|
Sergio Escalera, Oriol Pujol, Eric Laciar, Jordi Vitria, Esther Pueyo, & Petia Radeva. (2008). Coronary Damage Classification of Patients with the Chagas Disease with Error-Correcting Output Codes. In Intelligent Systems, 4th International IEEE Conference, 6–8 setembre 2008. (Vol. 2, 12–17).
Abstract: The Chagaspsila disease is endemic in all Latin America, affecting millions of people in the continent. In order to diagnose and treat the Chagaspsila disease, it is important to detect and measure the coronary damage of the patient. In this paper, we analyze and categorize patients into different groups based on the coronary damage produced by the disease. Based on the features of the heart cycle extracted using high resolution ECG, a multi-class scheme of error-correcting output codes (ECOC) is formulated and successfully applied. The results show that the proposed scheme obtains significant performance improvements compared to previous works and state-of-the-art ECOC designs.
|
|
|
Jose Seabra, F. Javier Sanchez, Francesco Ciompi, & Petia Radeva. (2010). Ultrasonographic Plaque Characterization using a Rayleigh Mixture Model. In 7th IEEE International Symposium on Biomedical Imaging (1–4).
Abstract: From Nano to Macro
A correct modelling of tissue morphology is determinant for the identification of vulnerable plaques. This paper aims at describing the plaque composition by means of a Rayleigh Mixture Model applied to ultrasonic data. The effectiveness of using a mixture of distributions is established through synthetic and real ultrasonic data samples. Furthermore, the proposed mixture model is used in a plaque classification problem in Intravascular Ultrasound (IVUS) images of coronary plaques. A classifier tested on a set of 67 in-vitro plaques, yields an overall accuracy of 86% and sensitivity of 92%, 94% and 82%, for fibrotic, calcified and lipidic tissues, respectively. These results strongly suggest that different plaques types can be distinguished by means of the coefficients and Rayleigh parameters of the mixture distribution.
|
|
|
Albert Andaluz, Francesc Carreras, Cristina Santa Marta, & Debora Gil. (2012). Myocardial torsion estimation with Tagged-MRI in the OsiriX platform. In Wiro Niessen(Erasmus MC) and Marc Modat(UCL) (Ed.), ISBI Workshop on Open Source Medical Image Analysis software. IEEE.
Abstract: Myocardial torsion (MT) plays a crucial role in the assessment of the functionality of the
left ventricle. For this purpose, the IAM group at the CVC has developed the Harmonic Phase Flow (HPF) plugin for the Osirix DICOM platform . We have validated its funcionalty on sequences acquired using different protocols and including healthy and pathological cases. Results show similar torsion trends for SPAMM acquisitions, with pathological cases introducing expected deviations from the ground truth. Finally, we provide the plugin free of charge at http://iam.cvc.uab.es
|
|
|
Sergio Vera, Miguel Angel Gonzalez Ballester, & Debora Gil. (2012). A medial map capturing the essential geometry of organs. In ISBI Workshop on Open Source Medical Image Analysis software (1691 - 1694). IEEE.
Abstract: Medial representations are powerful tools for describing and parameterizing the volumetric shape of anatomical structures. Accurate computation of one pixel wide medial surfaces is mandatory. Those surfaces must represent faithfully the geometry of the volume. Although morphological methods produce excellent results in 2D, their complexity and quality drops across dimensions, due to a more complex description of pixel neighborhoods. This paper introduces a continuous operator for accurate and efficient computation of medial structures of arbitrary dimension. Our experiments show its higher performance for medical imaging applications in terms of simplicity of medial structures and capability for reconstructing the anatomical volume
Keywords: Medial Surface Representation, Volume Reconstruction,Geometry , Image reconstruction , Liver , Manifolds , Shape , Surface morphology , Surface reconstruction
|
|
|
Debora Gil, Guillermo Torres, & Carles Sanchez. (2023). Transforming radiomic features into radiological words. In IEEE International Symposium on Biomedical Imaging.
|
|
|
Pau Cano, Debora Gil, & Eva Musulen. (2023). Towards automatic detection of helicobacter pylori in histological samples of gastric tissue. In IEEE International Symposium on Biomedical Imaging.
|
|
|
Guillermo Torres, Debora Gil, Antonio Rosell, Sonia Baeza, & Carles Sanchez. (2023). A radiomic biopsy for virtual histology of pulmonary nodules. In IEEE International Symposium on Biomedical Imaging.
|
|
|
Fernando Vilariño, Dan Norton, & Onur Ferhat. (2015). Memory Fields: DJs in the Library. In 21 st Symposium of Electronic Arts.
|
|
|
Pau Torras, Arnau Baro, Lei Kang, & Alicia Fornes. (2021). On the Integration of Language Models into Sequence to Sequence Architectures for Handwritten Music Recognition. In International Society for Music Information Retrieval Conference (pp. 690–696).
Abstract: Despite the latest advances in Deep Learning, the recognition of handwritten music scores is still a challenging endeavour. Even though the recent Sequence to Sequence(Seq2Seq) architectures have demonstrated its capacity to reliably recognise handwritten text, their performance is still far from satisfactory when applied to historical handwritten scores. Indeed, the ambiguous nature of handwriting, the non-standard musical notation employed by composers of the time and the decaying state of old paper make these scores remarkably difficult to read, sometimes even by trained humans. Thus, in this work we explore the incorporation of language models into a Seq2Seq-based architecture to try to improve transcriptions where the aforementioned unclear writing produces statistically unsound mistakes, which as far as we know, has never been attempted for this field of research on this architecture. After studying various Language Model integration techniques, the experimental evaluation on historical handwritten music scores shows a significant improvement over the state of the art, showing that this is a promising research direction for dealing with such difficult manuscripts.
|
|
|
Corina Krauter, Ursula Reiter, Albrecht Schmidt, Marc Masana, Rudolf Stollberger, Michael Fuchsjager, et al. (2019). Objective extraction of the temporal evolution of the mitral valve vortex ring from 4D flow MRI. In 27th Annual Meeting & Exhibition of the International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine.
Abstract: The mitral valve vortex ring is a promising flow structure for analysis of diastolic function, however, methods for objective extraction of its formation to dissolution are lacking. We present a novel algorithm for objective extraction of the temporal evolution of the mitral valve vortex ring from magnetic resonance 4D flow data and validated the method against visual analysis. The algorithm successfully extracted mitral valve vortex rings during both early- and late-diastolic filling and agreed substantially with visual assessment. Early-diastolic mitral valve vortex ring properties differed between healthy subjects and patients with ischemic heart disease.
|
|
|
Fernando Vilariño, Dimosthenis Karatzas, & Alberto Valcarce. (2018). Libraries as New Innovation Hubs: The Library Living Lab. In 30th ISPIM Innovation Conference.
Abstract: Libraries are in deep transformation both in EU and around the world, and they are thriving within a great window of opportunity for innovation. In this paper, we show how the Library Living Lab in Barcelona participated of this changing scenario and contributed to create the Bibliolab program, where more than 200 public libraries give voice to their users in a global user-centric innovation initiative, using technology as enabling factor. The Library Living Lab is a real 4-helix implementation where Universities, Research Centers, Public Administration, Companies and the Neighbors are joint together to explore how technology transforms the cultural experience of people. This case is an example of scalability and provides reference tools for policy making, sustainability, user engage methodologies and governance. We provide specific examples of new prototypes and services that help to understand how to redefine the role of the Library as a real hub for social innovation.
|
|
|
David Aldavert, Ricardo Toledo, Arnau Ramisa, & Ramon Lopez de Mantaras. (2009). Efficient Object Pixel-Level Categorization using Bag of Features: Advances in Visual Computing. In 5th International Symposium on Visual Computing (Vol. 5875, 44–55). Springer Berlin Heidelberg.
Abstract: In this paper we present a pixel-level object categorization method suitable to be applied under real-time constraints. Since pixels are categorized using a bag of features scheme, the major bottleneck of such an approach would be the feature pooling in local histograms of visual words. Therefore, we propose to bypass this time-consuming step and directly obtain the score from a linear Support Vector Machine classifier. This is achieved by creating an integral image of the components of the SVM which can readily obtain the classification score for any image sub-window with only 10 additions and 2 products, regardless of its size. Besides, we evaluated the performance of two efficient feature quantization methods: the Hierarchical K-Means and the Extremely Randomized Forest. All experiments have been done in the Graz02 database, showing comparable, or even better results to related work with a lower computational cost.
|
|
|
Bogdan Raducanu, & Fadi Dornaika. (2009). Natural Facial Expression Recognition Using Dynamic and Static Schemes. In 5th International Symposium on Visual Computing (Vol. 5875, 730–739). LNCS. Springer Berlin Heidelberg.
Abstract: Affective computing is at the core of a new paradigm in HCI and AI represented by human-centered computing. Within this paradigm, it is expected that machines will be enabled with perceiving capabilities, making them aware about users’ affective state. The current paper addresses the problem of facial expression recognition from monocular videos sequences. We propose a dynamic facial expression recognition scheme, which is proven to be very efficient. Furthermore, it is conveniently compared with several static-based systems adopting different magnitude of facial expression. We provide evaluations of performance using Linear Discriminant Analysis (LDA), Non parametric Discriminant Analysis (NDA), and Support Vector Machines (SVM). We also provide performance evaluations using arbitrary test video sequences.
|
|
|
Aleksandr Setkov, Fabio Martinez Carillo, Michele Gouiffes, Christian Jacquemin, Maria Vanrell, & Ramon Baldrich. (2015). DAcImPro: A Novel Database of Acquired Image Projections and Its Application to Object Recognition. In Advances in Visual Computing. Proceedings of 11th International Symposium, ISVC 2015 Part II (Vol. 9475, pp. 463–473). LNCS. Springer International Publishing.
Abstract: Projector-camera systems are designed to improve the projection quality by comparing original images with their captured projections, which is usually complicated due to high photometric and geometric variations. Many research works address this problem using their own test data which makes it extremely difficult to compare different proposals. This paper has two main contributions. Firstly, we introduce a new database of acquired image projections (DAcImPro) that, covering photometric and geometric conditions and providing data for ground-truth computation, can serve to evaluate different algorithms in projector-camera systems. Secondly, a new object recognition scenario from acquired projections is presented, which could be of a great interest in such domains, as home video projections and public presentations. We show that the task is more challenging than the classical recognition problem and thus requires additional pre-processing, such as color compensation or projection area selection.
Keywords: Projector-camera systems; Feature descriptors; Object recognition
|
|
|
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
|
|