JOURNAL ARTICLE

Cross-Modality Person Re-Identification with Generative Adversarial Training

Abstract

Person re-identification (Re-ID) is an important task in video surveillance which automatically searches and identifies people across different cameras. Despite the extensive Re-ID progress in RGB cameras, few works have studied the Re-ID between infrared and RGB images, which is essentially a cross-modality problem and widely encountered in real-world scenarios. The key challenge lies in two folds, i.e., the lack of discriminative information to re-identify the same person between RGB and infrared modalities, and the difficulty to learn a robust metric towards such a large-scale cross-modality retrieval. In this paper, we tackle the above two challenges by proposing a novel cross-modality generative adversarial network (termed cmGAN). To handle the issue of insufficient discriminative information, we leverage the cutting-edge generative adversarial training to design our own discriminator to learn discriminative feature representation from different modalities. To handle the issue of large-scale cross-modality metric learning, we integrates both identification loss and cross-modality triplet loss, which minimize inter-class ambiguity while maximizing cross-modality similarity among instances. The entire cmGAN can be trained in an end-to-end manner by using standard deep neural network framework. We have quantized the performance of our work in the newly-released SYSU RGB-IR Re-ID benchmark, and have reported superior performance, i.e., Cumulative Match Characteristic curve (CMC) and Mean Average Precision (MAP), over the state-of-the-art works [Wu et al., 2017], respectively.

Keywords:
Discriminative model Artificial intelligence Computer science Leverage (statistics) Modality (human–computer interaction) Metric (unit) Discriminator Benchmark (surveying) RGB color model Feature learning Adversarial system Machine learning Pattern recognition (psychology) Modalities Deep learning Engineering

Metrics

416
Cited By
23.25
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
40
Refs
0.99
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
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Citation History

Topics

Video Surveillance and Tracking Methods
Physical Sciences →  Computer Science →  Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition
Advanced Neural Network Applications
Physical Sciences →  Computer Science →  Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition
Image Enhancement Techniques
Physical Sciences →  Computer Science →  Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition
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