Museum Exhibit Identification Challenge for the Supervised Domain Adaptation and Beyond

Piotr Koniusz, Yusuf Tas, Hongguang Zhang, Mehrtash Harandi, Fatih Porikli, Rui Zhang; Proceedings of the European Conference on Computer Vision (ECCV), 2018, pp. 788-804

Abstract


We study an open problem of artwork identification and propose a new dataset dubbed Open Museum Identification Challenge (Open MIC). It contains photos of exhibits captured in 10 distinct exhibition spaces of several museums which showcase paintings, timepieces, sculptures, glassware, relics, science exhibits, natural history pieces, ceramics, pottery, tools and indigenous crafts. The goal of Open MIC is to stimulate research in domain adaptation, egocentric recognition and few-shot learning by providing a testbed complementary to the famous Office dataset which reaches ~90% accuracy. To form our dataset, we captured a number of images per art piece with a mobile phone and wearable cameras to form the source and target data splits, respectively. To achieve robust baselines, we build on a recent approach that aligns per-class scatter matrices of the source and target CNN streams. Moreover, we exploit the positive definite nature of such representations by using end-to-end Bregman divergences and the Riemannian metric. We present baselines such as training/evaluation per exhibition and training/evaluation on the combined set covering 866 exhibit identities. As each exhibition poses distinct challenges e.g., quality of lighting, motion blur, occlusions, clutter, viewpoint and scale variations, rotations, glares, transparency, non-planarity, clipping, we break down results w.r.t. these factors.

Related Material


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[bibtex]
@InProceedings{Koniusz_2018_ECCV,
author = {Koniusz, Piotr and Tas, Yusuf and Zhang, Hongguang and Harandi, Mehrtash and Porikli, Fatih and Zhang, Rui},
title = {Museum Exhibit Identification Challenge for the Supervised Domain Adaptation and Beyond},
booktitle = {Proceedings of the European Conference on Computer Vision (ECCV)},
month = {September},
year = {2018}
}