Abstract

A great many of approaches have been developed for cross-modal retrieval, among which subspace learning based ones dominate the landscape. Concerning whether using the semantic label information or not, subspace learning based approaches can be categorized into two paradigms, unsupervised and supervised. However, for multi-label cross-modal retrieval, supervised approaches just simply exploit multi-label information towards a discriminative subspace, without considering the correlations between multiple labels shared by multi-modalities, which often leads to an unsatisfactory retrieval performance. To address this issue, in this paper we propose a general framework, which jointly incorporates semantic correlations into subspace learning for multi-label cross-modal retrieval. By introducing the HSIC-based regularization term, the correlation information among multiple labels can be not only leveraged but also the consistency between the modality similarity from each modality is well preserved. Besides, based on the semantic-consistency projection, the semantic gap between the low-level feature space of each modality and the shared high-level semantic space can be balanced by a mid-level consistent one, where multi-label cross-modal retrieval can be performed effectively and efficiently. To solve the optimization problem, an effective iterative algorithm is designed, along with its convergence analysis theoretically and experimentally. Experimental results on real-world datasets have shown the superiority of the proposed method over several existing cross-modal subspace learning methods.

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