F.Guirado, Ana Ripoll, C.Roig, Aura Hernandez-Sabate, & Emilio Luque. (2006). Exploiting Throughput for Pipeline Execution in Streaming Image Processing Applications. In UAB, E. N. W, & et al. (Eds.), Euro-Par 2006 Parallel Processing (Vol. 4128, pp. 1095–1105). Lecture Notes In Computer Science. Dresden, Germany (European Union): Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg.
Abstract: There is a large range of image processing applications that act on an input sequence of image frames that are continuously received. Throughput is a key performance measure to be optimized when execu- ting them. In this paper we propose a new task replication methodology for optimizing throughput for an image processing application in the field of medicine. The results show that by applying the proposed methodo- logy we are able to achieve the desired throughput in all cases, in such a way that the input frames can be processed at any given rate.
Keywords: 12th International Euro–Par Conference
|
Ole Vilhelm-Larsen, Petia Radeva, & Enric Marti. (1995). Guidelines for choosing optimal parameters of elasticity for snakes. In Computer Analysis Of Images And Patterns (Vol. 970, pp. 106–113). LNCS.
Abstract: This paper proposes a guidance in the process of choosing and using the parameters of elasticity of a snake in order to obtain a precise segmentation. A new two step procedure is defined based on upper and lower bounds on the parameters. Formulas, by which these bounds can be calculated for real images where parts of the contour may be missing, are presented. Experiments on segmentation of bone structures in X-ray images have verified the usefulness of the new procedure.
|
Josep Llados, Jaime Lopez-Krahe, & Enric Marti. (1997). A system to understand hand-drawn floor plans using subgraph isomorphism and Hough transform. In Machine Vision and Applications (Vol. 10, pp. 150–158).
Abstract: Presently, man-machine interface development is a widespread research activity. A system to understand hand drawn architectural drawings in a CAD environment is presented in this paper. To understand a document, we have to identify its building elements and their structural properties. An attributed graph structure is chosen as a symbolic representation of the input document and the patterns to recognize in it. An inexact subgraph isomorphism procedure using relaxation labeling techniques is performed. In this paper we focus on how to speed up the matching. There is a building element, the walls, characterized by a hatching pattern. Using a straight line Hough transform (SLHT)-based method, we recognize this pattern, characterized by parallel straight lines, and remove from the input graph the edges belonging to this pattern. The isomorphism is then applied to the remainder of the input graph. When all the building elements have been recognized, the document is redrawn, correcting the inaccurate strokes obtained from a hand-drawn input.
Keywords: Line drawings – Hough transform – Graph matching – CAD systems – Graphics recognition
|
Josep Llados, Gemma Sanchez, & Enric Marti. (1998). A string based method to recognize symbols and structural textures in architectural plans. In Graphics Recognition Algorithms and Systems Second International Workshop, GREC' 97 Nancy, France, August 22–23, 1997 Selected Papers (Vol. 1389, pp. 91–103). LNCS. Springer Link.
Abstract: This paper deals with the recognition of symbols and structural textures in architectural plans using string matching techniques. A plan is represented by an attributed graph whose nodes represent characteristic points and whose edges represent segments. Symbols and textures can be seen as a set of regions, i.e. closed loops in the graph, with a particular arrangement. The search for a symbol involves a graph matching between the regions of a model graph and the regions of the graph representing the document. Discriminating a texture means a clustering of neighbouring regions of this graph. Both procedures involve a similarity measure between graph regions. A string codification is used to represent the sequence of outlining edges of a region. Thus, the similarity between two regions is defined in terms of the string edit distance between their boundary strings. The use of string matching allows the recognition method to work also under presence of distortion.
|
Misael Rosales, Petia Radeva, Oriol Rodriguez, & Debora Gil. (2005). Suppression of IVUS Image Rotation. A Kinematic Approach. In Monica Andres and Hernandez Petia and Santos A. and R. Frangi (Ed.), Functional Imaging and Modeling of the Heart (Vol. 3504, pp. 889–892). LNCS, 3504. Springer Berlin / Heidelberg.
Abstract: IntraVascular Ultrasound (IVUS) is an exploratory technique used in interventional procedures that shows cross section images of arteries and provides qualitative information about the causes and severity of the arterial lumen narrowing. Cross section analysis as well as visualization of plaque extension in a vessel segment during the catheter imaging pullback are the technique main advantages. However, IVUS sequence exhibits a periodic rotation artifact that makes difficult the longitudinal lesion inspection and hinders any segmentation algorithm. In this paper we propose a new kinematic method to estimate and remove the image rotation of IVUS images sequences. Results on several IVUS sequences show good results and prompt some of the clinical applications to vessel dynamics study, and relation to vessel pathology.
|
Alicia Fornes, Josep Llados, Gemma Sanchez, & Horst Bunke. (2012). Writer Identification in Old Handwritten Music Scores. In Copnstantin Papaodysseus (Ed.), Pattern Recognition and Signal Processing in Archaeometry: Mathematical and Computational Solutions for Archaeology (pp. 27–63). IGI-Global.
Abstract: The aim of writer identification is determining the writer of a piece of handwriting from a set of writers. In this paper we present a system for writer identification in old handwritten music scores. Even though an important amount of compositions contains handwritten text in the music scores, the aim of our work is to use only music notation to determine the author. The steps of the system proposed are the following. First of all, the music sheet is preprocessed and normalized for obtaining a single binarized music line, without the staff lines. Afterwards, 100 features are extracted for every music line, which are subsequently used in a k-NN classifier that compares every feature vector with prototypes stored in a database. By applying feature selection and extraction methods on the original feature set, the performance is increased. The proposed method has been tested on a database of old music scores from the 17th to 19th centuries, achieving a recognition rate of about 95%.
|
Joost Van de Weijer, Robert Benavente, Maria Vanrell, Cordelia Schmid, Ramon Baldrich, Jacob Verbeek, et al. (2012). Color Naming. In Theo Gevers, Arjan Gijsenij, Joost Van de Weijer, & Jan-Mark Geusebroek (Eds.), Color in Computer Vision: Fundamentals and Applications (pp. 287–317). John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
|
Xavier Perez Sala, Laura Igual, Sergio Escalera, & Cecilio Angulo. (2012). Uniform Sampling of Rotations for Discrete and Continuous Learning of 2D Shape Models. In Vision Robotics: Technologies for Machine Learning and Vision Applications (pp. 23–42). IGI-Global.
Abstract: Different methodologies of uniform sampling over the rotation group, SO(3), for building unbiased 2D shape models from 3D objects are introduced and reviewed in this chapter. State-of-the-art non uniform sampling approaches are discussed, and uniform sampling methods using Euler angles and quaternions are introduced. Moreover, since presented work is oriented to model building applications, it is not limited to general discrete methods to obtain uniform 3D rotations, but also from a continuous point of view in the case of Procrustes Analysis.
|
Fadi Dornaika, & Bogdan Raducanu. (2012). Analysis and Recognition of Facial Expressions in Videos Using Facial Shape Deformation. In S.E. Carter (Ed.), Facial Expressions: Dynamic Patterns, Impairments and Social Perceptions (pp. 157–178). NOVA Publishers.
|
Fadi Dornaika, Bogdan Raducanu, & Alireza Bosaghzadeh. (2015). Facial expression recognition based on multi observations with application to social robotics. In Bruce Flores (Ed.), Emotional and Facial Expressions: Recognition, Developmental Differences and Social Importance (pp. 153–166). Nova Science publishers.
Abstract: Human-robot interaction is a hot topic nowadays in the social robotics
community. One crucial aspect is represented by the affective communication
which comes encoded through the facial expressions. In this chapter, we propose a novel approach for facial expression recognition, which exploits an efficient and adaptive graph-based label propagation (semi-supervised mode) in a multi-observation framework. The facial features are extracted using an appearance-based 3D face tracker, viewand texture independent. Our method has been extensively tested on the CMU dataset, and has been conveniently compared with other methods for graph construction. With the proposed approach, we developed an application for an AIBO robot, in which it mirrors the recognized facial
expression.
|
Debora Gil, F. Javier Sanchez, Gloria Fernandez Esparrach, & Jorge Bernal. (2015). 3D Stable Spatio-temporal Polyp Localization in Colonoscopy Videos. In Computer-Assisted and Robotic Endoscopy. Revised selected papers of Second International Workshop, CARE 2015, Held in Conjunction with MICCAI 2015 (Vol. 9515, pp. 140–152). LNCS.
Abstract: Computational intelligent systems could reduce polyp miss rate in colonoscopy for colon cancer diagnosis and, thus, increase the efficiency of the procedure. One of the main problems of existing polyp localization methods is a lack of spatio-temporal stability in their response. We propose to explore the response of a given polyp localization across temporal windows in order to select
those image regions presenting the highest stable spatio-temporal response.
Spatio-temporal stability is achieved by extracting 3D watershed regions on the
temporal window. Stability in localization response is statistically determined by analysis of the variance of the output of the localization method inside each 3D region. We have explored the benefits of considering spatio-temporal stability in two different tasks: polyp localization and polyp detection. Experimental results indicate an average improvement of 21:5% in polyp localization and 43:78% in polyp detection.
Keywords: Colonoscopy, Polyp Detection, Polyp Localization, Region Extraction, Watersheds
|
Jordina Torrents-Barrena, Aida Valls, Petia Radeva, Meritxell Arenas, & Domenec Puig. (2015). Automatic Recognition of Molecular Subtypes of Breast Cancer in X-Ray images using Segmentation-based Fractal Texture Analysis. In Artificial Intelligence Research and Development (Vol. 277, pp. 247–256). Frontiers in Artificial Intelligence and Applications. IOS Press.
Abstract: Breast cancer disease has recently been classified into four subtypes regarding the molecular properties of the affected tumor region. For each patient, an accurate diagnosis of the specific type is vital to decide the most appropriate therapy in order to enhance life prospects. Nowadays, advanced therapeutic diagnosis research is focused on gene selection methods, which are not robust enough. Hence, we hypothesize that computer vision algorithms can offer benefits to address the problem of discriminating among them through X-Ray images. In this paper, we propose a novel approach driven by texture feature descriptors and machine learning techniques. First, we segment the tumour part through an active contour technique and then, we perform a complete fractal analysis to collect qualitative information of the region of interest in the feature extraction stage. Finally, several supervised and unsupervised classifiers are used to perform multiclass classification of the aforementioned data. The experimental results presented in this paper support that it is possible to establish a relation between each tumor subtype and the extracted features of the patterns revealed on mammograms.
|
Fernando Vilariño, Dimosthenis Karatzas, Marcos Catalan, & Alberto Valcarcel. (2015). An horizon for the Public Library as a place for innovation and creativity. The Library Living Lab in Volpelleres. In The White Book on Public Library Network from Diputació de Barcelona.
|
Pedro Herruzo, Marc Bolaños, & Petia Radeva. (2016). Can a CNN Recognize Catalan Diet? In AIP Conference Proceedings (Vol. 1773).
Abstract: CoRR abs/1607.08811
Nowadays, we can find several diseases related to the unhealthy diet habits of the population, such as diabetes, obesity, anemia, bulimia and anorexia. In many cases, these diseases are related to the food consumption of people. Mediterranean diet is scientifically known as a healthy diet that helps to prevent many metabolic diseases. In particular, our work focuses on the recognition of Mediterranean food and dishes. The development of this methodology would allow to analise the daily habits of users with wearable cameras, within the topic of lifelogging. By using automatic mechanisms we could build an objective tool for the analysis of the patient’s behavior, allowing specialists to discover unhealthy food patterns and understand the user’s lifestyle.
With the aim to automatically recognize a complete diet, we introduce a challenging multi-labeled dataset related to Mediter-ranean diet called FoodCAT. The first type of label provided consists of 115 food classes with an average of 400 images per dish, and the second one consists of 12 food categories with an average of 3800 pictures per class. This dataset will serve as a basis for the development of automatic diet recognition. In this context, deep learning and more specifically, Convolutional Neural Networks (CNNs), currently are state-of-the-art methods for automatic food recognition. In our work, we compare several architectures for image classification, with the purpose of diet recognition. Applying the best model for recognising food categories, we achieve a top-1 accuracy of 72.29%, and top-5 of 97.07%. In a complete diet recognition of dishes from Mediterranean diet, enlarged with the Food-101 dataset for international dishes recognition, we achieve a top-1 accuracy of 68.07%, and top-5 of 89.53%, for a total of 115+101 food classes.
|
Antonio Lopez, Jiaolong Xu, Jose Luis Gomez, David Vazquez, & German Ros. (2017). From Virtual to Real World Visual Perception using Domain Adaptation -- The DPM as Example. In Gabriela Csurka (Ed.), Domain Adaptation in Computer Vision Applications (pp. 243–258). Springer.
Abstract: Supervised learning tends to produce more accurate classifiers than unsupervised learning in general. This implies that training data is preferred with annotations. When addressing visual perception challenges, such as localizing certain object classes within an image, the learning of the involved classifiers turns out to be a practical bottleneck. The reason is that, at least, we have to frame object examples with bounding boxes in thousands of images. A priori, the more complex the model is regarding its number of parameters, the more annotated examples are required. This annotation task is performed by human oracles, which ends up in inaccuracies and errors in the annotations (aka ground truth) since the task is inherently very cumbersome and sometimes ambiguous. As an alternative we have pioneered the use of virtual worlds for collecting such annotations automatically and with high precision. However, since the models learned with virtual data must operate in the real world, we still need to perform domain adaptation (DA). In this chapter we revisit the DA of a deformable part-based model (DPM) as an exemplifying case of virtual- to-real-world DA. As a use case, we address the challenge of vehicle detection for driver assistance, using different publicly available virtual-world data. While doing so, we investigate questions such as: how does the domain gap behave due to virtual-vs-real data with respect to dominant object appearance per domain, as well as the role of photo-realism in the virtual world.
Keywords: Domain Adaptation
|