Abstract:Image classification has become a key ingredient in the field of computer vision. To enhance classification accuracy, current approaches heavily focus on increasing network depth and width, e.g., inception modules, at the cost of computational requirements. To mitigate this problem, in this paper a novel dictionary learning method is proposed and tested with Chinese handwritten numbers. We have considered three important characteristics to design the dictionary: discriminability, sparsity, and classification error. We formulated these metrics into a unified cost function. The proposed architecture i) obtains an efficient sparse code in a novel feature space without relying on $\ell_0$ and $\ell_1$ norms minimisation; and ii) includes the classification error within the cost function as an extra constraint. Experimental results show that the proposed method provides superior classification performance compared to recent dictionary learning methods. With a classification accuracy of $\sim$98\%, the results suggest that our proposed sparse learning algorithm achieves comparable performance to existing well-known deep learning methods, e.g., SqueezeNet, GoogLeNet and MobileNetV2, but with a fraction of parameters.
Abstract:In this paper, the problem of terahertz pulsed imaging and reconstruction is addressed. It is assumed that an incomplete (subsampled) three dimensional THz data set has been acquired and the aim is to recover all missing samples. A sparsity-inducing approach is proposed for this purpose. First, a simple interpolation is applied to incomplete noisy data. Then, we propose a spatio-temporal dictionary learning method to obtain an appropriate sparse representation of data based on a joint sparse recovery algorithm. Then, using the sparse coefficients and the learned dictionary, the 3D data is effectively denoised by minimizing a simple cost function. We consider two types of terahertz data to evaluate the performance of the proposed approach; THz data acquired for a model sample with clear layered structures (e.g., a T-shape plastic sheet buried in a polythene pellet), and pharmaceutical tablet data (with low spatial resolution). The achieved signal-to-noise-ratio for reconstruction of T-shape data, from only 5% observation was 19 dB. Moreover, the accuracies of obtained thickness and depth measurements for pharmaceutical tablet data after reconstruction from 10% observation were 98.8%, and 99.9%, respectively. These results, along with chemical mapping analysis, presented at the end of this paper, confirm the accuracy of the proposed method.