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Journal Article

Citation

Fan D, Wang L, Cheng S, Li Y. Sensors (Basel) 2021; 21(17): e5839.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2021, MDPI: Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute)

DOI

10.3390/s21175839

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

As a sub-direction of image retrieval, person re-identification (Re-ID) is usually used to solve the security problem of cross camera tracking and monitoring. A growing number of shopping centers have recently attempted to apply Re-ID technology. One of the development trends of related algorithms is using an attention mechanism to capture global and local features. We notice that these algorithms have apparent limitations. They only focus on the most salient features without considering certain detailed features. People's clothes, bags and even shoes are of great help to distinguish pedestrians. We notice that global features usually cover these important local features. Therefore, we propose a dual branch network based on a multi-scale attention mechanism. This network can capture apparent global features and inconspicuous local features of pedestrian images. Specifically, we design a dual branch attention network (DBA-Net) for better performance. These two branches can optimize the extracted features of different depths at the same time. We also design an effective block (called channel, position and spatial-wise attention (CPSA)), which can capture key fine-grained information, such as bags and shoes. Furthermore, based on ID loss, we use complementary triplet loss and adaptive weighted rank list loss (WRLL) on each branch during the training process. DBA-Net can not only learn semantic context information of the channel, position, and spatial dimensions but can integrate detailed semantic information by learning the dependency relationships between features. Extensive experiments on three widely used open-source datasets proved that DBA-Net clearly yielded overall state-of-the-art performance. Particularly on the CUHK03 dataset, the mean average precision (mAP) of DBA-Net achieved 83.2%.


Language: en

Keywords

deep learning; attention; dual branch; loss function; person re-identification

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