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 feature extraction


Learning Spherical Convolution for Fast Features from 360 Imagery

Neural Information Processing Systems

While 360 cameras offer tremendous new possibilities in vision, graphics, and augmented reality, the spherical images they produce make core feature extraction non-trivial. Convolutional neural networks (CNNs) trained on images from perspective cameras yield "flat filters, yet 360 images cannot be projected to a single plane without significant distortion. A naive solution that repeatedly projects the viewing sphere to all tangent planes is accurate, but much too computationally intensive for real problems. We propose to learn a spherical convolutional network that translates a planar CNN to process 360 imagery directly in its equirectangular projection. Our approach learns to reproduce the flat filter outputs on 360 data, sensitive to the varying distortion effects across the viewing sphere. The key benefits are 1) efficient feature extraction for 360 images and video, and 2) the ability to leverage powerful pre-trained networks researchers have carefully honed (together with massive labeled image training sets) for perspective images. We validate our approach compared to several alternative methods in terms of both raw CNN output accuracy as well as applying a state-of-the-art "flat object detector to 360 data. Our method yields the most accurate results while saving orders of magnitude in computation versus the existing exact reprojection solution.




3198dfd0aef271d22f7bcddd6f12f5cb-Paper.pdf

Neural Information Processing Systems

Classical approaches are based on adetect-thendescribeparadigm where separate handcrafted methods areusedtofirstidentify repeatable keypoints and then represent them with a local descriptor.



UPS: Unified Projection Sharing for Lightweight Single-Image Super-resolution and Beyond

Neural Information Processing Systems

To date, transformer-based frameworks have demonstrated impressive results in single-image super-resolution (SISR). However, under practical lightweight scenarios, the complex interaction of deep image feature extraction and similarity modeling limits the performance of these methods, since they require simultaneous layer-specific optimization of both two tasks. In this work, we introduce a novel Unified Projection Sharing algorithm(UPS) to decouple the feature extraction and similarity modeling, achieving notable performance. To do this, we establish a unified projection space defined by a learnable projection matrix, for similarity calculation across all self-attention layers. As a result, deep image feature extraction remains a per-layer optimization manner, while similarity modeling is carried out by projecting these image features onto the shared projection space. Extensive experiments demonstrate that our proposed UPS achieves state-of-the-art performance relative to leading lightweight SISR methods, as verified by various popular benchmarks. Moreover, our unified optimized projection space exhibits encouraging robustness performance for unseen data (degraded and depth images). Finally, UPS also demonstrates promising results across various image restoration tasks, including real-world and classic SISR, image denoising, and image deblocking.


DenoiseRep: Denoising Model for Representation Learning

Neural Information Processing Systems

The denoising model has been proven a powerful generative model but has little exploration of discriminative tasks. Representation learning is important in discriminative tasks, which is defined as . In this paper, we propose a novel Denoising Model for Representation Learning () to improve feature discrimination with joint feature extraction and denoising.


EEGPT: Pretrained Transformer for Universal and Reliable Representation of EEG Signals

Neural Information Processing Systems

Electroencephalography (EEG) is crucial for recording brain activity, with applications in medicine, neuroscience, and brain-computer interfaces (BCI). However, challenges such as low signal-to-noise ratio (SNR), high inter-subject variability, and channel mismatch complicate the extraction of robust, universal EEG representations. We propose EEGPT, a novel 10-million-parameter pretrained transformer model designed for universal EEG feature extraction. In EEGPT, a mask-based dual self-supervised learning method for efficient feature extraction is designed. Compared to other mask-based self-supervised learning methods, EEGPT introduces spatio-temporal representation alignment. This involves constructing a self-supervised task based on EEG representations that possess high SNR and rich semantic information, rather than on raw signals. Consequently, this approach mitigates the issue of poor feature quality typically extracted from low SNR signals. Additionally, EEGPT's hierarchical structure processes spatial and temporal information separately, reducing computational complexity while increasing flexibility and adaptability for BCI applications. By training on a large mixed multi-task EEG dataset, we fully exploit EEGPT's capabilities.


Sliced Mutual Information: A Scalable Measure of Statistical Dependence

Neural Information Processing Systems

Mutual information (MI) is a fundamental measure of statistical dependence, with a myriad of applications to information theory, statistics, and machine learning. While it possesses many desirable structural properties, the estimation of high-dimensional MI from samples suffers from the curse of dimensionality. Motivated by statistical scalability to high dimensions, this paper proposes sliced MI (SMI) as a surrogate measure of dependence. SMI is defined as an average of MI terms between one-dimensional random projections. We show that it preserves many of the structural properties of classic MI, while gaining scalable computation and efficient estimation from samples. Furthermore, and in contrast to classic MI, SMI can grow as a result of deterministic transformations. This enables leveraging SMI for feature extraction by optimizing it over processing functions of raw data to identify useful representations thereof. Our theory is supported by numerical studies of independence testing and feature extraction, which demonstrate the potential gains SMI offers over classic MI for high-dimensional inference.


ZeShot-VQA: Zero-Shot Visual Question Answering Framework with Answer Mapping for Natural Disaster Damage Assessment

Karimi, Ehsan, Rahnemoonfar, Maryam

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Natural disasters usually affect vast areas and devastate infrastructures. Performing a timely and efficient response is crucial to minimize the impact on affected communities, and data-driven approaches are the best choice. Visual question answering (VQA) models help management teams to achieve in-depth understanding of damages. However, recently published models do not possess the ability to answer open-ended questions and only select the best answer among a predefined list of answers. If we want to ask questions with new additional possible answers that do not exist in the predefined list, the model needs to be fin-tuned/retrained on a new collected and annotated dataset, which is a time-consuming procedure. In recent years, large-scale Vision-Language Models (VLMs) have earned significant attention. These models are trained on extensive datasets and demonstrate strong performance on both unimodal and multimodal vision/language downstream tasks, often without the need for fine-tuning. In this paper, we propose a VLM-based zero-shot VQA (ZeShot-VQA) method, and investigate the performance of on post-disaster FloodNet dataset. Since the proposed method takes advantage of zero-shot learning, it can be applied on new datasets without fine-tuning. In addition, ZeShot-VQA is able to process and generate answers that has been not seen during the training procedure, which demonstrates its flexibility.