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Author |
Aymen Azaza |
![find book details (via ISBN) isbn](img/isbn.gif)
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Title |
Context, Motion and Semantic Information for Computational Saliency |
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Book Whole |
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Year |
2018 |
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PhD Thesis, Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona-CVC |
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The main objective of this thesis is to highlight the salient object in an image or in a video sequence. We address three important—but in our opinion
insufficiently investigated—aspects of saliency detection. Firstly, we start
by extending previous research on saliency which explicitly models the information provided from the context. Then, we show the importance of
explicit context modelling for saliency estimation. Several important works
in saliency are based on the usage of object proposals. However, these methods
focus on the saliency of the object proposal itself and ignore the context.
To introduce context in such saliency approaches, we couple every object
proposal with its direct context. This allows us to evaluate the importance
of the immediate surround (context) for its saliency. We propose several
saliency features which are computed from the context proposals including
features based on omni-directional and horizontal context continuity. Secondly,
we investigate the usage of top-downmethods (high-level semantic
information) for the task of saliency prediction since most computational
methods are bottom-up or only include few semantic classes. We propose
to consider a wider group of object classes. These objects represent important
semantic information which we will exploit in our saliency prediction
approach. Thirdly, we develop a method to detect video saliency by computing
saliency from supervoxels and optical flow. In addition, we apply the
context features developed in this thesis for video saliency detection. The
method combines shape and motion features with our proposed context
features. To summarize, we prove that extending object proposals with their
direct context improves the task of saliency detection in both image and
video data. Also the importance of the semantic information in saliency
estimation is evaluated. Finally, we propose a newmotion feature to detect
saliency in video data. The three proposed novelties are evaluated on standard
saliency benchmark datasets and are shown to improve with respect to
state-of-the-art. |
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October 2018 |
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Ph.D. thesis |
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Ediciones Graficas Rey |
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Joost Van de Weijer;Ali Douik |
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978-84-945373-9-4 |
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LAMP; 600.120 |
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no |
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Call Number |
Admin @ si @ Aza2018 |
Serial |
3218 |
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Author |
Dena Bazazian |
![find book details (via ISBN) isbn](img/isbn.gif)
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Title |
Fully Convolutional Networks for Text Understanding in Scene Images |
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Book Whole |
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Year |
2018 |
Publication |
PhD Thesis, Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona-CVC |
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Text understanding in scene images has gained plenty of attention in the computer vision community and it is an important task in many applications as text carries semantically rich information about scene content and context. For instance, reading text in a scene can be applied to autonomous driving, scene understanding or assisting visually impaired people. The general aim of scene text understanding is to localize and recognize text in scene images. Text regions are first localized in the original image by a trained detector model and afterwards fed into a recognition module. The tasks of localization and recognition are highly correlated since an inaccurate localization can affect the recognition task.
The main purpose of this thesis is to devise efficient methods for scene text understanding. We investigate how the latest results on deep learning can advance text understanding pipelines. Recently, Fully Convolutional Networks (FCNs) and derived methods have achieved a significant performance on semantic segmentation and pixel level classification tasks. Therefore, we took benefit of the strengths of FCN approaches in order to detect text in natural scenes. In this thesis we have focused on two challenging tasks of scene text understanding which are Text Detection and Word Spotting. For the task of text detection, we have proposed an efficient text proposal technique in scene images. We have considered the Text Proposals method as the baseline which is an approach to reduce the search space of possible text regions in an image. In order to improve the Text Proposals method we combined it with Fully Convolutional Networks to efficiently reduce the number of proposals while maintaining the same level of accuracy and thus gaining a significant speed up. Our experiments demonstrate that this text proposal approach yields significantly higher recall rates than the line based text localization techniques, while also producing better-quality localization. We have also applied this technique on compressed images such as videos from wearable egocentric cameras. For the task of word spotting, we have introduced a novel mid-level word representation method. We have proposed a technique to create and exploit an intermediate representation of images based on text attributes which roughly correspond to character probability maps. Our representation extends the concept of Pyramidal Histogram Of Characters (PHOC) by exploiting Fully Convolutional Networks to derive a pixel-wise mapping of the character distribution within candidate word regions. We call this representation the Soft-PHOC. Furthermore, we show how to use Soft-PHOC descriptors for word spotting tasks through an efficient text line proposal algorithm. To evaluate the detected text, we propose a novel line based evaluation along with the classic bounding box based approach. We test our method on incidental scene text images which comprises real-life scenarios such as urban scenes. The importance of incidental scene text images is due to the complexity of backgrounds, perspective, variety of script and language, short text and little linguistic context. All of these factors together makes the incidental scene text images challenging. |
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November 2018 |
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Ph.D. thesis |
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Publisher |
Ediciones Graficas Rey |
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Editor |
Dimosthenis Karatzas;Andrew Bagdanov |
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978-84-948531-1-1 |
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DAG; 600.121 |
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no |
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Call Number |
Admin @ si @ Baz2018 |
Serial |
3220 |
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Author |
Anjan Dutta; Josep Llados; Horst Bunke; Umapada Pal |
![download PDF file pdf](img/file_PDF.gif)
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Title |
Product graph-based higher order contextual similarities for inexact subgraph matching |
Type |
Journal Article |
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Year |
2018 |
Publication |
Pattern Recognition |
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PR |
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76 |
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596-611 |
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Many algorithms formulate graph matching as an optimization of an objective function of pairwise quantification of nodes and edges of two graphs to be matched. Pairwise measurements usually consider local attributes but disregard contextual information involved in graph structures. We address this issue by proposing contextual similarities between pairs of nodes. This is done by considering the tensor product graph (TPG) of two graphs to be matched, where each node is an ordered pair of nodes of the operand graphs. Contextual similarities between a pair of nodes are computed by accumulating weighted walks (normalized pairwise similarities) terminating at the corresponding paired node in TPG. Once the contextual similarities are obtained, we formulate subgraph matching as a node and edge selection problem in TPG. We use contextual similarities to construct an objective function and optimize it with a linear programming approach. Since random walk formulation through TPG takes into account higher order information, it is not a surprise that we obtain more reliable similarities and better discrimination among the nodes and edges. Experimental results shown on synthetic as well as real benchmarks illustrate that higher order contextual similarities increase discriminating power and allow one to find approximate solutions to the subgraph matching problem. |
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DAG; 602.167; 600.097; 600.121 |
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Call Number |
Admin @ si @ DLB2018 |
Serial |
3083 |
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Permanent link to this record |
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Author |
Hans Stadthagen-Gonzalez; Luis Lopez; M. Carmen Parafita; C. Alejandro Parraga |
![goto web page (via DOI) doi](img/doi.gif)
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Title |
Using two-alternative forced choice tasks and Thurstone law of comparative judgments for code-switching research |
Type |
Book Chapter |
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Year |
2018 |
Publication |
Linguistic Approaches to Bilingualism |
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67-97 |
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two-alternative forced choice and Thurstone's law; acceptability judgment; code-switching |
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This article argues that 2-alternative forced choice tasks and Thurstone’s law of comparative judgments (Thurstone, 1927) are well suited to investigate code-switching competence by means of acceptability judgments. We compare this method with commonly used Likert scale judgments and find that the 2-alternative forced choice task provides granular details that remain invisible in a Likert scale experiment. In order to compare and contrast both methods, we examined the syntactic phenomenon usually referred to as the Adjacency Condition (AC) (apud Stowell, 1981), which imposes a condition of adjacency between verb and object. Our interest in the AC comes from the fact that it is a subtle feature of English grammar which is absent in Spanish, and this provides an excellent springboard to create minimal code-switched pairs that allow us to formulate a clear research question that can be tested using both methods. |
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NEUROBIT; no menciona |
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no |
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Call Number |
Admin @ si @ SLP2018 |
Serial |
2994 |
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Author |
Raul Gomez; Lluis Gomez; Jaume Gibert; Dimosthenis Karatzas |
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Title |
Learning to Learn from Web Data through Deep Semantic Embeddings |
Type |
Conference Article |
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Year |
2018 |
Publication |
15th European Conference on Computer Vision Workshops |
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11134 |
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514-529 |
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In this paper we propose to learn a multimodal image and text embedding from Web and Social Media data, aiming to leverage the semantic knowledge learnt in the text domain and transfer it to a visual model for semantic image retrieval. We demonstrate that the pipeline can learn from images with associated text without supervision and perform a thourough analysis of five different text embeddings in three different benchmarks. We show that the embeddings learnt with Web and Social Media data have competitive performances over supervised methods in the text based image retrieval task, and we clearly outperform state of the art in the MIRFlickr dataset when training in the target data. Further we demonstrate how semantic multimodal image retrieval can be performed using the learnt embeddings, going beyond classical instance-level retrieval problems. Finally, we present a new dataset, InstaCities1M, composed by Instagram images and their associated texts that can be used for fair comparison of image-text embeddings. |
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Munich; Alemanya; September 2018 |
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ECCVW |
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DAG; 600.129; 601.338; 600.121 |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ GGG2018a |
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3175 |
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Permanent link to this record |
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Author |
Arka Ujjal Dey; Suman Ghosh; Ernest Valveny |
![download PDF file pdf](img/file_PDF.gif)
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Title |
Don't only Feel Read: Using Scene text to understand advertisements |
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Conference Article |
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2018 |
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IEEE/CVF Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition Workshops |
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We propose a framework for automated classification of Advertisement Images, using not just Visual features but also Textual cues extracted from embedded text. Our approach takes inspiration from the assumption that Ad images contain meaningful textual content, that can provide discriminative semantic interpretetion, and can thus aid in classifcation tasks. To this end, we develop a framework using off-the-shelf components, and demonstrate the effectiveness of Textual cues in semantic Classfication tasks. |
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Salt Lake City; Utah; USA; June 2018 |
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CVPRW |
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DAG; 600.121; 600.129 |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ DGV2018 |
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3551 |
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Author |
Miguel Angel Bautista; Oriol Pujol; Fernando De la Torre; Sergio Escalera |
![download PDF file pdf](img/file_PDF.gif)
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Title |
Error-Correcting Factorization |
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Journal Article |
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Year |
2018 |
Publication |
IEEE Transactions on Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence |
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TPAMI |
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40 |
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2388-2401 |
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Error Correcting Output Codes (ECOC) is a successful technique in multi-class classification, which is a core problem in Pattern Recognition and Machine Learning. A major advantage of ECOC over other methods is that the multi- class problem is decoupled into a set of binary problems that are solved independently. However, literature defines a general error-correcting capability for ECOCs without analyzing how it distributes among classes, hindering a deeper analysis of pair-wise error-correction. To address these limitations this paper proposes an Error-Correcting Factorization (ECF) method, our contribution is three fold: (I) We propose a novel representation of the error-correction capability, called the design matrix, that enables us to build an ECOC on the basis of allocating correction to pairs of classes. (II) We derive the optimal code length of an ECOC using rank properties of the design matrix. (III) ECF is formulated as a discrete optimization problem, and a relaxed solution is found using an efficient constrained block coordinate descent approach. (IV) Enabled by the flexibility introduced with the design matrix we propose to allocate the error-correction on classes that are prone to confusion. Experimental results in several databases show that when allocating the error-correction to confusable classes ECF outperforms state-of-the-art approaches. |
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0162-8828 |
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HuPBA; no menciona |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ BPT2018 |
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3015 |
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Author |
Maedeh Aghaei; Mariella Dimiccoli; C. Canton-Ferrer; Petia Radeva |
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Title |
Towards social pattern characterization from egocentric photo-streams |
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Journal Article |
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2018 |
Publication |
Computer Vision and Image Understanding |
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CVIU |
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171 |
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104-117 |
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Social pattern characterization; Social signal extraction; Lifelogging; Convolutional and recurrent neural networks |
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Following the increasingly popular trend of social interaction analysis in egocentric vision, this article presents a comprehensive pipeline for automatic social pattern characterization of a wearable photo-camera user. The proposed framework relies merely on the visual analysis of egocentric photo-streams and consists of three major steps. The first step is to detect social interactions of the user where the impact of several social signals on the task is explored. The detected social events are inspected in the second step for categorization into different social meetings. These two steps act at event-level where each potential social event is modeled as a multi-dimensional time-series, whose dimensions correspond to a set of relevant features for each task; finally, LSTM is employed to classify the time-series. The last step of the framework is to characterize social patterns of the user. Our goal is to quantify the duration, the diversity and the frequency of the user social relations in various social situations. This goal is achieved by the discovery of recurrences of the same people across the whole set of social events related to the user. Experimental evaluation over EgoSocialStyle – the proposed dataset in this work, and EGO-GROUP demonstrates promising results on the task of social pattern characterization from egocentric photo-streams. |
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MILAB; no proj |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ ADC2018 |
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3022 |
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Author |
Debora Gil; Rosa Maria Ortiz; Carles Sanchez; Antoni Rosell |
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Title |
Objective endoscopic measurements of central airway stenosis. A pilot study |
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Journal Article |
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2018 |
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Respiration |
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RES |
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95 |
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63–69 |
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Bronchoscopy; Tracheal stenosis; Airway stenosis; Computer-assisted analysis |
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Endoscopic estimation of the degree of stenosis in central airway obstruction is subjective and highly variable. Objective: To determine the benefits of using SENSA (System for Endoscopic Stenosis Assessment), an image-based computational software, for obtaining objective stenosis index (SI) measurements among a group of expert bronchoscopists and general pulmonologists. Methods: A total of 7 expert bronchoscopists and 7 general pulmonologists were enrolled to validate SENSA usage. The SI obtained by the physicians and by SENSA were compared with a reference SI to set their precision in SI computation. We used SENSA to efficiently obtain this reference SI in 11 selected cases of benign stenosis. A Web platform with three user-friendly microtasks was designed to gather the data. The users had to visually estimate the SI from videos with and without contours of the normal and the obstructed area provided by SENSA. The users were able to modify the SENSA contours to define the reference SI using morphometric bronchoscopy. Results: Visual SI estimation accuracy was associated with neither bronchoscopic experience (p = 0.71) nor the contours of the normal and the obstructed area provided by the system (p = 0.13). The precision of the SI by SENSA was 97.7% (95% CI: 92.4-103.7), which is significantly better than the precision of the SI by visual estimation (p < 0.001), with an improvement by at least 15%. Conclusion: SENSA provides objective SI measurements with a precision of up to 99.5%, which can be calculated from any bronchoscope using an affordable scalable interface. Providing normal and obstructed contours on bronchoscopic videos does not improve physicians' visual estimation of the SI. |
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IAM; 600.075; 600.096; 600.145 |
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Admin @ si @ GOS2018 |
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3043 |
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Jose M. Armingol; Jorge Alfonso; Nourdine Aliane; Miguel Clavijo; Sergio Campos-Cordobes; Arturo de la Escalera; Javier del Ser; Javier Fernandez; Fernando Garcia; Felipe Jimenez; Antonio Lopez; Mario Mata |
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Title |
Environmental Perception for Intelligent Vehicles |
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2018 |
Publication |
Intelligent Vehicles. Enabling Technologies and Future Developments |
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23–101 |
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Computer vision; laser techniques; data fusion; advanced driver assistance systems; traffic monitoring systems; intelligent vehicles |
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Environmental perception represents, because of its complexity, a challenge for Intelligent Transport Systems due to the great variety of situations and different elements that can happen in road environments and that must be faced by these systems. In connection with this, so far there are a variety of solutions as regards sensors and methods, so the results of precision, complexity, cost, or computational load obtained by these works are different. In this chapter some systems based on computer vision and laser techniques are presented. Fusion methods are also introduced in order to provide advanced and reliable perception systems. |
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ADAS; 600.118 |
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Admin @ si @AAA2018 |
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3046 |
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Author |
Antonio Lopez; David Vazquez; Gabriel Villalonga |
![goto web page url](img/www.gif)
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Title |
Data for Training Models, Domain Adaptation |
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2018 |
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Intelligent Vehicles. Enabling Technologies and Future Developments |
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395–436 |
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Driving simulator; hardware; software; interface; traffic simulation; macroscopic simulation; microscopic simulation; virtual data; training data |
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Simulation can enable several developments in the field of intelligent vehicles. This chapter is divided into three main subsections. The first one deals with driving simulators. The continuous improvement of hardware performance is a well-known fact that is allowing the development of more complex driving simulators. The immersion in the simulation scene is increased by high fidelity feedback to the driver. In the second subsection, traffic simulation is explained as well as how it can be used for intelligent transport systems. Finally, it is rather clear that sensor-based perception and action must be based on data-driven algorithms. Simulation could provide data to train and test algorithms that are afterwards implemented in vehicles. These tools are explained in the third subsection. |
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ADAS; 600.118 |
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Admin @ si @ LVV2018 |
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3047 |
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Sounak Dey; Anjan Dutta; Juan Ignacio Toledo; Suman Ghosh; Josep Llados; Umapada Pal |
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SigNet: Convolutional Siamese Network for Writer Independent Offline Signature Verification |
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Miscellaneous |
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2018 |
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Arxiv |
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Offline signature verification is one of the most challenging tasks in biometrics and document forensics. Unlike other verification problems, it needs to model minute but critical details between genuine and forged signatures, because a skilled falsification might often resembles the real signature with small deformation. This verification task is even harder in writer independent scenarios which is undeniably fiscal for realistic cases. In this paper, we model an offline writer independent signature verification task with a convolutional Siamese network. Siamese networks are twin networks with shared weights, which can be trained to learn a feature space where similar observations are placed in proximity. This is achieved by exposing the network to a pair of similar and dissimilar observations and minimizing the Euclidean distance between similar pairs while simultaneously maximizing it between dissimilar pairs. Experiments conducted on cross-domain datasets emphasize the capability of our network to model forgery in different languages (scripts) and handwriting styles. Moreover, our designed Siamese network, named SigNet, exceeds the state-of-the-art results on most of the benchmark signature datasets, which paves the way for further research in this direction. |
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DAG; 600.097; 600.121 |
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Admin @ si @ DDT2018 |
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3085 |
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Dena Bazazian; Dimosthenis Karatzas; Andrew Bagdanov |
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Soft-PHOC Descriptor for End-to-End Word Spotting in Egocentric Scene Images |
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2018 |
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International Workshop on Egocentric Perception, Interaction and Computing at ECCV |
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Word spotting in natural scene images has many applications in scene understanding and visual assistance. We propose Soft-PHOC, an intermediate representation of images based on character probability maps. Our representation extends the concept of the Pyramidal Histogram Of Characters (PHOC) by exploiting Fully Convolutional Networks to derive a pixel-wise mapping of the character distribution within candidate word regions. We show how to use our descriptors for word spotting tasks in egocentric camera streams through an efficient text line proposal algorithm. This is based on the Hough Transform over character attribute maps followed by scoring using Dynamic Time Warping (DTW). We evaluate our results on ICDAR 2015 Challenge 4 dataset of incidental scene text captured by an egocentric camera. |
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Munich; Alemanya; September 2018 |
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ECCVW |
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DAG; 600.129; 600.121; |
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Admin @ si @ BKB2018b |
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3174 |
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Jorge Bernal; Aymeric Histace; Marc Masana; Quentin Angermann; Cristina Sanchez Montes; Cristina Rodriguez de Miguel; Maroua Hammami; Ana Garcia Rodriguez; Henry Cordova; Olivier Romain; Gloria Fernandez Esparrach; Xavier Dray; F. Javier Sanchez |
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Polyp Detection Benchmark in Colonoscopy Videos using GTCreator: A Novel Fully Configurable Tool for Easy and Fast Annotation of Image Databases |
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2018 |
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32nd International Congress and Exhibition on Computer Assisted Radiology & Surgery |
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CARS |
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ISE; MV; 600.119 |
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Admin @ si @ BHM2018 |
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3089 |
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Katerine Diaz; Francesc J. Ferri; Aura Hernandez-Sabate |
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An overview of incremental feature extraction methods based on linear subspaces |
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Journal Article |
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2018 |
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Knowledge-Based Systems |
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KBS |
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145 |
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219-235 |
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With the massive explosion of machine learning in our day-to-day life, incremental and adaptive learning has become a major topic, crucial to keep up-to-date and improve classification models and their corresponding feature extraction processes. This paper presents a categorized overview of incremental feature extraction based on linear subspace methods which aim at incorporating new information to the already acquired knowledge without accessing previous data. Specifically, this paper focuses on those linear dimensionality reduction methods with orthogonal matrix constraints based on global loss function, due to the extensive use of their batch approaches versus other linear alternatives. Thus, we cover the approaches derived from Principal Components Analysis, Linear Discriminative Analysis and Discriminative Common Vector methods. For each basic method, its incremental approaches are differentiated according to the subspace model and matrix decomposition involved in the updating process. Besides this categorization, several updating strategies are distinguished according to the amount of data used to update and to the fact of considering a static or dynamic number of classes. Moreover, the specific role of the size/dimension ratio in each method is considered. Finally, computational complexity, experimental setup and the accuracy rates according to published results are compiled and analyzed, and an empirical evaluation is done to compare the best approach of each kind. |
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0950-7051 |
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ADAS; 600.118 |
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Admin @ si @ DFH2018 |
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3090 |
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