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Author |
Laura Lopez-Fuentes; Andrew Bagdanov; Joost Van de Weijer; Harald Skinnemoen |
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Title |
Bandwidth Limited Object Recognition in High Resolution Imagery |
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Conference Article |
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2017 |
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IEEE Winter conference on Applications of Computer Vision |
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This paper proposes a novel method to optimize bandwidth usage for object detection in critical communication scenarios. We develop two operating models of active information seeking. The first model identifies promising regions in low resolution imagery and progressively requests higher resolution regions on which to perform recognition of higher semantic quality. The second model identifies promising regions in low resolution imagery while simultaneously predicting the approximate location of the object of higher semantic quality. From this general framework, we develop a car recognition system via identification of its license plate and evaluate the performance of both models on a car dataset that we introduce. Results are compared with traditional JPEG compression and demonstrate that our system saves up to one order of magnitude of bandwidth while sacrificing little in terms of recognition performance. |
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Santa Rosa; CA; USA; March 2017 |
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WACV |
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LAMP; 600.068; 600.109; 600.084; 600.106; 600.079; 600.120 |
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Admin @ si @ LBW2017 |
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2973 |
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Author |
Laura Lopez-Fuentes; Joost Van de Weijer; Marc Bolaños; Harald Skinnemoen |
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Title |
Multi-modal Deep Learning Approach for Flood Detection |
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Conference Article |
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2017 |
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MediaEval Benchmarking Initiative for Multimedia Evaluation |
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In this paper we propose a multi-modal deep learning approach to detect floods in social media posts. Social media posts normally contain some metadata and/or visual information, therefore in order to detect the floods we use this information. The model is based on a Convolutional Neural Network which extracts the visual features and a bidirectional Long Short-Term Memory network to extract the semantic features from the textual metadata. We validate the
method on images extracted from Flickr which contain both visual information and metadata and compare the results when using both, visual information only or metadata only. This work has been done in the context of the MediaEval Multimedia Satellite Task. |
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Dublin; Ireland; September 2017 |
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MediaEval |
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LAMP; 600.084; 600.109; 600.120 |
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Admin @ si @ LWB2017a |
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2974 |
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Author |
Quentin Angermann; Jorge Bernal; Cristina Sanchez Montes; Maroua Hammami; Gloria Fernandez Esparrach; Xavier Dray; Olivier Romain; F. Javier Sanchez; Aymeric Histace |
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Title |
Clinical Usability Quantification Of a Real-Time Polyp Detection Method In Videocolonoscopy |
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Conference Article |
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2017 |
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25th United European Gastroenterology Week |
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Barcelona, October 2017 |
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ESGE |
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MV; no menciona |
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Admin @ si @ ABS2017c |
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2978 |
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Maryam Asadi-Aghbolaghi; Albert Clapes; Marco Bellantonio; Hugo Jair Escalante; Victor Ponce; Xavier Baro; Isabelle Guyon; Shohreh Kasaei; Sergio Escalera |
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A survey on deep learning based approaches for action and gesture recognition in image sequences |
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Conference Article |
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2017 |
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12th IEEE International Conference on Automatic Face and Gesture Recognition |
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The interest in action and gesture recognition has grown considerably in the last years. In this paper, we present a survey on current deep learning methodologies for action and gesture recognition in image sequences. We introduce a taxonomy that summarizes important aspects of deep learning
for approaching both tasks. We review the details of the proposed architectures, fusion strategies, main datasets, and competitions.
We summarize and discuss the main works proposed so far with particular interest on how they treat the temporal dimension of data, discussing their main features and identify opportunities and challenges for future research. |
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Washington; USA; May 2017 |
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FG |
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HUPBA; no proj |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ ACB2017b |
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2982 |
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Author |
Ivet Rafegas; Maria Vanrell |
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Title |
Color representation in CNNs: parallelisms with biological vision |
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Conference Article |
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2017 |
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ICCV Workshop on Mutual Benefits ofr Cognitive and Computer Vision |
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Convolutional Neural Networks (CNNs) trained for object recognition tasks present representational capabilities approaching to primate visual systems [1]. This provides a computational framework to explore how image features
are efficiently represented. Here, we dissect a trained CNN
[2] to study how color is represented. We use a classical methodology used in physiology that is measuring index of selectivity of individual neurons to specific features. We use ImageNet Dataset [20] images and synthetic versions
of them to quantify color tuning properties of artificial neurons to provide a classification of the network population.
We conclude three main levels of color representation showing some parallelisms with biological visual systems: (a) a decomposition in a circular hue space to represent single color regions with a wider hue sampling beyond the first
layer (V2), (b) the emergence of opponent low-dimensional spaces in early stages to represent color edges (V1); and (c) a strong entanglement between color and shape patterns representing object-parts (e.g. wheel of a car), objectshapes (e.g. faces) or object-surrounds configurations (e.g. blue sky surrounding an object) in deeper layers (V4 or IT). |
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Venice; Italy; October 2017 |
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ICCV-MBCC |
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CIC; 600.087; 600.051 |
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no |
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Call Number |
Admin @ si @ RaV2017 |
Serial |
2984 |
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Author |
Antonio Lopez; Gabriel Villalonga; Laura Sellart; German Ros; David Vazquez; Jiaolong Xu; Javier Marin; Azadeh S. Mozafari |
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Title |
Training my car to see using virtual worlds |
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Journal Article |
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Year |
2017 |
Publication |
Image and Vision Computing |
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IMAVIS |
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38 |
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102-118 |
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Computer vision technologies are at the core of different advanced driver assistance systems (ADAS) and will play a key role in oncoming autonomous vehicles too. One of the main challenges for such technologies is to perceive the driving environment, i.e. to detect and track relevant driving information in a reliable manner (e.g. pedestrians in the vehicle route, free space to drive through). Nowadays it is clear that machine learning techniques are essential for developing such a visual perception for driving. In particular, the standard working pipeline consists of collecting data (i.e. on-board images), manually annotating the data (e.g. drawing bounding boxes around pedestrians), learning a discriminative data representation taking advantage of such annotations (e.g. a deformable part-based model, a deep convolutional neural network), and then assessing the reliability of such representation with the acquired data. In the last two decades most of the research efforts focused on representation learning (first, designing descriptors and learning classifiers; later doing it end-to-end). Hence, collecting data and, especially, annotating it, is essential for learning good representations. While this has been the case from the very beginning, only after the disruptive appearance of deep convolutional neural networks that it became a serious issue due to their data hungry nature. In this context, the problem is that manual data annotation is a tiresome work prone to errors. Accordingly, in the late 00’s we initiated a research line consisting of training visual models using photo-realistic computer graphics, especially focusing on assisted and autonomous driving. In this paper, we summarize such a work and show how it has become a new tendency with increasing acceptance. |
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ADAS; 600.118 |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ LVS2017 |
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2985 |
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Author |
Hana Jarraya; Oriol Ramos Terrades; Josep Llados |
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Title |
Learning structural loss parameters on graph embedding applied on symbolic graphs |
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Conference Article |
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2017 |
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12th IAPR International Workshop on Graphics Recognition |
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We propose an amelioration of proposed Graph Embedding (GEM) method in previous work that takes advantages of structural pattern representation and the structured distortion. it models an Attributed Graph (AG) as a Probabilistic Graphical Model (PGM). Then, it learns the parameters of this PGM presented by a vector, as new signature of AG in a lower dimensional vectorial space. We focus to adapt the structured learning algorithm via 1_slack formulation with a suitable risk function, called Graph Edit Distance (GED). It defines the dissimilarity of the ground truth and predicted graph labels. It determines by the error tolerant graph matching using bipartite graph matching algorithm. We apply Structured Support Vector Machines (SSVM) to process classification task. During our experiments, we got our results on the GREC dataset. |
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Kyoto; Japan; November 2017 |
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GREC |
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DAG; 600.097; 600.121 |
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no |
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Call Number |
Admin @ si @ JRL2017b |
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3073 |
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Author |
Arash Akbarinia; Raquel Gil Rodriguez; C. Alejandro Parraga |
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Title |
Colour Constancy: Biologically-inspired Contrast Variant Pooling Mechanism |
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Conference Article |
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2017 |
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28th British Machine Vision Conference |
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Pooling is a ubiquitous operation in image processing algorithms that allows for higher-level processes to collect relevant low-level features from a region of interest. Currently, max-pooling is one of the most commonly used operators in the computational literature. However, it can lack robustness to outliers due to the fact that it relies merely on the peak of a function. Pooling mechanisms are also present in the primate visual cortex where neurons of higher cortical areas pool signals from lower ones. The receptive fields of these neurons have been shown to vary according to the contrast by aggregating signals over a larger region in the presence of low contrast stimuli. We hypothesise that this contrast-variant-pooling mechanism can address some of the shortcomings of maxpooling. We modelled this contrast variation through a histogram clipping in which the percentage of pooled signal is inversely proportional to the local contrast of an image. We tested our hypothesis by applying it to the phenomenon of colour constancy where a number of popular algorithms utilise a max-pooling step (e.g. White-Patch, Grey-Edge and Double-Opponency). For each of these methods, we investigated the consequences of replacing their original max-pooling by the proposed contrast-variant-pooling. Our experiments on three colour constancy benchmark datasets suggest that previous results can significantly improve by adopting a contrast-variant-pooling mechanism. |
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London; September 2017 |
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BMVC |
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NEUROBIT; 600.068; 600.072 |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ AGP2017 |
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2992 |
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Author |
Arash Akbarinia; C. Alejandro Parraga; Marta Exposito; Bogdan Raducanu; Xavier Otazu |
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Can biological solutions help computers detect symmetry? |
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Conference Article |
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2017 |
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40th European Conference on Visual Perception |
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Berlin; Germany; August 2017 |
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ECVP |
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NEUROBIT |
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Admin @ si @ APE2017 |
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2995 |
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J. Chazalon; P. Gomez-Kramer; Jean-Christophe Burie; M.Coustaty; S.Eskenazi; Muhammad Muzzamil Luqman; Nibal Nayef; Marçal Rusiñol; N. Sidere; Jean-Marc Ogier |
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SmartDoc 2017 Video Capture: Mobile Document Acquisition in Video Mode |
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Conference Article |
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2017 |
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1st International Workshop on Open Services and Tools for Document Analysis |
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As mobile document acquisition using smartphones is getting more and more common, along with the continuous improvement of mobile devices (both in terms of computing power and image quality), we can wonder to which extent mobile phones can replace desktop scanners. Modern applications can cope with perspective distortion and normalize the contrast of a document page captured with a smartphone, and in some cases like bottle labels or posters, smartphones even have the advantage of allowing the acquisition of non-flat or large documents. However, several cases remain hard to handle, such as reflective documents (identity cards, badges, glossy magazine cover, etc.) or large documents for which some regions require an important amount of detail. This paper introduces the SmartDoc 2017 benchmark (named “SmartDoc Video Capture”), which aims at
assessing whether capturing documents using the video mode of a smartphone could solve those issues. The task under evaluation is both a stitching and a reconstruction problem, as the user can move the device over different parts of the document to capture details or try to erase highlights. The material released consists of a dataset, an evaluation method and the associated tool, a sample method, and the tools required to extend the dataset. All the components are released publicly under very permissive licenses, and we particularly cared about maximizing the ease of
understanding, usage and improvement. |
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Kyoto; Japan; November 2017 |
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ICDAR-OST |
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DAG; 600.084; 600.121 |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ CGB2017 |
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2997 |
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Lluis Gomez; Marçal Rusiñol; Dimosthenis Karatzas |
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LSDE: Levenshtein Space Deep Embedding for Query-by-string Word Spotting |
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2017 |
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14th International Conference on Document Analysis and Recognition |
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n this paper we present the LSDE string representation and its application to handwritten word spotting. LSDE is a novel embedding approach for representing strings that learns a space in which distances between projected points are correlated with the Levenshtein edit distance between the original strings.
We show how such a representation produces a more semantically interpretable retrieval from the user’s perspective than other state of the art ones such as PHOC and DCToW. We also conduct a preliminary handwritten word spotting experiment on the George Washington dataset. |
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Kyoto; Japan; November 2017 |
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ICDAR |
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DAG; 600.084; 600.121 |
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Admin @ si @ GRK2017 |
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2999 |
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E. Royer; J. Chazalon; Marçal Rusiñol; F. Bouchara |
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Benchmarking Keypoint Filtering Approaches for Document Image Matching |
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Conference Article |
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2017 |
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14th International Conference on Document Analysis and Recognition |
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Best Poster Award.
Reducing the amount of keypoints used to index an image is particularly interesting to control processing time and memory usage in real-time document image matching applications, like augmented documents or smartphone applications. This paper benchmarks two keypoint selection methods on a task consisting of reducing keypoint sets extracted from document images, while preserving detection and segmentation accuracy. We first study the different forms of keypoint filtering, and we introduce the use of the CORE selection method on
keypoints extracted from document images. Then, we extend a previously published benchmark by including evaluations of the new method, by adding the SURF-BRISK detection/description scheme, and by reporting processing speeds. Evaluations are conducted on the publicly available dataset of ICDAR2015 SmartDOC challenge 1. Finally, we prove that reducing the original keypoint set is always feasible and can be beneficial
not only to processing speed but also to accuracy. |
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Kyoto; Japan; November 2017 |
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ICDAR |
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DAG; 600.084; 600.121 |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ RCR2017 |
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3000 |
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Author |
David Aldavert; Marçal Rusiñol; Ricardo Toledo |
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Title |
Automatic Static/Variable Content Separation in Administrative Document Images |
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Conference Article |
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2017 |
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14th International Conference on Document Analysis and Recognition |
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In this paper we present an automatic method for separating static and variable content from administrative document images. An alignment approach is able to unsupervisedly build probabilistic templates from a set of examples of the same document kind. Such templates define which is the likelihood of every pixel of being either static or variable content. In the extraction step, the same alignment technique is used to match
an incoming image with the template and to locate the positions where variable fields appear. We validate our approach on the public NIST Structured Tax Forms Dataset. |
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Kyoto; Japan; November 2017 |
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ICDAR |
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Notes |
DAG; 600.084; 600.121 |
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no |
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Call Number |
Admin @ si @ ART2017 |
Serial |
3001 |
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Author |
Leonardo Galteri; Dena Bazazian; Lorenzo Seidenari; Marco Bertini; Andrew Bagdanov; Anguelos Nicolaou; Dimosthenis Karatzas; Alberto del Bimbo |
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Title |
Reading Text in the Wild from Compressed Images |
Type |
Conference Article |
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Year |
2017 |
Publication |
1st International workshop on Egocentric Perception, Interaction and Computing |
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Abstract |
Reading text in the wild is gaining attention in the computer vision community. Images captured in the wild are almost always compressed to varying degrees, depending on application context, and this compression introduces artifacts
that distort image content into the captured images. In this paper we investigate the impact these compression artifacts have on text localization and recognition in the wild. We also propose a deep Convolutional Neural Network (CNN) that can eliminate text-specific compression artifacts and which leads to an improvement in text recognition. Experimental results on the ICDAR-Challenge4 dataset demonstrate that compression artifacts have a significant
impact on text localization and recognition and that our approach yields an improvement in both – especially at high compression rates. |
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Address |
Venice; Italy; October 2017 |
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ICCV - EPIC |
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Notes |
DAG; 600.084; 600.121 |
Approved |
no |
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Call Number |
Admin @ si @ GBS2017 |
Serial |
3006 |
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Permanent link to this record |
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Author |
Andrei Polzounov; Artsiom Ablavatski; Sergio Escalera; Shijian Lu; Jianfei Cai |
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Title |
WordFences: Text Localization and Recognition |
Type |
Conference Article |
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Year |
2017 |
Publication |
24th International Conference on Image Processing |
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Beijing; China; September 2017 |
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ICIP |
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Notes |
HUPBA; no menciona |
Approved |
no |
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Call Number |
Admin @ si @ PAE2017 |
Serial |
3007 |
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Permanent link to this record |