|
Mireia Sole, Joan Blanco, Debora Gil, G. Fonseka, Richard Frodsham, Oliver Valero, et al. (2017). Is there a pattern of Chromosome territoriality along mice spermatogenesis? In 3rd Spanish MeioNet Meeting Abstract Book (pp. 55–56).
|
|
|
Marc Masana, Joost Van de Weijer, Luis Herranz, Andrew Bagdanov, & Jose Manuel Alvarez. (2017). Domain-adaptive deep network compression. In 17th IEEE International Conference on Computer Vision.
Abstract: Deep Neural Networks trained on large datasets can be easily transferred to new domains with far fewer labeled examples by a process called fine-tuning. This has the advantage that representations learned in the large source domain can be exploited on smaller target domains. However, networks designed to be optimal for the source task are often prohibitively large for the target task. In this work we address the compression of networks after domain transfer.
We focus on compression algorithms based on low-rank matrix decomposition. Existing methods base compression solely on learned network weights and ignore the statistics of network activations. We show that domain transfer leads to large shifts in network activations and that it is desirable to take this into account when compressing.
We demonstrate that considering activation statistics when compressing weights leads to a rank-constrained regression problem with a closed-form solution. Because our method takes into account the target domain, it can more optimally
remove the redundancy in the weights. Experiments show that our Domain Adaptive Low Rank (DALR) method significantly outperforms existing low-rank compression techniques. With our approach, the fc6 layer of VGG19 can be compressed more than 4x more than using truncated SVD alone – with only a minor or no loss in accuracy. When applied to domain-transferred networks it allows for compression down to only 5-20% of the original number of parameters with only a minor drop in performance.
|
|
|
Albert Clapes, Ozan Bilici, Dariia Temirova, Egils Avots, Gholamreza Anbarjafari, & Sergio Escalera. (2018). From apparent to real age: gender, age, ethnic, makeup, and expression bias analysis in real age estimation. In IEEE/CVF Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition Workshops (pp. 2373–2382).
|
|
|
Marçal Rusiñol, Dimosthenis Karatzas, & Josep Llados. (2015). Automatic Verification of Properly Signed Multi-page Document Images. In Proceedings of the Eleventh International Symposium on Visual Computing (Vol. 9475, pp. 327–336). LNCS, 9475.
Abstract: In this paper we present an industrial application for the automatic screening of incoming multi-page documents in a banking workflow aimed at determining whether these documents are properly signed or not. The proposed method is divided in three main steps. First individual pages are classified in order to identify the pages that should contain a signature. In a second step, we segment within those key pages the location where the signatures should appear. The last step checks whether the signatures are present or not. Our method is tested in a real large-scale environment and we report the results when checking two different types of real multi-page contracts, having in total more than 14,500 pages.
Keywords: Document Image; Manual Inspection; Signature Verification; Rejection Criterion; Document Flow
|
|
|
Josep Llados. (2021). The 5G of Document Intelligence. In 3rd Workshop on Future of Document Analysis and Recognition.
|
|
|
Shiqi Yang, Yaxing Wang, Joost Van de Weijer, Luis Herranz, & Shangling Jui. (2021). Exploiting the Intrinsic Neighborhood Structure for Source-free Domain Adaptation. In Thirty-fifth Conference on Neural Information Processing Systems (NeurIPS 2021).
Abstract: Domain adaptation (DA) aims to alleviate the domain shift between source domain and target domain. Most DA methods require access to the source data, but often that is not possible (e.g. due to data privacy or intellectual property). In this paper, we address the challenging source-free domain adaptation (SFDA) problem, where the source pretrained model is adapted to the target domain in the absence of source data. Our method is based on the observation that target data, which might no longer align with the source domain classifier, still forms clear clusters. We capture this intrinsic structure by defining local affinity of the target data, and encourage label consistency among data with high local affinity. We observe that higher affinity should be assigned to reciprocal neighbors, and propose a self regularization loss to decrease the negative impact of noisy neighbors. Furthermore, to aggregate information with more context, we consider expanded neighborhoods with small affinity values. In the experimental results we verify that the inherent structure of the target features is an important source of information for domain adaptation. We demonstrate that this local structure can be efficiently captured by considering the local neighbors, the reciprocal neighbors, and the expanded neighborhood. Finally, we achieve state-of-the-art performance on several 2D image and 3D point cloud recognition datasets. Code is available in https://github.com/Albert0147/SFDA_neighbors.
|
|
|
Gemma Rotger, Francesc Moreno-Noguer, Felipe Lumbreras, & Antonio Agudo. (2019). Single view facial hair 3D reconstruction. In 9th Iberian Conference on Pattern Recognition and Image Analysis (Vol. 11867, pp. 423–436). LNCS.
Abstract: n this work, we introduce a novel energy-based framework that addresses the challenging problem of 3D reconstruction of facial hair from a single RGB image. To this end, we identify hair pixels over the image via texture analysis and then determine individual hair fibers that are modeled by means of a parametric hair model based on 3D helixes. We propose to minimize an energy composed of several terms, in order to adapt the hair parameters that better fit the image detections. The final hairs respond to the resulting fibers after a post-processing step where we encourage further realism. The resulting approach generates realistic facial hair fibers from solely an RGB image without assuming any training data nor user interaction. We provide an experimental evaluation on real-world pictures where several facial hair styles and image conditions are observed, showing consistent results and establishing a comparison with respect to competing approaches.
Keywords: 3D Vision; Shape Reconstruction; Facial Hair Modeling
|
|
|
Bojana Gajic, & Ramon Baldrich. (2018). Cross-domain fashion image retrieval. In CVPR 2018 Workshop on Women in Computer Vision (WiCV 2018, 4th Edition) (pp. 19500–19502).
Abstract: Cross domain image retrieval is a challenging task that implies matching images from one domain to their pairs from another domain. In this paper we focus on fashion image retrieval, which involves matching an image of a fashion item taken by users, to the images of the same item taken in controlled condition, usually by professional photographer. When facing this problem, we have different products
in train and test time, and we use triplet loss to train the network. We stress the importance of proper training of simple architecture, as well as adapting general models to the specific task.
|
|
|
Bojana Gajic, Eduard Vazquez, & Ramon Baldrich. (2017). Evaluation of Deep Image Descriptors for Texture Retrieval. In Proceedings of the 12th International Joint Conference on Computer Vision, Imaging and Computer Graphics Theory and Applications (VISIGRAPP 2017) (pp. 251–257).
Abstract: The increasing complexity learnt in the layers of a Convolutional Neural Network has proven to be of great help for the task of classification. The topic has received great attention in recently published literature.
Nonetheless, just a handful of works study low-level representations, commonly associated with lower layers. In this paper, we explore recent findings which conclude, counterintuitively, the last layer of the VGG convolutional network is the best to describe a low-level property such as texture. To shed some light on this issue, we are proposing a psychophysical experiment to evaluate the adequacy of different layers of the VGG network for texture retrieval. Results obtained suggest that, whereas the last convolutional layer is a good choice for a specific task of classification, it might not be the best choice as a texture descriptor, showing a very poor performance on texture retrieval. Intermediate layers show the best performance, showing a good combination of basic filters, as in the primary visual cortex, and also a degree of higher level information to describe more complex textures.
Keywords: Texture Representation; Texture Retrieval; Convolutional Neural Networks; Psychophysical Evaluation
|
|
|
Jose Elias Yauri, Aura Hernandez-Sabate, Pau Folch, & Debora Gil. (2021). Mental Workload Detection Based on EEG Analysis. In Artificial Intelligent Research and Development. Proceedings 23rd International Conference of the Catalan Association for Artificial Intelligence. (Vol. 339, pp. 268–277).
Abstract: The study of mental workload becomes essential for human work efficiency, health conditions and to avoid accidents, since workload compromises both performance and awareness. Although workload has been widely studied using several physiological measures, minimising the sensor network as much as possible remains both a challenge and a requirement.
Electroencephalogram (EEG) signals have shown a high correlation to specific cognitive and mental states like workload. However, there is not enough evidence in the literature to validate how well models generalize in case of new subjects performing tasks of a workload similar to the ones included during model’s training.
In this paper we propose a binary neural network to classify EEG features across different mental workloads. Two workloads, low and medium, are induced using two variants of the N-Back Test. The proposed model was validated in a dataset collected from 16 subjects and shown a high level of generalization capability: model reported an average recall of 81.81% in a leave-one-out subject evaluation.
Keywords: Cognitive states; Mental workload; EEG analysis; Neural Networks.
|
|
|
Filip Szatkowski, Mateusz Pyla, Marcin Przewięzlikowski, Sebastian Cygert, Bartłomiej Twardowski, & Tomasz Trzcinski. (2023). Adapt Your Teacher: Improving Knowledge Distillation for Exemplar-Free Continual Learning. In Proceedings of the IEEE/CVF International Conference on Computer Vision (ICCV) Workshops (pp. 3512–3517).
Abstract: In this work, we investigate exemplar-free class incremental learning (CIL) with knowledge distillation (KD) as a regularization strategy, aiming to prevent forgetting. KD-based methods are successfully used in CIL, but they often struggle to regularize the model without access to exemplars of the training data from previous tasks. Our analysis reveals that this issue originates from substantial representation shifts in the teacher network when dealing with out-of-distribution data. This causes large errors in the KD loss component, leading to performance degradation in CIL. Inspired by recent test-time adaptation methods, we introduce Teacher Adaptation (TA), a method that concurrently updates the teacher and the main model during incremental training. Our method seamlessly integrates with KD-based CIL approaches and allows for consistent enhancement of their performance across multiple exemplar-free CIL benchmarks.
|
|
|
Ricardo Toledo, S. Sallent, J. Paradell, & Juan J. Villanueva. (1995). CARE: Computer Assisted Radiology Environment. In Pattern Recognition and image analysis: preprints of the VI National Symposium on Pattern Recogniotion & Image Analysis.
|
|
|
Reza Azad, Maryam Asadi Aghbolaghi, Mahmood Fathy, & Sergio Escalera. (2019). Bi-Directional ConvLSTM U-Net with Densley Connected Convolutions. In Visual Recognition for Medical Images workshop (pp. 406–415).
Abstract: In recent years, deep learning-based networks have achieved state-of-the-art performance in medical image segmentation. Among the existing networks, U-Net has been successfully applied on medical image segmentation. In this paper, we propose an extension of U-Net, Bi-directional ConvLSTM U-Net with Densely connected convolutions (BCDU-Net), for medical image segmentation, in which we take full advantages of U-Net, bi-directional ConvLSTM (BConvLSTM) and the mechanism of dense convolutions. Instead of a simple concatenation in the skip connection of U-Net, we employ BConvLSTM to combine the feature maps extracted from the corresponding encoding path and the previous decoding up-convolutional layer in a non-linear way. To strengthen feature propagation and encourage feature reuse, we use densely connected convolutions in the last convolutional layer of the encoding path. Finally, we can accelerate the convergence speed of the proposed network by employing batch normalization (BN). The proposed model is evaluated on three datasets of: retinal blood vessel segmentation, skin lesion segmentation, and lung nodule segmentation, achieving state-of-the-art performance.
|
|
|
Reza Azad, Maryam Asadi-Aghbolaghi, Mahmood Fathy, & Sergio Escalera. (2020). Attention Deeplabv3+: Multi-level Context Attention Mechanism for Skin Lesion Segmentation. In Bioimage computation workshop.
|
|
|
Reza Azad, Afshin Bozorgpour, Maryam Asadi-Aghbolaghi, Dorit Merhof, & Sergio Escalera. (2021). Deep Frequency Re-Calibration U-Net for Medical Image Segmentation. In IEEE/CVF International Conference on Computer Vision Workshops (pp. 3274–3283).
Abstract: We present a novel solution to the garment animation problem through deep learning. Our contribution allows animating any template outfit with arbitrary topology and geometric complexity. Recent works develop models for garment edition, resizing and animation at the same time by leveraging the support body model (encoding garments as body homotopies). This leads to complex engineering solutions that suffer from scalability, applicability and compatibility. By limiting our scope to garment animation only, we are able to propose a simple model that can animate any outfit, independently of its topology, vertex order or connectivity. Our proposed architecture maps outfits to animated 3D models into the standard format for 3D animation (blend weights and blend shapes matrices), automatically providing of compatibility with any graphics engine. We also propose a methodology to complement supervised learning with an unsupervised physically based learning that implicitly solves collisions and enhances cloth quality.
|
|