To break the three lockings during backpropagation (BP) process for neural network training, multiple decoupled learning methods have been investigated recently. These methods either lead to significant drop in accuracy performance or suffer from dramatic increase in memory usage. In this paper, a new form of decoupled learning, named decoupled neural network training scheme with re-computation and weight prediction (DTRP) is proposed. In DTRP, a re-computation scheme is adopted to solve the memory explosion problem, and a weight prediction scheme is proposed to deal with the weight delay caused by re-computation. Additionally, a batch compensation scheme is developed, allowing the proposed DTRP to run faster. Theoretical analysis shows that DTRP is guaranteed to converge to crical points under certain conditions. Experiments are conducted by training various convolutional neural networks on several classification datasets, showing comparable or better results than the state-of-the-art methods and BP. These experiments also reveal that adopting the proposed method, the memory explosion problem is effectively solved, and a significant acceleration is achieved.
Recently, personality trait recognition, which aims to identify people’s first impression behavior data and analyze people’s psychological characteristics, has been an interesting and active topic in psychology, affective neuroscience and artificial intelligence. To effectively take advantage of spatio-temporal cues in audio-visual modalities, this paper proposes a new method of multimodal personality trait recognition integrating audio-visual modalities based on a hybrid deep learning framework, which is comprised of convolutional neural networks (CNN), bi-directional long short-term memory network (Bi-LSTM), and the Transformer network. In particular, a pre-trained deep audio CNN model is used to learn high-level segment-level audio features. A pre-trained deep face CNN model is leveraged to separately learn high-level frame-level global scene features and local face features from each frame in dynamic video sequences. Then, these extracted deep audio-visual features are fed into a Bi-LSTM and a Transformer network to individually capture long-term temporal dependency, thereby producing the final global audio and visual features for downstream tasks. Finally, a linear regression method is employed to conduct the single audio-based and visual-based personality trait recognition tasks, followed by a decision-level fusion strategy used for producing the final Big-Five personality scores and interview scores. Experimental results on the public ChaLearn First Impression-V2 personality dataset show the effectiveness of our method, outperforming other used methods.
Mask-face detection has been a significant task since the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic in early 2020. While various reviews on mask-face detection techniques up to 2021 are available, little has been reviewed on the distinction between two-class (i.e., wearing mask and without mask) and three-class masking, which includes an additional incorrect-mask-wearing class. Moreover, no formal review has been conducted on the techniques of implementing mask detection models in hardware systems or mobile devices. The objectives of this paper are three-fold. First, we aimed to provide an up-to-date review of recent mask-face detection research in both two-class cases and three-class cases, next, to fill the gap left by existing reviews by providing a formal review of mask-face detection hardware systems; and to propose a new framework named Out-of-distribution Mask (OOD-Mask) to perform the three-class detection task using only two-class training data. This was achieved by treating the incorrect-mask-wearing scenario as an anomaly, leading to reasonable performance in the absence of training data of the third class.
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