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Fernando Barrera, Felipe Lumbreras and Angel Sappa. 2012. Evaluation of Similarity Functions in Multimodal Stereo. 9th International Conference on Image Analysis and Recognition. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 320–329. (LNCS.)
Abstract: This paper presents an evaluation framework for multimodal stereo matching, which allows to compare the performance of four similarity functions. Additionally, it presents details of a multimodal stereo head that supply thermal infrared and color images, as well as, aspects of its calibration and rectification. The pipeline includes a novel method for the disparity selection, which is suitable for evaluating the similarity functions. Finally, a benchmark for comparing different initializations of the proposed framework is presented. Similarity functions are based on mutual information, gradient orientation and scale space representations. Their evaluation is performed using two metrics: i) disparity error, and ii) number of correct matches on planar regions. In addition to the proposed evaluation, the current paper also shows that 3D sparse representations can be recovered from such a multimodal stereo head.
Keywords: Aveiro, Portugal
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Fernando Barrera, Felipe Lumbreras, Cristhian Aguilera and Angel Sappa. 2012. Planar-Based Multispectral Stereo. 11th Quantitative InfraRed Thermography.
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Ferran Diego, G.D. Evangelidis and Joan Serrat. 2012. Night-time outdoor surveillance by mobile cameras. 1st International Conference on Pattern Recognition Applications and Methods.365–371.
Abstract: This paper addresses the problem of video surveillance by mobile cameras. We present a method that allows online change detection in night-time outdoor surveillance. Because of the camera movement, background frames are not available and must be “localized” in former sequences and registered with the current frames. To this end, we propose a Frame Localization And Registration (FLAR) approach that solves the problem efficiently. Frames of former sequences define a database which is queried by current frames in turn. To quickly retrieve nearest neighbors, database is indexed through a visual dictionary method based on the SURF descriptor. Furthermore, the frame localization is benefited by a temporal filter that exploits the temporal coherence of videos. Next, the recently proposed ECC alignment scheme is used to spatially register the synchronized frames. Finally, change detection methods apply to aligned frames in order to mark suspicious areas. Experiments with real night sequences recorded by in-vehicle cameras demonstrate the performance of the proposed method and verify its efficiency and effectiveness against other methods.
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German Ros, Angel Sappa, Daniel Ponsa and Antonio Lopez. 2012. Visual SLAM for Driverless Cars: A Brief Survey. IEEE Workshop on Navigation, Perception, Accurate Positioning and Mapping for Intelligent Vehicles.
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German Ros, Jesus Martinez del Rincon and Gines Garcia-Mateos. 2012. Articulated Particle Filter for Hand Tracking. 21st International Conference on Pattern Recognition.3581–3585.
Abstract: This paper proposes a new version of Particle Filter, called Articulated Particle Filter – ArPF -, which has been specifically designed for an efficient sampling of hierarchical spaces, generated by articulated objects. Our approach decomposes the articulated motion into layers for efficiency purposes, making use of a careful modeling of the diffusion noise along with its propagation through the articulations. This produces an increase of accuracy and prevent for divergences. The algorithm is tested on hand tracking due to its complex hierarchical articulated nature. With this purpose, a new dataset generation tool for quantitative evaluation is also presented in this paper.
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Jose Carlos Rubio, Joan Serrat and Antonio Lopez. 2012. Multiple target tracking and identity linking under split, merge and occlusion of targets and observations. 1st International Conference on Pattern Recognition Applications and Methods.
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Jose Carlos Rubio, Joan Serrat and Antonio Lopez. 2012. Unsupervised co-segmentation through region matching. 25th IEEE Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition. IEEE Xplore, 749–756.
Abstract: Co-segmentation is defined as jointly partitioning multiple images depicting the same or similar object, into foreground and background. Our method consists of a multiple-scale multiple-image generative model, which jointly estimates the foreground and background appearance distributions from several images, in a non-supervised manner. In contrast to other co-segmentation methods, our approach does not require the images to have similar foregrounds and different backgrounds to function properly. Region matching is applied to exploit inter-image information by establishing correspondences between the common objects that appear in the scene. Moreover, computing many-to-many associations of regions allow further applications, like recognition of object parts across images. We report results on iCoseg, a challenging dataset that presents extreme variability in camera viewpoint, illumination and object deformations and poses. We also show that our method is robust against large intra-class variability in the MSRC database.
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Jose Carlos Rubio, Joan Serrat and Antonio Lopez. 2012. Video Co-segmentation. 11th Asian Conference on Computer Vision. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 13–24. (LNCS.)
Abstract: Segmentation of a single image is in general a highly underconstrained problem. A frequent approach to solve it is to somehow provide prior knowledge or constraints on how the objects of interest look like (in terms of their shape, size, color, location or structure). Image co-segmentation trades the need for such knowledge for something much easier to obtain, namely, additional images showing the object from other viewpoints. Now the segmentation problem is posed as one of differentiating the similar object regions in all the images from the more varying background. In this paper, for the first time, we extend this approach to video segmentation: given two or more video sequences showing the same object (or objects belonging to the same class) moving in a similar manner, we aim to outline its region in all the frames. In addition, the method works in an unsupervised manner, by learning to segment at testing time. We compare favorably with two state-of-the-art methods on video segmentation and report results on benchmark videos.
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Jose Carlos Rubio, Joan Serrat, Antonio Lopez and N. Paragios. 2012. Image Contextual Representation and Matching through Hierarchies and Higher Order Graphs. 21st International Conference on Pattern Recognition.2664–2667.
Abstract: We present a region matching algorithm which establishes correspondences between regions from two segmented images. An abstract graph-based representation conceals the image in a hierarchical graph, exploiting the scene properties at two levels. First, the similarity and spatial consistency of the image semantic objects is encoded in a graph of commute times. Second, the cluttered regions of the semantic objects are represented with a shape descriptor. Many-to-many matching of regions is specially challenging due to the instability of the segmentation under slight image changes, and we explicitly handle it through high order potentials. We demonstrate the matching approach applied to images of world famous buildings, captured under different conditions, showing the robustness of our method to large variations in illumination and viewpoint.
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Jose Manuel Alvarez, Theo Gevers, Y. LeCun and Antonio Lopez. 2012. Road Scene Segmentation from a Single Image. 12th European Conference on Computer Vision. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 376–389. (LNCS.)
Abstract: Road scene segmentation is important in computer vision for different applications such as autonomous driving and pedestrian detection. Recovering the 3D structure of road scenes provides relevant contextual information to improve their understanding.
In this paper, we use a convolutional neural network based algorithm to learn features from noisy labels to recover the 3D scene layout of a road image. The novelty of the algorithm relies on generating training labels by applying an algorithm trained on a general image dataset to classify on–board images. Further, we propose a novel texture descriptor based on a learned color plane fusion to obtain maximal uniformity in road areas. Finally, acquired (off–line) and current (on–line) information are combined to detect road areas in single images.
From quantitative and qualitative experiments, conducted on publicly available datasets, it is concluded that convolutional neural networks are suitable for learning 3D scene layout from noisy labels and provides a relative improvement of 7% compared to the baseline. Furthermore, combining color planes provides a statistical description of road areas that exhibits maximal uniformity and provides a relative improvement of 8% compared to the baseline. Finally, the improvement is even bigger when acquired and current information from a single image are combined
Keywords: road detection
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