Recognizing Groceries in situ Using in vitro Training Data
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Recognizing Groceries in situ Using in vitro Training Data

Abstract

The problem of using pictures of objects captured under ideal imaging conditions (here referred to as in vitro) to recognize objects in natural environments (in situ) is an emerging area of interest in computer vision and pattern recognition. Examples of tasks in this vein include assistive vision systems for the blind and object recognition for mobile robots; the proliferation of image databases on the web is bound to lead to more examples in the near future. Despite its importance, there is still a need for a freely available database to facilitate study of this kind of training/testing dichotomy. In this work one of our contributions is a new multimedia database of 120 grocery products, GroZi-120. For every product, two different recordings are available: in vitro images extracted from online grocery websites, and in situ images extracted from camcorder video collected inside a grocery store. As an additional contribution, we present the results of applying three commonly used object recognition/ detection algorithms (color histogram matching, SIFT matching, and boosted Haar-like features) to the dataset. Finally, we analyze the successes and failures of these algorithms against product type and imaging conditions, both in terms of recognition rate and localization accuracy, in order to suggest ways forward for further research in this domain.

Pre-2018 CSE ID: CS2007-0877

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