Learning Efficient Binary Codes From High-Level Feature Representations for Multilabel Image Retrieval

2017 
Due to the efficiency and effectiveness of hashing technologies, they have become increasingly popular in large-scale image semantic retrieval. However, existing hash methods suppose that the data distributions satisfy the manifold assumption that semantic similar samples tend to lie on a low-dimensional manifold, which will be weakened due to the large intraclass variation. Moreover, these methods learn hash functions by relaxing the discrete constraints on binary codes to real value, which will introduce large quantization loss. To tackle the above problems, this paper proposes a novel unsupervised hashing algorithm to learn efficient binary codes from high-level feature representations. More specifically, we explore nonnegative matrix factorization for learning high-level visual features. Ultimately, binary codes are generated by performing binary quantization in the high-level feature representations space, which will map images with similar (visually or semantically) high-level feature representations to similar binary codes. To solve the corresponding optimization problem involving nonnegative and discrete variables, we develop an efficient optimization algorithm to reduce quantization loss with guaranteed convergence in theory. Extensive experiments show that our proposed method outperforms the state-of-the-art hashing methods on several multilabel real-world image datasets.
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