Visualizing and Understanding Deep Texture Representations
This work addresses the problem of understanding and improving texture representations in deep learning for computer vision researchers, but it is incremental as it builds on existing models.
The paper systematically evaluates CNN-based texture descriptors for recognition, showing that the bilinear CNN model is a strong general-purpose texture descriptor that outperforms others on benchmarks and achieves better ImageNet accuracy without spatial jittering.
A number of recent approaches have used deep convolutional neural networks (CNNs) to build texture representations. Nevertheless, it is still unclear how these models represent texture and invariances to categorical variations. This work conducts a systematic evaluation of recent CNN-based texture descriptors for recognition and attempts to understand the nature of invariances captured by these representations. First we show that the recently proposed bilinear CNN model [25] is an excellent general-purpose texture descriptor and compares favorably to other CNN-based descriptors on various texture and scene recognition benchmarks. The model is translationally invariant and obtains better accuracy on the ImageNet dataset without requiring spatial jittering of data compared to corresponding models trained with spatial jittering. Based on recent work [13, 28] we propose a technique to visualize pre-images, providing a means for understanding categorical properties that are captured by these representations. Finally, we show preliminary results on how a unified parametric model of texture analysis and synthesis can be used for attribute-based image manipulation, e.g. to make an image more swirly, honeycombed, or knitted. The source code and additional visualizations are available at http://vis-www.cs.umass.edu/texture