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Author |
M. Altillawi; S. Li; S.M. Prakhya; Z. Liu; Joan Serrat |
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Title |
Implicit Learning of Scene Geometry From Poses for Global Localization |
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Journal Article |
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Year |
2024 |
Publication |
IEEE Robotics and Automation Letters |
Abbreviated Journal |
ROBOTAUTOMLET |
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Volume |
9 |
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2 |
Pages |
955-962 |
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Localization; Localization and mapping; Deep learning for visual perception; Visual learning |
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Abstract |
Global visual localization estimates the absolute pose of a camera using a single image, in a previously mapped area. Obtaining the pose from a single image enables many robotics and augmented/virtual reality applications. Inspired by latest advances in deep learning, many existing approaches directly learn and regress 6 DoF pose from an input image. However, these methods do not fully utilize the underlying scene geometry for pose regression. The challenge in monocular relocalization is the minimal availability of supervised training data, which is just the corresponding 6 DoF poses of the images. In this letter, we propose to utilize these minimal available labels (i.e., poses) to learn the underlying 3D geometry of the scene and use the geometry to estimate the 6 DoF camera pose. We present a learning method that uses these pose labels and rigid alignment to learn two 3D geometric representations ( X, Y, Z coordinates ) of the scene, one in camera coordinate frame and the other in global coordinate frame. Given a single image, it estimates these two 3D scene representations, which are then aligned to estimate a pose that matches the pose label. This formulation allows for the active inclusion of additional learning constraints to minimize 3D alignment errors between the two 3D scene representations, and 2D re-projection errors between the 3D global scene representation and 2D image pixels, resulting in improved localization accuracy. During inference, our model estimates the 3D scene geometry in camera and global frames and aligns them rigidly to obtain pose in real-time. We evaluate our work on three common visual localization datasets, conduct ablation studies, and show that our method exceeds state-of-the-art regression methods' pose accuracy on all datasets. |
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2377-3766 |
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ADAS |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ |
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3857 |
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Author |
Ayan Banerjee; Sanket Biswas; Josep Llados; Umapada Pal |
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Title |
SemiDocSeg: Harnessing Semi-Supervised Learning for Document Layout Analysis |
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Journal Article |
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Year |
2024 |
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International Journal on Document Analysis and Recognition |
Abbreviated Journal |
IJDAR |
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Document layout analysis; Semi-supervised learning; Co-Occurrence matrix; Instance segmentation; Swin transformer |
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Document Layout Analysis (DLA) is the process of automatically identifying and categorizing the structural components (e.g. Text, Figure, Table, etc.) within a document to extract meaningful content and establish the page's layout structure. It is a crucial stage in document parsing, contributing to their comprehension. However, traditional DLA approaches often demand a significant volume of labeled training data, and the labor-intensive task of generating high-quality annotated training data poses a substantial challenge. In order to address this challenge, we proposed a semi-supervised setting that aims to perform learning on limited annotated categories by eliminating exhaustive and expensive mask annotations. The proposed setting is expected to be generalizable to novel categories as it learns the underlying positional information through a support set and class information through Co-Occurrence that can be generalized from annotated categories to novel categories. Here, we first extract features from the input image and support set with a shared multi-scale feature acquisition backbone. Then, the extracted feature representation is fed to the transformer encoder as a query. Later on, we utilize a semantic embedding network before the decoder to capture the underlying semantic relationships and similarities between different instances, enabling the model to make accurate predictions or classifications with only a limited amount of labeled data. Extensive experimentation on competitive benchmarks like PRIMA, DocLayNet, and Historical Japanese (HJ) demonstrate that this generalized setup obtains significant performance compared to the conventional supervised approach. |
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June 2024 |
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DAG |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ BBL2024a |
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4001 |
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Ayan Banerjee; Sanket Biswas; Josep Llados; Umapada Pal |
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GraphKD: Exploring Knowledge Distillation Towards Document Object Detection with Structured Graph Creation |
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Miscellaneous |
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Year |
2024 |
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Arxiv |
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Object detection in documents is a key step to automate the structural elements identification process in a digital or scanned document through understanding the hierarchical structure and relationships between different elements. Large and complex models, while achieving high accuracy, can be computationally expensive and memory-intensive, making them impractical for deployment on resource constrained devices. Knowledge distillation allows us to create small and more efficient models that retain much of the performance of their larger counterparts. Here we present a graph-based knowledge distillation framework to correctly identify and localize the document objects in a document image. Here, we design a structured graph with nodes containing proposal-level features and edges representing the relationship between the different proposal regions. Also, to reduce text bias an adaptive node sampling strategy is designed to prune the weight distribution and put more weightage on non-text nodes. We encode the complete graph as a knowledge representation and transfer it from the teacher to the student through the proposed distillation loss by effectively capturing both local and global information concurrently. Extensive experimentation on competitive benchmarks demonstrates that the proposed framework outperforms the current state-of-the-art approaches. The code will be available at: this https URL. |
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DAG |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ BBL2024b |
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4023 |
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Author |
German Barquero; Sergio Escalera; Cristina Palmero |
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Title |
Seamless Human Motion Composition with Blended Positional Encodings |
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Miscellaneous |
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Year |
2024 |
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Arxiv |
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Conditional human motion generation is an important topic with many applications in virtual reality, gaming, and robotics. While prior works have focused on generating motion guided by text, music, or scenes, these typically result in isolated motions confined to short durations. Instead, we address the generation of long, continuous sequences guided by a series of varying textual descriptions. In this context, we introduce FlowMDM, the first diffusion-based model that generates seamless Human Motion Compositions (HMC) without any postprocessing or redundant denoising steps. For this, we introduce the Blended Positional Encodings, a technique that leverages both absolute and relative positional encodings in the denoising chain. More specifically, global motion coherence is recovered at the absolute stage, whereas smooth and realistic transitions are built at the relative stage. As a result, we achieve state-of-the-art results in terms of accuracy, realism, and smoothness on the Babel and HumanML3D datasets. FlowMDM excels when trained with only a single description per motion sequence thanks to its Pose-Centric Cross-ATtention, which makes it robust against varying text descriptions at inference time. Finally, to address the limitations of existing HMC metrics, we propose two new metrics: the Peak Jerk and the Area Under the Jerk, to detect abrupt transitions. |
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HUPBA |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ BEP2024 |
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4022 |
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Author |
Marcos V Conde; Javier Vazquez; Michael S Brown; Radu TImofte |
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Title |
NILUT: Conditional Neural Implicit 3D Lookup Tables for Image Enhancement |
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Conference Article |
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Year |
2024 |
Publication |
38th AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence |
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3D lookup tables (3D LUTs) are a key component for image enhancement. Modern image signal processors (ISPs) have dedicated support for these as part of the camera rendering pipeline. Cameras typically provide multiple options for picture styles, where each style is usually obtained by applying a unique handcrafted 3D LUT. Current approaches for learning and applying 3D LUTs are notably fast, yet not so memory-efficient, as storing multiple 3D LUTs is required. For this reason and other implementation limitations, their use on mobile devices is less popular. In this work, we propose a Neural Implicit LUT (NILUT), an implicitly defined continuous 3D color transformation parameterized by a neural network. We show that NILUTs are capable of accurately emulating real 3D LUTs. Moreover, a NILUT can be extended to incorporate multiple styles into a single network with the ability to blend styles implicitly. Our novel approach is memory-efficient, controllable and can complement previous methods, including learned ISPs. |
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AAAI |
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CIC; MACO |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ CVB2024 |
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3872 |
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Author |
Alloy Das; Sanket Biswas; Ayan Banerjee; Josep Llados; Umapada Pal; Saumik Bhattacharya |
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Title |
Harnessing the Power of Multi-Lingual Datasets for Pre-training: Towards Enhancing Text Spotting Performance |
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Conference Article |
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Year |
2024 |
Publication |
Winter Conference on Applications of Computer Vision |
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718-728 |
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The adaptation capability to a wide range of domains is crucial for scene text spotting models when deployed to real-world conditions. However, existing state-of-the-art (SOTA) approaches usually incorporate scene text detection and recognition simply by pretraining on natural scene text datasets, which do not directly exploit the intermediate feature representations between multiple domains. Here, we investigate the problem of domain-adaptive scene text spotting, i.e., training a model on multi-domain source data such that it can directly adapt to target domains rather than being specialized for a specific domain or scenario. Further, we investigate a transformer baseline called Swin-TESTR to focus on solving scene-text spotting for both regular and arbitrary-shaped scene text along with an exhaustive evaluation. The results clearly demonstrate the potential of intermediate representations to achieve significant performance on text spotting benchmarks across multiple domains (e.g. language, synth-to-real, and documents). both in terms of accuracy and efficiency. |
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Waikoloa; Hawai; USA; January 2024 |
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WACV |
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DAG |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ DBB2024 |
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3986 |
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Permanent link to this record |
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Author |
Alloy Das; Sanket Biswas; Umapada Pal; Josep Llados |
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Title |
Diving into the Depths of Spotting Text in Multi-Domain Noisy Scenes |
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Conference Article |
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Year |
2024 |
Publication |
IEEE International Conference on Robotics and Automation in PACIFICO |
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When used in a real-world noisy environment, the capacity to generalize to multiple domains is essential for any autonomous scene text spotting system. However, existing state-of-the-art methods employ pretraining and fine-tuning strategies on natural scene datasets, which do not exploit the feature interaction across other complex domains. In this work, we explore and investigate the problem of domain-agnostic scene text spotting, i.e., training a model on multi-domain source data such that it can directly generalize to target domains rather than being specialized for a specific domain or scenario. In this regard, we present the community a text spotting validation benchmark called Under-Water Text (UWT) for noisy underwater scenes to establish an important case study. Moreover, we also design an efficient super-resolution based end-to-end transformer baseline called DA-TextSpotter which achieves comparable or superior performance over existing text spotting architectures for both regular and arbitrary-shaped scene text spotting benchmarks in terms of both accuracy and model efficiency. The dataset, code and pre-trained models will be released upon acceptance. |
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Yokohama; Japan; May 2024 |
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ICRA |
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DAG |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ DBP2024 |
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3979 |
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Author |
Hao Fang; Ajian Liu; Jun Wan; Sergio Escalera; Chenxu Zhao; Xu Zhang; Stan Z Li; Zhen Lei |
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Title |
Surveillance Face Anti-spoofing |
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Journal Article |
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Year |
2024 |
Publication |
IEEE Transactions on Information Forensics and Security |
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TIFS |
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19 |
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1535-1546 |
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Face Anti-spoofing (FAS) is essential to secure face recognition systems from various physical attacks. However, recent research generally focuses on short-distance applications (i.e., phone unlocking) while lacking consideration of long-distance scenes (i.e., surveillance security checks). In order to promote relevant research and fill this gap in the community, we collect a large-scale Surveillance High-Fidelity Mask (SuHiFiMask) dataset captured under 40 surveillance scenes, which has 101 subjects from different age groups with 232 3D attacks (high-fidelity masks), 200 2D attacks (posters, portraits, and screens), and 2 adversarial attacks. In this scene, low image resolution and noise interference are new challenges faced in surveillance FAS. Together with the SuHiFiMask dataset, we propose a Contrastive Quality-Invariance Learning (CQIL) network to alleviate the performance degradation caused by image quality from three aspects: (1) An Image Quality Variable module (IQV) is introduced to recover image information associated with discrimination by combining the super-resolution network. (2) Using generated sample pairs to simulate quality variance distributions to help contrastive learning strategies obtain robust feature representation under quality variation. (3) A Separate Quality Network (SQN) is designed to learn discriminative features independent of image quality. Finally, a large number of experiments verify the quality of the SuHiFiMask dataset and the superiority of the proposed CQIL. |
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HUPBA |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ FLW2024 |
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3869 |
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Author |
G. Gasbarri; Matias Bilkis; E. Roda Salichs; J. Calsamiglia |
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Title |
Sequential hypothesis testing for continuously-monitored quantum systems |
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Journal Article |
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2024 |
Publication |
Quantum |
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8 |
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1289 |
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We consider a quantum system that is being continuously monitored, giving rise to a measurement signal. From such a stream of data, information needs to be inferred about the underlying system's dynamics. Here we focus on hypothesis testing problems and put forward the usage of sequential strategies where the signal is analyzed in real time, allowing the experiment to be concluded as soon as the underlying hypothesis can be identified with a certified prescribed success probability. We analyze the performance of sequential tests by studying the stopping-time behavior, showing a considerable advantage over currently-used strategies based on a fixed predetermined measurement time. |
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xxxx |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ GBR2024 |
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3847 |
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Justine Giroux; Mohammad Reza Karimi Dastjerdi; Yannick Hold-Geoffroy; Javier Vazquez; Jean François Lalonde |
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Title |
Towards a Perceptual Evaluation Framework for Lighting Estimation |
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Conference Article |
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2024 |
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Arxiv |
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rogress in lighting estimation is tracked by computing existing image quality assessment (IQA) metrics on images from standard datasets. While this may appear to be a reasonable approach, we demonstrate that doing so does not correlate to human preference when the estimated lighting is used to relight a virtual scene into a real photograph. To study this, we design a controlled psychophysical experiment where human observers must choose their preference amongst rendered scenes lit using a set of lighting estimation algorithms selected from the recent literature, and use it to analyse how these algorithms perform according to human perception. Then, we demonstrate that none of the most popular IQA metrics from the literature, taken individually, correctly represent human perception. Finally, we show that by learning a combination of existing IQA metrics, we can more accurately represent human preference. This provides a new perceptual framework to help evaluate future lighting estimation algorithms. |
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Seattle; USA; June 2024 |
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CVPR |
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MACO; CIC |
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Admin @ si @ GDH2024 |
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3999 |
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Sergi Garcia Bordils; Dimosthenis Karatzas; Marçal Rusiñol |
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STEP – Towards Structured Scene-Text Spotting |
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Conference Article |
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2024 |
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Winter Conference on Applications of Computer Vision |
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883-892 |
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We introduce the structured scene-text spotting task, which requires a scene-text OCR system to spot text in the wild according to a query regular expression. Contrary to generic scene text OCR, structured scene-text spotting seeks to dynamically condition both scene text detection and recognition on user-provided regular expressions. To tackle this task, we propose the Structured TExt sPotter (STEP), a model that exploits the provided text structure to guide the OCR process. STEP is able to deal with regular expressions that contain spaces and it is not bound to detection at the word-level granularity. Our approach enables accurate zero-shot structured text spotting in a wide variety of real-world reading scenarios and is solely trained on publicly available data. To demonstrate the effectiveness of our approach, we introduce a new challenging test dataset that contains several types of out-of-vocabulary structured text, reflecting important reading applications of fields such as prices, dates, serial numbers, license plates etc. We demonstrate that STEP can provide specialised OCR performance on demand in all tested scenarios. |
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Waikoloa; Hawai; USA; January 2024 |
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WACV |
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DAG |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ GKR2024 |
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3992 |
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Author |
Alex Gomez-Villa; Bartlomiej Twardowski; Kai Wang; Joost van de Weijer |
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Title |
Plasticity-Optimized Complementary Networks for Unsupervised Continual Learning |
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Conference Article |
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2024 |
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Winter Conference on Applications of Computer Vision |
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1690-1700 |
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Continuous unsupervised representation learning (CURL) research has greatly benefited from improvements in self-supervised learning (SSL) techniques. As a result, existing CURL methods using SSL can learn high-quality representations without any labels, but with a notable performance drop when learning on a many-tasks data stream. We hypothesize that this is caused by the regularization losses that are imposed to prevent forgetting, leading to a suboptimal plasticity-stability trade-off: they either do not adapt fully to the incoming data (low plasticity), or incur significant forgetting when allowed to fully adapt to a new SSL pretext-task (low stability). In this work, we propose to train an expert network that is relieved of the duty of keeping the previous knowledge and can focus on performing optimally on the new tasks (optimizing plasticity). In the second phase, we combine this new knowledge with the previous network in an adaptation-retrospection phase to avoid forgetting and initialize a new expert with the knowledge of the old network. We perform several experiments showing that our proposed approach outperforms other CURL exemplar-free methods in few- and many-task split settings. Furthermore, we show how to adapt our approach to semi-supervised continual learning (Semi-SCL) and show that we surpass the accuracy of other exemplar-free Semi-SCL methods and reach the results of some others that use exemplars. |
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Waikoloa; Hawai; USA; January 2024 |
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Admin @ si @ GTW2024 |
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3989 |
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Mustafa Hajij; Mathilde Papillon; Florian Frantzen; Jens Agerberg; Ibrahem AlJabea; Ruben Ballester; Claudio Battiloro; Guillermo Bernardez; Tolga Birdal; Aiden Brent; Peter Chin; Sergio Escalera; Simone Fiorellino; Odin Hoff Gardaa; Gurusankar Gopalakrishnan; Devendra Govil; Josef Hoppe; Maneel Reddy Karri; Jude Khouja; Manuel Lecha; Neal Livesay; Jan Meibner; Soham Mukherjee; Alexander Nikitin; Theodore Papamarkou; Jaro Prilepok; Karthikeyan Natesan Ramamurthy; Paul Rosen; Aldo Guzman-Saenz; Alessandro Salatiello; Shreyas N. Samaga; Simone Scardapane; Michael T. Schaub; Luca Scofano; Indro Spinelli; Lev Telyatnikov; Quang Truong; Robin Walters; Maosheng Yang; Olga Zaghen; Ghada Zamzmi; Ali Zia; Nina Miolane |
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TopoX: A Suite of Python Packages for Machine Learning on Topological Domains |
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2024 |
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Arxiv |
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We introduce TopoX, a Python software suite that provides reliable and user-friendly building blocks for computing and machine learning on topological domains that extend graphs: hypergraphs, simplicial, cellular, path and combinatorial complexes. TopoX consists of three packages: TopoNetX facilitates constructing and computing on these domains, including working with nodes, edges and higher-order cells; TopoEmbedX provides methods to embed topological domains into vector spaces, akin to popular graph-based embedding algorithms such as node2vec; TopoModelx is built on top of PyTorch and offers a comprehensive toolbox of higher-order message passing functions for neural networks on topological domains. The extensively documented and unit-tested source code of TopoX is available under MIT license at this https URL. |
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Aura Hernandez-Sabate; Jose Elias Yauri; Pau Folch; Daniel Alvarez; Debora Gil |
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EEG Dataset Collection for Mental Workload Predictions in Flight-Deck Environment |
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2024 |
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Sensors |
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SENS |
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24 |
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1174 |
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High mental workload reduces human performance and the ability to correctly carry out complex tasks. In particular, aircraft pilots enduring high mental workloads are at high risk of failure, even with catastrophic outcomes. Despite progress, there is still a lack of knowledge about the interrelationship between mental workload and brain functionality, and there is still limited data on flight-deck scenarios. Although recent emerging deep-learning (DL) methods using physiological data have presented new ways to find new physiological markers to detect and assess cognitive states, they demand large amounts of properly annotated datasets to achieve good performance. We present a new dataset of electroencephalogram (EEG) recordings specifically collected for the recognition of different levels of mental workload. The data were recorded from three experiments, where participants were induced to different levels of workload through tasks of increasing cognition demand. The first involved playing the N-back test, which combines memory recall with arithmetical skills. The second was playing Heat-the-Chair, a serious game specifically designed to emphasize and monitor subjects under controlled concurrent tasks. The third was flying in an Airbus320 simulator and solving several critical situations. The design of the dataset has been validated on three different levels: (1) correlation of the theoretical difficulty of each scenario to the self-perceived difficulty and performance of subjects; (2) significant difference in EEG temporal patterns across the theoretical difficulties and (3) usefulness for the training and evaluation of AI models. |
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Admin @ si @ HYF2024 |
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Hunor Laczko; Meysam Madadi; Sergio Escalera; Jordi Gonzalez |
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A Generative Multi-Resolution Pyramid and Normal-Conditioning 3D Cloth Draping |
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2024 |
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Winter Conference on Applications of Computer Vision |
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RGB cloth generation has been deeply studied in the related literature, however, 3D garment generation remains an open problem. In this paper, we build a conditional variational autoencoder for 3D garment generation and draping. We propose a pyramid network to add garment details progressively in a canonical space, i.e. unposing and unshaping the garments w.r.t. the body. We study conditioning the network on surface normal UV maps, as an intermediate representation, which is an easier problem to optimize than 3D coordinates. Our results on two public datasets, CLOTH3D and CAPE, show that our model is robust, controllable in terms of detail generation by the use of multi-resolution pyramids, and achieves state-of-the-art results that can highly generalize to unseen garments, poses, and shapes even when training with small amounts of data. |
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Waikoloa; Hawai; USA; January 2024 |
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ISE; HUPBA |
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Admin @ si @ LME2024 |
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3996 |
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