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Most existing person re-identification methods focus on matching still person images across non-overlapping camera views. Despite their excellent performance in some circumstances, these methods still suffer from occlusion and the changes of pose, viewpoint or lighting. Video-based re-id is a natural way to overcome these problems, by exploiting space-time information from videos. One of the most challenging problems in video-based person re-identification is temporal alignment, in addition to spatial alignment. To address the problem, we propose an effective superpixel-based temporally aligned representation for video-based person re-identification, which represents a video sequence only using one walking cycle. Particularly, we first build a candidate set of walking cycles by extracting motion information at superpixel level, which is more robust than that at the pixel level. Then, from the candidate set, we propose an effective criterion to select the walking cycle most matching the intrinsic periodicity property of walking persons. Finally, we propose a temporally aligned pooling scheme to describe the video data in the selected walking cycle. In addition, to characterize the individual still images in the cycle, we propose a superpixel-based representation to improve spatial alignment. Extensive experimental results on three public datasets demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed method compared with the state-of-the-art approaches.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/s19183861 | DOI Listing |
IEEE Trans Image Process
September 2025
Contrastive Language-Image Pre-training (CLIP) has achieved remarkable results in the field of person re-identification (ReID) due to its excellent cross-modal understanding ability and high scalability. Since the text encoder of CLIP mainly focuses on easy-to-describe attributes such as clothing, and clothing is the main interference factor that reduces the recognition accuracy in cloth-changing person ReID (CC ReID). Consequently, directly applying CLIP to cloth-changing scenario may be difficult to adapt to such dynamic feature changes, thereby affecting the precision of identification.
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September 2025
With the continuous expansion of intelligent surveillance networks, lifelong person re-identification (LReID) has received widespread attention, pursuing the need of self-evolution across different domains. However, existing LReID studies accumulate knowledge with the assumption that people would not change their clothes. In this paper, we propose a more practical task, namely lifelong person re-identification with hybrid clothing states (LReID-Hybrid), which takes a series of cloth-changing and same-cloth domains into account during lifelong learning.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Data
August 2025
Department of Law and Economics, UnitelmaSapienza, Piazza Sassari 4, Rome, RM 00161, Italy.
Wi-Fi sensing is an innovative technology that enables numerous human-related applications. Among these, Wi-Fi based person re-identification (Re-ID) is an emerging research topic aiming to address well-known challenges related to traditional vision-based methods, such as occlusions or illumination changes. This approach can serve as either an alternative or a supplementary solution to those conventional techniques.
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August 2025
Cross-resolution person re-identification (CR-ReID) aims to match low-resolution (LR) and high-resolution (HR) images of the same individual. To reduce the cost of manual annotation, existing unsupervised CR-ReID methods typically rely on cross-resolution fusion to obtain pseudo-labels and resolution-invariant features. However, the fusion process requires two encoders and a fusion module, which significantly increases computational complexity and reduces efficiency.
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August 2025
Faculty of Medicine, Qilu Institute of Technology, 3028, East Jingshi Road, Jinan, 250000, Shangdong, China.
Heart failure is a significant global health challenge with high mortality rates. This study examines the association between glycemic variability and short-term mortality in critically ill heart failure patients. Data from the eICU Collaborative Research Database (eICU-CRD) and the Medical Information Mart for Intensive Care (MIMIC-IV) database were analyzed, including 23,744 heart failure patients.
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