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On-line Access: 2024-08-27
Received: 2023-10-17
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Yunhe PAN. On visual understanding[J]. Frontiers of Information Technology & Electronic Engineering, 2022, 23(9): 1287-1289.
@article{title="On visual understanding",
author="Yunhe PAN",
journal="Frontiers of Information Technology & Electronic Engineering",
volume="23",
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pages="1287-1289",
year="2022",
publisher="Zhejiang University Press & Springer",
doi="10.1631/FITEE.2130000"
}
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Abstract:
1 Problems and development in the field of visual recognition
From the beginning of artificial intelligence (AI), pattern recognition has been an important aspect of the field. In recent years, the maturity of deep neural networks (DNNs) has significantly improved the accuracy of visual recognition. DNN has been widely used in applications such as medical image classification, vehicle identification, and facial recognition, and has thus promoted the development of the AI industry to a climax. However, there are currently critical defects in visual recognition based on DNN technology. For example, these networks usually require a very large amount of labeled training data, and have weak cross-domain transferability and task generalization. Their learning and reasoning processes are still hard to understand, which leads to unexplainable predictions. These challenges present an obstacle to the development of AI research and application.
If we look at the current visual recognition technology from a larger and broader perspective, we can find that the above defects are fundamental, because the currently used DNN model needs to be trained with a large amount of labeled visual data, and then used in the process of visual recognition. In essence, it is a classification process based on data statistics and pattern matching (
2 Three-step model of visual understanding
Visual recognition is not equivalent to visual understanding. We propose that there are three steps in visual understanding, of which classification is only the first. After classification, one proceeds to the second step: visual parsing. In the process of visual parsing, the components of the visual object and their structural relationship are further identified and compared. Identification involves finding components and structures in visual data that correspond to the components and structures of known visual concepts. Parsing verifies the correctness of the classification results and establishes the structure of visual object data. After completing visual parsing, one proceeds to the third step: visual simulation. In this step, predictive motion simulation and operations including causal reasoning are carried out on the structure of the visual objects to judge the rationality of meeting physical constraints in reality, so as to verify the previous recognition and parsing results.
We can take a picture of a cat as an example to illustrate the modeling process of visual understanding. The process is as follows:
1. Recognition: It is a cat. Extract the visual concept of the cat and proceed to the next step; otherwise, stop here.
2. Parsing: Based on the structure contained in the visual concept, identify whether the cat’s head, body, feet, tail, and their relationships are suitable for the cat concept. If not, return to step 1 for re-identification; if yes, proceed to the next step.
3. Simulation: Simulate various activities of the cat to investigate whether the cat’s activities in various environments can be completed reasonably. If not, return to step 2; if yes, proceed to the next step.
4. End visual understanding: Incorporate the processed structured data into the knowledge about cats.
3 Characteristics of the three-step visual understanding model
To further understand the above-mentioned three-step visual understanding model, we will further discuss some of its characteristics:
1. The key step in visual understanding is visual parsing. This is an identification of the components contained in the object according to a conceptual structure based on the visual concept (
2. Human visual parsing tasks are often aimed only at the main components of concepts. The main components have existing, commonly used names. For subsidiary parts that have not been described in language, such as the area between the cheekbones and chin of the face, only experts specialized in anatomy (such as doctors or artists) have professional concepts and memories. Therefore, visual parsing is a cross-media (
3. Visual knowledge (
4. Visual data that have been understood have actually been structured to form visual knowledge. Such visual knowledge can easily be incorporated into long-term memory. For example, when one sees a cat whose head is very small, or whose fur color and markings are unusual, or who has a particular gait, this information may be included in one’s “cat” memory by expanding the concept of “cat” (
5. The learned visual information can naturally be explained, because it has deep structural cognition; it can also be used for transfer learning because the semantic concepts have cross-media relevance. This semantic information can clearly indicate the reasonable direction of transferable recognition.
4 Advancing visual recognition to visual understanding
Visual understanding is important, because it can potentially work with visual knowledge (
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