Abstract

In recent years, deep convolutional features have been applied to discriminative correlation filters-based methods, which have achieved impressive performance in tracking. Most of them utilize hierarchical features from a certain layer. However, this is not always sufficient to learn target appearance changes and to suppress the background interference in complicated interfering factors (e.g., deformation, fast motion, low resolution, and rotations). In this paper, we propose an adaptive multi-branch correlation filter tracking method, by constructing multi-branch models and using an adaptive selection strategy to improve the accuracy and robustness of visual tracking. Specially, the multi-branch models are introduced to tolerate temporal changes of the object, which can serve different circumstances. In addition, the adaptive selection strategy incorporates both foreground and background information to learn background suppression. To further improve the tracking performance, we propose a measurement method to handle tracking failures from unreliable samples. Extensive experiments on OTB-2013, OTB-2015, and VOT-2016 datasets show that the proposed tracker has comparable performance compared to state-of-the-art tracking methods. Especially, on the OTB-2015, our method significantly improves the baseline with a gain of 5.5% in overlap precision.

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