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Maria Oliver, G. Haro, Mariella Dimiccoli, B. Mazin, & C. Ballester. (2016). A Computational Model for Amodal Completion. JMIV - Journal of Mathematical Imaging and Vision, 56(3), 511–534.
Abstract: 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.
Keywords: Perception; visual completion; disocclusion; Bayesian model;relatability; Euler elastica
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Henry Velesaca, Patricia Suarez, Dario Carpio, & Angel Sappa. (2021). Synthesized Image Datasets: Towards an Annotation-Free Instance Segmentation Strategy. In 16th International Symposium on Visual Computing (Vol. 13017, 131–143). LNCS.
Abstract: This paper presents a complete pipeline to perform deep learning-based instance segmentation of different types of grains (e.g., corn, sunflower, soybeans, lentils, chickpeas, mote, and beans). The proposed approach consists of using synthesized image datasets for the training process, which are easily generated according to the category of the instance to be segmented. The synthesized imaging process allows generating a large set of well-annotated grain samples with high variability—as large and high as the user requires. Instance segmentation is performed through a popular deep learning based approach, the Mask R-CNN architecture, but any learning-based instance segmentation approach can be considered. Results obtained by the proposed pipeline show that the strategy of using synthesized image datasets for training instance segmentation helps to avoid the time-consuming image annotation stage, as well as to achieve higher intersection over union and average precision performances. Results obtained with different varieties of grains are shown, as well as comparisons with manually annotated images, showing both the simplicity of the process and the improvements in the performance.
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Daniel Ponsa, & Antonio Lopez. (2009). Variance reduction techniques in particle-based visual contour Tracking. PR - Pattern Recognition, 42(11), 2372–2391.
Abstract: This paper presents a comparative study of three different strategies to improve the performance of particle filters, in the context of visual contour tracking: the unscented particle filter, the Rao-Blackwellized particle filter, and the partitioned sampling technique. The tracking problem analyzed is the joint estimation of the global and local transformation of the outline of a given target, represented following the active shape model approach. The main contributions of the paper are the novel adaptations of the considered techniques on this generic problem, and the quantitative assessment of their performance in extensive experimental work done.
Keywords: Contour tracking; Active shape models; Kalman filter; Particle filter; Importance sampling; Unscented particle filter; Rao-Blackwellization; Partitioned sampling
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Francesc Net, Marc Folia, Pep Casals, & Lluis Gomez. (2023). Transductive Learning for Near-Duplicate Image Detection in Scanned Photo Collections. In 17th International Conference on Document Analysis and Recognition (Vol. 14191, pp. 3–17). LNCS.
Abstract: This paper presents a comparative study of near-duplicate image detection techniques in a real-world use case scenario, where a document management company is commissioned to manually annotate a collection of scanned photographs. Detecting duplicate and near-duplicate photographs can reduce the time spent on manual annotation by archivists. This real use case differs from laboratory settings as the deployment dataset is available in advance, allowing the use of transductive learning. We propose a transductive learning approach that leverages state-of-the-art deep learning architectures such as convolutional neural networks (CNNs) and Vision Transformers (ViTs). Our approach involves pre-training a deep neural network on a large dataset and then fine-tuning the network on the unlabeled target collection with self-supervised learning. The results show that the proposed approach outperforms the baseline methods in the task of near-duplicate image detection in the UKBench and an in-house private dataset.
Keywords: Image deduplication; Near-duplicate images detection; Transductive Learning; Photographic Archives; Deep Learning
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Angel Sappa, Rosa Herrero, Fadi Dornaika, David Geronimo, & Antonio Lopez. (2007). Road Approximation in Euclidean and v-Disparity Space: A Comparative Study. In Computer Aided Systems Theory, (Vol. 4739, 1105–1112). LNCS.
Abstract: This paper presents a comparative study between two road approximation techniques—planar surfaces—from stereo vision data. The first approach is carried out in the v-disparity space and is based on a voting scheme, the Hough transform. The second one consists in computing the best fitting plane for the whole 3D road data points, directly in the Euclidean space, by using least squares fitting. The comparative study is initially performed over a set of different synthetic surfaces
(e.g., plane, quadratic surface, cubic surface) digitized by a virtual stereo head; then real data obtained with a commercial stereo head are used. The comparative study is intended to be used as a criterion for fining the best technique according to the road geometry. Additionally, it highlights common problems driven from a wrong assumption about the scene’s prior knowledge.
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Angel Sappa, Rosa Herrero, Fadi Dornaika, David Geronimo, & Antonio Lopez. (2007). Road Approximation in Euclidean and v-Disparity Space: A Comparative Study. In EUROCAST2007, Workshop on Cybercars and Intelligent Vehicles (368–369).
Abstract: This paper presents a comparative study between two road approximation techniques—planar surfaces—from stereo vision data. The first approach is carried out in the v-disparity space and is based on a voting scheme, the Hough transform. The second one consists in computing the best fitting plane for the whole 3D road data points, directly in the Euclidean space, by using least squares fitting. The comparative study is initially performed over a set of different synthetic surfaces
(e.g., plane, quadratic surface, cubic surface) digitized by a virtual stereo head; then real data obtained with a commercial stereo head are used. The comparative study is intended to be used as a criterion for fining the best technique according to the road geometry. Additionally, it highlights common problems driven from a wrong assumption about the scene’s prior knowledge.
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P. Ricaurte, C. Chilan, Cristhian A. Aguilera-Carrasco, Boris X. Vintimilla, & Angel Sappa. (2014). Performance Evaluation of Feature Point Descriptors in the Infrared Domain. In 9th International Conference on Computer Vision Theory and Applications (Vol. 1, pp. 545–550).
Abstract: This paper presents a comparative evaluation of classical feature point descriptors when they are used in the long-wave infrared spectral band. Robustness to changes in rotation, scaling, blur, and additive noise are evaluated using a state of the art framework. Statistical results using an outdoor image data set are presented together with a discussion about the differences with respect to the results obtained when images from the visible spectrum are considered.
Keywords: Infrared Imaging; Feature Point Descriptors
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Monica Piñol, Angel Sappa, & Ricardo Toledo. (2012). MultiTable Reinforcement for Visual Object Recognition. In 4th International Conference on Signal and Image Processing (Vol. 221, pp. 469–480). LNCS. Springer India.
Abstract: This paper presents a bag of feature based method for visual object recognition. Our contribution is focussed on the selection of the best feature descriptor. It is implemented by using a novel multi-table reinforcement learning method that selects among five of classical descriptors (i.e., Spin, SIFT, SURF, C-SIFT and PHOW) the one that best describes each image. Experimental results and comparisons are provided showing the improvements achieved with the proposed approach.
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Albert Berenguel, Oriol Ramos Terrades, Josep Llados, & Cristina Cañero. (2016). Banknote counterfeit detection through background texture printing analysis. In 12th IAPR Workshop on Document Analysis Systems.
Abstract: This paper is focused on the detection of counterfeit photocopy banknotes. The main difficulty is to work on a real industrial scenario without any constraint about the acquisition device and with a single image. The main contributions of this paper are twofold: first the adaptation and performance evaluation of existing approaches to classify the genuine and photocopy banknotes using background texture printing analysis, which have not been applied into this context before. Second, a new dataset of Euro banknotes images acquired with several cameras under different luminance conditions to evaluate these methods. Experiments on the proposed algorithms show that mixing SIFT features and sparse coding dictionaries achieves quasi perfect classification using a linear SVM with the created dataset. Approaches using dictionaries to cover all possible texture variations have demonstrated to be robust and outperform the state-of-the-art methods using the proposed benchmark.
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Albert Berenguel, Oriol Ramos Terrades, Josep Llados, & Cristina Cañero. (2019). Recurrent Comparator with attention models to detect counterfeit documents. In 15th International Conference on Document Analysis and Recognition.
Abstract: This paper is focused on the detection of counterfeit documents via the recurrent comparison of the security textured background regions of two images. The main contributions are twofold: first we apply and adapt a recurrent comparator architecture with attention mechanism to the counterfeit detection task, which constructs a representation of the background regions by recurrently condition the next observation, learning the difference between genuine and counterfeit images through iterative glimpses. Second we propose a new counterfeit document dataset to ensure the generalization of the learned model towards the detection of the lack of resolution during the counterfeit manufacturing. The presented network, outperforms state-of-the-art classification approaches for counterfeit detection as demonstrated in the evaluation.
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Marçal Rusiñol, V. Poulain d'Andecy, Dimosthenis Karatzas, & Josep Llados. (2014). Classification of Administrative Document Images by Logo Identification. In Bart Lamiroy, & Jean-Marc Ogier (Eds.), Graphics Recognition. Current Trends and Challenges (Vol. 8746, pp. 49–58). Springer Berlin Heidelberg.
Abstract: This paper is focused on the categorization of administrative document images (such as invoices) based on the recognition of the supplier’s graphical logo. Two different methods are proposed, the first one uses a bag-of-visual-words model whereas the second one tries to locate logo images described by the blurred shape model descriptor within documents by a sliding-window technique. Preliminar results are reported with a dataset of real administrative documents.
Keywords: Administrative Document Classification; Logo Recognition; Logo Spotting
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Marçal Rusiñol, V. Poulain d'Andecy, Dimosthenis Karatzas, & Josep Llados. (2011). Classification of Administrative Document Images by Logo Identification. In In proceedings of 9th IAPR Workshop on Graphic Recognition.
Abstract: This paper is focused on the categorization of administrative document images (such as invoices) based on the recognition of the supplier's graphical logo. Two different methods are proposed, the first one uses a bag-of-visual-words model whereas the second one tries to locate logo images described by the blurred shape model descriptor within documents by a sliding-window technique. Preliminar results are reported with a dataset of real administrative documents.
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Marçal Rusiñol, V. Poulain d'Andecy, Dimosthenis Karatzas, & Josep Llados. (2013). Classification of Administrative Document Images by Logo Identification. In 10th IAPR International Workshop on Graphics Recognition.
Abstract: This paper is focused on the categorization of administrative document images (such as invoices) based on the recognition of the supplier's graphical logo. Two different methods are proposed, the first one uses a bag-of-visual-words model whereas the second one tries to locate logo images described by the blurred shape model descriptor within documents by a sliding-window technique. Preliminar results are reported with a dataset of real administrative documents.
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Nataliya Shapovalova, Wenjuan Gong, Marco Pedersoli, Xavier Roca, & Jordi Gonzalez. (2011). On Importance of Interactions and Context in Human Action Recognition. In and M. Hernandez J. M. S. J. Vitria (Ed.), 5th Iberian Conference on Pattern Recognition and Image Analysis (Vol. 6669, pp. 58–66). LNCS. Springer Berlin Heidelberg.
Abstract: This paper is focused on the automatic recognition of human events in static images. Popular techniques use knowledge of the human pose for inferring the action, and the most recent approaches tend to combine pose information with either knowledge of the scene or of the objects with which the human interacts. Our approach makes a step forward in this direction by combining the human pose with the scene in which the human is placed, together with the spatial relationships between humans and objects. Based on standard, simple descriptors like HOG and SIFT, recognition performance is enhanced when these three types of knowledge are taken into account. Results obtained in the PASCAL 2010 Action Recognition Dataset demonstrate that our technique reaches state-of-the-art results using simple descriptors and classifiers.
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Ivo Everts, Jan van Gemert, & Theo Gevers. (2013). Evaluation of Color STIPs for Human Action Recognition. In IEEE Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition (pp. 2850–2857).
Abstract: This paper is concerned with recognizing realistic human actions in videos based on spatio-temporal interest points (STIPs). Existing STIP-based action recognition approaches operate on intensity representations of the image data. Because of this, these approaches are sensitive to disturbing photometric phenomena such as highlights and shadows. Moreover, valuable information is neglected by discarding chromaticity from the photometric representation. These issues are addressed by Color STIPs. Color STIPs are multi-channel reformulations of existing intensity-based STIP detectors and descriptors, for which we consider a number of chromatic representations derived from the opponent color space. This enhanced modeling of appearance improves the quality of subsequent STIP detection and description. Color STIPs are shown to substantially outperform their intensity-based counterparts on the challenging UCF~sports, UCF11 and UCF50 action recognition benchmarks. Moreover, the results show that color STIPs are currently the single best low-level feature choice for STIP-based approaches to human action recognition.
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