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Author |
Anna Esposito; Terry Amorese; Nelson Maldonato; Alessandro Vinciarelli; Maria Ines Torres; Sergio Escalera; Gennaro Cordasco |
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Title |
Seniors’ ability to decode differently aged facial emotional expressions |
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Conference Article |
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Year |
2020 |
Publication |
Faces and Gestures in E-health and welfare workshop |
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716-722 |
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Virtual; November 2020 |
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HUPBA |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ EAM2020 |
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3515 |
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Author |
Anna Esposito; Italia Cirillo; Antonietta Esposito; Leopoldina Fortunati; Gian Luca Foresti; Sergio Escalera; Nikolaos Bourbakis |
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Title |
Impairments in decoding facial and vocal emotional expressions in high functioning autistic adults and adolescents |
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Conference Article |
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Year |
2020 |
Publication |
Faces and Gestures in E-health and welfare workshop |
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667-674 |
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Virtual; November 2020 |
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HUPBA |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ ECE2020 |
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3516 |
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Author |
Anjan Dutta; Pau Riba; Josep Llados; Alicia Fornes |
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Title |
Hierarchical Stochastic Graphlet Embedding for Graph-based Pattern Recognition |
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Journal Article |
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Year |
2020 |
Publication |
Neural Computing and Applications |
Abbreviated Journal |
NEUCOMA |
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32 |
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11579–11596 |
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Abstract |
Despite being very successful within the pattern recognition and machine learning community, graph-based methods are often unusable because of the lack of mathematical operations defined in graph domain. Graph embedding, which maps graphs to a vectorial space, has been proposed as a way to tackle these difficulties enabling the use of standard machine learning techniques. However, it is well known that graph embedding functions usually suffer from the loss of structural information. In this paper, we consider the hierarchical structure of a graph as a way to mitigate this loss of information. The hierarchical structure is constructed by topologically clustering the graph nodes and considering each cluster as a node in the upper hierarchical level. Once this hierarchical structure is constructed, we consider several configurations to define the mapping into a vector space given a classical graph embedding, in particular, we propose to make use of the stochastic graphlet embedding (SGE). Broadly speaking, SGE produces a distribution of uniformly sampled low-to-high-order graphlets as a way to embed graphs into the vector space. In what follows, the coarse-to-fine structure of a graph hierarchy and the statistics fetched by the SGE complements each other and includes important structural information with varied contexts. Altogether, these two techniques substantially cope with the usual information loss involved in graph embedding techniques, obtaining a more robust graph representation. This fact has been corroborated through a detailed experimental evaluation on various benchmark graph datasets, where we outperform the state-of-the-art methods. |
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DAG; 600.140; 600.121; 600.141 |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ DRL2020 |
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3348 |
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Author |
Angel Morera; Angel Sanchez; A. Belen Moreno; Angel Sappa; Jose F. Velez |
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Title |
SSD vs. YOLO for Detection of Outdoor Urban Advertising Panels under Multiple Variabilities |
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Journal Article |
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Year |
2020 |
Publication |
Sensors |
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SENS |
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Volume |
20 |
Issue |
16 |
Pages |
4587 |
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Abstract |
This work compares Single Shot MultiBox Detector (SSD) and You Only Look Once (YOLO) deep neural networks for the outdoor advertisement panel detection problem by handling multiple and combined variabilities in the scenes. Publicity panel detection in images offers important advantages both in the real world as well as in the virtual one. For example, applications like Google Street View can be used for Internet publicity and when detecting these ads panels in images, it could be possible to replace the publicity appearing inside the panels by another from a funding company. In our experiments, both SSD and YOLO detectors have produced acceptable results under variable sizes of panels, illumination conditions, viewing perspectives, partial occlusion of panels, complex background and multiple panels in scenes. Due to the difficulty of finding annotated images for the considered problem, we created our own dataset for conducting the experiments. The major strength of the SSD model was the almost elimination of False Positive (FP) cases, situation that is preferable when the publicity contained inside the panel is analyzed after detecting them. On the other side, YOLO produced better panel localization results detecting a higher number of True Positive (TP) panels with a higher accuracy. Finally, a comparison of the two analyzed object detection models with different types of semantic segmentation networks and using the same evaluation metrics is also included. |
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MSIAU; 600.130; 601.349; 600.122 |
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no |
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Call Number |
Admin @ si @ MSM2020 |
Serial |
3452 |
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Author |
Andres Mafla; Sounak Dey; Ali Furkan Biten; Lluis Gomez; Dimosthenis Karatzas |
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Title |
Fine-grained Image Classification and Retrieval by Combining Visual and Locally Pooled Textual Features |
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Conference Article |
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Year |
2020 |
Publication |
IEEE Winter Conference on Applications of Computer Vision |
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Text contained in an image carries high-level semantics that can be exploited to achieve richer image understanding. In particular, the mere presence of text provides strong guiding content that should be employed to tackle a diversity of computer vision tasks such as image retrieval, fine-grained classification, and visual question answering. In this paper, we address the problem of fine-grained classification and image retrieval by leveraging textual information along with visual cues to comprehend the existing intrinsic relation between the two modalities. The novelty of the proposed model consists of the usage of a PHOC descriptor to construct a bag of textual words along with a Fisher Vector Encoding that captures the morphology of text. This approach provides a stronger multimodal representation for this task and as our experiments demonstrate, it achieves state-of-the-art results on two different tasks, fine-grained classification and image retrieval. |
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Aspen; Colorado; USA; March 2020 |
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WACV |
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Notes |
DAG; 600.121; 600.129 |
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no |
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Call Number |
Admin @ si @ MDB2020 |
Serial |
3334 |
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Author |
Ana Garcia Rodriguez; Jorge Bernal; F. Javier Sanchez; Henry Cordova; Rodrigo Garces Duran; Cristina Rodriguez de Miguel; Gloria Fernandez Esparrach |
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Title |
Polyp fingerprint: automatic recognition of colorectal polyps’ unique features |
Type |
Journal Article |
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Year |
2020 |
Publication |
Surgical Endoscopy and other Interventional Techniques |
Abbreviated Journal |
SEND |
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Volume |
34 |
Issue |
4 |
Pages |
1887-1889 |
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Abstract |
BACKGROUND:
Content-based image retrieval (CBIR) is an application of machine learning used to retrieve images by similarity on the basis of features. Our objective was to develop a CBIR system that could identify images containing the same polyp ('polyp fingerprint').
METHODS:
A machine learning technique called Bag of Words was used to describe each endoscopic image containing a polyp in a unique way. The system was tested with 243 white light images belonging to 99 different polyps (for each polyp there were at least two images representing it in two different temporal moments). Images were acquired in routine colonoscopies at Hospital Clínic using high-definition Olympus endoscopes. The method provided for each image the closest match within the dataset.
RESULTS:
The system matched another image of the same polyp in 221/243 cases (91%). No differences were observed in the number of correct matches according to Paris classification (protruded: 90.7% vs. non-protruded: 91.3%) and size (< 10 mm: 91.6% vs. > 10 mm: 90%).
CONCLUSIONS:
A CBIR system can match accurately two images containing the same polyp, which could be a helpful aid for polyp image recognition.
KEYWORDS:
Artificial intelligence; Colorectal polyps; Content-based image retrieval |
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MV; no menciona |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ |
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3403 |
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Author |
Alicia Fornes; Josep Llados; Joana Maria Pujadas-Mora |
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Title |
Browsing of the Social Network of the Past: Information Extraction from Population Manuscript Images |
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Book Chapter |
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Year |
2020 |
Publication |
Handwritten Historical Document Analysis, Recognition, and Retrieval – State of the Art and Future Trends |
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World Scientific |
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978-981-120-323-7 |
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DAG; 600.140; 600.121 |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ FLP2020 |
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3350 |
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Author |
Alejandro Cartas; Petia Radeva; Mariella Dimiccoli |
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Title |
Activities of Daily Living Monitoring via a Wearable Camera: Toward Real-World Applications |
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Journal Article |
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2020 |
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IEEE Access |
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ACCESS |
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8 |
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77344 - 77363 |
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Activity recognition from wearable photo-cameras is crucial for lifestyle characterization and health monitoring. However, to enable its wide-spreading use in real-world applications, a high level of generalization needs to be ensured on unseen users. Currently, state-of-the-art methods have been tested only on relatively small datasets consisting of data collected by a few users that are partially seen during training. In this paper, we built a new egocentric dataset acquired by 15 people through a wearable photo-camera and used it to test the generalization capabilities of several state-of-the-art methods for egocentric activity recognition on unseen users and daily image sequences. In addition, we propose several variants to state-of-the-art deep learning architectures, and we show that it is possible to achieve 79.87% accuracy on users unseen during training. Furthermore, to show that the proposed dataset and approach can be useful in real-world applications, where data can be acquired by different wearable cameras and labeled data are scarcely available, we employed a domain adaptation strategy on two egocentric activity recognition benchmark datasets. These experiments show that the model learned with our dataset, can easily be transferred to other domains with a very small amount of labeled data. Taken together, those results show that activity recognition from wearable photo-cameras is mature enough to be tested in real-world applications. |
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MILAB; no proj |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ CRD2020 |
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3436 |
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Author |
Albert Clapes; Julio C. S. Jacques Junior; Carla Morral; Sergio Escalera |
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Title |
ChaLearn LAP 2020 Challenge on Identity-preserved Human Detection: Dataset and Results |
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Conference Article |
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Year |
2020 |
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15th IEEE International Conference on Automatic Face and Gesture Recognition |
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801-808 |
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This paper summarizes the ChaLearn Looking at People 2020 Challenge on Identity-preserved Human Detection (IPHD). For the purpose, we released a large novel dataset containing more than 112K pairs of spatiotemporally aligned depth and thermal frames (and 175K instances of humans) sampled from 780 sequences. The sequences contain hundreds of non-identifiable people appearing in a mix of in-the-wild and scripted scenarios recorded in public and private places. The competition was divided into three tracks depending on the modalities exploited for the detection: (1) depth, (2) thermal, and (3) depth-thermal fusion. Color was also captured but only used to facilitate the groundtruth annotation. Still the temporal synchronization of three sensory devices is challenging, so bad temporal matches across modalities can occur. Hence, the labels provided should considered “weak”, although test frames were carefully selected to minimize this effect and ensure the fairest comparison of the participants’ results. Despite this added difficulty, the results got by the participants demonstrate current fully-supervised methods can deal with that and achieve outstanding detection performance when measured in terms of AP@0.50. |
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Virtual; November 2020 |
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HUPBA |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ CJM2020 |
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3501 |
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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 |
Ajian Liu; Xuan Li; Jun Wan; Yanyan Liang; Sergio Escalera; Hugo Jair Escalante; Meysam Madadi; Yi Jin; Zhuoyuan Wu; Xiaogang Yu; Zichang Tan; Qi Yuan; Ruikun Yang; Benjia Zhou; Guodong Guo; Stan Z. Li |
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Title |
Cross-ethnicity Face Anti-spoofing Recognition Challenge: A Review |
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2020 |
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IET Biometrics |
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BIO |
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10 |
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1 |
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24-43 |
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Face anti-spoofing is critical to prevent face recognition systems from a security breach. The biometrics community has %possessed achieved impressive progress recently due the excellent performance of deep neural networks and the availability of large datasets. Although ethnic bias has been verified to severely affect the performance of face recognition systems, it still remains an open research problem in face anti-spoofing. Recently, a multi-ethnic face anti-spoofing dataset, CASIA-SURF CeFA, has been released with the goal of measuring the ethnic bias. It is the largest up to date cross-ethnicity face anti-spoofing dataset covering 3 ethnicities, 3 modalities, 1,607 subjects, 2D plus 3D attack types, and the first dataset including explicit ethnic labels among the recently released datasets for face anti-spoofing. We organized the Chalearn Face Anti-spoofing Attack Detection Challenge which consists of single-modal (e.g., RGB) and multi-modal (e.g., RGB, Depth, Infrared (IR)) tracks around this novel resource to boost research aiming to alleviate the ethnic bias. Both tracks have attracted 340 teams in the development stage, and finally 11 and 8 teams have submitted their codes in the single-modal and multi-modal face anti-spoofing recognition challenges, respectively. All the results were verified and re-ran by the organizing team, and the results were used for the final ranking. This paper presents an overview of the challenge, including its design, evaluation protocol and a summary of results. We analyze the top ranked solutions and draw conclusions derived from the competition. In addition we outline future work directions. |
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HUPBA; no proj |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ LLW2020b |
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3523 |
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