A new discriminative coding method for image classification
The bag-of-words (BOW) based methods are widely used in image classification. However,
huge number of visual information is omitted inevitably in the quantization step of the BOW.
Recently, NBNN and its improved methods like Local NBNN were proposed to solve this
problem. Nevertheless, these methods do not perform better than the state-of-the-art BOW
based methods. In this paper, based on the advantages of BOW and Local NBNN, we
introduce a novel locality discriminative coding (LDC) method. We convert each low level …
huge number of visual information is omitted inevitably in the quantization step of the BOW.
Recently, NBNN and its improved methods like Local NBNN were proposed to solve this
problem. Nevertheless, these methods do not perform better than the state-of-the-art BOW
based methods. In this paper, based on the advantages of BOW and Local NBNN, we
introduce a novel locality discriminative coding (LDC) method. We convert each low level …
Abstract
The bag-of-words (BOW) based methods are widely used in image classification. However, huge number of visual information is omitted inevitably in the quantization step of the BOW. Recently, NBNN and its improved methods like Local NBNN were proposed to solve this problem. Nevertheless, these methods do not perform better than the state-of-the-art BOW based methods. In this paper, based on the advantages of BOW and Local NBNN, we introduce a novel locality discriminative coding (LDC) method. We convert each low level local feature, such as SIFT, into code vector using the Local Feature-to-Class distance other than by k-means quantization. After coding, sum-pooling combined with SPM is used to construct a single feature representation vector for each image. Extensive experimental results on several challenging benchmark datasets show that our LDC method outperforms six state-of-the-art image classification methods.
Springer
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