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Md. Mostafa Kamal Sarker; Hatem A. Rashwan; Farhan Akram; Vivek Kumar Singh; Syeda Furruka Banu; Forhad U H Chowdhury; Kabir Ahmed Choudhury; Sylvie Chambon; Petia Radeva; Domenec Puig; Mohamed Abdel-Nasser |
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Title |
SLSNet: Skin lesion segmentation using a lightweight generative adversarial network |
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Journal Article |
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Year |
2021 |
Publication |
Expert Systems With Applications |
Abbreviated Journal |
ESWA |
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Volume |
183 |
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115433 |
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Abstract |
The determination of precise skin lesion boundaries in dermoscopic images using automated methods faces many challenges, most importantly, the presence of hair, inconspicuous lesion edges and low contrast in dermoscopic images, and variability in the color, texture and shapes of skin lesions. Existing deep learning-based skin lesion segmentation algorithms are expensive in terms of computational time and memory. Consequently, running such segmentation algorithms requires a powerful GPU and high bandwidth memory, which are not available in dermoscopy devices. Thus, this article aims to achieve precise skin lesion segmentation with minimum resources: a lightweight, efficient generative adversarial network (GAN) model called SLSNet, which combines 1-D kernel factorized networks, position and channel attention, and multiscale aggregation mechanisms with a GAN model. The 1-D kernel factorized network reduces the computational cost of 2D filtering. The position and channel attention modules enhance the discriminative ability between the lesion and non-lesion feature representations in spatial and channel dimensions, respectively. A multiscale block is also used to aggregate the coarse-to-fine features of input skin images and reduce the effect of the artifacts. SLSNet is evaluated on two publicly available datasets: ISBI 2017 and the ISIC 2018. Although SLSNet has only 2.35 million parameters, the experimental results demonstrate that it achieves segmentation results on a par with the state-of-the-art skin lesion segmentation methods with an accuracy of 97.61%, and Dice and Jaccard similarity coefficients of 90.63% and 81.98%, respectively. SLSNet can run at more than 110 frames per second (FPS) in a single GTX1080Ti GPU, which is faster than well-known deep learning-based image segmentation models, such as FCN. Therefore, SLSNet can be used for practical dermoscopic applications. |
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MILAB; no proj |
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Admin @ si @ SRA2021 |
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3633 |
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Sergio Escalera; Markus Weimer; Mikhail Burtsev; Valentin Malykh; Varvara Logacheva; Ryan Lowe; Iulian Vlad Serban; Yoshua Bengio; Alexander Rudnicky; Alan W. Black; Shrimai Prabhumoye; Łukasz Kidzinski; Mohanty Sharada; Carmichael Ong; Jennifer Hicks; Sergey Levine; Marcel Salathe; Scott Delp; Iker Huerga; Alexander Grigorenko; Leifur Thorbergsson; Anasuya Das; Kyla Nemitz; Jenna Sandker; Stephen King; Alexander S. Ecker; Leon A. Gatys; Matthias Bethge; Jordan Boyd Graber; Shi Feng; Pedro Rodriguez; Mohit Iyyer; He He; Hal Daume III; Sean McGregor; Amir Banifatemi; Alexey Kurakin; Ian Goodfellow; Samy Bengio |
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Title |
Introduction to NIPS 2017 Competition Track |
Type |
Book Chapter |
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Year |
2018 |
Publication |
The NIPS ’17 Competition: Building Intelligent Systems |
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1-23 |
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Competitions have become a popular tool in the data science community to solve hard problems, assess the state of the art and spur new research directions. Companies like Kaggle and open source platforms like Codalab connect people with data and a data science problem to those with the skills and means to solve it. Hence, the question arises: What, if anything, could NIPS add to this rich ecosystem?
In 2017, we embarked to find out. We attracted 23 potential competitions, of which we selected five to be NIPS 2017 competitions. Our final selection features competitions advancing the state of the art in other sciences such as “Classifying Clinically Actionable Genetic Mutations” and “Learning to Run”. Others, like “The Conversational Intelligence Challenge” and “Adversarial Attacks and Defences” generated new data sets that we expect to impact the progress in their respective communities for years to come. And “Human-Computer Question Answering Competition” showed us just how far we as a field have come in ability and efficiency since the break-through performance of Watson in Jeopardy. Two additional competitions, DeepArt and AI XPRIZE Milestions, were also associated to the NIPS 2017 competition track, whose results are also presented within this chapter. |
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Springer |
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Sergio Escalera; Markus Weimer |
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978-3-319-94042-7 |
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HUPBA; no proj |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ EWB2018 |
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3200 |
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Author |
Giacomo Magnifico; Beata Megyesi; Mohamed Ali Souibgui; Jialuo Chen; Alicia Fornes |
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Title |
Lost in Transcription of Graphic Signs in Ciphers |
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Conference Article |
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Year |
2022 |
Publication |
International Conference on Historical Cryptology (HistoCrypt 2022) |
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153-158 |
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Keywords |
transcription of ciphers; hand-written text recognition of symbols; graphic signs |
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Hand-written Text Recognition techniques with the aim to automatically identify and transcribe hand-written text have been applied to historical sources including ciphers. In this paper, we compare the performance of two machine learning architectures, an unsupervised method based on clustering and a deep learning method with few-shot learning. Both models are tested on seen and unseen data from historical ciphers with different symbol sets consisting of various types of graphic signs. We compare the models and highlight their differences in performance, with their advantages and shortcomings. |
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Amsterdam, Netherlands, June 20-22, 2022 |
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HystoCrypt |
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Notes |
DAG; 600.121; 600.162; 602.230; 600.140 |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ MBS2022 |
Serial |
3731 |
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Author |
Pau Riba; Lutz Goldmann; Oriol Ramos Terrades; Diede Rusticus; Alicia Fornes; Josep Llados |
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Title |
Table detection in business document images by message passing networks |
Type |
Journal Article |
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Year |
2022 |
Publication |
Pattern Recognition |
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PR |
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Volume |
127 |
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Pages |
108641 |
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Tabular structures in business documents offer a complementary dimension to the raw textual data. For instance, there is information about the relationships among pieces of information. Nowadays, digital mailroom applications have become a key service for workflow automation. Therefore, the detection and interpretation of tables is crucial. With the recent advances in information extraction, table detection and recognition has gained interest in document image analysis, in particular, with the absence of rule lines and unknown information about rows and columns. However, business documents usually contain sensitive contents limiting the amount of public benchmarking datasets. In this paper, we propose a graph-based approach for detecting tables in document images which do not require the raw content of the document. Hence, the sensitive content can be previously removed and, instead of using the raw image or textual content, we propose a purely structural approach to keep sensitive data anonymous. Our framework uses graph neural networks (GNNs) to describe the local repetitive structures that constitute a table. In particular, our main application domain are business documents. We have carefully validated our approach in two invoice datasets and a modern document benchmark. Our experiments demonstrate that tables can be detected by purely structural approaches. |
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July 2022 |
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Elsevier |
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Notes |
DAG; 600.162; 600.121 |
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no |
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Call Number |
Admin @ si @ RGR2022 |
Serial |
3729 |
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Author |
Meysam Madadi; Sergio Escalera; Alex Carruesco Llorens; Carlos Andujar; Xavier Baro; Jordi Gonzalez |
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Title |
Top-down model fitting for hand pose recovery in sequences of depth images |
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Journal Article |
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Year |
2018 |
Publication |
Image and Vision Computing |
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IMAVIS |
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79 |
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63-75 |
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State-of-the-art approaches on hand pose estimation from depth images have reported promising results under quite controlled considerations. In this paper we propose a two-step pipeline for recovering the hand pose from a sequence of depth images. The pipeline has been designed to deal with images taken from any viewpoint and exhibiting a high degree of finger occlusion. In a first step we initialize the hand pose using a part-based model, fitting a set of hand components in the depth images. In a second step we consider temporal data and estimate the parameters of a trained bilinear model consisting of shape and trajectory bases. We evaluate our approach on a new created synthetic hand dataset along with NYU and MSRA real datasets. Results demonstrate that the proposed method outperforms the most recent pose recovering approaches, including those based on CNNs. |
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HUPBA; 600.098 |
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no |
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Call Number |
Admin @ si @ MEC2018 |
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3203 |
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Author |
Marc Oliu; Javier Selva; Sergio Escalera |
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Title |
Folded Recurrent Neural Networks for Future Video Prediction |
Type |
Conference Article |
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Year |
2018 |
Publication |
15th European Conference on Computer Vision |
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Volume |
11218 |
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Pages |
745-761 |
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Future video prediction is an ill-posed Computer Vision problem that recently received much attention. Its main challenges are the high variability in video content, the propagation of errors through time, and the non-specificity of the future frames: given a sequence of past frames there is a continuous distribution of possible futures. This work introduces bijective Gated Recurrent Units, a double mapping between the input and output of a GRU layer. This allows for recurrent auto-encoders with state sharing between encoder and decoder, stratifying the sequence representation and helping to prevent capacity problems. We show how with this topology only the encoder or decoder needs to be applied for input encoding and prediction, respectively. This reduces the computational cost and avoids re-encoding the predictions when generating a sequence of frames, mitigating the propagation of errors. Furthermore, it is possible to remove layers from an already trained model, giving an insight to the role performed by each layer and making the model more explainable. We evaluate our approach on three video datasets, outperforming state of the art prediction results on MMNIST and UCF101, and obtaining competitive results on KTH with 2 and 3 times less memory usage and computational cost than the best scored approach. |
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Munich; September 2018 |
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ECCV |
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HUPBA; no menciona |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ OSE2018 |
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3204 |
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Author |
Ciprian Corneanu; Meysam Madadi; Sergio Escalera |
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Title |
Deep Structure Inference Network for Facial Action Unit Recognition |
Type |
Conference Article |
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Year |
2018 |
Publication |
15th European Conference on Computer Vision |
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Volume |
11216 |
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309-324 |
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Computer Vision; Machine Learning; Deep Learning; Facial Expression Analysis; Facial Action Units; Structure Inference |
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Facial expressions are combinations of basic components called Action Units (AU). Recognizing AUs is key for general facial expression analysis. Recently, efforts in automatic AU recognition have been dedicated to learning combinations of local features and to exploiting correlations between AUs. We propose a deep neural architecture that tackles both problems by combining learned local and global features in its initial stages and replicating a message passing algorithm between classes similar to a graphical model inference approach in later stages. We show that by training the model end-to-end with increased supervision we improve state-of-the-art by 5.3% and 8.2% performance on BP4D and DISFA datasets, respectively. |
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Munich; September 2018 |
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ECCV |
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HUPBA; no proj |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ CME2018 |
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3205 |
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Author |
Mohamed Ilyes Lakhal; Albert Clapes; Sergio Escalera; Oswald Lanz; Andrea Cavallaro |
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Title |
Residual Stacked RNNs for Action Recognition |
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Conference Article |
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Year |
2018 |
Publication |
9th International Workshop on Human Behavior Understanding |
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534-548 |
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Action recognition; Deep residual learning; Two-stream RNN |
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Action recognition pipelines that use Recurrent Neural Networks (RNN) are currently 5–10% less accurate than Convolutional Neural Networks (CNN). While most works that use RNNs employ a 2D CNN on each frame to extract descriptors for action recognition, we extract spatiotemporal features from a 3D CNN and then learn the temporal relationship of these descriptors through a stacked residual recurrent neural network (Res-RNN). We introduce for the first time residual learning to counter the degradation problem in multi-layer RNNs, which have been successful for temporal aggregation in two-stream action recognition pipelines. Finally, we use a late fusion strategy to combine RGB and optical flow data of the two-stream Res-RNN. Experimental results show that the proposed pipeline achieves competitive results on UCF-101 and state of-the-art results for RNN-like architectures on the challenging HMDB-51 dataset. |
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Munich; September 2018 |
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ECCVW |
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HUPBA; no proj |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ LCE2018b |
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3206 |
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Author |
Giuseppe Pezzano; Oliver Diaz; Vicent Ribas Ripoll; Petia Radeva |
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Title |
CoLe-CNN+: Context learning – Convolutional neural network for COVID-19-Ground-Glass-Opacities detection and segmentation |
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Journal Article |
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2021 |
Publication |
Computers in Biology and Medicine |
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CBM |
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136 |
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104689 |
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The most common tool for population-wide COVID-19 identification is the Reverse Transcription-Polymerase Chain Reaction test that detects the presence of the virus in the throat (or sputum) in swab samples. This test has a sensitivity between 59% and 71%. However, this test does not provide precise information regarding the extension of the pulmonary infection. Moreover, it has been proven that through the reading of a computed tomography (CT) scan, a clinician can provide a more complete perspective of the severity of the disease. Therefore, we propose a comprehensive system for fully-automated COVID-19 detection and lesion segmentation from CT scans, powered by deep learning strategies to support decision-making process for the diagnosis of COVID-19. |
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MILAB; no menciona |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ PDR2021 |
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3635 |
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Author |
Cristina Palmero; Javier Selva; Mohammad Ali Bagheri; Sergio Escalera |
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Title |
Recurrent CNN for 3D Gaze Estimation using Appearance and Shape Cues |
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Conference Article |
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2018 |
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29th British Machine Vision Conference |
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Gaze behavior is an important non-verbal cue in social signal processing and humancomputer interaction. In this paper, we tackle the problem of person- and head poseindependent 3D gaze estimation from remote cameras, using a multi-modal recurrent convolutional neural network (CNN). We propose to combine face, eyes region, and face landmarks as individual streams in a CNN to estimate gaze in still images. Then, we exploit the dynamic nature of gaze by feeding the learned features of all the frames in a sequence to a many-to-one recurrent module that predicts the 3D gaze vector of the last frame. Our multi-modal static solution is evaluated on a wide range of head poses and gaze directions, achieving a significant improvement of 14.6% over the state of the art on
EYEDIAP dataset, further improved by 4% when the temporal modality is included. |
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Newcastle; UK; September 2018 |
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BMVC |
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HUPBA; no proj |
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Admin @ si @ PSB2018 |
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3208 |
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Author |
Yagmur Gucluturk; Umut Guclu; Xavier Baro; Hugo Jair Escalante; Isabelle Guyon; Sergio Escalera; Marcel A. J. van Gerven; Rob van Lier |
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Title |
Multimodal First Impression Analysis with Deep Residual Networks |
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Journal Article |
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2018 |
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IEEE Transactions on Affective Computing |
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TAC |
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8 |
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3 |
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316-329 |
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People form first impressions about the personalities of unfamiliar individuals even after very brief interactions with them. In this study we present and evaluate several models that mimic this automatic social behavior. Specifically, we present several models trained on a large dataset of short YouTube video blog posts for predicting apparent Big Five personality traits of people and whether they seem suitable to be recommended to a job interview. Along with presenting our audiovisual approach and results that won the third place in the ChaLearn First Impressions Challenge, we investigate modeling in different modalities including audio only, visual only, language only, audiovisual, and combination of audiovisual and language. Our results demonstrate that the best performance could be obtained using a fusion of all data modalities. Finally, in order to promote explainability in machine learning and to provide an example for the upcoming ChaLearn challenges, we present a simple approach for explaining the predictions for job interview recommendations |
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HUPBA; no proj |
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Admin @ si @ GGB2018 |
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3210 |
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Author |
Gabriela Ramirez; Esau Villatoro; Bogdan Ionescu; Hugo Jair Escalante; Sergio Escalera; Martha Larson; Henning Muller; Isabelle Guyon |
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Title |
Overview of the Multimedia Information Processing for Personality & Social Networks Analysis Contes |
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Conference Article |
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2018 |
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Multimedia Information Processing for Personality and Social Networks Analysis (MIPPSNA 2018) |
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Beijing; China; August 2018 |
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ICPRW |
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HUPBA |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ RVI2018 |
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3211 |
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Rain Eric Haamer; Eka Rusadze; Iiris Lusi; Tauseef Ahmed; Sergio Escalera; Gholamreza Anbarjafari |
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Review on Emotion Recognition Databases |
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Book Chapter |
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2018 |
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Human-Robot Interaction: Theory and Application |
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emotion; computer vision; databases |
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Over the past few decades human-computer interaction has become more important in our daily lives and research has developed in many directions: memory research, depression detection, and behavioural deficiency detection, lie detection, (hidden) emotion recognition etc. Because of that, the number of generic emotion and face databases or those tailored to specific needs have grown immensely large. Thus, a comprehensive yet compact guide is needed to help researchers find the most suitable database and understand what types of databases already exist. In this paper, different elicitation methods are discussed and the databases are primarily organized into neat and informative tables based on the format. |
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978-1-78923-316-2 |
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HUPBA; 602.133 |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ HRL2018 |
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3212 |
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Author |
Reza Azad; Maryam Asadi-Aghbolaghi; Shohreh Kasaei; Sergio Escalera |
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Title |
Dynamic 3D Hand Gesture Recognition by Learning Weighted Depth Motion Maps |
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Journal Article |
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2019 |
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IEEE Transactions on Circuits and Systems for Video Technology |
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TCSVT |
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29 |
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6 |
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1729-1740 |
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Hand gesture recognition; Multilevel temporal sampling; Weighted depth motion map; Spatio-temporal description; VLAD encoding |
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Hand gesture recognition from sequences of depth maps is a challenging computer vision task because of the low inter-class and high intra-class variability, different execution rates of each gesture, and the high articulated nature of human hand. In this paper, a multilevel temporal sampling (MTS) method is first proposed that is based on the motion energy of key-frames of depth sequences. As a result, long, middle, and short sequences are generated that contain the relevant gesture information. The MTS results in increasing the intra-class similarity while raising the inter-class dissimilarities. The weighted depth motion map (WDMM) is then proposed to extract the spatio-temporal information from generated summarized sequences by an accumulated weighted absolute difference of consecutive frames. The histogram of gradient (HOG) and local binary pattern (LBP) are exploited to extract features from WDMM. The obtained results define the current state-of-the-art on three public benchmark datasets of: MSR Gesture 3D, SKIG, and MSR Action 3D, for 3D hand gesture recognition. We also achieve competitive results on NTU action dataset. |
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June 2019, |
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HUPBA; no proj |
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Admin @ si @ AAK2018 |
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3213 |
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Ester Fornells; Manuel De Armas; Maria Teresa Anguera; Sergio Escalera; Marcos Antonio Catalán; Josep Moya |
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Desarrollo del proyecto del Consell Comarcal del Baix Llobregat “Buen Trato a las personas mayores y aquellas en situación de fragilidad con sufrimiento emocional: Hacia un envejecimiento saludable” |
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Journal |
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2018 |
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Informaciones Psiquiatricas |
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232 |
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47-59 |
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0210-7279 |
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HUPBA; no menciona |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ FAA2018 |
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3214 |
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