Abstract
Access to large image volumes through camera traps and crowdsourcing provides novel possibilities for animal monitoring and conservation. It calls for automatic methods for analysis, in particular, when re-identifying individual animals from the images. Most existing re-identification methods rely on either hand-crafted local features or end-to-end learning of fur pattern similarity. The former does not need labeled training data, while the latter, although very data-hungry typically outperforms the former when enough training data is available. We propose a novel re-identification pipeline that combines the strengths of both approaches by utilizing modern learnable local features and feature aggregation. This creates representative pattern feature embeddings that provide high re-identification accuracy while allowing us to apply the method to small datasets by using pre-trained feature descriptors. We report a comprehensive comparison of different modern local features and demonstrate the advantages of the proposed pipeline on two very different species.
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