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State-of-the-art image retrieval pipelines are based on “bag-of-words” matching. We note that the original order in which features are extracted from the image is discarded in the “bag-of-words” matching pipeline. As a result, a set of features extracted from a query image can be transmitted in any order. A set of m unique features has m! orderings, and if the order of transmission can be discarded, one can reduce the query size by an additional log 2 (m!) bits. We propose a coding scheme based on Digital Search Trees that reduces size of a set of features by approximately log 2 (m!) bits. We perform analysis of the scheme, and show how it applies to any set of symbols in which order can be discarded. We illustrate how the scheme can be applied to a set of low bitrate Compressed Histogram of Gradients (CHoG) descriptors.
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Published on 01/01/2012
Volume 2012, 2012
DOI: 10.1109/iccvw.2011.6130219
Licence: CC BY-NC-SA license
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