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Existing person re-identification methods often have low generalizability, which is mostly due to the limited availability of large-scale labeled training data. However, labeling large-scale training data is very expensive and time-consuming. To address this, this paper presents a solution, called DomainMix, which can learn a person re-identification model from both synthetic and real-world data, for the first time, completely without human annotations. This way, the proposed method enjoys the cheap availability of large-scale training data, and benefiting from its scalability and diversity, the learned model is able to generalize well on unseen domains. Specifically, inspired from a recent work generating large-scale synthetic data for effective person re-identification training, in each epoch, the proposed method firstly clusters the unlabeled real-world images and select the reliable clusters according to three criteria, i.e. independence, compactness, and quantity. Then, the classification layer is initialized adaptively using the generated features of real-world images. When training, to address the large domain gap between two domains, a domain-invariant feature learning method is proposed, which designs an adversarial learning between domain-invariant feature learning and domain discrimination, and meanwhile learns a discriminative feature for person re-identification. This way, the domain gap between synthetic and real-world data is much reduced, and the learned feature is generalizable thanks to the large-scale and diverse training data. Experimental results show that the proposed annotation-free method is more or less comparable to the counterpart trained with full human annotations, which is quite promising. In addition, it achieves the current state of the art on several person re-identification datasets under direct cross-dataset evaluation.
Existing person re-identification (re-id) methods are stuck when deployed to a new unseen scenario despite the success in cross-camera person matching. Recent efforts have been substantially devoted to domain adaptive person re-id where extensive unl
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