Robust statistical deformable models
File(s)
Author(s)
Antonakos, Epameinondas
Type
Thesis or dissertation
Abstract
During the last few years, we have witnessed tremendous advances in the field of 2D Deformable Models for the problem of landmark localization. These advances, which are mainly reported on the task of face alignment, have created two major and opposing families of methodologies. On the one hand, there are the generative Deformable Models that utilize a Newton-type optimization. This family of techniques has attracted extensive research effort during the last two decades, but has lately been criticized of achieving inaccurate performance. On the other hand, there is the currently predominant family of discriminative Deformable Models that treat the problem of landmark localization as a regression problem. These techniques commonly employ cascaded linear regression and have proved to be very accurate.
In this thesis, we argue that even though generative Deformable Models are less accurate than discriminative, they are still very valuable for several tasks. In the first part of the thesis, we propose two novel generative Deformable Models. In the second part of the thesis, we show that the combination of generative and discriminative Deformable Models achieves state-of-the-art results on the tasks of (i) landmark localization and (ii) semi-supervised annotation of large visual data.
In this thesis, we argue that even though generative Deformable Models are less accurate than discriminative, they are still very valuable for several tasks. In the first part of the thesis, we propose two novel generative Deformable Models. In the second part of the thesis, we show that the combination of generative and discriminative Deformable Models achieves state-of-the-art results on the tasks of (i) landmark localization and (ii) semi-supervised annotation of large visual data.
Version
Open Access
Date Issued
2017-03
Date Awarded
2018-01
Advisor
Zafeiriou, Stefanos
Pantic, Maja
Publisher Department
Computing
Publisher Institution
Imperial College London
Qualification Level
Doctoral
Qualification Name
Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)