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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Robust Face Recognition via Sparse Representation

TLDR
This work considers the problem of automatically recognizing human faces from frontal views with varying expression and illumination, as well as occlusion and disguise, and proposes a general classification algorithm for (image-based) object recognition based on a sparse representation computed by C1-minimization.
Abstract
We consider the problem of automatically recognizing human faces from frontal views with varying expression and illumination, as well as occlusion and disguise. We cast the recognition problem as one of classifying among multiple linear regression models and argue that new theory from sparse signal representation offers the key to addressing this problem. Based on a sparse representation computed by C1-minimization, we propose a general classification algorithm for (image-based) object recognition. This new framework provides new insights into two crucial issues in face recognition: feature extraction and robustness to occlusion. For feature extraction, we show that if sparsity in the recognition problem is properly harnessed, the choice of features is no longer critical. What is critical, however, is whether the number of features is sufficiently large and whether the sparse representation is correctly computed. Unconventional features such as downsampled images and random projections perform just as well as conventional features such as eigenfaces and Laplacianfaces, as long as the dimension of the feature space surpasses certain threshold, predicted by the theory of sparse representation. This framework can handle errors due to occlusion and corruption uniformly by exploiting the fact that these errors are often sparse with respect to the standard (pixel) basis. The theory of sparse representation helps predict how much occlusion the recognition algorithm can handle and how to choose the training images to maximize robustness to occlusion. We conduct extensive experiments on publicly available databases to verify the efficacy of the proposed algorithm and corroborate the above claims.

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Proceedings Article

Robust Subspace Segmentation by Low-Rank Representation

TL;DR: Both theoretical and experimental results show that low-rank representation is a promising tool for subspace segmentation from corrupted data.
Book ChapterDOI

Real-time compressive tracking

TL;DR: A simple yet effective and efficient tracking algorithm with an appearance model based on features extracted from the multi-scale image feature space with data-independent basis that performs favorably against state-of-the-art algorithms on challenging sequences in terms of efficiency, accuracy and robustness.
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Sparse Subspace Clustering: Algorithm, Theory, and Applications

TL;DR: This paper proposes and studies an algorithm, called sparse subspace clustering, to cluster data points that lie in a union of low-dimensional subspaces, and demonstrates the effectiveness of the proposed algorithm through experiments on synthetic data as well as the two real-world problems of motion segmentation and face clustering.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Face recognition in unconstrained videos with matched background similarity

TL;DR: A comprehensive database of labeled videos of faces in challenging, uncontrolled conditions, the ‘YouTube Faces’ database, along with benchmark, pair-matching tests are presented and a novel set-to-set similarity measure, the Matched Background Similarity (MBGS), is described.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Sparse subspace clustering

TL;DR: This work proposes a method based on sparse representation (SR) to cluster data drawn from multiple low-dimensional linear or affine subspaces embedded in a high-dimensional space and applies this method to the problem of segmenting multiple motions in video.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

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TL;DR: A face recognition algorithm which is insensitive to large variation in lighting direction and facial expression is developed, based on Fisher's linear discriminant and produces well separated classes in a low-dimensional subspace, even under severe variations in lighting and facial expressions.
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What is the minimum number of images required for a facial recognition model to sufficiently learn features?

The paper does not provide a specific minimum number of images required for a facial recognition model to sufficiently learn features.