Firat Ismailoglu, Ida G. Sprinkhuizen-Kuyper, Evgueni Smirnov, Sergio Escalera, & Ralf Peeters. (2015). Fractional Programming Weighted Decoding for Error-Correcting Output Codes. In Multiple Classifier Systems, Proceedings of 12th International Workshop , MCS 2015 (pp. 38–50). Springer International Publishing.
Abstract: In order to increase the classification performance obtained using Error-Correcting Output Codes designs (ECOC), introducing weights in the decoding phase of the ECOC has attracted a lot of interest. In this work, we present a method for ECOC designs that focuses on increasing hypothesis margin on the data samples given a base classifier. While achieving this, we implicitly reward the base classifiers with high performance, whereas punish those with low performance. The resulting objective function is of the fractional programming type and we deal with this problem through the Dinkelbach’s Algorithm. The conducted tests over well known UCI datasets show that the presented method is superior to the unweighted decoding and that it outperforms the results of the state-of-the-art weighted decoding methods in most of the performed experiments.
|
Isabelle Guyon, Kristin Bennett, Gavin Cawley, Hugo Jair Escalante, Sergio Escalera, Tin Kam Ho, et al. (2015). Design of the 2015 ChaLearn AutoML Challenge. In IEEE International Joint Conference on Neural Networks IJCNN2015.
Abstract: ChaLearn is organizing for IJCNN 2015 an Automatic Machine Learning challenge (AutoML) to solve classification and regression problems from given feature representations, without any human intervention. This is a challenge with code
submission: the code submitted can be executed automatically on the challenge servers to train and test learning machines on new datasets. However, there is no obligation to submit code. Half of the prizes can be won by just submitting prediction results.
There are six rounds (Prep, Novice, Intermediate, Advanced, Expert, and Master) in which datasets of progressive difficulty are introduced (5 per round). There is no requirement to participate in previous rounds to enter a new round. The rounds alternate AutoML phases in which submitted code is “blind tested” on
datasets the participants have never seen before, and Tweakathon phases giving time (' 1 month) to the participants to improve their methods by tweaking their code on those datasets. This challenge will push the state-of-the-art in fully automatic machine learning on a wide range of problems taken from real world
applications. The platform will remain available beyond the termination of the challenge: http://codalab.org/AutoML
|
Frederic Sampedro, Sergio Escalera, Anna Domenech, & Ignasi Carrio. (2014). A computational framework for cancer response assessment based on oncological PET-CT scans. CBM - Computers in Biology and Medicine, 55, 92–99.
Abstract: In this work we present a comprehensive computational framework to help in the clinical assessment of cancer response from a pair of time consecutive oncological PET-CT scans. In this scenario, the design and implementation of a supervised machine learning system to predict and quantify cancer progression or response conditions by introducing a novel feature set that models the underlying clinical context is described. Performance results in 100 clinical cases (corresponding to 200 whole body PET-CT scans) in comparing expert-based visual analysis and classifier decision making show up to 70% accuracy within a completely automatic pipeline and 90% accuracy when providing the system with expert-guided PET tumor segmentation masks.
Keywords: Computer aided diagnosis; Nuclear medicine; Machine learning; Image processing; Quantitative analysis
|
Andres Traumann, Gholamreza Anbarjafari, & Sergio Escalera. (2015). Accurate 3D Measurement Using Optical Depth Information. EL - Electronic Letters, 51(18), 1420–1422.
Abstract: A novel three-dimensional measurement technique is proposed. The methodology consists in mapping from the screen coordinates reported by the optical camera to the real world, and integrating distance gradients from the beginning to the end point, while also minimising the error through fitting pixel locations to a smooth curve. The results demonstrate accuracy of less than half a centimetre using Microsoft Kinect II.
|
Isabelle Guyon, Kristin Bennett, Gavin Cawley, Hugo Jair Escalante, & Sergio Escalera. (2015). The AutoML challenge on codalab. In IEEE International Joint Conference on Neural Networks IJCNN2015.
|
Gerard Canal, Cecilio Angulo, & Sergio Escalera. (2015). Gesture based Human Multi-Robot interaction. In IEEE International Joint Conference on Neural Networks IJCNN2015.
Abstract: The emergence of robot applications for nontechnical users implies designing new ways of interaction between robotic platforms and users. The main goal of this work is the development of a gestural interface to interact with robots
in a similar way as humans do, allowing the user to provide information of the task with non-verbal communication. The gesture recognition application has been implemented using the Microsoft’s KinectTM v2 sensor. Hence, a real-time algorithm based on skeletal features is described to deal with both, static
gestures and dynamic ones, being the latter recognized using a weighted Dynamic Time Warping method. The gesture recognition application has been implemented in a multi-robot case.
A NAO humanoid robot is in charge of interacting with the users and respond to the visual signals they produce. Moreover, a wheeled Wifibot robot carries both the sensor and the NAO robot, easing navigation when necessary. A broad set of user tests have been carried out demonstrating that the system is, indeed, a
natural approach to human robot interaction, with a fast response and easy to use, showing high gesture recognition rates.
|
Andres Traumann, Sergio Escalera, & Gholamreza Anbarjafari. (2015). A New Retexturing Method for Virtual Fitting Room Using Kinect 2 Camera. In 2015 IEEE Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition Worshops (CVPRW) (pp. 75–79).
|
Ramin Irani, Kamal Nasrollahi, Chris Bahnsen, D.H. Lundtoft, Thomas B. Moeslund, Marc O. Simon, et al. (2015). Spatio-temporal Analysis of RGB-D-T Facial Images for Multimodal Pain Level Recognition. In 2015 IEEE Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition Worshops (CVPRW) (pp. 88–95).
Abstract: Pain is a vital sign of human health and its automatic detection can be of crucial importance in many different contexts, including medical scenarios. While most available computer vision techniques are based on RGB, in this paper, we investigate the effect of combining RGB, depth, and thermal
facial images for pain detection and pain intensity level recognition. For this purpose, we extract energies released by facial pixels using a spatiotemporal filter. Experiments on a group of 12 elderly people applying the multimodal approach show that the proposed method successfully detects pain and recognizes between three intensity levels in 82% of the analyzed frames improving more than 6% over RGB only analysis in similar conditions.
|
Mohammad Ali Bagheri, Qigang Gao, Sergio Escalera, Albert Clapes, Kamal Nasrollahi, Michael Holte, et al. (2015). Keep it Accurate and Diverse: Enhancing Action Recognition Performance by Ensemble Learning. In IEEE Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition Worshops (CVPRW) (pp. 22–29).
Abstract: The performance of different action recognition techniques has recently been studied by several computer vision researchers. However, the potential improvement in classification through classifier fusion by ensemble-based methods has remained unattended. In this work, we evaluate the performance of an ensemble of action learning techniques, each performing the recognition task from a different perspective.
The underlying idea is that instead of aiming a very sophisticated and powerful representation/learning technique, we can learn action categories using a set of relatively simple and diverse classifiers, each trained with different feature set. In addition, combining the outputs of several learners can reduce the risk of an unfortunate selection of a learner on an unseen action recognition scenario.
This leads to having a more robust and general-applicable framework. In order to improve the recognition performance, a powerful combination strategy is utilized based on the Dempster-Shafer theory, which can effectively make use
of diversity of base learners trained on different sources of information. The recognition results of the individual classifiers are compared with those obtained from fusing the classifiers’ output, showing enhanced performance of the proposed methodology.
|
Isabelle Guyon, Kristin Bennett, Gavin Cawley, Hugo Jair Escalante, Sergio Escalera, Tin Kam Ho, et al. (2015). AutoML Challenge 2015: Design and First Results. In 32nd International Conference on Machine Learning, ICML workshop, JMLR proceedings ICML15 (pp. 1–8).
Abstract: ChaLearn is organizing the Automatic Machine Learning (AutoML) contest 2015, which challenges participants to solve classication and regression problems without any human intervention. Participants' code is automatically run on the contest servers to train and test learning machines. However, there is no obligation to submit code; half of the prizes can be won by submitting prediction results only. Datasets of progressively increasing diculty are introduced throughout the six rounds of the challenge. (Participants can
enter the competition in any round.) The rounds alternate phases in which learners are tested on datasets participants have not seen (AutoML), and phases in which participants have limited time to tweak their algorithms on those datasets to improve performance (Tweakathon). This challenge will push the state of the art in fully automatic machine learning on a wide range of real-world problems. The platform will remain available beyond the termination of the challenge: http://codalab.org/AutoML.
Keywords: AutoML Challenge; machine learning; model selection; meta-learning; repre- sentation learning; active learning
|
Huamin Ren, Weifeng Liu, Soren Ingvor Olsen, Sergio Escalera, & Thomas B. Moeslund. (2015). Unsupervised Behavior-Specific Dictionary Learning for Abnormal Event Detection. In 26th British Machine Vision Conference.
|
Isabelle Guyon, Imad Chaabane, Hugo Jair Escalante, Sergio Escalera, Damir Jajetic, James Robert Lloyd, et al. (2016). A brief Review of the ChaLearn AutoML Challenge: Any-time Any-dataset Learning without Human Intervention. In AutoML Workshop (pp. 1–8).
Abstract: The ChaLearn AutoML Challenge team conducted a large scale evaluation of fully automatic, black-box learning machines for feature-based classification and regression problems. The test bed was composed of 30 data sets from a wide variety of application domains and ranged across different types of complexity. Over six rounds, participants succeeded in delivering AutoML software capable of being trained and tested without human intervention. Although improvements can still be made to close the gap between human-tweaked and AutoML models, this competition contributes to the development of fully automated environments by challenging practitioners to solve problems under specific constraints and sharing their approaches; the platform will remain available for post-challenge submissions at http://codalab.org/AutoML.
Keywords: AutoML Challenge; machine learning; model selection; meta-learning; repre- sentation learning; active learning
|
Pejman Rasti, Tonis Uiboupin, Sergio Escalera, & Gholamreza Anbarjafari. (2016). Convolutional Neural Network Super Resolution for Face Recognition in Surveillance Monitoring. In 9th Conference on Articulated Motion and Deformable Objects.
|
Dennis H. Lundtoft, Kamal Nasrollahi, Thomas B. Moeslund, & Sergio Escalera. (2016). Spatiotemporal Facial Super-Pixels for Pain Detection. In 9th Conference on Articulated Motion and Deformable Objects.
Abstract: Best student paper award.
Pain detection using facial images is of critical importance in many Health applications. Since pain is a spatiotemporal process, recent works on this topic employ facial spatiotemporal features to detect pain. These systems extract such features from the entire area of the face. In this paper, we show that by employing super-pixels we can divide the face into three regions, in a way that only one of these regions (about one third of the face) contributes to the pain estimation and the other two regions can be discarded. The experimental results on the UNBCMcMaster database show that the proposed system using this single region outperforms state-of-the-art systems in detecting no-pain scenarios, while it reaches comparable results in detecting weak and severe pain scenarios.
Keywords: Facial images; Super-pixels; Spatiotemporal filters; Pain detection
|
Mark Philip Philipsen, Anders Jorgensen, Thomas B. Moeslund, & Sergio Escalera. (2016). RGB-D Segmentation of Poultry Entrails. In 9th Conference on Articulated Motion and Deformable Objects.
Abstract: Best commercial paper award.
|