Detection and tracking of faces in image sequences is among the most well studied problems in the intersection
Generic face detection and facial landmark localization in static imagery are among the most mature and wellstudied problems in machine learning and computer vision. Currently, the top performing face detectors achieve a true positive rate of around 75-80% whilst maintaining low false positive rates. Furthermore, the top performing facial landmark localization algorithms obtain low point-to-point errors for more than 70% of commonly benchmarked images captured under unconstrained conditions. The task of facial landmark tracking in videos, however, has attracted much less attention. Generally, a tracking-by-detection framework is applied, where face detection and landmark localization are employed in every frame in order to avoid drifting. Thus, this solution is equivalent to landmark detection in static imagery. Empirically, a straightforward application of such a framework cannot achieve higher performance, on average, than the one reported for static imagery 1 . In this paper, we show for the first time, to the best of our knowledge, that the results of generic face detection and landmark localization can be used to recursively train powerful and accurate person-specific face detectors and landmark localization methods for offline deformable tracking. The proposed pipeline can track landmarks in very challenging long-term sequences captured under arbitrary conditions. The pipeline was used as a semi-automatic tool to annotate the majority of the videos of the 300-VW Challenge 2 .
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