Progressive sparse representation-based classification using local discrete cosine transform evaluation for image recognition

This paper proposes a progressive sparse representation-based classification algorithm using local discrete cosine transform (DCT) evaluation to perform face recognition. Specifically, the sum of the contributions of all training samples of each subject is first taken as the contribution of this sub...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of electronic imaging Vol. 24; no. 5; p. 053010
Main Authors Song, Xiaoning, Feng, Zhen-Hua, Hu, Guosheng, Yang, Xibei, Yang, Jingyu, Qi, Yunsong
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers 01.09.2015
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ISSN1017-9909
1560-229X
DOI10.1117/1.JEI.24.5.053010

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Summary:This paper proposes a progressive sparse representation-based classification algorithm using local discrete cosine transform (DCT) evaluation to perform face recognition. Specifically, the sum of the contributions of all training samples of each subject is first taken as the contribution of this subject, then the redundant subject with the smallest contribution to the test sample is iteratively eliminated. Second, the progressive method aims at representing the test sample as a linear combination of all the remaining training samples, by which the representation capability of each training sample is exploited to determine the optimal "nearest neighbors" for the test sample. Third, the transformed DCT evaluation is constructed to measure the similarity between the test sample and each local training sample using cosine distance metrics in the DCT domain. The final goal of the proposed method is to determine an optimal weighted sum of nearest neighbors that are obtained under the local correlative degree evaluation, which is approximately equal to the test sample, and we can use this weighted linear combination to perform robust classification. Experimental results conducted on the ORL database of faces (created by the Olivetti Research Laboratory in Cambridge), the FERET face database (managed by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency and the National Institute of Standards and Technology), AR face database (created by Aleix Martinez and Robert Benavente in the Computer Vision Center at U.A.B), and USPS handwritten digit database (gathered at the Center of Excellence in Document Analysis and Recognition at SUNY Buffalo) demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed method.
ISSN:1017-9909
1560-229X
DOI:10.1117/1.JEI.24.5.053010