Andrew Garbett

2papers

2 Papers

CVMar 30, 2021
Pre-training strategies and datasets for facial representation learning

Adrian Bulat, Shiyang Cheng, Jing Yang et al.

What is the best way to learn a universal face representation? Recent work on Deep Learning in the area of face analysis has focused on supervised learning for specific tasks of interest (e.g. face recognition, facial landmark localization etc.) but has overlooked the overarching question of how to find a facial representation that can be readily adapted to several facial analysis tasks and datasets. To this end, we make the following 4 contributions: (a) we introduce, for the first time, a comprehensive evaluation benchmark for facial representation learning consisting of 5 important face analysis tasks. (b) We systematically investigate two ways of large-scale representation learning applied to faces: supervised and unsupervised pre-training. Importantly, we focus our evaluations on the case of few-shot facial learning. (c) We investigate important properties of the training datasets including their size and quality (labelled, unlabelled or even uncurated). (d) To draw our conclusions, we conducted a very large number of experiments. Our main two findings are: (1) Unsupervised pre-training on completely in-the-wild, uncurated data provides consistent and, in some cases, significant accuracy improvements for all facial tasks considered. (2) Many existing facial video datasets seem to have a large amount of redundancy. We will release code, and pre-trained models to facilitate future research.

CRApr 18, 2020
CryptoCam: Privacy Conscious Open Circuit Television

Gerard Wilkinson, Dan Jackson, Andrew Garbett et al.

The prevalence of Closed Circuit Television (CCTV) in today's society has given rise to an inherent asymmetry of control between the watchers and the watched. A sense of unease relating to the unobservable observer (operator) often leads to a lack of trust in the camera and its purpose, despite security cameras generally being present as a protective device. In this paper, we detail our concept of Open Circuit Television and prototype CryptoCam, a novel system for secure sharing of video footage to individuals and potential subjects nearby. Utilizing point-of-capture encryption and wireless transfer of time-based access keys for footage, we have developed a system to encourage a more open approach to information sharing and consumption. Detailing concerns highlighted in existing literature we formalize our over-arching concept into a framework called Open Circuit Television (OCTV). Through CryptoCam we hope to address this asymmetry of control by providing subjects with data equity, discoverability and oversight.