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A hierarchical adaptive model for robust short-term visual tracking

Luka Čehovin (2015) A hierarchical adaptive model for robust short-term visual tracking. PhD thesis.

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    Abstract

    Visual tracking is a topic in computer vision with applications in many emerging as well as established technological areas, such as robotics, video surveillance, human-computer interaction, autonomous vehicles, and sport analytics. The main question of visual tracking is how to design an algorithm (visual tracker) that determines the state of one or more objects in a stream of images by accounting for their sequential nature. In this doctoral thesis we address two important topics in single-target short-term visual tracking. The first topic is related to construction of an object appearance model for visual tracking. The modeling and updating of the appearance model is crucial for successful tracking. We introduce a hierarchical appearance model which structures object appearance in multiple layers. The bottom layer contains the most specific information and each higher layer models the appearance information in a more general way. The hierarchical relations are also reflected in the update process where the higher layers guide the lower layers in their update while the lower layers provide a source for adaptation to higher layers if their information is reliable. The benefits of hierarchical appearance models are demonstrated with two implementations, primarily designed to tackle tracking of non-rigid and articulated objects that present a challenge for many existing trackers. The first example of appearance model combines local and global visual information in a coupled-layer appearance model. The bottom layer contains a part-based appearance description that is able to adapt to the geometrical deformations of non-rigid targets and the top layer is a multi-modal global object appearance model that guides the model during object appearance changes. The experimental evaluation shows that the proposed coupled-layer appearance model excels in robustness despite the fact that is uses relatively simple appearance descriptors. Our evaluation also exposed several weaknesses that were reflected in a decreased accuracy. Our second presented appearance model extends the hierarchy by introducing the third layer and a concept of template anchors. The first two layers are conceptually similar to the original two-layer appearance model, while the third layer is a memory system that is composed of static templates that provide a strong spatial cue when one of the templates is matched to the image reliably, thus assisting in quick recovery of the entire appearance model. In the experimental evaluation we show that this addition indeed improves the accuracy, as well as the overall performance of a tracker. The second question that we are addressing is the performance evaluation of single-target short-term visual tracking algorithms. In contrast to the dominant trend in the past decades, we claim that visual tracking is a complex process and that the performance of visual trackers cannot be reduced to a single performance measure, nor should it be described by an arbitrary set of measures where the relationship between measures is not well understood. In our research we investigate performance measures that are traditionally used in performance evaluation of single-target short-term visual trackers, through theoretical and empirical analysis, and show that some of them are measuring the same aspect of tracking performance. Based on our analysis we propose a pair of two weakly correlated measures to measure the accuracy and robustness of a tracker, propose a visualization of the results as well as the analysis of the entire methodology using the theoretical trackers that exhibit extreme tracking behaviors. This is followed by an extension of the methodology on ranking of multiple trackers where we also take into account the potentially stochastic nature of visual trackers and test the statistical significance of performance differences. To support the proposed evaluation methodology we have developed an open-source software tool that implements the methodology and a simple communication protocol that enables a straightforward integration of trackers. The proposed evaluation methodology and the evaluation system have been adopted by several Visual Object Tracking (VOT) challenges.

    Item Type: Thesis (PhD thesis)
    Keywords: computer vision, visual tracking, visual model, short-term tracking, articulated object, non-rigid objects, performance measures, performance evaluation, ranking
    Number of Pages: 167
    Language of Content: English
    Mentor / Comentors:
    Name and SurnameIDFunction
    prof. dr. Aleš Leonardis29Mentor
    doc. dr. Matej KristanComentor
    Link to COBISS: http://www.cobiss.si/scripts/cobiss?command=search&base=51012&select=(ID=1536554691)
    Institution: University of Ljubljana
    Department: Faculty of Computer and Information Science
    Item ID: 3136
    Date Deposited: 16 Sep 2015 17:35
    Last Modified: 13 Oct 2015 10:44
    URI: http://eprints.fri.uni-lj.si/id/eprint/3136

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