Search results for key=BeL1994 : 1 match found.

Refereed full papers (journals, book chapters, international conferences)

1994

Jeffrey S. Beis and David G. Lowe, Learning indexing functions for 3-D model-based object recognition, In Proceedings of the 1994 IEEE Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition (CVPR'94), Seattle, U.S.A., June 1994.

Indexing is an efficient method of recovering match hypotheses in model-based object recognition. Unlike other methods, which search for viewpoint-invariant shape descriptors to use as indices, we use a learning method to model the smooth variation in appearance of local feature sets (LFS). Indexing from LFS effectively deals with the problems of occlusion and missing features. The indexing functions generated by the learning method are probability distributions describing the possible interpretations of each index value. During recognition, this information can be used to select the least ambiguous features for matching. A verification stage follows so that the final reliability and accuracy of the match is greater than that from indexing alone. This approach has the potential to work with a wide range of image features and model types.