4.7 Article

Cross-Modality Person Re-Identification via Modality-Aware Collaborative Ensemble Learning

Journal

IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON IMAGE PROCESSING
Volume 29, Issue -, Pages 9387-9399

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TIP.2020.2998275

Keywords

Cameras; Task analysis; Collaboration; Learning systems; Visualization; Face recognition; Collaborative work; Cross-modality; person re-identification; collaborative ensemble learning

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Visible thermal person re-identification (VT-ReID) is a challenging cross-modality pedestrian retrieval problem due to the large intra-class variations and modality discrepancy across different cameras. Existing VT-ReID methods mainly focus on learning cross-modality sharable feature representations by handling the modality-discrepancy in feature level. However, the modality difference in classifier level has received much less attention, resulting in limited discriminability. In this paper, we propose a novel modality-aware collaborative ensemble (MACE) learning method with middle-level sharable two-stream network (MSTN) for VT-ReID, which handles the modality-discrepancy in both feature level and classifier level. In feature level, MSTN achieves much better performance than existing methods by capturing sharable discriminative middle-level features in convolutional layers. In classifier level, we introduce both modality-specific and modality-sharable identity classifiers for two modalities to handle the modality discrepancy. To utilize the complementary information among different classifiers, we propose an ensemble learning scheme to incorporate the modality sharable classifier and the modality specific classifiers. In addition, we introduce a collaborative learning strategy, which regularizes modality-specific identity predictions and the ensemble outputs. Extensive experiments on two cross-modality datasets demonstrate that the proposed method outperforms current state-of-the-art by a large margin, achieving rank-1/mAP accuracy 51.64%/50.11% on the SYSU-MM01 dataset, and 72.37%/69.09% on the RegDB dataset.

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