4.7 Article

Representative Discovery of Structure Cues for Weakly-Supervised Image Segmentation

Journal

IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON MULTIMEDIA
Volume 16, Issue 2, Pages 470-479

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TMM.2013.2293424

Keywords

Structure cues; graphlet; weakly supervised; segmentation; active learning

Funding

  1. Singapore National Research Foundation under its International Research Centre@Singapore Funding Initiative
  2. Nature Science Foundation of China [61373076]
  3. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities [2013121026]
  4. 985 Project of Xiamen University
  5. Natural Science Foundation of China [61002009]
  6. Key Science and Technology Program of Zhejiang Province of China [2012C01035-1]
  7. Zhejiang Provincial Natural Science Foundation of China [LZ13F020004]

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Weakly-supervised image segmentation is a challenging problem with multidisciplinary applications in multimedia content analysis and beyond. It aims to segment an image by leveraging its image-level semantics (i.e., tags). This paper presents a weakly-supervised image segmentation algorithm that learns the distribution of spatially structural superpixel sets from image-level labels. More specifically, we first extract graphlets from a given image, which are small-sized graphs consisting of superpixels and encapsulating their spatial structure. Then, an efficient manifold embedding algorithm is proposed to transfer labels from training images into graphlets. It is further observed that there are numerous redundant graphlets that are not discriminative to semantic categories, which are abandoned by a graphlet selection scheme as they make no contribution to the subsequent segmentation. Thereafter, we use a Gaussian mixture model (GMM) to learn the distribution of the selected post-embedding graphlets (i.e., vectors output from the graphlet embedding). Finally, we propose an image segmentation algorithm, termed representative graphlet cut, which leverages the learned GMM prior to measure the structure homogeneity of a test image. Experimental results show that the proposed approach outperforms state-of-the-art weakly-supervised image segmentation methods, on five popular segmentation data sets. Besides, our approach performs competitively to the fully-supervised segmentation models.

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