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1.
IEEE Trans Pattern Anal Mach Intell ; 41(5): 1271-1278, 2019 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29993627

ABSTRACT

An end-to-end network architecture, the Recurrent Shape Regression (RSR), is presented to deal with the task of facial shape detection, a crucial step in many computer vision problems. The RSR generalizes the conventional cascaded regression into a recurrent dynamic network through abstracting common latent models with stage-to-stage operations. Instead of invariant regression transformation, we construct shape-dependent dynamic regressors to attain the recurrence of regression action itself. The regressors can be stacked into a high-order regression network to represent more complex shape regression. By further integrating feature learning as well as global shape constraint, the RSR becomes more controllable in entire optimization of shape regression, where the gradient computation can be efficiently back-propagated through time. To handle the possible partial occlusions of shapes, we propose a mimic virtual occlusion strategy by randomly disturbing certain point cliques without the requirement of any annotations of occlusion information or even occluded training data. Extensive experiments on five face datasets demonstrate that the proposed RSR outperforms the recent state-of-the-art cascaded approaches.


Subject(s)
Image Processing, Computer-Assisted/methods , Neural Networks, Computer , Regression Analysis , Databases, Factual , Face/diagnostic imaging , Humans , Pattern Recognition, Automated
2.
IEEE Trans Pattern Anal Mach Intell ; 40(4): 987-1001, 2018 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28459684

ABSTRACT

Face alignment acts as an important task in computer vision. Regression-based methods currently dominate the approach to solving this problem, which generally employ a series of mapping functions from the face appearance to iteratively update the face shape hypothesis. One keypoint here is thus how to perform the regression procedure. In this work, we formulate this regression procedure as a sparse coding problem. We learn two relational dictionaries, one for the face appearance and the other one for the face shape, with coupled reconstruction coefficient to capture their underlying relationships. To deploy this model for face alignment, we derive the relational dictionaries in a stage-wised manner to perform close-loop refinement of themselves, i.e., the face appearance dictionary is first learned from the face shape dictionary and then used to update the face shape hypothesis, and the updated face shape dictionary from the shape hypothesis is in return used to refine the face appearance dictionary. To improve the model accuracy, we extend this model hierarchically from the whole face shape to face part shapes, thus both the global and local view variations of a face are captured. To locate facial landmarks under occlusions, we further introduce an occlusion dictionary into the face appearance dictionary to recover face shape from partially occluded face appearance. The occlusion dictionary is learned in a data driven manner from background images to represent a set of elemental occlusion patterns, a sparse combination of which models various practical partial face occlusions. By integrating all these technical innovations, we obtain a robust and accurate approach to locate facial landmarks under different face views and possibly severe occlusions for face images in the wild. Extensive experimental analyses and evaluations on different benchmark datasets, as well as two new datasets built by ourselves, have demonstrated the robustness and accuracy of our proposed model, especially for face images with large view variations and/or severe occlusions.

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