4.7 Article

Identifying Visible Parts via Pose Estimation for Occluded Person Re-Identification

Journal

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TNNLS.2021.3059515

Keywords

Probes; Feature extraction; Task analysis; Pose estimation; Image reconstruction; Channel estimation; Vegetation; Human pose; occluded person re-identification; occlusion detection

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This article addresses the occlusion problem in person re-identification, proposing to incorporate pose information into the re-id framework to eliminate noise information.
We focus on the occlusion problem in person re-identification (re-id), which is one of the main challenges in real-world person retrieval scenarios. Previous methods on the occluded re-id problem usually assume that only the probes are occluded, thereby removing occlusions by manually cropping. However, this may not always hold in practice. This article relaxes this assumption and investigates a more general occlusion problem, where both the probe and gallery images could be occluded. The key to this challenging problem is depressing the noise information by identifying bodies and occlusions. We propose to incorporate the pose information into the re-id framework, which benefits the model in three aspects. First, it provides the location of the body. We then design a Pose-Masked Feature Branch to make our model focus on the body region only and filter those noise features brought by occlusions. Second, the estimated pose reveals which body parts are visible, giving us a hint to construct more informative person features. We propose a Pose-Embedded Feature Branch to adaptively re-calibrate channel-wise feature responses based on the visible body parts. Third, in testing, the estimated pose indicates which regions are informative and reliable for both probe and gallery images. Then we explicitly split the extracted spatial feature into parts. Only part features from those commonly visible parts are utilized in the retrieval. To better evaluate the performances of the occluded re-id, we also propose a large-scale data set for the occluded re-id with more than 35 000 images, namely Occluded-DukeMTMC. Extensive experiments show our approach surpasses previous methods on the occluded, partial, and non-occluded re-id data sets.

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