Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4969764 Pattern Recognition 2017 45 Pages PDF
Abstract
Tackling illumination variation is a major problem and it is also an important challenge for practical face recognition systems. Some related methods consider that lighting intensity components mainly lie in large-scale features, and they use a lot of image decomposition techniques to extract the small-scale illumination-invariant features and remove the large-scale features from original face images. However, it argues that the large-scale features contain a lot useful information which can be further extracted, and the small-scale illumination-invariant features are not robust enough due to they contain some detrimental features (noise, etc.). In this paper, we propose a discriminative multi-layer illumination-robust feature extraction (DMI) model to address this problem. First, we decompose the large-scale features into multi-layer small-scale illumination-robust features as a linear combination, and then a weight is assigned to each layer to adjust its importance and influence. The idea is to take full advantage of these useful information in large-scale features for face recognition. Second, we learn a discriminant filter to improve the robustness and statistical discriminative ability of the reconstructed illumination-robust face for face recognition under poor lighting conditions. Extensive experiments on three benchmark face databases and a video image database show that DMI performs better than the related methods, especially in difficult lighting conditions.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Computer Science Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition
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