Selective hidden random fields: Exploiting domain-specific saliency for event classificationDownload PDFOpen Website

Vidit Jain, Amit Singhal, Jiebo Luo

2008 (modified: 10 Nov 2022)CVPR 2008Readers: Everyone
Abstract: Classifying an event captured in an image is useful for understanding the contents of the image. The captured event provides context to refine models for the presence and appearance of various entities, such as people and objects, in the captured scene. Such contextual processing facilitates the generation of better abstractions and annotations for the image. Consider a typical set of consumer images with sports-related content. These images are taken mostly by amateur photographers, and often at a distance. In the absence of manual annotation or other sources of information such as time and location, typical recognition tasks are formidable on these images. Identifying the sporting event in these images provides a context for further recognition and annotation tasks. We propose to use the domain-specific saliency of the appearances of the playing surfaces, and ignore the noninformative parts of the image such as crowd regions, to discriminate among different sports. To this end, we present a variation of the hidden-state conditional random field that selects a subset of the observed features suitable for classification. The inferred hidden variables in this model represent a selection criteria desirable for the problem domain. For sports-related images, this selection criteria corresponds to the segmentation of the playing surface in the image. We demonstrate the utility of this model on consumer images collected from the Internet.
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