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voc-release4.01's Introduction

Information
===========

Project webpage: http://www.cs.uchicago.edu/~pff/latent/.

This is an implementation of our object detection system based on
mixtures of deformable part models. The current implementation extends
the system in [2] as described in [3]. The models in this implementation 
are structured using the grammar formalism presented in [4].

The distribution contains object detection and model learning code, as
well as models trained on the PASCAL and INRIA Person datasets. This
release also includes code for rescoring detections based on
contextual information.

The system is implemented in Matlab, with a few helper functions
written in C/C++ for efficiency reasons. The software was tested on
several versions of Linux and Mac OS X using Matlab versions R2009b
and R2010a. There may be compatibility issues with other versions of
Matlab.

For questions concerning the code please contact Ross Girshick at
<rbg AT cs DOT uchicago DOT edu>.

This project has been supported by the National Science Foundation under Grant
No. 0534820, 0746569 and 0811340.


References
==========

[1] P. Felzenszwalb, D. McAllester, D. Ramaman.  
A Discriminatively Trained, Multiscale, Deformable Part Model.  
Proceedings of the IEEE CVPR 2008.

[2] P. Felzenszwalb, R. Girshick, D. McAllester, D. Ramanan.  Object
Detection with Discriminatively Trained Part Based Models.
To appear in the IEEE Transactions on Pattern Analysis and Machine 
Intelligence.

[3] P. Felzenszwalb, R. Girshick, D. McAllester.
release4-notes.pdf -- included in this code release.

[4] P. Felzenszwalb, D. McAllester
Object Detection Grammars
University of Chicago, Computer Science TR-2010-02, February 2010


How to Cite
===========
When citing our system, please cite reference [2] and the website for
the specific release. The website bibtex reference is below.

@misc{voc-release4,
  author = "Felzenszwalb, P. F. and Girshick, R. B. and McAllester, D.",
  title = "Discriminatively Trained Deformable Part Models, Release 4",
  howpublished = "http://people.cs.uchicago.edu/~pff/latent-release4/"}


Basic Usage
===========

1. Unpack the code.
2. Start matlab.
3. Run the 'compile' script to compile the helper functions.
   (you may need to edit compile.m to use a different convolution 
    routine depending on your system)
4. Load a model and an image.
5. Use 'process' to detect objects.

example:
> load VOC2007/car_final.mat;   % car model trained on the PASCAL 2007 dataset
> im = imread('000034.jpg');    % test image
> bbox = process(im, model, 0); % detect objects
> showboxes(im, bbox);          % display results

The main functions defined in the object detection code are:

boxes = imgdetect(im, model, thresh)              % detect objects in image im
bbox = bboxpred_get(model.bboxpred, dets, boxes)  % bounding box location regression
I = nms(bbox, overlap)                            % non-maximal suppression
bbox = clipboxes(im, bbox)                        % clip boxes to image boundary
showboxes(im, boxes)                              % visualize detections
visualizemodel(model)                             % visualize models

Their usage is demonstrated in the 'demo' script.  

The directories 'VOC200?' contain matlab datafiles with models trained
on several PASCAL datasets (the train+val subsets).  Loading one of
these files from within matlab will define a variable 'model' with the
model trained for a particular object category.  The value
'model.thresh' defines a threshold that can be used in the 'detect'
function to obtain a high recall rate.

Using the learning code
=======================

1. Download and install the 2006/2007/2008 PASCAL VOC devkit and dataset.
   (you should set VOCopts.testset='test' in VOCinit.m)
2. Modify 'globals.m' according to your configuration.
3. Run 'make' to compile learn.cc, the LSVM gradient descent code.
   (Run from a shell, not Matlab.)
4. Start matlab.
5. Run the 'compile' script to compile the helper functions.
   (you may need to edit compile.m to use a different convolution 
    routine depending on your system)
6. Use the 'pascal' script to train and evaluate a model. 

example:
> pascal('person', 3);   % train and evaluate a 6 component person model

The learning code saves a number of intermediate files in a cache
directory defined in 'globals.m'.  You should delete these files before
training models on different datasets, or when training new models after
modifing the code.

The code also generates some very large temporary files during training
(the default configuration produces files up to about 3GB).  They are
placed in a temporary directory defined in 'globals.m'.  This directory
should be in a local filesystem.


Context Rescoring
=================

This release includes code for rescoring detections based on contextual
information.  Context rescoring is performed by class-specific SVMs.
To train these SVMs, the following steps are required.
1) Models for all 20 PASCAL object classes must be trained.
2) Detections must be computed on the PASCAL trainval and test datasets.
   (The script trainval.m can be used for computing detections on the
    trainval dataset.)
3) The svm-mex MATLAB interface for SVM^light must be installed.  It
   can be downloaded from http://sourceforge.net/projects/mex-svm/.
   (This in turn requires downloading SVM^light version *6.01*.)
   Place the 'svm_mex601' directory from the installation in this 
   code directory.
After these steps have been completed, the context rescoring SVMs
can be trained by calling the function 'rescore_train()' in matlab.
The detections on the test datasets, for all classes, can be rescored
by calling the function 'rescore_test()' in matlab.

example:
> rescore_train()
> rescore_test()


Multicore Support
=================

In addition to multithreaded convolutions (see notes in compile.m),
multicore support is also available through the Matlab Parallel 
Computing Toolbox.  Various loops (e.g., negative example data mining,
positive latent labeling, and testing) are implemented using the 'parfor'
parallel for-loop construct.  To take advantage of the parfor loops,
use the 'matlabpool' command.

example:
> matlabpool open 8   % start 8 parallel matlab instances

The parfor loops work without any changes when running a single
Matlab instance.  Note that due to the use of parfor loops you may
see non-sequential ordering of loop indexes in the terminal output when
training and testing.  This is expected behavior.  The parallel computing
toolbox has been tested on Linux using Matlab 2009b and 2010a.  The OS
X version of Matlab tends to crash when using the parallel computing
toolbox.

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