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Author |
Reza Azad; Maryam Asadi Aghbolaghi; Mahmood Fathy; Sergio Escalera |
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Title |
Bi-Directional ConvLSTM U-Net with Densley Connected Convolutions |
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Conference Article |
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2019 |
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Visual Recognition for Medical Images workshop |
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406-415 |
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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. |
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Seul; Korea; October 2019 |
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ICCVW |
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HUPBA; no proj |
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Admin @ si @ AAF2019 |
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3324 |
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Maria Ines Torres; Javier Mikel Olaso; Cesar Montenegro; Riberto Santana; A.Vazquez; Raquel Justo; J.A.Lozano; Stephan Schogl; Gerard Chollet; Nazim Dugan; M.Irvine; N.Glackin; C.Pickard; Anna Esposito; Gennaro Cordasco; Alda Troncone; Dijana Petrovska Delacretaz; Aymen Mtibaa; Mohamed Amine Hmani; M.S.Korsnes; L.J.Martinussen; Sergio Escalera; C.Palmero Cantariño; Olivier Deroo; O.Gordeeva; Jofre Tenorio Laranga; E.Gonzalez Fraile; Begoña Fernandez Ruanova; A.Gonzalez Pinto |
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Title |
The EMPATHIC project: mid-term achievements |
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Conference Article |
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2019 |
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12th ACM International Conference on PErvasive Technologies Related to Assistive Environments |
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629-638 |
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Maria Ines Torres; Javier Mikel Olaso, César Montenegro, Riberto Santana, A. Vázquez, Raquel Justo, J. A. Lozano, Stephan Schlögl, Gérard Chollet, Nazim Dugan, M. Irvine, N. Glackin, C. Pickard, Anna Esposito, Gennaro Cordasco, Alda Troncone, Dijana Petrovska-Delacrétaz, Aymen Mtibaa, Mohamed Amine Hmani, M. S. Korsnes, L. J. Martinussen, Sergio Escalera, C. Palmero Cantariño, Olivier Deroo, O. Gordeeva, Jofre Tenorio-Laranga, E. Gonzalez-Fraile, Begoña Fernández-Ruanova, A. Gonzalez-Pinto |
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Rhodes Greece; June 2019 |
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PETRA |
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HUPBA; no proj |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ TOM2019 |
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3325 |
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Author |
Daniel Sanchez; Meysam Madadi; Marc Oliu; Sergio Escalera |
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Title |
Multi-task human analysis in still images: 2D/3D pose, depth map, and multi-part segmentation |
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Conference Article |
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2019 |
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14th IEEE International Conference on Automatic Face and Gesture Recognition |
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While many individual tasks in the domain of human analysis have recently received an accuracy boost from deep learning approaches, multi-task learning has mostly been ignored due to a lack of data. New synthetic datasets are being released, filling this gap with synthetic generated data. In this work, we analyze four related human analysis tasks in still images in a multi-task scenario by leveraging such datasets. Specifically, we study the correlation of 2D/3D pose estimation, body part segmentation and full-body depth estimation. These tasks are learned via the well-known Stacked Hourglass module such that each of the task-specific streams shares information with the others. The main goal is to analyze how training together these four related tasks can benefit each individual task for a better generalization. Results on the newly released SURREAL dataset show that all four tasks benefit from the multi-task approach, but with different combinations of tasks: while combining all four tasks improves 2D pose estimation the most, 2D pose improves neither 3D pose nor full-body depth estimation. On the other hand 2D parts segmentation can benefit from 2D pose but not from 3D pose. In all cases, as expected, the maximum improvement is achieved on those human body parts that show more variability in terms of spatial distribution, appearance and shape, e.g. wrists and ankles. |
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Lille; France; May 2019 |
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FG |
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HUPBA; no proj |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ SMO2019 |
Serial |
3326 |
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Author |
Sergio Escalera; Marti Soler; Stephane Ayache; Umut Guçlu; Jun Wan; Meysam Madadi; Xavier Baro; Hugo Jair Escalante; Isabelle Guyon |
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Title |
ChaLearn Looking at People: Inpainting and Denoising Challenges |
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Book Chapter |
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Year |
2019 |
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The Springer Series on Challenges in Machine Learning |
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23-44 |
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Dealing with incomplete information is a well studied problem in the context of machine learning and computational intelligence. However, in the context of computer vision, the problem has only been studied in specific scenarios (e.g., certain types of occlusions in specific types of images), although it is common to have incomplete information in visual data. This chapter describes the design of an academic competition focusing on inpainting of images and video sequences that was part of the competition program of WCCI2018 and had a satellite event collocated with ECCV2018. The ChaLearn Looking at People Inpainting Challenge aimed at advancing the state of the art on visual inpainting by promoting the development of methods for recovering missing and occluded information from images and video. Three tracks were proposed in which visual inpainting might be helpful but still challenging: human body pose estimation, text overlays removal and fingerprint denoising. This chapter describes the design of the challenge, which includes the release of three novel datasets, and the description of evaluation metrics, baselines and evaluation protocol. The results of the challenge are analyzed and discussed in detail and conclusions derived from this event are outlined. |
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HuPBA; no proj |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ ESA2019 |
Serial |
3327 |
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Author |
Ajian Liu; Jun Wan; Sergio Escalera; Hugo Jair Escalante; Zichang Tan; Qi Yuan; Kai Wang; Chi Lin; Guodong Guo; Isabelle Guyon; Stan Z. Li |
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Title |
Multi-Modal Face Anti-Spoofing Attack Detection Challenge at CVPR2019 |
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Conference Article |
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Year |
2019 |
Publication |
IEEE International Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition-Workshop |
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Anti-spoofing attack detection is critical to guarantee the security of face-based authentication and facial analysis systems. Recently, a multi-modal face anti-spoofing dataset, CASIA-SURF, has been released with the goal of boosting research in this important topic. CASIA-SURF is the largest public data set for facial anti-spoofing attack detection in terms of both, diversity and modalities: it comprises 1,000 subjects and 21,000 video samples. We organized a challenge around this novel resource to boost research in the subject. The Chalearn LAP multi-modal face anti-spoofing attack detection challenge attracted more than 300 teams for the development phase with a total of 13 teams qualifying for the final round. This paper presents an overview of the challenge, including its design, evaluation protocol and a summary of results. We analyze the top ranked solutions and draw conclusions derived from the competition. In addition we outline future work directions. |
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California; June 2019 |
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CVPRW |
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HuPBA; no proj |
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no |
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Call Number |
Admin @ si @ LWE2019 |
Serial |
3329 |
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Author |
Isabelle Guyon; Lisheng Sun Hosoya; Marc Boulle; Hugo Jair Escalante; Sergio Escalera; Zhengying Liu; Damir Jajetic; Bisakha Ray; Mehreen Saeed; Michele Sebag; Alexander R.Statnikov; Wei-Wei Tu; Evelyne Viegas |
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Title |
Analysis of the AutoML Challenge Series 2015-2018. |
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Book Chapter |
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Year |
2019 |
Publication |
Automated Machine Learning |
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177-219 |
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The ChaLearn AutoML Challenge (The authors are in alphabetical order of last name, except the first author who did most of the writing and the second author who produced most of the numerical analyses and plots.) (NIPS 2015 – ICML 2016) consisted of six rounds of a machine learning competition of progressive difficulty, subject to limited computational resources. It was followed bya one-round AutoML challenge (PAKDD 2018). The AutoML setting differs from former model selection/hyper-parameter selection challenges, such as the one we previously organized for NIPS 2006: the participants aim to develop fully automated and computationally efficient systems, capable of being trained and tested without human intervention, with code submission. This chapter analyzes the results of these competitions and provides details about the datasets, which were not revealed to the participants. The solutions of the winners are systematically benchmarked over all datasets of all rounds and compared with canonical machine learning algorithms available in scikit-learn. All materials discussed in this chapter (data and code) have been made publicly available at http://automl.chalearn.org/. |
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Springer |
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SSCML |
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HuPBA; no proj |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ GHB2019 |
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3330 |
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Author |
Shifeng Zhang; Xiaobo Wang; Ajian Liu; Chenxu Zhao; Jun Wan; Sergio Escalera; Hailin Shi; Zezheng Wang; Stan Z. Li |
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Title |
A Dataset and Benchmark for Large-scale Multi-modal Face Anti-spoofing |
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Conference Article |
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Year |
2019 |
Publication |
32nd IEEE Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition |
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919-928 |
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Face anti-spoofing is essential to prevent face recognition systems from a security breach. Much of the progresses have been made by the availability of face anti-spoofing benchmark datasets in recent years. However, existing face anti-spoofing benchmarks have limited number of subjects (≤170) and modalities (≤2), which hinder the further development of the academic community. To facilitate face anti-spoofing research, we introduce a large-scale multi-modal dataset, namely CASIA-SURF, which is the largest publicly available dataset for face anti-spoofing in terms of both subjects and visual modalities. Specifically, it consists of 1,000 subjects with 21,000 videos and each sample has 3 modalities (i.e., RGB, Depth and IR). We also provide a measurement set, evaluation protocol and training/validation/testing subsets, developing a new benchmark for face anti-spoofing. Moreover, we present a new multi-modal fusion method as baseline, which performs feature re-weighting to select the more informative channel features while suppressing the less useful ones for each modal. Extensive experiments have been conducted on the proposed dataset to verify its significance and generalization capability. The dataset is available at https://sites.google.com/qq.com/chalearnfacespoofingattackdete/. |
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California; June 2019 |
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CVPR |
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HuPBA; no proj |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ ZWL2019 |
Serial |
3331 |
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Author |
Ciprian Corneanu; Meysam Madadi; Sergio Escalera; Aleix M. Martinez |
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Title |
What does it mean to learn in deep networks? And, how does one detect adversarial attacks? |
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Conference Article |
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Year |
2019 |
Publication |
32nd IEEE Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition |
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4752-4761 |
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The flexibility and high-accuracy of Deep Neural Networks (DNNs) has transformed computer vision. But, the fact that we do not know when a specific DNN will work and when it will fail has resulted in a lack of trust. A clear example is self-driving cars; people are uncomfortable sitting in a car driven by algorithms that may fail under some unknown, unpredictable conditions. Interpretability and explainability approaches attempt to address this by uncovering what a DNN models, i.e., what each node (cell) in the network represents and what images are most likely to activate it. This can be used to generate, for example, adversarial attacks. But these approaches do not generally allow us to determine where a DNN will succeed or fail and why. i.e., does this learned representation generalize to unseen samples? Here, we derive a novel approach to define what it means to learn in deep networks, and how to use this knowledge to detect adversarial attacks. We show how this defines the ability of a network to generalize to unseen testing samples and, most importantly, why this is the case. |
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California; June 2019 |
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CVPR |
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HuPBA; no proj |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ CME2019 |
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3332 |
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Author |
Swathikiran Sudhakaran; Sergio Escalera; Oswald Lanz |
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Title |
LSTA: Long Short-Term Attention for Egocentric Action Recognition |
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Conference Article |
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2019 |
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32nd IEEE Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition |
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9946-9955 |
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Egocentric activity recognition is one of the most challenging tasks in video analysis. It requires a fine-grained discrimination of small objects and their manipulation. While some methods base on strong supervision and attention mechanisms, they are either annotation consuming or do not take spatio-temporal patterns into account. In this paper we propose LSTA as a mechanism to focus on features from spatial relevant parts while attention is being tracked smoothly across the video sequence. We demonstrate the effectiveness of LSTA on egocentric activity recognition with an end-to-end trainable two-stream architecture, achieving state-of-the-art performance on four standard benchmarks. |
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California; June 2019 |
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HuPBA; no proj |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ SEL2019 |
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3333 |
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Andres Mafla; Sounak Dey; Ali Furkan Biten; Lluis Gomez; Dimosthenis Karatzas |
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Fine-grained Image Classification and Retrieval by Combining Visual and Locally Pooled Textual Features |
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Conference Article |
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2020 |
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IEEE Winter Conference on Applications of Computer Vision |
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Text contained in an image carries high-level semantics that can be exploited to achieve richer image understanding. In particular, the mere presence of text provides strong guiding content that should be employed to tackle a diversity of computer vision tasks such as image retrieval, fine-grained classification, and visual question answering. In this paper, we address the problem of fine-grained classification and image retrieval by leveraging textual information along with visual cues to comprehend the existing intrinsic relation between the two modalities. The novelty of the proposed model consists of the usage of a PHOC descriptor to construct a bag of textual words along with a Fisher Vector Encoding that captures the morphology of text. This approach provides a stronger multimodal representation for this task and as our experiments demonstrate, it achieves state-of-the-art results on two different tasks, fine-grained classification and image retrieval. |
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Aspen; Colorado; USA; March 2020 |
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WACV |
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DAG; 600.121; 600.129 |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ MDB2020 |
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3334 |
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Rui Zhang; Yongsheng Zhou; Qianyi Jiang; Qi Song; Nan Li; Kai Zhou; Lei Wang; Dong Wang; Minghui Liao; Mingkun Yang; Xiang Bai; Baoguang Shi; Dimosthenis Karatzas; Shijian Lu; CV Jawahar |
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ICDAR 2019 Robust Reading Challenge on Reading Chinese Text on Signboard |
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2019 |
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15th International Conference on Document Analysis and Recognition |
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1577-1581 |
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Chinese scene text reading is one of the most challenging problems in computer vision and has attracted great interest. Different from English text, Chinese has more than 6000 commonly used characters and Chinesecharacters can be arranged in various layouts with numerous fonts. The Chinese signboards in street view are a good choice for Chinese scene text images since they have different backgrounds, fonts and layouts. We organized a competition called ICDAR2019-ReCTS, which mainly focuses on reading Chinese text on signboard. This report presents the final results of the competition. A large-scale dataset of 25,000 annotated signboard images, in which all the text lines and characters are annotated with locations and transcriptions, were released. Four tasks, namely character recognition, text line recognition, text line detection and end-to-end recognition were set up. Besides, considering the Chinese text ambiguity issue, we proposed a multi ground truth (multi-GT) evaluation method to make evaluation fairer. The competition started on March 1, 2019 and ended on April 30, 2019. 262 submissions from 46 teams are received. Most of the participants come from universities, research institutes, and tech companies in China. There are also some participants from the United States, Australia, Singapore, and Korea. 21 teams submit results for Task 1, 23 teams submit results for Task 2, 24 teams submit results for Task 3, and 13 teams submit results for Task 4. |
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Sydney; Australia; September 2019 |
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ICDAR |
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DAG; 600.129; 600.121 |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ LZZ2019 |
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3335 |
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Author |
Helena Muñoz; Fernando Vilariño; Dimosthenis Karatzas |
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Title |
Eye-Movements During Information Extraction from Administrative Documents |
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Conference Article |
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2019 |
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International Conference on Document Analysis and Recognition Workshops |
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6-9 |
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A key aspect of digital mailroom processes is the extraction of relevant information from administrative documents. More often than not, the extraction process cannot be fully automated, and there is instead an important amount of manual intervention. In this work we study the human process of information extraction from invoice document images. We explore whether the gaze of human annotators during an manual information extraction process could be exploited towards reducing the manual effort and automating the process. To this end, we perform an eye-tracking experiment replicating real-life interfaces for information extraction. Through this pilot study we demonstrate that relevant areas in the document can be identified reliably through automatic fixation classification, and the obtained models generalize well to new subjects. Our findings indicate that it is in principle possible to integrate the human in the document image analysis loop, making use of the scanpath to automate the extraction process or verify extracted information. |
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Sydney; Australia; September 2019 |
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ICDARW |
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DAG; 600.140; 600.121; 600.129;SIAI |
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Admin @ si @ MVK2019 |
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3336 |
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Mohammed Al Rawi; Ernest Valveny; Dimosthenis Karatzas |
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Can One Deep Learning Model Learn Script-Independent Multilingual Word-Spotting? |
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2019 |
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15th International Conference on Document Analysis and Recognition |
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260-267 |
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Word spotting has gained increased attention lately as it can be used to extract textual information from handwritten documents and scene-text images. Current word spotting approaches are designed to work on a single language and/or script. Building intelligent models that learn script-independent multilingual word-spotting is challenging due to the large variability of multilingual alphabets and symbols. We used ResNet-152 and the Pyramidal Histogram of Characters (PHOC) embedding to build a one-model script-independent multilingual word-spotting and we tested it on Latin, Arabic, and Bangla (Indian) languages. The one-model we propose performs on par with the multi-model language-specific word-spotting system, and thus, reduces the number of models needed for each script and/or language. |
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Sydney; Australia; September 2019 |
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DAG; 600.129; 600.121 |
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Admin @ si @ RVK2019 |
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3337 |
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Zheng Huang; Kai Chen; Jianhua He; Xiang Bai; Dimosthenis Karatzas; Shijian Lu; CV Jawahar |
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ICDAR2019 Competition on Scanned Receipt OCR and Information Extraction |
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2019 |
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15th International Conference on Document Analysis and Recognition |
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1516-1520 |
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The ICDAR 2019 Challenge on “Scanned receipts OCR and key information extraction” (SROIE) covers important aspects related to the automated analysis of scanned receipts. The SROIE tasks play a key role in many document analysis systems and hold significant commercial potential. Although a lot of work has been published over the years on administrative document analysis, the community has advanced relatively slowly, as most datasets have been kept private. One of the key contributions of SROIE to the document analysis community is to offer a first, standardized dataset of 1000 whole scanned receipt images and annotations, as well as an evaluation procedure for such tasks. The Challenge is structured around three tasks, namely Scanned Receipt Text Localization (Task 1), Scanned Receipt OCR (Task 2) and Key Information Extraction from Scanned Receipts (Task 3). The competition opened on 10th February, 2019 and closed on 5th May, 2019. We received 29, 24 and 18 valid submissions received for the three competition tasks, respectively. This report presents the competition datasets, define the tasks and the evaluation protocols, offer detailed submission statistics, as well as an analysis of the submitted performance. While the tasks of text localization and recognition seem to be relatively easy to tackle, it is interesting to observe the variety of ideas and approaches proposed for the information extraction task. According to the submissions' performance we believe there is still margin for improving information extraction performance, although the current dataset would have to grow substantially in following editions. Given the success of the SROIE competition evidenced by the wide interest generated and the healthy number of submissions from academic, research institutes and industry over different countries, we consider that the SROIE competition can evolve into a useful resource for the community, drawing further attention and promoting research and development efforts in this field. |
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DAG; 600.129 |
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Admin @ si @ HCH2019 |
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3338 |
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Yipeng Sun; Zihan Ni; Chee-Kheng Chng; Yuliang Liu; Canjie Luo; Chun Chet Ng; Junyu Han; Errui Ding; Jingtuo Liu; Dimosthenis Karatzas; Chee Seng Chan; Lianwen Jin |
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ICDAR 2019 Competition on Large-Scale Street View Text with Partial Labeling – RRC-LSVT |
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2019 |
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15th International Conference on Document Analysis and Recognition |
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1557-1562 |
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Robust text reading from street view images provides valuable information for various applications. Performance improvement of existing methods in such a challenging scenario heavily relies on the amount of fully annotated training data, which is costly and in-efficient to obtain. To scale up the amount of training data while keeping the labeling procedure cost-effective, this competition introduces a new challenge on Large-scale Street View Text with Partial Labeling (LSVT), providing 50, 000 and 400, 000 images in full and weak annotations, respectively. This competition aims to explore the abilities of state-of-the-art methods to detect and recognize text instances from large-scale street view images, closing the gap between research benchmarks and real applications. During the competition period, a total of 41 teams participated in the two proposed tasks with 132 valid submissions, ie, text detection and end-to-end text spotting. This paper includes dataset descriptions, task definitions, evaluation protocols and results summaries of the ICDAR 2019-LSVT challenge. |
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Sydney; Australia; September 2019 |
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ICDAR |
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DAG; 600.129; 600.121 |
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Admin @ si @ SNC2019 |
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3339 |
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