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Miguel Angel Bautista, Sergio Escalera, Xavier Baro, Petia Radeva, Jordi Vitria, & Oriol Pujol. (2011). Minimal Design of Error-Correcting Output Codes. PRL - Pattern Recognition Letters, 33(6), 693–702.
Abstract: IF JCR CCIA 1.303 2009 54/103
The classification of large number of object categories is a challenging trend in the pattern recognition field. In literature, this is often addressed using an ensemble of classifiers. In this scope, the Error-correcting output codes framework has demonstrated to be a powerful tool for combining classifiers. However, most state-of-the-art ECOC approaches use a linear or exponential number of classifiers, making the discrimination of a large number of classes unfeasible. In this paper, we explore and propose a minimal design of ECOC in terms of the number of classifiers. Evolutionary computation is used for tuning the parameters of the classifiers and looking for the best minimal ECOC code configuration. The results over several public UCI datasets and different multi-class computer vision problems show that the proposed methodology obtains comparable (even better) results than state-of-the-art ECOC methodologies with far less number of dichotomizers.
Keywords: Multi-class classification; Error-correcting output codes; Ensemble of classifiers
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Onur Ferhat, & Fernando Vilariño. (2016). Low Cost Eye Tracking: The Current Panorama. CIN - Computational Intelligence and Neuroscience, , Article ID 8680541.
Abstract: Despite the availability of accurate, commercial gaze tracker devices working with infrared (IR) technology, visible light gaze tracking constitutes an interesting alternative by allowing scalability and removing hardware requirements. Over the last years, this field has seen examples of research showing performance comparable to the IR alternatives. In this work, we survey the previous work on remote, visible light gaze trackers and analyze the explored techniques from various perspectives such as calibration strategies, head pose invariance, and gaze estimation techniques. We also provide information on related aspects of research such as public datasets to test against, open source projects to build upon, and gaze tracking services to directly use in applications. With all this information, we aim to provide the contemporary and future researchers with a map detailing previously explored ideas and the required tools.
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Bogdan Raducanu, & Jordi Vitria. (2008). Learning to Learn: From Smarts Machines to Intelligent Machines. PRL - Patter Recognition Letters, 1024–1032.
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A. Martinez, & Jordi Vitria. (2000). Learning mixture models using a genetic version of the EM algorithm. PRL - Pattern Recognition Letters, 21(8), 759–769.
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David Guillamet, Jordi Vitria, & B. Shiele. (2003). Introducing a weighted non-negative matrix factorization for image classification. PRL - Pattern Recognition Letters, 24(14), 2447–2454.
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