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Author |
Xavier Soria; Angel Sappa; Riad I. Hammoud |
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Title |
Wide-Band Color Imagery Restoration for RGB-NIR Single Sensor Images |
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Journal Article |
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2018 |
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Sensors |
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SENS |
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18 |
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7 |
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2059 |
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RGB-NIR sensor; multispectral imaging; deep learning; CNNs |
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Multi-spectral RGB-NIR sensors have become ubiquitous in recent years. These sensors allow the visible and near-infrared spectral bands of a given scene to be captured at the same time. With such cameras, the acquired imagery has a compromised RGB color representation due to near-infrared bands (700–1100 nm) cross-talking with the visible bands (400–700 nm).
This paper proposes two deep learning-based architectures to recover the full RGB color images, thus removing the NIR information from the visible bands. The proposed approaches directly restore the high-resolution RGB image by means of convolutional neural networks. They are evaluated with several outdoor images; both architectures reach a similar performance when evaluated in different
scenarios and using different similarity metrics. Both of them improve the state of the art approaches. |
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ADAS; MSIAU; 600.086; 600.130; 600.122; 600.118 |
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Admin @ si @ SSH2018 |
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3145 |
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Author |
Jose Luis Gomez; Gabriel Villalonga; Antonio Lopez |
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Title |
Co-Training for Deep Object Detection: Comparing Single-Modal and Multi-Modal Approaches |
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2021 |
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Sensors |
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SENS |
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21 |
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9 |
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3185 |
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co-training; multi-modality; vision-based object detection; ADAS; self-driving |
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Top-performing computer vision models are powered by convolutional neural networks (CNNs). Training an accurate CNN highly depends on both the raw sensor data and their associated ground truth (GT). Collecting such GT is usually done through human labeling, which is time-consuming and does not scale as we wish. This data-labeling bottleneck may be intensified due to domain shifts among image sensors, which could force per-sensor data labeling. In this paper, we focus on the use of co-training, a semi-supervised learning (SSL) method, for obtaining self-labeled object bounding boxes (BBs), i.e., the GT to train deep object detectors. In particular, we assess the goodness of multi-modal co-training by relying on two different views of an image, namely, appearance (RGB) and estimated depth (D). Moreover, we compare appearance-based single-modal co-training with multi-modal. Our results suggest that in a standard SSL setting (no domain shift, a few human-labeled data) and under virtual-to-real domain shift (many virtual-world labeled data, no human-labeled data) multi-modal co-training outperforms single-modal. In the latter case, by performing GAN-based domain translation both co-training modalities are on par, at least when using an off-the-shelf depth estimation model not specifically trained on the translated images. |
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ADAS; 600.118 |
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Admin @ si @ GVL2021 |
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3562 |
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Author |
Zhijie Fang; Antonio Lopez |
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Title |
Intention Recognition of Pedestrians and Cyclists by 2D Pose Estimation |
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Journal Article |
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2019 |
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IEEE Transactions on Intelligent Transportation Systems |
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TITS |
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21 |
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11 |
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4773 - 4783 |
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Anticipating the intentions of vulnerable road users (VRUs) such as pedestrians and cyclists is critical for performing safe and comfortable driving maneuvers. This is the case for human driving and, thus, should be taken into account by systems providing any level of driving assistance, from advanced driver assistant systems (ADAS) to fully autonomous vehicles (AVs). In this paper, we show how the latest advances on monocular vision-based human pose estimation, i.e. those relying on deep Convolutional Neural Networks (CNNs), enable to recognize the intentions of such VRUs. In the case of cyclists, we assume that they follow traffic rules to indicate future maneuvers with arm signals. In the case of pedestrians, no indications can be assumed. Instead, we hypothesize that the walking pattern of a pedestrian allows to determine if he/she has the intention of crossing the road in the path of the ego-vehicle, so that the ego-vehicle must maneuver accordingly (e.g. slowing down or stopping). In this paper, we show how the same methodology can be used for recognizing pedestrians and cyclists' intentions. For pedestrians, we perform experiments on the JAAD dataset. For cyclists, we did not found an analogous dataset, thus, we created our own one by acquiring and annotating videos which we share with the research community. Overall, the proposed pipeline provides new state-of-the-art results on the intention recognition of VRUs. |
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ADAS; 600.118 |
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Admin @ si @ FaL2019 |
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3305 |
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Author |
Akhil Gurram; Onay Urfalioglu; Ibrahim Halfaoui; Fahd Bouzaraa; Antonio Lopez |
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Title |
Semantic Monocular Depth Estimation Based on Artificial Intelligence |
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Journal Article |
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2020 |
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IEEE Intelligent Transportation Systems Magazine |
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ITSM |
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13 |
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4 |
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99-103 |
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Depth estimation provides essential information to perform autonomous driving and driver assistance. A promising line of work consists of introducing additional semantic information about the traffic scene when training CNNs for depth estimation. In practice, this means that the depth data used for CNN training is complemented with images having pixel-wise semantic labels where the same raw training data is associated with both types of ground truth, i.e., depth and semantic labels. The main contribution of this paper is to show that this hard constraint can be circumvented, i.e., that we can train CNNs for depth estimation by leveraging the depth and semantic information coming from heterogeneous datasets. In order to illustrate the benefits of our approach, we combine KITTI depth and Cityscapes semantic segmentation datasets, outperforming state-of-the-art results on monocular depth estimation. |
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ADAS; 600.124; 600.118 |
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Admin @ si @ GUH2019 |
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3306 |
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Author |
Fei Yang; Luis Herranz; Joost Van de Weijer; Jose Antonio Iglesias; Antonio Lopez; Mikhail Mozerov |
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Title |
Variable Rate Deep Image Compression with Modulated Autoencoder |
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Journal Article |
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Year |
2020 |
Publication |
IEEE Signal Processing Letters |
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SPL |
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27 |
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331-335 |
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Variable rate is a requirement for flexible and adaptable image and video compression. However, deep image compression methods (DIC) are optimized for a single fixed rate-distortion (R-D) tradeoff. While this can be addressed by training multiple models for different tradeoffs, the memory requirements increase proportionally to the number of models. Scaling the bottleneck representation of a shared autoencoder can provide variable rate compression with a single shared autoencoder. However, the R-D performance using this simple mechanism degrades in low bitrates, and also shrinks the effective range of bitrates. To address these limitations, we formulate the problem of variable R-D optimization for DIC, and propose modulated autoencoders (MAEs), where the representations of a shared autoencoder are adapted to the specific R-D tradeoff via a modulation network. Jointly training this modulated autoencoder and the modulation network provides an effective way to navigate the R-D operational curve. Our experiments show that the proposed method can achieve almost the same R-D performance of independent models with significantly fewer parameters. |
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LAMP; ADAS; 600.141; 600.120; 600.118 |
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Admin @ si @ YHW2020 |
Serial |
3346 |
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