Fast Mean shift by compact density representation

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Abstract

The Mean Shift procedure is a well established clustering technique that is widely used in imaging applications such as image and video segmentation, denoising, object tracking, texture classification, and others. However, the Mean Shift procedure has relatively high time complexity which is superlinear in the number of data points. In this paper we present a novel fast Mean Shift procedure which is based on the random sampling of the Kernel Density Estimate (KDE). We show theoretically that the resulting reduced KDE is close to the complete data KDE, to within a given accuracy. Moreover, we prove that the time complexity of the proposed fast Mean Shift procedure based on the reduced KDE is considerably lower than that of the original Mean Shift; the typical gain is of several orders for big data sets. Experiments show that image and video segmentation results of the proposed fast Mean Shift method are similar to those based on the standard Mean shift procedure. We also present a new application of the Fast Mean Shift method to the efficient construction of graph hierarchies for images; the resulting structure is potentially useful for solving computer vision problems which can be posed as graph problems, including stereo, semi-automatic segmentation, and optical flow. ©2009 IEEE.

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Freedman, D., & Kisilev, P. (2009). Fast Mean shift by compact density representation. In 2009 IEEE Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition, CVPR 2009 (pp. 1818–1825). IEEE Computer Society. https://doi.org/10.1109/CVPRW.2009.5206716

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