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Fadi Dornaika, & Angel Sappa. (2007). Real-time Vehicle Ego-Motion using Stereo Pairs and Particle Filters. In Int. Conf. on Image Analysis and Recognition, (Vol. 4633, 469–480). LNCS.
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Monica Piñol, Angel Sappa, & Ricardo Toledo. (2012). MultiTable Reinforcement for Visual Object Recognition. In 4th International Conference on Signal and Image Processing (Vol. 221, pp. 469–480). LNCS. Springer India.
Abstract: This paper presents a bag of feature based method for visual object recognition. Our contribution is focussed on the selection of the best feature descriptor. It is implemented by using a novel multi-table reinforcement learning method that selects among five of classical descriptors (i.e., Spin, SIFT, SURF, C-SIFT and PHOW) the one that best describes each image. Experimental results and comparisons are provided showing the improvements achieved with the proposed approach.
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Martin Menchon, Estefania Talavera, Jose M. Massa, & Petia Radeva. (2020). Behavioural Pattern Discovery from Collections of Egocentric Photo-Streams. In ECCV Workshops (Vol. 12538, pp. 469–484). LNCS.
Abstract: The automatic discovery of behaviour is of high importance when aiming to assess and improve the quality of life of people. Egocentric images offer a rich and objective description of the daily life of the camera wearer. This work proposes a new method to identify a person’s patterns of behaviour from collected egocentric photo-streams. Our model characterizes time-frames based on the context (place, activities and environment objects) that define the images composition. Based on the similarity among the time-frames that describe the collected days for a user, we propose a new unsupervised greedy method to discover the behavioural pattern set based on a novel semantic clustering approach. Moreover, we present a new score metric to evaluate the performance of the proposed algorithm. We validate our method on 104 days and more than 100k images extracted from 7 users. Results show that behavioural patterns can be discovered to characterize the routine of individuals and consequently their lifestyle.
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Laura Igual, Santiago Segui, Jordi Vitria, Fernando Azpiroz, & Petia Radeva. (2007). Sparse Bayesian Feature Selection Applied to Intestinal Motility Analysis. In XVI Congreso Argentino de Bioingenieria (467–470).
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David Geronimo, Frederic Lerasle, & Antonio Lopez. (2012). State-driven particle filter for multi-person tracking. In J. Blanc-Talon et al. (Ed.), 11th International Conference on Advanced Concepts for Intelligent Vision Systems (Vol. 7517, pp. 467–478). Heidelberg: Springer.
Abstract: Multi-person tracking can be exploited in applications such as driver assistance, surveillance, multimedia and human-robot interaction. With the help of human detectors, particle filters offer a robust method able to filter noisy detections and provide temporal coherence. However, some traditional problems such as occlusions with other targets or the scene, temporal drifting or even the lost targets detection are rarely considered, making the systems performance decrease. Some authors propose to overcome these problems using heuristics not explained
and formalized in the papers, for instance by defining exceptions to the model updating depending on tracks overlapping. In this paper we propose to formalize these events by the use of a state-graph, defining the current state of the track (e.g., potential , tracked, occluded or lost) and the transitions between states in an explicit way. This approach has the advantage of linking track actions such as the online underlying models updating, which gives flexibility to the system. It provides an explicit representation to adapt the multiple parallel trackers depending on the context, i.e., each track can make use of a specific filtering strategy, dynamic model, number of particles, etc. depending on its state. We implement this technique in a single-camera multi-person tracker and test
it in public video sequences.
Keywords: human tracking
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Lluis Gomez, & Dimosthenis Karatzas. (2013). Multi-script Text Extraction from Natural Scenes. In 12th International Conference on Document Analysis and Recognition (pp. 467–471).
Abstract: Scene text extraction methodologies are usually based in classification of individual regions or patches, using a priori knowledge for a given script or language. Human perception of text, on the other hand, is based on perceptual organisation through which text emerges as a perceptually significant group of atomic objects. Therefore humans are able to detect text even in languages and scripts never seen before. In this paper, we argue that the text extraction problem could be posed as the detection of meaningful groups of regions. We present a method built around a perceptual organisation framework that exploits collaboration of proximity and similarity laws to create text-group hypotheses. Experiments demonstrate that our algorithm is competitive with state of the art approaches on a standard dataset covering text in variable orientations and two languages.
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Jiaolong Xu, David Vazquez, Antonio Lopez, Javier Marin, & Daniel Ponsa. (2013). Learning a Multiview Part-based Model in Virtual World for Pedestrian Detection. In IEEE Intelligent Vehicles Symposium (pp. 467–472). IEEE.
Abstract: State-of-the-art deformable part-based models based on latent SVM have shown excellent results on human detection. In this paper, we propose to train a multiview deformable part-based model with automatically generated part examples from virtual-world data. The method is efficient as: (i) the part detectors are trained with precisely extracted virtual examples, thus no latent learning is needed, (ii) the multiview pedestrian detector enhances the performance of the pedestrian root model, (iii) a top-down approach is used for part detection which reduces the searching space. We evaluate our model on Daimler and Karlsruhe Pedestrian Benchmarks with publicly available Caltech pedestrian detection evaluation framework and the result outperforms the state-of-the-art latent SVM V4.0, on both average miss rate and speed (our detector is ten times faster).
Keywords: Pedestrian Detection; Virtual World; Part based
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Juan A. Carvajal Ayala, Dennis Romero, & Angel Sappa. (2016). Fine-tuning based deep convolutional networks for lepidopterous genus recognition. In 21st Ibero American Congress on Pattern Recognition (pp. 467–475). LNCS.
Abstract: This paper describes an image classification approach oriented to identify specimens of lepidopterous insects at Ecuadorian ecological reserves. This work seeks to contribute to studies in the area of biology about genus of butterflies and also to facilitate the registration of unrecognized specimens. The proposed approach is based on the fine-tuning of three widely used pre-trained Convolutional Neural Networks (CNNs). This strategy is intended to overcome the reduced number of labeled images. Experimental results with a dataset labeled by expert biologists is presented, reaching a recognition accuracy above 92%.
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Bogdan Raducanu, & Fadi Dornaika. (2012). Appearance-based Face Recognition Using A Supervised Manifold Learning Framework. In IEEE Workshop on the Applications of Computer Vision (pp. 465–470). IEEE Xplore.
Abstract: Many natural image sets, depicting objects whose appearance is changing due to motion, pose or light variations, can be considered samples of a low-dimension nonlinear manifold embedded in the high-dimensional observation space (the space of all possible images). The main contribution of our work is represented by a Supervised Laplacian Eigemaps (S-LE) algorithm, which exploits the class label information for mapping the original data in the embedded space. Our proposed approach benefits from two important properties: i) it is discriminative, and ii) it adaptively selects the neighbors of a sample without using any predefined neighborhood size. Experiments were conducted on four face databases and the results demonstrate that the proposed algorithm significantly outperforms many linear and non-linear embedding techniques. Although we've focused on the face recognition problem, the proposed approach could also be extended to other category of objects characterized by large variance in their appearance.
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Stefan Schurischuster, Beatriz Remeseiro, Petia Radeva, & Martin Kampel. (2018). A Preliminary Study of Image Analysis for Parasite Detection on Honey Bees. In 15th International Conference on Image Analysis and Recognition (Vol. 10882, pp. 465–473). LNCS.
Abstract: Varroa destructor is a parasite harming bee colonies. As the worldwide bee population is in danger, beekeepers as well as researchers are looking for methods to monitor the health of bee hives. In this context, we present a preliminary study to detect parasites on bee videos by means of image analysis and machine learning techniques. For this purpose, each video frame is analyzed individually to extract bee image patches, which are then processed to compute image descriptors and finally classified into mite and no mite bees. The experimental results demonstrated the adequacy of the proposed method, which will be a perfect stepping stone for a further bee monitoring system.
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Muhammad Anwer Rao, David Vazquez, & Antonio Lopez. (2011). Color Contribution to Part-Based Person Detection in Different Types of Scenarios. In W. Kropatsch A. Berciano H. Molina D. D. P. Real (Ed.), 14th International Conference on Computer Analysis of Images and Patterns (Vol. 6855, pp. 463–470). Berlin Heidelberg: Springer.
Abstract: Camera-based person detection is of paramount interest due to its potential applications. The task is diffcult because the great variety of backgrounds (scenarios, illumination) in which persons are present, as well as their intra-class variability (pose, clothe, occlusion). In fact, the class person is one of the included in the popular PASCAL visual object classes (VOC) challenge. A breakthrough for this challenge, regarding person detection, is due to Felzenszwalb et al. These authors proposed a part-based detector that relies on histograms of oriented gradients (HOG) and latent support vector machines (LatSVM) to learn a model of the whole human body and its constitutive parts, as well as their relative position. Since the approach of Felzenszwalb et al. appeared new variants have been proposed, usually giving rise to more complex models. In this paper, we focus on an issue that has not attracted suficient interest up to now. In particular, we refer to the fact that HOG is usually computed from RGB color space, but other possibilities exist and deserve the corresponding investigation. In this paper we challenge RGB space with the opponent color space (OPP), which is inspired in the human vision system.We will compute the HOG on top of OPP, then we train and test the part-based human classifer by Felzenszwalb et al. using PASCAL VOC challenge protocols and person database. Our experiments demonstrate that OPP outperforms RGB. We also investigate possible differences among types of scenarios: indoor, urban and countryside. Interestingly, our experiments suggest that the beneficts of OPP with respect to RGB mainly come for indoor and countryside scenarios, those in which the human visual system was designed by evolution.
Keywords: Pedestrian Detection; Color
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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
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Tomas Sixta, Julio C. S. Jacques Junior, Pau Buch Cardona, Eduard Vazquez, & Sergio Escalera. (2020). FairFace Challenge at ECCV 2020: Analyzing Bias in Face Recognition. In ECCV Workshops (Vol. 12540, pp. 463–481). LNCS.
Abstract: This work summarizes the 2020 ChaLearn Looking at People Fair Face Recognition and Analysis Challenge and provides a description of the top-winning solutions and analysis of the results. The aim of the challenge was to evaluate accuracy and bias in gender and skin colour of submitted algorithms on the task of 1:1 face verification in the presence of other confounding attributes. Participants were evaluated using an in-the-wild dataset based on reannotated IJB-C, further enriched 12.5K new images and additional labels. The dataset is not balanced, which simulates a real world scenario where AI-based models supposed to present fair outcomes are trained and evaluated on imbalanced data. The challenge attracted 151 participants, who made more 1.8K submissions in total. The final phase of the challenge attracted 36 active teams out of which 10 exceeded 0.999 AUC-ROC while achieving very low scores in the proposed bias metrics. Common strategies by the participants were face pre-processing, homogenization of data distributions, the use of bias aware loss functions and ensemble models. The analysis of top-10 teams shows higher false positive rates (and lower false negative rates) for females with dark skin tone as well as the potential of eyeglasses and young age to increase the false positive rates too.
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Adriana Romero, & Carlo Gatta. (2013). Do We Really Need All These Neurons? In 6th Iberian Conference on Pattern Recognition and Image Analysis (Vol. 7887, pp. 460–467). LNCS. Springer Berlin Heidelberg.
Abstract: Restricted Boltzmann Machines (RBMs) are generative neural networks that have received much attention recently. In particular, choosing the appropriate number of hidden units is important as it might hinder their representative power. According to the literature, RBM require numerous hidden units to approximate any distribution properly. In this paper, we present an experiment to determine whether such amount of hidden units is required in a classification context. We then propose an incremental algorithm that trains RBM reusing the previously trained parameters using a trade-off measure to determine the appropriate number of hidden units. Results on the MNIST and OCR letters databases show that using a number of hidden units, which is one order of magnitude smaller than the literature estimate, suffices to achieve similar performance. Moreover, the proposed algorithm allows to estimate the required number of hidden units without the need of training many RBM from scratch.
Keywords: Retricted Boltzmann Machine; hidden units; unsupervised learning; classification
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Sergio Escalera, Xavier Baro, Jordi Gonzalez, Miguel Angel Bautista, Meysam Madadi, Miguel Reyes, et al. (2014). ChaLearn Looking at People Challenge 2014: Dataset and Results. In ECCV Workshop on ChaLearn Looking at People (Vol. 8925, pp. 459–473). LNCS.
Abstract: This paper summarizes the ChaLearn Looking at People 2014 challenge data and the results obtained by the participants. The competition was split into three independent tracks: human pose recovery from RGB data, action and interaction recognition from RGB data sequences, and multi-modal gesture recognition from RGB-Depth sequences. For all the tracks, the goal was to perform user-independent recognition in sequences of continuous images using the overlapping Jaccard index as the evaluation measure. In this edition of the ChaLearn challenge, two large novel data sets were made publicly available and the Microsoft Codalab platform were used to manage the competition. Outstanding results were achieved in the three challenge tracks, with accuracy results of 0.20, 0.50, and 0.85 for pose recovery, action/interaction recognition, and multi-modal gesture recognition, respectively.
Keywords: Human Pose Recovery; Behavior Analysis; Action and in- teractions; Multi-modal gestures; recognition
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