Mariette Schönfeld

h-index29
2papers

2 Papers

14.4CVMay 27
Transfer learning RGB models to hyperspectral images with trainable tensor decompositions

Mariette Schönfeld, Laurens Devos, Wannes Meert et al.

Transfer learning makes it possible to use large vision networks on a variety of domains, by specializing their models' general filters to new tasks. However, these networks assume the input images to have 3 input channels, making them incompatible with multi- or hyperspectral images. Current approaches that mitigate this incompatibility sacrifice information in either the image, or the model. This work proposes a novel approach that preserves the image and spatial information present in the model by using partially trainable tensor decompositions. We create such decompositions of pretrained convolutional filters, separating the filters into spatial and spectral components. The spectral components are then replaced with trainable components of higher channel dimensionality. This creates hyperspectral filters that can specialize to new datasets, while retaining the spatial patterns of the original filter. Experiments on a variety of hyperspectral datasets show that our approach is more accurate and robust than other hyperspectral transfer learning methods.

CVSep 22, 2025Code
Tailored Transformation Invariance for Industrial Anomaly Detection

Mariette Schönfeld, Wannes Meert, Hendrik Blockeel

Industrial Anomaly Detection (IAD) is a subproblem within Computer Vision Anomaly Detection that has been receiving increasing amounts of attention due to its applicability to real-life scenarios. Recent research has focused on how to extract the most informative features, contrasting older kNN-based methods that use only pretrained features. These recent methods are much more expensive to train however and could complicate real-life application. Careful study of related work with regards to transformation invariance leads to the idea that popular benchmarks require robustness to only minor translations. With this idea we then formulate LWinNN, a local window based approach that creates a middle ground between kNN based methods that have either complete or no translation invariance. Our experiments demonstrate that this small change increases accuracy considerably, while simultaneously decreasing both train and test time. This teaches us two things: first, the gap between kNN-based approaches and more complex state-of-the-art methodology can still be narrowed by effective usage of the limited data available. Second, our assumption of requiring only limited translation invariance highlights potential areas of interest for future work and the need for more spatially diverse benchmarks, for which our method can hopefully serve as a new baseline. Our code can be found at https://github.com/marietteschonfeld/LWinNN .