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Dimosthenis Karatzas, Faisal Shafait, Seiichi Uchida, Masakazu Iwamura, Lluis Gomez, Sergi Robles, et al. (2013). ICDAR 2013 Robust Reading Competition. In 12th International Conference on Document Analysis and Recognition (pp. 1484–1493).
Abstract: This report presents the final results of the ICDAR 2013 Robust Reading Competition. The competition is structured in three Challenges addressing text extraction in different application domains, namely born-digital images, real scene images and real-scene videos. The Challenges are organised around specific tasks covering text localisation, text segmentation and word recognition. The competition took place in the first quarter of 2013, and received a total of 42 submissions over the different tasks offered. This report describes the datasets and ground truth specification, details the performance evaluation protocols used and presents the final results along with a brief summary of the participating methods.
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Lluis Gomez. (2012). Perceptual Organization for Text Extraction in Natural Scenes (Vol. 173). Master's thesis, , .
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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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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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Fadi Dornaika, Alireza Bosaghzadeh, & Bogdan Raducanu. (2013). Efficient Graph Construction for Label Propagation based Multi-observation Face Recognition. In Human Behavior Understanding 4th International Workshop (Vol. 8212, pp. 124–135). Springer International Publishing.
Abstract: Workshop on Human Behavior Understanding
Human-machine interaction is a hot topic nowadays in the communities of multimedia and computer vision. In this context, face recognition algorithms (used as primary cue for a person’s identity assessment) work well under controlled conditions but degrade significantly when tested in real-world environments. Recently, graph-based label propagation for multi-observation face recognition was proposed. However, the associated graphs were constructed in an ad-hoc manner (e.g., using the KNN graph) that cannot adapt optimally to the data. In this paper, we propose a novel approach for efficient and adaptive graph construction that can be used for multi-observation face recognition as well as for other recognition problems. Experimental results performed on Honda video face database, show a distinct advantage of the proposed method over the standard graph construction methods.
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David Fernandez, Simone Marinai, Josep Llados, & Alicia Fornes. (2013). Contextual Word Spotting in Historical Manuscripts using Markov Logic Networks. In 2nd International Workshop on Historical Document Imaging and Processing (pp. 36–43).
Abstract: Natural languages can often be modelled by suitable grammars whose knowledge can improve the word spotting results. The implicit contextual information is even more useful when dealing with information that is intrinsically described as one collection of records. In this paper, we present one approach to word spotting which uses the contextual information of records to improve the results. The method relies on Markov Logic Networks to probabilistically model the relational organization of handwritten records. The performance has been evaluated on the Barcelona Marriages Dataset that contains structured handwritten records that summarize marriage information.
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A. M. Here, B. C. Lopez, Debora Gil, J. J. Camarero, & Jordi Martinez-Vilalta. (2013). A new software to analyse wood anatomical features in conifer species. In International Symposium on Wood Structure in Plant Biology and Ecology.
Abstract: International Symposium on Wood Structure in Plant Biology and Ecology
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Enric Marti, Ferran Poveda, Antoni Gurgui, Jaume Rocarias, & Debora Gil. (2013). Una propuesta de seguimiento, tutorías on line y evaluación en la metodología de Aprendizaje Basado en Proyectos.
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Debora Gil, Agnes Borras, Sergio Vera, & Miguel Angel Gonzalez Ballester. (2013). A Validation Benchmark for Assessment of Medial Surface Quality for Medical Applications. In 9th International Conference on Computer Vision Systems (Vol. 7963, pp. 334–343). LNCS. Springer Berlin Heidelberg.
Abstract: Confident use of medial surfaces in medical decision support systems requires evaluating their quality for detecting pathological deformations and describing anatomical volumes. Validation in the medical imaging field is a challenging task mainly due to the difficulties for getting consensual ground truth. In this paper we propose a validation benchmark for assessing medial surfaces in the context of medical applications. Our benchmark includes a home-made database of synthetic medial surfaces and volumes and specific scores for evaluating surface accuracy, its stability against volume deformations and its capabilities for accurate reconstruction of anatomical volumes.
Keywords: Medial Surfaces; Shape Representation; Medical Applications; Performance Evaluation
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Sergio Vera, Miguel Angel Gonzalez Ballester, & Debora Gil. (2013). Volumetric Anatomical Parameterization and Meshing for Inter-patient Liver Coordinate System Deffinition. In 16th International Conference on Medical Image Computing and Computer Assisted Intervention.
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Carles Sanchez, Jorge Bernal, Debora Gil, & F. Javier Sanchez. (2013). On-line lumen centre detection in gastrointestinal and respiratory endoscopy. In Klaus Miguel Angel and Drechsler Stefan and González Ballester Raj and Wesarg Cristina and Shekhar Marius George and Oyarzun Laura M. and L. Erdt (Ed.), Second International Workshop Clinical Image-Based Procedures (Vol. 8361, pp. 31–38). LNCS. Springer International Publishing.
Abstract: We present in this paper a novel lumen centre detection for gastrointestinal and respiratory endoscopic images. The proposed method is based on the appearance and geometry of the lumen, which we defined as the darkest image region which centre is a hub of image gradients. Experimental results validated on the first public annotated gastro-respiratory database prove the reliability of the method for a wide range of images (with precision over 95 %).
Keywords: Lumen centre detection; Bronchoscopy; Colonoscopy
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David Roche, Debora Gil, & Jesus Giraldo. (2013). Detecting loss of diversity for an efficient termination of EAs. In 15th International Symposium on Symbolic and Numeric Algorithms for Scientific Computing (pp. 561–566).
Abstract: Termination of Evolutionary Algorithms (EA) at its steady state so that useless iterations are not performed is a main point for its efficient application to black-box problems. Many EA algorithms evolve while there is still diversity in their population and, thus, they could be terminated by analyzing the behavior some measures of EA population diversity. This paper presents a numeric approximation to steady states that can be used to detect the moment EA population has lost its diversity for EA termination. Our condition has been applied to 3 EA paradigms based on diversity and a selection of functions
covering the properties most relevant for EA convergence.
Experiments show that our condition works regardless of the search space dimension and function landscape.
Keywords: EA termination; EA population diversity; EA steady state
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Hongxing Gao, Marçal Rusiñol, Dimosthenis Karatzas, Josep Llados, Tomokazu Sato, Masakazu Iwamura, et al. (2013). Key-region detection for document images -applications to administrative document retrieval. In 12th International Conference on Document Analysis and Recognition (pp. 230–234).
Abstract: In this paper we argue that a key-region detector designed to take into account the special characteristics of document images can result in the detection of less and more meaningful key-regions. We propose a fast key-region detector able to capture aspects of the structural information of the document, and demonstrate its efficiency by comparing against standard detectors in an administrative document retrieval scenario. We show that using the proposed detector results to a smaller number of detected key-regions and higher performance without any drop in speed compared to standard state of the art detectors.
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Andreas Fischer, Ching Y. Suen, Volkmar Frinken, Kaspar Riesen, & Horst Bunke. (2013). A Fast Matching Algorithm for Graph-Based Handwriting Recognition. In 9th IAPR – TC15 Workshop on Graph-based Representation in Pattern Recognition (Vol. 7877, pp. 194–203). LNCS. Springer Berlin Heidelberg.
Abstract: The recognition of unconstrained handwriting images is usually based on vectorial representation and statistical classification. Despite their high representational power, graphs are rarely used in this field due to a lack of efficient graph-based recognition methods. Recently, graph similarity features have been proposed to bridge the gap between structural representation and statistical classification by means of vector space embedding. This approach has shown a high performance in terms of accuracy but had shortcomings in terms of computational speed. The time complexity of the Hungarian algorithm that is used to approximate the edit distance between two handwriting graphs is demanding for a real-world scenario. In this paper, we propose a faster graph matching algorithm which is derived from the Hausdorff distance. On the historical Parzival database it is demonstrated that the proposed method achieves a speedup factor of 12.9 without significant loss in recognition accuracy.
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Andreas Fischer, Volkmar Frinken, Horst Bunke, & Ching Y. Suen. (2013). Improving HMM-Based Keyword Spotting with Character Language Models. In 12th International Conference on Document Analysis and Recognition (pp. 506–510).
Abstract: Facing high error rates and slow recognition speed for full text transcription of unconstrained handwriting images, keyword spotting is a promising alternative to locate specific search terms within scanned document images. We have previously proposed a learning-based method for keyword spotting using character hidden Markov models that showed a high performance when compared with traditional template image matching. In the lexicon-free approach pursued, only the text appearance was taken into account for recognition. In this paper, we integrate character n-gram language models into the spotting system in order to provide an additional language context. On the modern IAM database as well as the historical George Washington database, we demonstrate that character language models significantly improve the spotting performance.
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