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Author |
Mikkel Thogersen; Sergio Escalera; Jordi Gonzalez; Thomas B. Moeslund |
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Title |
Segmentation of RGB-D Indoor scenes by Stacking Random Forests and Conditional Random Fields |
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Journal Article |
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2016 |
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Pattern Recognition Letters |
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PRL |
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80 |
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208–215 |
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This paper proposes a technique for RGB-D scene segmentation using Multi-class
Multi-scale Stacked Sequential Learning (MMSSL) paradigm. Following recent trends in state-of-the-art, a base classifier uses an initial SLIC segmentation to obtain superpixels which provide a diminution of data while retaining object boundaries. A series of color and depth features are extracted from the superpixels, and are used in a Conditional Random Field (CRF) to predict superpixel labels. Furthermore, a Random Forest (RF) classifier using random offset features is also used as an input to the CRF, acting as an initial prediction. As a stacked classifier, another Random Forest is used acting on a spatial multi-scale decomposition of the CRF confidence map to correct the erroneous labels assigned by the previous classifier. The model is tested on the popular NYU-v2 dataset.
The approach shows that simple multi-modal features with the power of the MMSSL
paradigm can achieve better performance than state of the art results on the same dataset. |
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HuPBA; ISE;MILAB; 600.098; 600.119 |
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Admin @ si @ TEG2016 |
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2843 |
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H. Martin Kjer; Jens Fagertun; Sergio Vera; Debora Gil; Miguel Angel Gonzalez Ballester; Rasmus R. Paulsena |
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Title |
Free-form image registration of human cochlear uCT data using skeleton similarity as anatomical prior |
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2016 |
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Patter Recognition Letters |
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76 |
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1 |
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76-82 |
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IAM; 600.060 |
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Admin @ si @ MFV2017b |
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2941 |
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Author |
C. Alejandro Parraga; Arash Akbarinia |
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Title |
NICE: A Computational Solution to Close the Gap from Colour Perception to Colour Categorization |
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2016 |
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PLoS One |
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Plos |
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11 |
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3 |
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e0149538 |
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The segmentation of visible electromagnetic radiation into chromatic categories by the human visual system has been extensively studied from a perceptual point of view, resulting in several colour appearance models. However, there is currently a void when it comes to relate these results to the physiological mechanisms that are known to shape the pre-cortical and cortical visual pathway. This work intends to begin to fill this void by proposing a new physiologically plausible model of colour categorization based on Neural Isoresponsive Colour Ellipsoids (NICE) in the cone-contrast space defined by the main directions of the visual signals entering the visual cortex. The model was adjusted to fit psychophysical measures that concentrate on the categorical boundaries and are consistent with the ellipsoidal isoresponse surfaces of visual cortical neurons. By revealing the shape of such categorical colour regions, our measures allow for a more precise and parsimonious description, connecting well-known early visual processing mechanisms to the less understood phenomenon of colour categorization. To test the feasibility of our method we applied it to exemplary images and a popular ground-truth chart obtaining labelling results that are better than those of current state-of-the-art algorithms. |
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NEUROBIT; 600.068 |
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Admin @ si @ PaA2016a |
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2747 |
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Author |
Juan Ramon Terven Salinas; Bogdan Raducanu; Maria Elena Meza-de-Luna; Joaquin Salas |
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Title |
Head-gestures mirroring detection in dyadic social linteractions with computer vision-based wearable devices |
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Journal Article |
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2016 |
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Neurocomputing |
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NEUCOM |
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175 |
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B |
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866–876 |
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Head gestures recognition; Mirroring detection; Dyadic social interaction analysis; Wearable devices |
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During face-to-face human interaction, nonverbal communication plays a fundamental role. A relevant aspect that takes part during social interactions is represented by mirroring, in which a person tends to mimic the non-verbal behavior (head and body gestures, vocal prosody, etc.) of the counterpart. In this paper, we introduce a computer vision-based system to detect mirroring in dyadic social interactions with the use of a wearable platform. In our context, mirroring is inferred as simultaneous head noddings displayed by the interlocutors. Our approach consists of the following steps: (1) facial features extraction; (2) facial features stabilization; (3) head nodding recognition; and (4) mirroring detection. Our system achieves a mirroring detection accuracy of 72% on a custom mirroring dataset. |
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LAMP; 600.072; 600.068; |
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Admin @ si @ TRM2016 |
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2721 |
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Author |
Mariella Dimiccoli; Jean-Pascal Jacob; Lionel Moisan |
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Title |
Particle detection and tracking in fluorescence time-lapse imaging: a contrario approach |
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Journal Article |
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Year |
2016 |
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Journal of Machine Vision and Applications |
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MVAP |
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27 |
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511-527 |
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particle detection; particle tracking; a-contrario approach; time-lapse fluorescence imaging |
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Abstract |
In this work, we propose a probabilistic approach for the detection and the
tracking of particles on biological images. In presence of very noised and poor
quality data, particles and trajectories can be characterized by an a-contrario
model, that estimates the probability of observing the structures of interest
in random data. This approach, first introduced in the modeling of human visual
perception and then successfully applied in many image processing tasks, leads
to algorithms that do not require a previous learning stage, nor a tedious
parameter tuning and are very robust to noise. Comparative evaluations against
a well established baseline show that the proposed approach outperforms the
state of the art. |
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MILAB; |
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Admin @ si @ DJM2016 |
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2735 |
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Author |
Svebor Karaman; Andrew Bagdanov; Lea Landucci; Gianpaolo D'Amico; Andrea Ferracani; Daniele Pezzatini; Alberto del Bimbo |
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Title |
Personalized multimedia content delivery on an interactive table by passive observation of museum visitors |
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Journal Article |
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Year |
2016 |
Publication |
Multimedia Tools and Applications |
Abbreviated Journal |
MTAP |
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75 |
Issue |
7 |
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3787-3811 |
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Computer vision; Video surveillance; Cultural heritage; Multimedia museum; Personalization; Natural interaction; Passive profiling |
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The amount of multimedia data collected in museum databases is growing fast, while the capacity of museums to display information to visitors is acutely limited by physical space. Museums must seek the perfect balance of information given on individual pieces in order to provide sufficient information to aid visitor understanding while maintaining sparse usage of the walls and guaranteeing high appreciation of the exhibit. Moreover, museums often target the interests of average visitors instead of the entire spectrum of different interests each individual visitor might have. Finally, visiting a museum should not be an experience contained in the physical space of the museum but a door opened onto a broader context of related artworks, authors, artistic trends, etc. In this paper we describe the MNEMOSYNE system that attempts to address these issues through a new multimedia museum experience. Based on passive observation, the system builds a profile of the artworks of interest for each visitor. These profiles of interest are then used to drive an interactive table that personalizes multimedia content delivery. The natural user interface on the interactive table uses the visitor’s profile, an ontology of museum content and a recommendation system to personalize exploration of multimedia content. At the end of their visit, the visitor can take home a personalized summary of their visit on a custom mobile application. In this article we describe in detail each component of our approach as well as the first field trials of our prototype system built and deployed at our permanent exhibition space at LeMurate (http://www.lemurate.comune.fi.it/lemurate/) in Florence together with the first results of the evaluation process during the official installation in the National Museum of Bargello (http://www.uffizi.firenze.it/musei/?m=bargello). |
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Springer US |
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1380-7501 |
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LAMP; 601.240; 600.079 |
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Admin @ si @ KBL2016 |
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2520 |
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Author |
Anastasios Doulamis; Nikolaos Doulamis; Marco Bertini; Jordi Gonzalez; Thomas B. Moeslund |
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Introduction to the Special Issue on the Analysis and Retrieval of Events/Actions and Workflows in Video Streams |
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Journal Article |
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2016 |
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Multimedia Tools and Applications |
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MTAP |
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75 |
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22 |
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14985-14990 |
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ISE; HUPBA |
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Admin @ si @ DDB2016 |
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2934 |
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Francesco Ciompi; Simone Balocco; Juan Rigla; Xavier Carrillo; J. Mauri; Petia Radeva |
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Computer-Aided Detection of Intra-Coronary Stent in Intravascular Ultrasound Sequences |
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2016 |
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Medical Physics |
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MP |
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43 |
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10 |
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Purpose: An intraluminal coronary stent is a metal mesh tube deployed in a stenotic artery during Percutaneous Coronary Intervention (PCI), in order to prevent acute vessel occlusion. The identication of struts location and the denition of the stent shape are relevant for PCI planning 15 and for patient follow-up. We present a fully-automatic framework for Computer-Aided Detection
(CAD) of intra-coronary stents in Intravascular Ultrasound (IVUS) image sequences. The CAD system is able to detect stent struts and estimate the stent shape.
Methods: The proposed CAD uses machine learning to provide a comprehensive interpretation of the local structure of the vessel by means of semantic classication. The output of the classication 20 stage is then used to detect struts and to estimate the stent shape. The proposed approach is validated using a multi-centric data-set of 1,015 images from 107 IVUS sequences containing both metallic and bio-absorbable stents.
Results: The method was able to detect structs in both metallic stents with an overall F-measure of 77.7% and a mean distance of 0.15 mm from manually annotated struts, and in bio-absorbable 25 stents with an overall F-measure of 77.4% and a mean distance of 0.09 mm from manually annotated struts.
Conclusions: The results are close to the inter-observer variability and suggest that the system has the potential of being used as method for aiding percutaneous interventions. |
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MILAB |
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Admin @ si @ CBR2016 |
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2819 |
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Pejman Rasti; Salma Samiei; Mary Agoyi; Sergio Escalera; Gholamreza Anbarjafari |
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Robust non-blind color video watermarking using QR decomposition and entropy analysis |
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2016 |
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Journal of Visual Communication and Image Representation |
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JVCIR |
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38 |
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838-847 |
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Video watermarking; QR decomposition; Discrete Wavelet Transformation; Chirp Z-transform; Singular value decomposition; Orthogonal–triangular decomposition |
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Issues such as content identification, document and image security, audience measurement, ownership and copyright among others can be settled by the use of digital watermarking. Many recent video watermarking methods show drops in visual quality of the sequences. The present work addresses the aforementioned issue by introducing a robust and imperceptible non-blind color video frame watermarking algorithm. The method divides frames into moving and non-moving parts. The non-moving part of each color channel is processed separately using a block-based watermarking scheme. Blocks with an entropy lower than the average entropy of all blocks are subject to a further process for embedding the watermark image. Finally a watermarked frame is generated by adding moving parts to it. Several signal processing attacks are applied to each watermarked frame in order to perform experiments and are compared with some recent algorithms. Experimental results show that the proposed scheme is imperceptible and robust against common signal processing attacks. |
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HuPBA;MILAB; |
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Admin @ si @RSA2016 |
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2766 |
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Tadashi Araki; Sumit K. Banchhor; Narendra D. Londhe; Nobutaka Ikeda; Petia Radeva; Devarshi Shukla; Luca Saba; Antonella Balestrieri; Andrew Nicolaides; Shoaib Shafique; John R. Laird; Jasjit S. Suri |
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Reliable and Accurate Calcium Volume Measurement in Coronary Artery Using Intravascular Ultrasound Videos |
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2016 |
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Journal of Medical Systems |
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JMS |
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40 |
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3 |
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51:1-51:20 |
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Interventional cardiology; Atherosclerosis; Coronary arteries; IVUS; calcium volume; Soft computing; Performance Reliability; Accuracy |
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Quantitative assessment of calcified atherosclerotic volume within the coronary artery wall is vital for cardiac interventional procedures. The goal of this study is to automatically measure the calcium volume, given the borders of coronary vessel wall for all the frames of the intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) video. Three soft computing fuzzy classification techniques were adapted namely Fuzzy c-Means (FCM), K-means, and Hidden Markov Random Field (HMRF) for automated segmentation of calcium regions and volume computation. These methods were benchmarked against previously developed threshold-based method. IVUS image data sets (around 30,600 IVUS frames) from 15 patients were collected using 40 MHz IVUS catheter (Atlantis® SR Pro, Boston Scientific®, pullback speed of 0.5 mm/s). Calcium mean volume for FCM, K-means, HMRF and threshold-based method were 37.84 ± 17.38 mm3, 27.79 ± 10.94 mm3, 46.44 ± 19.13 mm3 and 35.92 ± 16.44 mm3 respectively. Cross-correlation, Jaccard Index and Dice Similarity were highest between FCM and threshold-based method: 0.99, 0.92 ± 0.02 and 0.95 + 0.02 respectively. Student’s t-test, z-test and Wilcoxon-test are also performed to demonstrate consistency, reliability and accuracy of the results. Given the vessel wall region, the system reliably and automatically measures the calcium volume in IVUS videos. Further, we validated our system against a trained expert using scoring: K-means showed the best performance with an accuracy of 92.80 %. Out procedure and protocol is along the line with method previously published clinically. |
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MILAB; |
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Admin @ si @ ABL2016 |
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2729 |
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Sergio Escalera; Vassilis Athitsos; Isabelle Guyon |
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Challenges in multimodal gesture recognition |
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2016 |
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Journal of Machine Learning Research |
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JMLR |
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17 |
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1-54 |
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Gesture Recognition; Time Series Analysis; Multimodal Data Analysis; Computer Vision; Pattern Recognition; Wearable sensors; Infrared Cameras; KinectTM |
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This paper surveys the state of the art on multimodal gesture recognition and introduces the JMLR special topic on gesture recognition 2011-2015. We began right at the start of the KinectTMrevolution when inexpensive infrared cameras providing image depth recordings became available. We published papers using this technology and other more conventional methods, including regular video cameras, to record data, thus providing a good overview of uses of machine learning and computer vision using multimodal data in this area of application. Notably, we organized a series of challenges and made available several datasets we recorded for that purpose, including tens of thousands
of videos, which are available to conduct further research. We also overview recent state of the art works on gesture recognition based on a proposed taxonomy for gesture recognition, discussing challenges and future lines of research. |
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Zhuowen Tu |
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HuPBA;MILAB; |
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Admin @ si @ EAG2016 |
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2764 |
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Author |
Maria Oliver; G. Haro; Mariella Dimiccoli; B. Mazin; C. Ballester |
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A Computational Model for Amodal Completion |
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2016 |
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Journal of Mathematical Imaging and Vision |
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JMIV |
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56 |
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3 |
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511–534 |
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Perception; visual completion; disocclusion; Bayesian model;relatability; Euler elastica |
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This paper presents a computational model to recover the most likely interpretation
of the 3D scene structure from a planar image, where some objects may occlude others. The estimated scene interpretation is obtained by integrating some global and local cues and provides both the complete disoccluded objects that form the scene and their ordering according to depth.
Our method first computes several distal scenes which are compatible with the proximal planar image. To compute these different hypothesized scenes, we propose a perceptually inspired object disocclusion method, which works by minimizing the Euler's elastica as well as by incorporating the relatability of partially occluded contours and the convexity of the disoccluded objects. Then, to estimate the preferred scene we rely on a Bayesian model and define probabilities taking into account the global complexity of the objects in the hypothesized scenes as well as the effort of bringing these objects in their relative position in the planar image, which is also measured by an Euler's elastica-based quantity. The model is illustrated with numerical experiments on, both, synthetic and real images showing the ability of our model to reconstruct the occluded objects and the preferred perceptual order among them. We also present results on images of the Berkeley dataset with provided figure-ground ground-truth labeling. |
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MILAB; 601.235 |
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Call Number |
Admin @ si @ OHD2016b |
Serial |
2745 |
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Author |
Lluis Gomez; Dimosthenis Karatzas |
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Title |
A fast hierarchical method for multi‐script and arbitrary oriented scene text extraction |
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Journal Article |
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Year |
2016 |
Publication |
International Journal on Document Analysis and Recognition |
Abbreviated Journal |
IJDAR |
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Volume |
19 |
Issue |
4 |
Pages |
335-349 |
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Keywords |
scene text; segmentation; detection; hierarchical grouping; perceptual organisation |
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Abstract |
Typography and layout lead to the hierarchical organisation of text in words, text lines, paragraphs. This inherent structure is a key property of text in any script and language, which has nonetheless been minimally leveraged by existing text detection methods. This paper addresses the problem of text
segmentation in natural scenes from a hierarchical perspective.
Contrary to existing methods, we make explicit use of text structure, aiming directly to the detection of region groupings corresponding to text within a hierarchy produced by an agglomerative similarity clustering process over individual regions. We propose an optimal way to construct such an hierarchy introducing a feature space designed to produce text group hypotheses with
high recall and a novel stopping rule combining a discriminative classifier and a probabilistic measure of group meaningfulness based in perceptual organization. Results obtained over four standard datasets, covering text in variable orientations and different languages, demonstrate that our algorithm, while being trained in a single mixed dataset, outperforms state of the art
methods in unconstrained scenarios. |
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DAG; 600.056; 601.197 |
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no |
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Call Number |
Admin @ si @ GoK2016a |
Serial |
2862 |
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Author |
Jiaolong Xu; Sebastian Ramos; David Vazquez; Antonio Lopez |
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Title |
Hierarchical Adaptive Structural SVM for Domain Adaptation |
Type |
Journal Article |
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Year |
2016 |
Publication |
International Journal of Computer Vision |
Abbreviated Journal |
IJCV |
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Volume |
119 |
Issue |
2 |
Pages |
159-178 |
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Keywords |
Domain Adaptation; Pedestrian Detection |
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Abstract |
A key topic in classification is the accuracy loss produced when the data distribution in the training (source) domain differs from that in the testing (target) domain. This is being recognized as a very relevant problem for many
computer vision tasks such as image classification, object detection, and object category recognition. In this paper, we present a novel domain adaptation method that leverages multiple target domains (or sub-domains) in a hierarchical adaptation tree. The core idea is to exploit the commonalities and differences of the jointly considered target domains.
Given the relevance of structural SVM (SSVM) classifiers, we apply our idea to the adaptive SSVM (A-SSVM), which only requires the target domain samples together with the existing source-domain classifier for performing the desired adaptation. Altogether, we term our proposal as hierarchical A-SSVM (HA-SSVM).
As proof of concept we use HA-SSVM for pedestrian detection, object category recognition and face recognition. In the former we apply HA-SSVM to the deformable partbased model (DPM) while in the rest HA-SSVM is applied to multi-category classifiers. We will show how HA-SSVM is effective in increasing the detection/recognition accuracy with respect to adaptation strategies that ignore the structure of the target data. Since, the sub-domains of the target data are not always known a priori, we shown how HA-SSVM can incorporate sub-domain discovery for object category recognition. |
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Springer US |
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0920-5691 |
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Notes |
ADAS; 600.085; 600.082; 600.076 |
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no |
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Call Number |
Admin @ si @ XRV2016 |
Serial |
2669 |
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Author |
Antonio Hernandez; Sergio Escalera; Stan Sclaroff |
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Title |
Poselet-basedContextual Rescoring for Human Pose Estimation via Pictorial Structures |
Type |
Journal Article |
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Year |
2016 |
Publication |
International Journal of Computer Vision |
Abbreviated Journal |
IJCV |
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Volume |
118 |
Issue |
1 |
Pages |
49–64 |
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Keywords |
Contextual rescoring; Poselets; Human pose estimation |
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Abstract |
In this paper we propose a contextual rescoring method for predicting the position of body parts in a human pose estimation framework. A set of poselets is incorporated in the model, and their detections are used to extract spatial and score-related features relative to other body part hypotheses. A method is proposed for the automatic discovery of a compact subset of poselets that covers the different poses in a set of validation images while maximizing precision. A rescoring mechanism is defined as a set-based boosting classifier that computes a new score for each body joint detection, given its relationship to detections of other body joints and mid-level parts in the image. This new score is incorporated in the pictorial structure model as an additional unary potential, following the recent work of Pishchulin et al. Experiments on two benchmarks show comparable results to Pishchulin et al. while reducing the size of the mid-level representation by an order of magnitude, reducing the execution time by 68 % accordingly. |
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Springer US |
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0920-5691 |
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Notes |
HuPBA;MILAB; |
Approved |
no |
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Call Number |
Admin @ si @ HES2016 |
Serial |
2719 |
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