Abstract

AbstractMost of the successful person re‐ID models conduct supervised training and need a large number of training data. These models fail to generalise well on unseen unlabelled testing sets. The authors aim to learn a generalisable person re‐identification model. The model uses one labelled source dataset and one unlabelled target dataset during training and generalises well on the target testing set. To this end, after a feature extraction by the ResNext‐50 network, the authors optimise the model by three loss functions. (a) One loss function is designed to learn the features of the target domain by tuning the distances between target images. Therefore, the trained model will be more robust to overcome the intra‐domain variations in the target domain and generalises well on the target testing set. (b) One triplet loss is used which considers both source and target domains and makes the model learn the inter‐domain variations between source and target domain as well as the variations in the target domain. (c) Also, one loss function is for supervised learning on the labelled source domain. Extensive experiments on Market1501 and DukeMTMC re‐ID show that the model achieves a very competitive performance compared with state‐of‐the‐art models and also it requires an acceptable amount of GPU RAM compared to other successful models.

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