Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Contributors
- 1 The Evolution of Object Categorization and the Challenge of Image Abstraction
- 2 A Strategy for Understanding How the Brain Accomplishes Object Recognition
- 3 Visual Recognition Circa 2008
- 4 On What It Means to See, and WhatWe Can Do About It
- 5 Generic Object Recognition by Inference of 3-D Volumetric Parts
- 6 What Has fMRI Taught Us About Object Recognition?
- 7 Object Recognition Through Reasoning About Functionality: A Survey of Related Work
- 8 The Interface Theory of Perception: Natural Selection Drives True Perception to Swift Extinction
- 9 Words and Pictures: Categories, Modifiers, Depiction, and Iconography
- 10 Structural Representation of Object Shape in the Brain
- 11 Learning Hierarchical Compositional Representations of Object Structure
- 12 Object Categorization in Man, Monkey, and Machine: Some Answers and Some Open Questions
- 13 Learning Compositional Models for Object Categories from Small Sample Sets
- 14 The Neurophysiology and Computational Mechanisms of Object Representation
- 15 From Classification to Full Object Interpretation
- 16 Visual Object Discovery
- 17 Towards Integration of Different Paradigms in Modeling, Representation, and Learning of Visual Categories
- 18 Acquisition and Disruption of Category Specificity in the Ventral Visual Stream: The Case of Late Developing and Vulnerable Face-Related Cortex
- 19 Using Simple Features and Relations
- 20 The Proactive Brain: Using Memory-Based Predictions in Visual Recognition
- 21 Spatial Pyramid Matching
- 22 Visual Learning for Optimal Decisions in the Human Brain
- 23 Shapes and Shock Graphs: From Segmented Shapes to Shapes Embedded in Images
- 24 Neural Encoding of Scene Statistics for Surface and Object Inference
- 25 Medial Models for Vision
- 26 Multimodal Categorization
- 27 Comparing 2-D Images of 3-D Objects
- Index
- Plate section
19 - Using Simple Features and Relations
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 May 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Contributors
- 1 The Evolution of Object Categorization and the Challenge of Image Abstraction
- 2 A Strategy for Understanding How the Brain Accomplishes Object Recognition
- 3 Visual Recognition Circa 2008
- 4 On What It Means to See, and WhatWe Can Do About It
- 5 Generic Object Recognition by Inference of 3-D Volumetric Parts
- 6 What Has fMRI Taught Us About Object Recognition?
- 7 Object Recognition Through Reasoning About Functionality: A Survey of Related Work
- 8 The Interface Theory of Perception: Natural Selection Drives True Perception to Swift Extinction
- 9 Words and Pictures: Categories, Modifiers, Depiction, and Iconography
- 10 Structural Representation of Object Shape in the Brain
- 11 Learning Hierarchical Compositional Representations of Object Structure
- 12 Object Categorization in Man, Monkey, and Machine: Some Answers and Some Open Questions
- 13 Learning Compositional Models for Object Categories from Small Sample Sets
- 14 The Neurophysiology and Computational Mechanisms of Object Representation
- 15 From Classification to Full Object Interpretation
- 16 Visual Object Discovery
- 17 Towards Integration of Different Paradigms in Modeling, Representation, and Learning of Visual Categories
- 18 Acquisition and Disruption of Category Specificity in the Ventral Visual Stream: The Case of Late Developing and Vulnerable Face-Related Cortex
- 19 Using Simple Features and Relations
- 20 The Proactive Brain: Using Memory-Based Predictions in Visual Recognition
- 21 Spatial Pyramid Matching
- 22 Visual Learning for Optimal Decisions in the Human Brain
- 23 Shapes and Shock Graphs: From Segmented Shapes to Shapes Embedded in Images
- 24 Neural Encoding of Scene Statistics for Surface and Object Inference
- 25 Medial Models for Vision
- 26 Multimodal Categorization
- 27 Comparing 2-D Images of 3-D Objects
- Index
- Plate section
Summary
Introduction
One possible approach to category recognition is to model object categories as graphs of features, and to focus mainly on the second-order (pairwise) relationships between them: category-dependent as well as perceptual grouping constraints. This differs from the popular bag-of-words model (Csurka et al. 2004), which concentrates exclusively on local features, ignoring the higher-order interactions between them. The main observation is that higher-order relationships between model features are more important for category recognition than local, first-order features. Earlier studies support the view that simple, unary features, without higher-order relationships (such as geometric constraints or conjunctions of properties), are not sufficient at higher cognitive levels where object category recognition takes place (Treisman 1986; Hummel 2000). The importance of using pairwise relationships between features was recognized early on, starting with Ullman's theory of the correspondence process, which introduced the notion of correspondence strength that takes into consideration both the local/unary affinities, but also pairwise interactions between features (Marr 1982).
More generally, using pairwise or global geometric constraints between contour fragments was explored extensively in early work. For example, interpretation trees were used to find correspondences between contour fragments, aligning an object model and the object instance in a novel image of a cluttered scene (Grimson and Lozano-Pérez 1987; Grimson 1990a). Other approaches relied on more global techniques based on transformation voting alignment (Lowe 1985), as well as geometric reasoning on groups of fragments (Goad 1983; Brooks 1981).
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Object CategorizationComputer and Human Vision Perspectives, pp. 369 - 383Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009