Face recognition by cortical multi-scale line and edge representations


Autoria(s): Rodrigues, J. M. F.; du Buf, J. M. H.
Data(s)

13/02/2009

13/02/2009

2006

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

International Conference on Image Analysis and Recognition (ICAR 2006). - Póvoa do Varzim : Springer, 18-20 September 2006. - LNCS 4142. - p. 329-340

AUT: JRO00913; DUB00865;

http://hdl.handle.net/10400.1/81

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Póvoa do Varzim

Relação

http://www.bib.ualg.pt/artigos/DocentesEST/RODFacRec.pdf

Direitos

openAccess

Palavras-Chave #Visão computorizada #Córtex visual
Tipo

article

Resumo

Empirical studies concerning face recognition suggest that faces may be stored in memory by a few canonical representations. Models of visual perception are based on image representations in cortical area V1 and beyond, which contain many cell layers for feature extraction. Simple, complex and end-stopped cells provide input for line, edge and keypoint detection. Detected events provide a rich, multi-scale object representation, and this representation can be stored in memory in order to identify objects. In this paper, the above context is applied to face recognition. The multi-scale line/edge representation is explored in conjunction with keypoint-based saliency maps for Focus-of-Attention. Recognition rates of up to 96% were achieved by combining frontal and 3/4 views, and recognition was quite robust against partial occlusions.