A comparison of feature combination strategies for saliency-based visual attention systems

被引:81
作者
Itti, L [1 ]
Koch, C [1 ]
机构
[1] CALTECH, Computat & Neural Syst Program, Pasadena, CA 91125 USA
来源
HUMAN VISION AND ELECTRONIC IMAGING IV | 1999年 / 3644卷
关键词
attention; saliency; target detection; feature integration; learning;
D O I
10.1117/12.348467
中图分类号
TP18 [人工智能理论];
学科分类号
081104 ; 0812 ; 0835 ; 1405 ;
摘要
Bottom-up or saliency-based visual attention allows primates to detect non-specific conspicuous targets in cluttered scenes. A classical metaphor, derived from electrophysiological and psychophysical studies, describes attention as a rapidly shiftable "spotlight". The model described here reproduces the attentional scanpaths of this spotlight: Simple multi-scale "feature maps" detect local spatial discontinuities in intensity, color, orientation or optical flow, and are combined into a unique "master" or "saliency" map. The saliency map is sequentially scanned, in order of decreasing saliency, by the focus of attention. We study the problem of combining feature maps, from different visual modalities and with unrelated dynamic ranges (such as color and motion), into a unique saliency map. Four combination strategies are compared using three databases of natural color images: (1) Simple normalized summation, (2) linear combination with learned weights, (3) global non-linear normalization followed by summation, and (4) local nonlinear competition between salient locations. Performance was measured as the number of false detections before the most salient target was found. Strategy (1) always yielded poorest performance and (2) best performance, with a 3 to 8-fold improvement in time to find a salient target. However, (2) yielded specialized systems with poor generalization. Interestingly, strategy (4) and its simplified, computationally efficient approximation (3) yielded significantly better performance than (1), with up to 4-fold improvement, while preserving generality.
引用
收藏
页码:473 / 482
页数:10
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