Discriminative Deep Metric Learning for Face Verification in the Wild

Abstract

This paper presents a new discriminative deep metric learning (DDML) method for face verification in the wild. Different from existing metric learning-based face verification methods which aim to learn a Mahalanobis distance metric to maximize the inter-class variations and minimize the intra-class variations, simultaneously, the proposed DDML trains a deep neural network which learns a set of hierarchical nonlinear transformations to project face pairs into the same feature subspace, under which the distance of each positive face pair is less than a smaller threshold and that of each negative pair is higher than a larger threshold, respectively, so that discriminative information can be exploited in the deep network. Our method achieves very competitive face verification performance on the widely used LFW and YouTube Faces (YTF) datasets.

Cite

Text

Hu et al. "Discriminative Deep Metric Learning for Face Verification in the Wild." Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition, 2014. doi:10.1109/CVPR.2014.242

Markdown

[Hu et al. "Discriminative Deep Metric Learning for Face Verification in the Wild." Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition, 2014.](https://mlanthology.org/cvpr/2014/hu2014cvpr-discriminative/) doi:10.1109/CVPR.2014.242

BibTeX

@inproceedings{hu2014cvpr-discriminative,
  title     = {{Discriminative Deep Metric Learning for Face Verification in the Wild}},
  author    = {Hu, Junlin and Lu, Jiwen and Tan, Yap-Peng},
  booktitle = {Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition},
  year      = {2014},
  doi       = {10.1109/CVPR.2014.242},
  url       = {https://mlanthology.org/cvpr/2014/hu2014cvpr-discriminative/}
}