Image-based family verification in the wild
Laburpena
Facial image analysis has been an important subject of study in the communities of pat-
tern recognition and computer vision. Facial images contain much information about the
person they belong to: identity, age, gender, ethnicity, expression and many more. For that
reason, the analysis of facial images has many applications in real world problems such
as face recognition, age estimation, gender classification or facial expression recognition.
Visual kinship recognition is a new research topic in the scope of facial image analysis.
It is essential for many real-world applications. However, nowadays
there exist only a few practical vision systems capable to handle such tasks. Hence, vision
technology for kinship-based problems has not matured enough to be applied to real-
world problems. This leads to a concern of unsatisfactory performance when attempted
on real-world datasets.
Kinship verification is to determine pairwise kin relations for a pair of given images. It
can be viewed as a typical binary classification problem, i.e., a face pair is either related
by kinship or it is not. Prior research works have addressed kinship types
for which pre-existing datasets have provided images, annotations and a verification task
protocol. Namely, father-son, father-daughter, mother-son and mother-daughter.
The main objective of this Master work is the study and development of feature selection
and fusion for the problem of family verification from facial images.
To achieve this objective, there is a main tasks that can be addressed: perform a compara-
tive study on face descriptors that include classic descriptors as well as deep descriptors.
The main contributions of this Thesis work are:
1. Studying the state of the art of the problem of family verification in images.
2. Implementing and comparing several criteria that correspond to different face rep-
resentations (Local Binary Patterns (LBP), Histogram Oriented Gradients (HOG),
deep descriptors).