The activation of the Deep Convolutional Neural Networks hidden layers can be successfully used as features, often referred as Deep Features, in generic visual similarity search tasks. Recently scientists have shown that permutation-based methods offer very good performance in indexing and supporting approximate similarity search on large database of objects. Permutation-based approaches represent metric objects as sequences (permutations) of reference objects, chosen from a predefined set of data. However, associating objects with permutations might have a high cost due to the distance calculation between the data objects and the reference objects. In this work, we propose a new approach to generate permutations at a very low computational cost, when objects to be indexed are Deep Features. We show that the permutations generated using the proposed method are more effective than those obtained using pivot selection criteria specifically developed for permutation-based methods.

Deep permutations: Deep convolutional neural networks and permutation-based indexing

VADICAMO, LUCIA
2016-01-01

Abstract

The activation of the Deep Convolutional Neural Networks hidden layers can be successfully used as features, often referred as Deep Features, in generic visual similarity search tasks. Recently scientists have shown that permutation-based methods offer very good performance in indexing and supporting approximate similarity search on large database of objects. Permutation-based approaches represent metric objects as sequences (permutations) of reference objects, chosen from a predefined set of data. However, associating objects with permutations might have a high cost due to the distance calculation between the data objects and the reference objects. In this work, we propose a new approach to generate permutations at a very low computational cost, when objects to be indexed are Deep Features. We show that the permutations generated using the proposed method are more effective than those obtained using pivot selection criteria specifically developed for permutation-based methods.
2016
978-3-319-46758-0
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11568/878557
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