NDPNet: A novel non-linear data projection network for few-shot fine-grained image classification
This work addresses the problem of classifying fine-grained images with very few examples, which is incremental as it builds on existing metric-based methods.
The paper tackled few-shot fine-grained image classification by introducing a non-linear data projection network to enhance discriminability and address limited samples, achieving state-of-the-art results in experiments.
Metric-based few-shot fine-grained image classification (FSFGIC) aims to learn a transferable feature embedding network by estimating the similarities between query images and support classes from very few examples. In this work, we propose, for the first time, to introduce the non-linear data projection concept into the design of FSFGIC architecture in order to address the limited sample problem in few-shot learning and at the same time to increase the discriminability of the model for fine-grained image classification. Specifically, we first design a feature re-abstraction embedding network that has the ability to not only obtain the required semantic features for effective metric learning but also re-enhance such features with finer details from input images. Then the descriptors of the query images and the support classes are projected into different non-linear spaces in our proposed similarity metric learning network to learn discriminative projection factors. This design can effectively operate in the challenging and restricted condition of a FSFGIC task for making the distance between the samples within the same class smaller and the distance between samples from different classes larger and for reducing the coupling relationship between samples from different categories. Furthermore, a novel similarity measure based on the proposed non-linear data project is presented for evaluating the relationships of feature information between a query image and a support set. It is worth to note that our proposed architecture can be easily embedded into any episodic training mechanisms for end-to-end training from scratch. Extensive experiments on FSFGIC tasks demonstrate the superiority of the proposed methods over the state-of-the-art benchmarks.