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Abstract
© 1992-2012 IEEE. Indoor scene recognition is a multi-faceted and challenging problem due to the diverse intra-class variations and the confusing inter-class similarities that characterize such scenes. This paper presents a novel approach that exploits rich mid-level convolutional features to categorize indoor scenes. Traditional convolutional features retain the global spatial structure, which is a desirable property for general object recognition. We, however, argue that the structure-preserving property of the convolutional neural network activations is not of substantial help in the presence of large variations in scene layouts, e.g., in indoor scenes. We propose to transform the structured convolutional activations to another highly discriminative feature space. The representation in the transformed space not only incorporates the discriminative aspects of the target data set but also encodes the features in terms of the general object categories that are present in indoor scenes. To this end, we introduce a new large-scale data set of 1300 object categories that are commonly present in indoor scenes. Our proposed approach achieves a significant performance boost over the previous state-of-The-Art approaches on five major scene classification data sets.
Original language | English |
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Article number | 7468494 |
Pages (from-to) | 3372-3383 |
Number of pages | 12 |
Journal | IEEE Transactions on Image Processing |
Volume | 25 |
Issue number | 7 |
Early online date | 11 May 2016 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - Jul 2016 |
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Advanced 3D Computer Vision Algorithms for 'Find and Grasp' Future Robots
Bennamoun, M. (Investigator 01)
ARC Australian Research Council
1/01/15 → 31/12/20
Project: Research
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A 3D Video-based Vision system for Future Robots
Bennamoun, M. (Investigator 01)
ARC Australian Research Council
1/01/11 → 31/12/15
Project: Research
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Revocable 2D/3D Shape Based Multimodal Hand Biometrics for Personal Identification & Verification
Sohel, F. (Investigator 01)
ARC Australian Research Council
1/01/12 → 29/06/17
Project: Research