Abstract

Unsupervised person re-identification (Re-ID) has better scalability and practicability than supervised Re-ID in the actual deployment. However, it is difficult to learn a discriminative Re-ID model without annotations. To address the above issue, we propose an end-to-end Self-supervised Agent Learning (SAL) algorithm by exploiting a set of agents as a bridge to reduce domain gaps for unsupervised cross-domain person Re- ID. The proposed SAL model enjoys several merits. First, to the best of our knowledge, this is the first work to exploit selfsupervised learning for unsupervised person Re-ID. Second, our model has designed three effective learning mechanisms including supervised label learning in source domain, similarity consistency learning in target domain, and self-supervised learning in cross domain, which can learn domain-invariant yet discriminative representations through the principled lens of agent learning by reducing domain discrepancy adaptively. Extensive experimental results on three standard benchmarks demonstrate that the proposed SAL performs favorably against state-of-the-art unsupervised person Re-ID methods.

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