Speech Emotion Recognition (SER) is crucial in human-machine interactions. Mainstream approaches utilize Convolutional Neural Networks or Recurrent Neural Networks to learn local energy feature representations of speech segments from speech information, but struggle with capturing global information such as the duration of energy in speech. Some use Transformers to capture global information, but there is room for improvement in terms of parameter count and performance. Furthermore, existing attention mechanisms focus on spatial or channel dimensions, hindering learning of important temporal information in speech. In this paper, to model local and global information at different levels of granularity in speech and capture temporal, spatial and channel dependencies in speech signals, we propose a Speech Emotion Recognition network based on CNN-Transformer and multi-dimensional attention mechanisms. Specifically, a stack of CNN blocks is dedicated to capturing local information in speech from a time-frequency perspective. In addition, a time-channel-space attention mechanism is used to enhance features across three dimensions. Moreover, we model local and global dependencies of feature sequences using large convolutional kernels with depthwise separable convolutions and lightweight Transformer modules. We evaluate the proposed method on IEMOCAP and Emo-DB datasets and show our approach significantly improves the performance over the state-of-the-art methods. Our code is available on https://github.com/SCNU-RISLAB/CNN-Transforemr-and-Multidimensional-Attention-Mechanism
In the era of 5G communication, removing interference sources that affect communication is a resource-intensive task. The rapid development of computer vision has enabled unmanned aerial vehicles to perform various high-altitude detection tasks. Because the field of object detection for antenna interference sources has not been fully explored, this industry lacks dedicated learning samples and detection models for this specific task. In this article, an antenna dataset is created to address important antenna interference source detection issues and serves as the basis for subsequent research. We introduce YOLO-Ant, a lightweight CNN and transformer hybrid detector specifically designed for antenna interference source detection. Specifically, we initially formulated a lightweight design for the network depth and width, ensuring that subsequent investigations were conducted within a lightweight framework. Then, we propose a DSLK-Block module based on depthwise separable convolution and large convolution kernels to enhance the network's feature extraction ability, effectively improving small object detection. To address challenges such as complex backgrounds and large interclass differences in antenna detection, we construct DSLKVit-Block, a powerful feature extraction module that combines DSLK-Block and transformer structures. Considering both its lightweight design and accuracy, our method not only achieves optimal performance on the antenna dataset but also yields competitive results on public datasets.
Accurately generating ground truth (GT) trajectories is essential for Simultaneous Localization and Mapping (SLAM) evaluation, particularly under varying environmental conditions. This study introduces a systematic approach employing a prior map-assisted framework for generating dense six-degree-of-freedom (6-DoF) GT poses for the first time, enhancing the fidelity of both indoor and outdoor SLAM datasets. Our method excels in handling degenerate and stationary conditions frequently encountered in SLAM datasets, thereby increasing robustness and precision. A significant aspect of our approach is the detailed derivation of covariances within the factor graph, enabling an in-depth analysis of pose uncertainty propagation. This analysis crucially contributes to demonstrating specific pose uncertainties and enhancing trajectory reliability from both theoretical and empirical perspectives. Additionally, we provide an open-source toolbox (https://github.com/JokerJohn/Cloud_Map_Evaluation) for map evaluation criteria, facilitating the indirect assessment of overall trajectory precision. Experimental results show at least a 30\% improvement in map accuracy and a 20\% increase in direct trajectory accuracy compared to the Iterative Closest Point (ICP) \cite{sharp2002icp} algorithm across diverse campus environments, with substantially enhanced robustness. Our open-source solution (https://github.com/JokerJohn/PALoc), extensively applied in the FusionPortable\cite{Jiao2022Mar} dataset, is geared towards SLAM benchmark dataset augmentation and represents a significant advancement in SLAM evaluations.
Moving object segmentation (MOS) provides a reliable solution for detecting traffic participants and thus is of great interest in the autonomous driving field. Dynamic capture is always critical in the MOS problem. Previous methods capture motion features from the range images directly. Differently, we argue that the residual maps provide greater potential for motion information, while range images contain rich semantic guidance. Based on this intuition, we propose MF-MOS, a novel motion-focused model with a dual-branch structure for LiDAR moving object segmentation. Novelly, we decouple the spatial-temporal information by capturing the motion from residual maps and generating semantic features from range images, which are used as movable object guidance for the motion branch. Our straightforward yet distinctive solution can make the most use of both range images and residual maps, thus greatly improving the performance of the LiDAR-based MOS task. Remarkably, our MF-MOS achieved a leading IoU of 76.7% on the MOS leaderboard of the SemanticKITTI dataset upon submission, demonstrating the current state-of-the-art performance. The implementation of our MF-MOS has been released at https://github.com/SCNU-RISLAB/MF-MOS.
Fine-grained sketch-based image retrieval (FG-SBIR) addresses the problem of retrieving a particular photo in a given query sketch. However, its widespread applicability is limited by the fact that it is difficult to draw a complete sketch for most people, and the drawing process often takes time. In this study, we aim to retrieve the target photo with the least number of strokes possible (incomplete sketch), named on-the-fly FG-SBIR (Bhunia et al. 2020), which starts retrieving at each stroke as soon as the drawing begins. We consider that there is a significant correlation among these incomplete sketches in the sketch drawing episode of each photo. To learn more efficient joint embedding space shared between the photo and its incomplete sketches, we propose a multi-granularity association learning framework that further optimizes the embedding space of all incomplete sketches. Specifically, based on the integrity of the sketch, we can divide a complete sketch episode into several stages, each of which corresponds to a simple linear mapping layer. Moreover, our framework guides the vector space representation of the current sketch to approximate that of its later sketches to realize the retrieval performance of the sketch with fewer strokes to approach that of the sketch with more strokes. In the experiments, we proposed more realistic challenges, and our method achieved superior early retrieval efficiency over the state-of-the-art methods and alternative baselines on two publicly available fine-grained sketch retrieval datasets.
Large-scale visual place recognition (VPR) is inherently challenging because not all visual cues in the image are beneficial to the task. In order to highlight the task-relevant visual cues in the feature embedding, the existing attention mechanisms are either based on artificial rules or trained in a thorough data-driven manner. To fill the gap between the two types, we propose a novel Semantic Reinforced Attention Learning Network (SRALNet), in which the inferred attention can benefit from both semantic priors and data-driven fine-tuning. The contribution lies in two-folds. (1) To suppress misleading local features, an interpretable local weighting scheme is proposed based on hierarchical feature distribution. (2) By exploiting the interpretability of the local weighting scheme, a semantic constrained initialization is proposed so that the local attention can be reinforced by semantic priors. Experiments demonstrate that our method outperforms state-of-the-art techniques on city-scale VPR benchmark datasets.
Most of the existing mobile robot localization solutions are either heavily dependent on pre-installed infrastructures or having difficulty working in highly repetitive environments which do not have sufficient unique features. To address this problem, we propose a magnetic-assisted initialization approach that enhances the performance of infrastructure-free mobile robot localization in repetitive featureless environments. The proposed system adopts a coarse-to-fine structure, which mainly consists of two parts: magnetic field-based matching and laser scan matching. Firstly, the interpolated magnetic field map is built and the initial pose of the mobile robot is partly determined by the k-Nearest Neighbors (k-NN) algorithm. Next, with the fusion of prior initial pose information, the robot is localized by laser scan matching more accurately and efficiently. In our experiment, the mobile robot was successfully localized in a featureless rectangular corridor with a success rate of 88% and an average correct localization time of 6.6 seconds.