Tri-Subject Kinship Verification: Understanding the Core of A Family
This work addresses kinship verification for computer vision applications, such as AI agents in human environments, but is incremental as it builds on existing bi-subject methods by extending to tri-subject scenarios.
The paper tackles the problem of tri-subject kinship verification (one child versus two parents) by proposing a novel relative symmetric bilinear model and a spatially voted feature selection method, achieving state-of-the-art performance on multiple datasets including a newly released large-scale database with over 1,000 families.
One major challenge in computer vision is to go beyond the modeling of individual objects and to investigate the bi- (one-versus-one) or tri- (one-versus-two) relationship among multiple visual entities, answering such questions as whether a child in a photo belongs to given parents. The child-parents relationship plays a core role in a family and understanding such kin relationship would have fundamental impact on the behavior of an artificial intelligent agent working in the human world. In this work, we tackle the problem of one-versus-two (tri-subject) kinship verification and our contributions are three folds: 1) a novel relative symmetric bilinear model (RSBM) introduced to model the similarity between the child and the parents, by incorporating the prior knowledge that a child may resemble a particular parent more than the other; 2) a spatially voted method for feature selection, which jointly selects the most discriminative features for the child-parents pair, while taking local spatial information into account; 3) a large scale tri-subject kinship database characterized by over 1,000 child-parents families. Extensive experiments on KinFaceW, Family101 and our newly released kinship database show that the proposed method outperforms several previous state of the art methods, while could also be used to significantly boost the performance of one-versus-one kinship verification when the information about both parents are available.