CVMar 27, 2019

Laplace Landmark Localization

arXiv:1903.11633v249 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses the problem of accurate and efficient facial landmark detection for real-time applications, though it is incremental in improving existing deep learning methods.

The paper tackles facial landmark localization by introducing a LaplaceKL objective to penalize low confidence in heatmaps and an adversarial training framework to leverage unlabeled data, achieving state-of-the-art results on 300W benchmarks and competitive performance on AFLW with a model 1/8 the size of others.

Landmark localization in images and videos is a classic problem solved in various ways. Nowadays, with deep networks prevailing throughout machine learning, there are revamped interests in pushing facial landmark detection technologies to handle more challenging data. Most efforts use network objectives based on L1 or L2 norms, which have several disadvantages. First of all, the locations of landmarks are determined from generated heatmaps (i.e., confidence maps) from which predicted landmark locations (i.e., the means) get penalized without accounting for the spread: a high scatter corresponds to low confidence and vice-versa. For this, we introduce a LaplaceKL objective that penalizes for a low confidence. Another issue is a dependency on labeled data, which are expensive to obtain and susceptible to error. To address both issues we propose an adversarial training framework that leverages unlabeled data to improve model performance. Our method claims state-of-the-art on all of the 300W benchmarks and ranks second-to-best on the Annotated Facial Landmarks in the Wild (AFLW) dataset. Furthermore, our model is robust with a reduced size: 1/8 the number of channels (i.e., 0.0398MB) is comparable to state-of-that-art in real-time on CPU. Thus, we show that our method is of high practical value to real-life application.

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