The Kinship Face in the Wild data sets, recently published in TPAMI, are currently used as a benchmark for the evaluation of kinship verification algorithms. We recommend that these data sets are no longer used in kinship verification research unless there is a compelling reason that takes into account the nature of the images. We note that most of the image kinship pairs are cropped from the same photographs. Exploiting this cropping information, competitive but biased performance can be obtained using a simple scoring approach, taking only into account the nature of the image pairs rather than any features about kin information. To illustrate our motives, we provide classification results utilizing a simple scoring method based on the image similarity of both images of a kinship pair. Using simply the distance of the chrominance averages of the images in the Lab color space without any training or using any specific kin features, we achieve performance comparable to state-of-the-art methods. We provide the source code to prove the validity of our claims and ensure the repeatability of our experiments.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/TPAMI.2016.2522416 | DOI Listing |
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