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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Hierarchical Representation Learning for Kinship Verification

TLDR
In this paper, a hierarchical kinship verification via representation learning (KVRL) framework is utilized to learn the representation of different face regions in an unsupervised manner, and a compact representation of facial images of kin is extracted as an output from the learned model and a multi-layer neural network is employed to verify the kin accurately.
Abstract
Kinship verification has a number of applications such as organizing large collections of images and recognizing resemblances among humans. In this paper, first, a human study is conducted to understand the capabilities of human mind and to identify the discriminatory areas of a face that facilitate kinship-cues. The visual stimuli presented to the participants determine their ability to recognize kin relationship using the whole face as well as specific facial regions. The effect of participant gender and age and kin-relation pair of the stimulus is analyzed using quantitative measures such as accuracy, discriminability index $d'$ , and perceptual information entropy. Utilizing the information obtained from the human study, a hierarchical kinship verification via representation learning (KVRL) framework is utilized to learn the representation of different face regions in an unsupervised manner. We propose a novel approach for feature representation termed as filtered contractive deep belief networks ( fc DBN). The proposed feature representation encodes relational information present in images using filters and contractive regularization penalty. A compact representation of facial images of kin is extracted as an output from the learned model and a multi-layer neural network is utilized to verify the kin accurately. A new WVU kinship database is created, which consists of multiple images per subject to facilitate kinship verification. The results show that the proposed deep learning framework (KVRL- fc DBN) yields the state-of-the-art kinship verification accuracy on the WVU kinship database and on four existing benchmark data sets. Furthermore, kinship information is used as a soft biometric modality to boost the performance of face verification via product of likelihood ratio and support vector machine based approaches. Using the proposed KVRL- fc DBN framework, an improvement of over 20% is observed in the performance of face verification.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

A comprehensive overview of biometric fusion

TL;DR: A comprehensive review of techniques incorporating ancillary information in the biometric recognition pipeline is presented in this paper, where the authors provide a comprehensive overview of the role of information fusion in biometrics.
Journal ArticleDOI

Learning deep compact similarity metric for kinship verification from face images

TL;DR: This work proposes a new kinship metric learning (KML) method with a coupled deep neural network (DNN) model, and introduces the property of hierarchical compactness into the coupled network to facilitate deep metric learning with limited amount of kinship training data.
Journal ArticleDOI

Weighted Graph Embedding-Based Metric Learning for Kinship Verification

TL;DR: A novel weighted graph embedding-based metric learning (WGEML) framework for kinship verification based on the fact that family members usually show high similarity in facial features, despite their diversity is developed.
Posted Content

A Comprehensive Overview of Biometric Fusion

TL;DR: The purpose of this article is to provide readers a comprehensive overview of the role of information fusion in biometrics with specific focus on three questions: what to fusion, when to fuse, and how to fuse.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

KinNet: Fine-to-Coarse Deep Metric Learning for Kinship Verification

TL;DR: In this work, KinNet is proposed, a fine-to-coarse deep metric learning framework for kinship verification, which transfers knowledge from the large-scale-data-driven face recognition task by pre-training the network with massive data for face recognition.
References
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Face Recognition Ability Matures Late: Evidence From Individual Differences in Young Adults

TL;DR: This study examined the developmental trajectory of face recognition ability in an individual differences study of 18-33 year-olds, an age interval in which participants are competent test takers with comparable general cognitive functions, and found a positive association between age and face recognition.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Genetic Algorithm-Based Feature Selection for Kinship Verification

TL;DR: Local and global features were combined to describe the face images in a better way and the effective and discriminative features were selected using the kinship genetic algorithm and then fulfilled kinship verification.
Journal ArticleDOI

Comments on the “Kinship Face in the Wild” Data Sets

TL;DR: The Kinship Face in the Wild data sets, recently published in TPAMI, are currently used as a benchmark for the evaluation of kinship verification algorithms and are recommended to be no longer used unless there is a compelling reason that takes into account the nature of the images.
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