rate over HOG+SVM by more than 30%. © 2013 IEEE. |
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ISSN: | 1063-6919 1063-6919 |