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Author |
Sergio Escalera; Marti Soler; Stephane Ayache; Umut Guçlu; Jun Wan; Meysam Madadi; Xavier Baro; Hugo Jair Escalante; Isabelle Guyon |
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Title |
ChaLearn Looking at People: Inpainting and Denoising Challenges |
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Book Chapter |
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Year |
2019 |
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The Springer Series on Challenges in Machine Learning |
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Pages |
23-44 |
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Dealing with incomplete information is a well studied problem in the context of machine learning and computational intelligence. However, in the context of computer vision, the problem has only been studied in specific scenarios (e.g., certain types of occlusions in specific types of images), although it is common to have incomplete information in visual data. This chapter describes the design of an academic competition focusing on inpainting of images and video sequences that was part of the competition program of WCCI2018 and had a satellite event collocated with ECCV2018. The ChaLearn Looking at People Inpainting Challenge aimed at advancing the state of the art on visual inpainting by promoting the development of methods for recovering missing and occluded information from images and video. Three tracks were proposed in which visual inpainting might be helpful but still challenging: human body pose estimation, text overlays removal and fingerprint denoising. This chapter describes the design of the challenge, which includes the release of three novel datasets, and the description of evaluation metrics, baselines and evaluation protocol. The results of the challenge are analyzed and discussed in detail and conclusions derived from this event are outlined. |
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HuPBA; no proj |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ ESA2019 |
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3327 |
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Author |
Xavier Perez Sala; Laura Igual; Sergio Escalera; Cecilio Angulo |
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Title |
Uniform Sampling of Rotations for Discrete and Continuous Learning of 2D Shape Models |
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Book Chapter |
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Year |
2012 |
Publication |
Vision Robotics: Technologies for Machine Learning and Vision Applications |
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2 |
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23-42 |
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Different methodologies of uniform sampling over the rotation group, SO(3), for building unbiased 2D shape models from 3D objects are introduced and reviewed in this chapter. State-of-the-art non uniform sampling approaches are discussed, and uniform sampling methods using Euler angles and quaternions are introduced. Moreover, since presented work is oriented to model building applications, it is not limited to general discrete methods to obtain uniform 3D rotations, but also from a continuous point of view in the case of Procrustes Analysis. |
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IGI-Global |
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MILAB;HuPBA |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ PIE2012 |
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2064 |
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Author |
Fernando Vilariño; Petia Radeva |
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Title |
Cardiac Segmentation with Discriminant Active Contours |
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Book Chapter |
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Year |
2003 |
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211–217 |
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Dynamic tracking of heart moving is one relevant target in medical imag- ing and can be helpful for analyzing heart dynamics in the study of several cardiac diseases. For this aim, a previous segmentation problem of such structures is stated, based on certain relevant features (like edges or intensity levels, textures, etc.) Clas- sical active models have been used, but they fail when overlapping structures or not well-defined contours are present. Automatic feature learning systems may be a pow- erful tool. Discriminant active contours present optimal results in this kind of problem. They are a kind of deformable models that converge to an optimal object segmenta- tion that dynamically adapts to the object contour. The feature space is designed from a filter bank in order to guarantee the search and learning of the set of relevant fea- tures for optimal classification on each part of the object. Tracking of target evolution is obtained through the whole set of images, using information from the actual and previous stages. Feedback systems are implemented to guarantee the minimum well- separable classification set in each segmentation step. Our implementation has been proved with several series of Magnetic Resonance with improved results in segmenta- tion in comparison to previous methods. |
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Palma de Mallorca |
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IOS Press |
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CCIA |
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MV;MILAB;SIAI |
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no |
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BCNPCL @ bcnpcl @ ViR2003; IAM @ iam @ VRa2003 |
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426 |
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Author |
David Roche; Debora Gil; Jesus Giraldo |
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Title |
Mathematical modeling of G protein-coupled receptor function: What can we learn from empirical and mechanistic models? |
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Book Chapter |
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Year |
2014 |
Publication |
G Protein-Coupled Receptors – Modeling and Simulation Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology |
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Volume |
796 |
Issue |
3 |
Pages |
159-181 |
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Keywords |
β-arrestin; biased agonism; curve fitting; empirical modeling; evolutionary algorithm; functional selectivity; G protein; GPCR; Hill coefficient; intrinsic efficacy; inverse agonism; mathematical modeling; mechanistic modeling; operational model; parameter optimization; receptor dimer; receptor oligomerization; receptor constitutive activity; signal transduction; two-state model |
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Abstract |
Empirical and mechanistic models differ in their approaches to the analysis of pharmacological effect. Whereas the parameters of the former are not physical constants those of the latter embody the nature, often complex, of biology. Empirical models are exclusively used for curve fitting, merely to characterize the shape of the E/[A] curves. Mechanistic models, on the contrary, enable the examination of mechanistic hypotheses by parameter simulation. Regretfully, the many parameters that mechanistic models may include can represent a great difficulty for curve fitting, representing, thus, a challenge for computational method development. In the present study some empirical and mechanistic models are shown and the connections, which may appear in a number of cases between them, are analyzed from the curves they yield. It may be concluded that systematic and careful curve shape analysis can be extremely useful for the understanding of receptor function, ligand classification and drug discovery, thus providing a common language for the communication between pharmacologists and medicinal chemists. |
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Springer Netherlands |
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0065-2598 |
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978-94-007-7422-3 |
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IAM; 600.075 |
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no |
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IAM @ iam @ RGG2014 |
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2197 |
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Author |
Jose M. Armingol; Jorge Alfonso; Nourdine Aliane; Miguel Clavijo; Sergio Campos-Cordobes; Arturo de la Escalera; Javier del Ser; Javier Fernandez; Fernando Garcia; Felipe Jimenez; Antonio Lopez; Mario Mata |
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Title |
Environmental Perception for Intelligent Vehicles |
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Book Chapter |
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Year |
2018 |
Publication |
Intelligent Vehicles. Enabling Technologies and Future Developments |
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23–101 |
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Computer vision; laser techniques; data fusion; advanced driver assistance systems; traffic monitoring systems; intelligent vehicles |
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Environmental perception represents, because of its complexity, a challenge for Intelligent Transport Systems due to the great variety of situations and different elements that can happen in road environments and that must be faced by these systems. In connection with this, so far there are a variety of solutions as regards sensors and methods, so the results of precision, complexity, cost, or computational load obtained by these works are different. In this chapter some systems based on computer vision and laser techniques are presented. Fusion methods are also introduced in order to provide advanced and reliable perception systems. |
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ADAS; 600.118 |
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no |
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Admin @ si @AAA2018 |
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3046 |
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Author |
Fernando Vilariño; Debora Gil; Petia Radeva |
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Title |
A Novel FLDA Formulation for Numerical Stability Analysis |
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Book Chapter |
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2004 |
Publication |
Recent Advances in Artificial Intelligence Research and Development |
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113 |
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77-84 |
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Supervised Learning; Linear Discriminant Analysis; Numerical Stability; Computer Vision |
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Fisher Linear Discriminant Analysis (FLDA) is one of the most popular techniques used in classification applying dimensional reduction. The numerical scheme involves the inversion of the within-class scatter matrix, which makes FLDA potentially ill-conditioned when it becomes singular. In this paper we present a novel explicit formulation of FLDA in terms of the eccentricity ratio and eigenvector orientations of the within-class scatter matrix. An analysis of this function will characterize those situations where FLDA response is not reliable because of numerical instability. This can solve common situations of poor classification performance in computer vision. |
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IOS Press |
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J. Vitrià, P. Radeva and I. Aguiló |
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978-1-58603-466-5 |
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MV;IAM;MILAB;SIAI |
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no |
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IAM @ iam @ VGR2004 |
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1663 |
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Author |
Julie Digne; Mariella Dimiccoli; Neus Sabater; Philippe Salembier |
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Title |
Neighborhood Filters and the Recovery of 3D Information |
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Book Chapter |
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Year |
2015 |
Publication |
Handbook of Mathematical Methods in Imaging |
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III |
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1645-1673 |
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Following their success in image processing (see Chapter Local Smoothing Neighborhood Filters), neighborhood filters have been extended to 3D surface processing. This adaptation is not straightforward. It has led to several variants for surfaces depending on whether the surface is defined as a mesh, or as a raw data point set. The image gray level in the bilateral similarity measure is replaced by a geometric information such as the normal or the curvature. The first section of this chapter reviews the variants of 3D mesh bilateral filters and compares them to the simplest possible isotropic filter, the mean curvature motion.In a second part, this chapter reviews applications of the bilateral filter to a data composed of a sparse depth map (or of depth cues) and of the image on which they have been computed. Such sparse depth cues can be obtained by stereovision or by psychophysical techniques. The underlying assumption to these applications is that pixels with similar intensity around a region are likely to have similar depths. Therefore, when diffusing depth information with a bilateral filter based on locality and color similarity, the discontinuities in depth are assured to be consistent with the color discontinuities, which is generally a desirable property. In the reviewed applications, this ends up with the reconstruction of a dense perceptual depth map from the joint data of an image and of depth cues. |
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Springer New York |
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978-1-4939-0789-2 |
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MILAB |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ DDS2015 |
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2710 |
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Author |
Klaus Broelemann; Anjan Dutta; Xiaoyi Jiang; Josep Llados |
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Title |
Hierarchical Plausibility-Graphs for Symbol Spotting in Graphical Documents |
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Book Chapter |
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2014 |
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Graphics Recognition. Current Trends and Challenges |
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8746 |
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25-37 |
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Graph representation of graphical documents often suffers from noise such as spurious nodes and edges, and their discontinuity. In general these errors occur during the low-level image processing viz. binarization, skeletonization, vectorization etc. Hierarchical graph representation is a nice and efficient way to solve this kind of problem by hierarchically merging node-node and node-edge depending on the distance. But the creation of hierarchical graph representing the graphical information often uses hard thresholds on the distance to create the hierarchical nodes (next state) of the lower nodes (or states) of a graph. As a result, the representation often loses useful information. This paper introduces plausibilities to the nodes of hierarchical graph as a function of distance and proposes a modified algorithm for matching subgraphs of the hierarchical graphs. The plausibility-annotated nodes help to improve the performance of the matching algorithm on two hierarchical structures. To show the potential of this approach, we conduct an experiment with the SESYD dataset. |
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Springer Berlin Heidelberg |
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Bart Lamiroy; Jean-Marc Ogier |
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LNCS |
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0302-9743 |
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978-3-662-44853-3 |
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DAG; 600.045; 600.056; 600.061; 600.077 |
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Admin @ si @ BDJ2014 |
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2699 |
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Javier Marin; David Geronimo; David Vazquez; Antonio Lopez |
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Title |
Pedestrian Detection: Exploring Virtual Worlds |
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2012 |
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Handbook of Pattern Recognition: Methods and Application |
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5 |
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145-162 |
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Virtual worlds; Pedestrian Detection; Domain Adaptation |
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Handbook of pattern recognition will include contributions from university educators and active research experts. This Handbook is intended to serve as a basic reference on methods and applications of pattern recognition. The primary aim of this handbook is providing the community of pattern recognition with a readable, easy to understand resource that covers introductory, intermediate and advanced topics with equal clarity. Therefore, the Handbook of pattern recognition can serve equally well as reference resource and as classroom textbook. Contributions cover all methods, techniques and applications of pattern recognition. A tentative list of relevant topics might include: 1- Statistical, structural, syntactic pattern recognition. 2- Neural networks, machine learning, data mining. 3- Discrete geometry, algebraic, graph-based techniques for pattern recognition. 4- Face recognition, Signal analysis, image coding and processing, shape and texture analysis. 5- Document processing, text and graphics recognition, digital libraries. 6- Speech recognition, music analysis, multimedia systems. 7- Natural language analysis, information retrieval. 8- Biometrics, biomedical pattern analysis and information systems. 9- Other scientific, engineering, social and economical applications of pattern recognition. 10- Special hardware architectures, software packages for pattern recognition. |
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iConcept Press |
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English |
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978-1-477554-82-1 |
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ADAS |
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no |
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ADAS @ adas @ MGV2012 |
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1979 |
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Author |
Beata Megyesi; Alicia Fornes; Nils Kopal; Benedek Lang |
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Title |
Historical Cryptology |
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2024 |
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Learning and Experiencing Cryptography with CrypTool and SageMath |
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Historical cryptology studies (original) encrypted manuscripts, often handwritten sources, produced in our history. These historical sources can be found in archives, often hidden without any indexing and therefore hard to locate. Once found they need to be digitized and turned into a machine-readable text format before they can be deciphered with computational methods. The focus of historical cryptology is not primarily the development of sophisticated algorithms for decipherment, but rather the entire process of analysis of the encrypted source from collection and digitization to transcription and decryption. The process also includes the interpretation and contextualization of the message set in its historical context. There are many challenges on the way, such as mistakes made by the scribe, errors made by the transcriber, damaged pages, handwriting styles that are difficult to interpret, historical languages from various time periods, and hidden underlying language of the message. Ciphertexts vary greatly in terms of their code system and symbol sets used with more or less distinguishable symbols. Ciphertexts can be embedded in clearly written text, or shorter or longer sequences of cleartext can be embedded in the ciphertext. The ciphers used mostly in historical times are substitutions (simple, homophonic, or polyphonic), with or without nomenclatures, encoded as digits or symbol sequences, with or without spaces. So the circumstances are different from those in modern cryptography which focuses on methods (algorithms) and their strengths and assumes that the algorithm is applied correctly. For both historical and modern cryptology, attack vectors outside the algorithm are applied like implementation flaws and side-channel attacks. In this chapter, we give an introduction to the field of historical cryptology and present an overview of how researchers today process historical encrypted sources. |
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DAG |
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Admin @ si @ MFK2024 |
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4020 |
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Nataliya Shapovalova; Carles Fernandez; Xavier Roca; Jordi Gonzalez |
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Title |
Semantics of Human Behavior in Image Sequences |
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2011 |
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Computer Analysis of Human Behavior |
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7 |
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151-182 |
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Human behavior is contextualized and understanding the scene of an action is crucial for giving proper semantics to behavior. In this chapter we present a novel approach for scene understanding. The emphasis of this work is on the particular case of Human Event Understanding. We introduce a new taxonomy to organize the different semantic levels of the Human Event Understanding framework proposed. Such a framework particularly contributes to the scene understanding domain by (i) extracting behavioral patterns from the integrative analysis of spatial, temporal, and contextual evidence and (ii) integrative analysis of bottom-up and top-down approaches in Human Event Understanding. We will explore how the information about interactions between humans and their environment influences the performance of activity recognition, and how this can be extrapolated to the temporal domain in order to extract higher inferences from human events observed in sequences of images. |
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Springer London |
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Albert Ali Salah; |
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978-0-85729-993-2 |
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ISE |
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Admin @ si @ SFR2011 |
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1810 |
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Author |
Fadi Dornaika; Bogdan Raducanu; Alireza Bosaghzadeh |
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Title |
Facial expression recognition based on multi observations with application to social robotics |
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Book Chapter |
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2015 |
Publication |
Emotional and Facial Expressions: Recognition, Developmental Differences and Social Importance |
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153-166 |
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Human-robot interaction is a hot topic nowadays in the social robotics
community. One crucial aspect is represented by the affective communication
which comes encoded through the facial expressions. In this chapter, we propose a novel approach for facial expression recognition, which exploits an efficient and adaptive graph-based label propagation (semi-supervised mode) in a multi-observation framework. The facial features are extracted using an appearance-based 3D face tracker, viewand texture independent. Our method has been extensively tested on the CMU dataset, and has been conveniently compared with other methods for graph construction. With the proposed approach, we developed an application for an AIBO robot, in which it mirrors the recognized facial
expression. |
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Nova Science publishers |
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Bruce Flores |
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LAMP; |
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Admin @ si @ DRB2015 |
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2720 |
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Author |
Michael Teutsch; Angel Sappa; Riad I. Hammoud |
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Title |
Image and Video Enhancement |
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Book Chapter |
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Year |
2022 |
Publication |
Computer Vision in the Infrared Spectrum. Synthesis Lectures on Computer Vision |
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9-21 |
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Image and video enhancement aims at improving the signal quality relative to imaging artifacts such as noise and blur or atmospheric perturbations such as turbulence and haze. It is usually performed in order to assist humans in analyzing image and video content or simply to present humans visually appealing images and videos. However, image and video enhancement can also be used as a preprocessing technique to ease the task and thus improve the performance of subsequent automatic image content analysis algorithms: preceding dehazing can improve object detection as shown by [23] or explicit turbulence modeling can improve moving object detection as discussed by [24]. But it remains an open question whether image and video enhancement should rather be performed explicitly as a preprocessing step or implicitly for example by feeding affected images directly to a neural network for image content analysis like object detection [25]. Especially for real-time video processing at low latency it can be better to handle image perturbation implicitly in order to minimize the processing time of an algorithm. This can be achieved by making algorithms for image content analysis robust or even invariant to perturbations such as noise or blur. Additionally, mistakes of an individual preprocessing module can obviously affect the quality of the entire processing pipeline. |
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Springer |
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SLCV |
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MSIAU; MACO |
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Admin @ si @ TSH2022a |
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3807 |
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Author |
David Vazquez; Antonio Lopez; Daniel Ponsa; David Geronimo |
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Title |
Interactive Training of Human Detectors |
Type |
Book Chapter |
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Year |
2013 |
Publication |
Multiodal Interaction in Image and Video Applications |
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48 |
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169-182 |
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Pedestrian Detection; Virtual World; AdaBoost; Domain Adaptation |
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Abstract |
Image based human detection remains as a challenging problem. Most promising detectors rely on classifiers trained with labelled samples. However, labelling is a manual labor intensive step. To overcome this problem we propose to collect images of pedestrians from a virtual city, i.e., with automatic labels, and train a pedestrian detector with them, which works fine when such virtual-world data are similar to testing one, i.e., real-world pedestrians in urban areas. When testing data is acquired in different conditions than training one, e.g., human detection in personal photo albums, dataset shift appears. In previous work, we cast this problem as one of domain adaptation and solve it with an active learning procedure. In this work, we focus on the same problem but evaluating a different set of faster to compute features, i.e., Haar, EOH and their combination. In particular, we train a classifier with virtual-world data, using such features and Real AdaBoost as learning machine. This classifier is applied to real-world training images. Then, a human oracle interactively corrects the wrong detections, i.e., few miss detections are manually annotated and some false ones are pointed out too. A low amount of manual annotation is fixed as restriction. Real- and virtual-world difficult samples are combined within what we call cool world and we retrain the classifier with this data. Our experiments show that this adapted classifier is equivalent to the one trained with only real-world data but requiring 90% less manual annotations. |
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Springer Heidelberg New York Dordrecht London |
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Springer Berlin Heidelberg |
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English |
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1868-4394 |
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978-3-642-35931-6 |
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ADAS; 600.057; 600.054; 605.203 |
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VLP2013; ADAS @ adas @ vlp2013 |
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2193 |
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Author |
Miquel Ferrer; I. Bardaji; Ernest Valveny; Dimosthenis Karatzas; Horst Bunke |
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Title |
Median Graph Computation by Means of Graph Embedding into Vector Spaces |
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Book Chapter |
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Year |
2013 |
Publication |
Graph Embedding for Pattern Analysis |
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45-72 |
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In pattern recognition [8, 14], a key issue to be addressed when designing a system is how to represent input patterns. Feature vectors is a common option. That is, a set of numerical features describing relevant properties of the pattern are computed and arranged in a vector form. The main advantages of this kind of representation are computational simplicity and a well sound mathematical foundation. Thus, a large number of operations are available to work with vectors and a large repository of algorithms for pattern analysis and classification exist. However, the simple structure of feature vectors might not be the best option for complex patterns where nonnumerical features or relations between different parts of the pattern become relevant. |
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Springer New York |
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Yun Fu; Yungian Ma |
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978-1-4614-4456-5 |
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Notes |
DAG |
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Call Number |
Admin @ si @ FBV2013 |
Serial |
2421 |
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