Title
Sequential Learning of Layered Models from Video
Abstract
A popular framework for the interpretation of image sequences is the layers or sprite model, see e.g. [15], [6]. Jojic and Frey [81 provide a generative probabilistic model framework for this task, but their algorithm is slow as it needs to search over discretized transformations (e.g. translations, or affines) for each layer simultaneously. Exact computation with this model scales exponentially with the number of objects, so Jojic and Frey used an approximate variational algorithm to speed up inference. Williams and Titsias [16] proposed an alternative sequential algorithm for the extraction of objects one at a time using a robust statistical method, thus avoiding the combinatorial explosion. In this chapter we elaborate on our sequential algorithm in the following ways: Firstly, we describe a method to speed up the computation of the transformations based on approximate tracking of the multiple objects in the scene. Secondly, for sequences where the motion of an object is large so that different views (or aspects) of the object are visible at different times in the sequence, we learn appearance models of the different aspects. We demonstrate our method on four video sequences, including a sequence where we learn articulated parts of a human body.
Year
DOI
Venue
2006
10.1007/11957959_29
Lecture Notes in Computer Science
Keywords
Field
DocType
human body,robust statistics,probabilistic model
Discretization,Computer science,Inference,Algorithm,Theoretical computer science,Statistical model,Sequential algorithm,Combinatorial explosion,Sequence learning,Computation,Speedup
Conference
Volume
ISSN
Citations 
4170
0302-9743
1
PageRank 
References 
Authors
0.37
14
2
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Michalis K. Titsias170642.50
Christopher K. I. Williams26807631.16