David W. Jacobs, Daphna Weinshall, et al.
IEEE Transactions on Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence
University of California Santa Barbara, CA, 93117, Many traditional methods for shape classification involve establishing point correspondences between shapes to produce matching scores, which are in turn used as similarity measures for classification. Learning techniques have been applied only in the second stage of this process, after the matching scores have been obtained. In this paper, instead of simply taking for granted the scores obtained by matching and then learning a classifier, we learn the matching scores themselves so as to produce shape similarity scores that minimize the classification loss. The solution is based on a max-margin formulation in the structured prediction setting. Experiments in shape databases reveal that such an integrated learning algorithm substantially improves on existing methods. © 2009 IEEE.
David W. Jacobs, Daphna Weinshall, et al.
IEEE Transactions on Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence
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