Using Segmentation to Verify Object Hypotheses - Robotics Institute Carnegie Mellon University

Using Segmentation to Verify Object Hypotheses

Conference Paper, Proceedings of (CVPR) Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition, June, 2007

Abstract

We present an approach for object recognition that combines detection and segmentation within a efficient hypothesize/test framework. Scanning-window template classifiers are the current state-of-the-art for many object classes such as faces, cars, and pedestrians. Such approaches, though quite successful, can be hindered by their lack of explicit encoding of object shape/structure - one might, for example, find faces in trees. We adopt the following strategy; we first use these systems as attention mechanisms, generating many possible object locations by tuning them for low missed-detections and high false-positives. At each hypothesized detection, we compute a local figure-ground segmentation using a window of slightly larger extent than that used by the classifier. This segmentation task is guided by top-down knowledge. We learn offline from training data those segmentations that are consistent with true positives. We then prune away those hypotheses with bad segmentations. We show this strategy leads to significant improvements (10-20%) over established approaches such as ViolaJones and DalalTriggs on a variety of benchmark datasets including the PASCAL challenge, LabelMe, and the INRIAPerson dataset.

BibTeX

@conference{Ramanan-2007-121228,
author = {D. Ramanan},
title = {Using Segmentation to Verify Object Hypotheses},
booktitle = {Proceedings of (CVPR) Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition},
year = {2007},
month = {June},
}