Loading [a11y]/accessibility-menu.js
Multi-modal Information Extraction and Fusion with Convolutional Neural Networks | IEEE Conference Publication | IEEE Xplore

Multi-modal Information Extraction and Fusion with Convolutional Neural Networks


Abstract:

Developing computational algorithms to model the biological vision system has challenged researchers in the computer vision field for several decades. As a result, state-...Show More

Abstract:

Developing computational algorithms to model the biological vision system has challenged researchers in the computer vision field for several decades. As a result, state-of-the-art algorithms such as the Convolutional Neural Network (CNN) have emerged for image classification and recognition tasks with promising results. CNNs however remain view-specific, producing good results when the variation between test and train data is small. Making CNNs learn invariant features to effectively recognise objects that undergo appearance changes as a result of transformations such as scaling remains a technical challenge. Recent physiological studies of the visual system are suggesting new paradigms. Firstly, our visual system uses both local features and global features in its recognition function. Secondly, cells tuned to global features respond quickly to visual stimuli for recognising objects. Thirdly, information from modalities that handle local features, global features and color are integrated in the brain for performing recognition tasks. While CNNs rely on aggregation of local features for recognition, these theories provide the potential for using global features to solve transformation invariance problems in CNNs. In this paper we realise these paradigms into a computational model, named as global features improved CNN (GCNN), and test it on classification of scaled images. We experiment combining Histogram of Gradients (HOG) global features, CNN local features and color information and test our technique on benchmark data sets. Our results show GCNN outperforms traditional CNN on classification of scaled images indicating potential effectiveness of our model towards improving scale-invariance in CNN based networks.
Date of Conference: 19-24 July 2020
Date Added to IEEE Xplore: 28 September 2020
ISBN Information:

ISSN Information:

Conference Location: Glasgow, UK

Contact IEEE to Subscribe

References

References is not available for this document.