Records |
Author |
Marc Serra |
Title |
Estimating Intrinsic Images from Physical and Categorical Color Cues |
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Report |
Year |
2010 |
Publication |
CVC Technical Report |
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151 |
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Master's thesis |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ Ser2010 |
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1345 |
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Author |
Ivet Rafegas; Javier Vazquez; Robert Benavente; Maria Vanrell; Susana Alvarez |
Title |
Enhancing spatio-chromatic representation with more-than-three color coding for image description |
Type |
Journal Article |
Year |
2017 |
Publication |
Journal of the Optical Society of America A |
Abbreviated Journal |
JOSA A |
Volume |
34 |
Issue |
5 |
Pages |
827-837 |
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Abstract |
Extraction of spatio-chromatic features from color images is usually performed independently on each color channel. Usual 3D color spaces, such as RGB, present a high inter-channel correlation for natural images. This correlation can be reduced using color-opponent representations, but the spatial structure of regions with small color differences is not fully captured in two generic Red-Green and Blue-Yellow channels. To overcome these problems, we propose a new color coding that is adapted to the specific content of each image. Our proposal is based on two steps: (a) setting the number of channels to the number of distinctive colors we find in each image (avoiding the problem of channel correlation), and (b) building a channel representation that maximizes contrast differences within each color channel (avoiding the problem of low local contrast). We call this approach more-than-three color coding (MTT) to enhance the fact that the number of channels is adapted to the image content. The higher color complexity an image has, the more channels can be used to represent it. Here we select distinctive colors as the most predominant in the image, which we call color pivots, and we build the new color coding using these color pivots as a basis. To evaluate the proposed approach we measure its efficiency in an image categorization task. We show how a generic descriptor improves its performance at the description level when applied on the MTT coding. |
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CIC; 600.087 |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ RVB2017 |
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2892 |
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Author |
Ricardo Toledo; Ramon Baldrich; Ernest Valveny; Petia Radeva |
Title |
Enhancing snakes for vessel detection in angiography images. |
Type |
Miscellaneous |
Year |
2002 |
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Proceedings of the Second IASTED International Conference Visualization, Imaging and Image Proceesing VIIP 2002: 139–144. |
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MILAB;DAG;CIC;ADAS |
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no |
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BCNPCL @ bcnpcl @ TBV2002 |
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300 |
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Author |
Eduard Vazquez; Maria Vanrell |
Title |
Eines per al desenvolupament de competencies de enginyeria en un assignatura de Intel·ligencia Artificial |
Type |
Miscellaneous |
Year |
2008 |
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V Jornades d’Innovacio Docent (UAB) |
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Bellaterra (Spain) |
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no |
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CAT @ cat @ VaV2008 |
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1011 |
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Author |
C. Alejandro Parraga; Jordi Roca; Maria Vanrell |
Title |
Do Basic Colors Influence Chromatic Adaptation? |
Type |
Journal Article |
Year |
2011 |
Publication |
Journal of Vision |
Abbreviated Journal |
VSS |
Volume |
11 |
Issue |
11 |
Pages |
85 |
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Abstract |
Color constancy (the ability to perceive colors relatively stable under different illuminants) is the result of several mechanisms spread across different neural levels and responding to several visual scene cues. It is usually measured by estimating the perceived color of a grey patch under an illuminant change. In this work, we hypothesize whether chromatic adaptation (without a reference white or grey) could be driven by certain colors, specifically those corresponding to the universal color terms proposed by Berlin and Kay (1969). To this end we have developed a new psychophysical paradigm in which subjects adjust the color of a test patch (in CIELab space) to match their memory of the best example of a given color chosen from the universal terms list (grey, red, green, blue, yellow, purple, pink, orange and brown). The test patch is embedded inside a Mondrian image and presented on a calibrated CRT screen inside a dark cabin. All subjects were trained to “recall” their most exemplary colors reliably from memory and asked to always produce the same basic colors when required under several adaptation conditions. These include achromatic and colored Mondrian backgrounds, under a simulated D65 illuminant and several colored illuminants. A set of basic colors were measured for each subject under neutral conditions (achromatic background and D65 illuminant) and used as “reference” for the rest of the experiment. The colors adjusted by the subjects in each adaptation condition were compared to the reference colors under the corresponding illuminant and a “constancy index” was obtained for each of them. Our results show that for some colors the constancy index was better than for grey. The set of best adapted colors in each condition were common to a majority of subjects and were dependent on the chromaticity of the illuminant and the chromatic background considered. |
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1534-7362 |
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CIC |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ PRV2011 |
Serial |
1759 |
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Author |
Noha Elfiky; Fahad Shahbaz Khan; Joost Van de Weijer; Jordi Gonzalez |
Title |
Discriminative Compact Pyramids for Object and Scene Recognition |
Type |
Journal Article |
Year |
2012 |
Publication |
Pattern Recognition |
Abbreviated Journal |
PR |
Volume |
45 |
Issue |
4 |
Pages |
1627-1636 |
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Abstract |
Spatial pyramids have been successfully applied to incorporating spatial information into bag-of-words based image representation. However, a major drawback is that it leads to high dimensional image representations. In this paper, we present a novel framework for obtaining compact pyramid representation. First, we investigate the usage of the divisive information theoretic feature clustering (DITC) algorithm in creating a compact pyramid representation. In many cases this method allows us to reduce the size of a high dimensional pyramid representation up to an order of magnitude with little or no loss in accuracy. Furthermore, comparison to clustering based on agglomerative information bottleneck (AIB) shows that our method obtains superior results at significantly lower computational costs. Moreover, we investigate the optimal combination of multiple features in the context of our compact pyramid representation. Finally, experiments show that the method can obtain state-of-the-art results on several challenging data sets. |
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0031-3203 |
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Notes |
ISE; CAT;CIC |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ EKW2012 |
Serial |
1807 |
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Author |
Rahat Khan; Joost Van de Weijer; Fahad Shahbaz Khan; Damien Muselet; christophe Ducottet; Cecile Barat |
Title |
Discriminative Color Descriptors |
Type |
Conference Article |
Year |
2013 |
Publication |
IEEE Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition |
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Volume |
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Issue |
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Pages |
2866 - 2873 |
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Abstract |
Color description is a challenging task because of large variations in RGB values which occur due to scene accidental events, such as shadows, shading, specularities, illuminant color changes, and changes in viewing geometry. Traditionally, this challenge has been addressed by capturing the variations in physics-based models, and deriving invariants for the undesired variations. The drawback of this approach is that sets of distinguishable colors in the original color space are mapped to the same value in the photometric invariant space. This results in a drop of discriminative power of the color description. In this paper we take an information theoretic approach to color description. We cluster color values together based on their discriminative power in a classification problem. The clustering has the explicit objective to minimize the drop of mutual information of the final representation. We show that such a color description automatically learns a certain degree of photometric invariance. We also show that a universal color representation, which is based on other data sets than the one at hand, can obtain competing performance. Experiments show that the proposed descriptor outperforms existing photometric invariants. Furthermore, we show that combined with shape description these color descriptors obtain excellent results on four challenging datasets, namely, PASCAL VOC 2007, Flowers-102, Stanford dogs-120 and Birds-200. |
Address |
Portland; Oregon; June 2013 |
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1063-6919 |
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CVPR |
Notes |
CIC; 600.048 |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ KWK2013a |
Serial |
2262 |
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Author |
Xavier Otazu; M. Ribo; M. Peracaula; J.M. Paredes; J. Nuñez |
Title |
Detection of superimposed periodic signals using wavelets |
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Journal |
Year |
2002 |
Publication |
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 333, 2: 365–372 (IF: 4.671) |
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CIC |
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no |
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CAT @ cat @ ORP2002 |
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272 |
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Author |
Eduard Vazquez; Ramon Baldrich; Joost Van de Weijer; Maria Vanrell |
Title |
Describing Reflectances for Colour Segmentation Robust to Shadows, Highlights and Textures |
Type |
Journal Article |
Year |
2011 |
Publication |
IEEE Transactions on Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence |
Abbreviated Journal |
TPAMI |
Volume |
33 |
Issue |
5 |
Pages |
917-930 |
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Abstract |
The segmentation of a single material reflectance is a challenging problem due to the considerable variation in image measurements caused by the geometry of the object, shadows, and specularities. The combination of these effects has been modeled by the dichromatic reflection model. However, the application of the model to real-world images is limited due to unknown acquisition parameters and compression artifacts. In this paper, we present a robust model for the shape of a single material reflectance in histogram space. The method is based on a multilocal creaseness analysis of the histogram which results in a set of ridges representing the material reflectances. The segmentation method derived from these ridges is robust to both shadow, shading and specularities, and texture in real-world images. We further complete the method by incorporating prior knowledge from image statistics, and incorporate spatial coherence by using multiscale color contrast information. Results obtained show that our method clearly outperforms state-of-the-art segmentation methods on a widely used segmentation benchmark, having as a main characteristic its excellent performance in the presence of shadows and highlights at low computational cost. |
Address |
Los Alamitos; CA; USA; |
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IEEE Computer Society |
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0162-8828 |
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CIC |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ VBW2011 |
Serial |
1715 |
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Author |
Hassan Ahmed Sial; Ramon Baldrich; Maria Vanrell |
Title |
Deep intrinsic decomposition trained on surreal scenes yet with realistic light effects |
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Journal Article |
Year |
2020 |
Publication |
Journal of the Optical Society of America A |
Abbreviated Journal |
JOSA A |
Volume |
37 |
Issue |
1 |
Pages |
1-15 |
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Abstract |
Estimation of intrinsic images still remains a challenging task due to weaknesses of ground-truth datasets, which either are too small or present non-realistic issues. On the other hand, end-to-end deep learning architectures start to achieve interesting results that we believe could be improved if important physical hints were not ignored. In this work, we present a twofold framework: (a) a flexible generation of images overcoming some classical dataset problems such as larger size jointly with coherent lighting appearance; and (b) a flexible architecture tying physical properties through intrinsic losses. Our proposal is versatile, presents low computation time, and achieves state-of-the-art results. |
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CIC; 600.140; 600.12; 600.118 |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ SBV2019 |
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3311 |
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Author |
Robert Benavente |
Title |
Dealing with colour variability: application to a colour naming task |
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Report |
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1999 |
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CVC Technical Report #32 |
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CVC (UAB) |
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no |
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CAT @ cat @ Ben1999 |
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53 |
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Author |
Aleksandr Setkov; Fabio Martinez Carillo; Michele Gouiffes; Christian Jacquemin; Maria Vanrell; Ramon Baldrich |
Title |
DAcImPro: A Novel Database of Acquired Image Projections and Its Application to Object Recognition |
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Conference Article |
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2015 |
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Advances in Visual Computing. Proceedings of 11th International Symposium, ISVC 2015 Part II |
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9475 |
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463-473 |
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Projector-camera systems; Feature descriptors; Object recognition |
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Projector-camera systems are designed to improve the projection quality by comparing original images with their captured projections, which is usually complicated due to high photometric and geometric variations. Many research works address this problem using their own test data which makes it extremely difficult to compare different proposals. This paper has two main contributions. Firstly, we introduce a new database of acquired image projections (DAcImPro) that, covering photometric and geometric conditions and providing data for ground-truth computation, can serve to evaluate different algorithms in projector-camera systems. Secondly, a new object recognition scenario from acquired projections is presented, which could be of a great interest in such domains, as home video projections and public presentations. We show that the task is more challenging than the classical recognition problem and thus requires additional pre-processing, such as color compensation or projection area selection. |
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Springer International Publishing |
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LNCS |
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0302-9743 |
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978-3-319-27862-9 |
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ISVC |
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CIC |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ SMG2015 |
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2736 |
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Author |
Robert Benavente; Laura Igual; Fernando Vilariño |
Title |
Current Challenges in Computer Vision |
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Book Whole |
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2008 |
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Proccedings of the Third Internal Workshop |
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978-84-936529-0-6 |
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CVCRD |
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MILAB;CIC;SIAI |
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no |
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BCNPCL @ bcnpcl @ BIV2008 |
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1110 |
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Author |
Bojana Gajic; Ramon Baldrich |
Title |
Cross-domain fashion image retrieval |
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Conference Article |
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2018 |
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CVPR 2018 Workshop on Women in Computer Vision (WiCV 2018, 4th Edition) |
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19500-19502 |
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Cross domain image retrieval is a challenging task that implies matching images from one domain to their pairs from another domain. In this paper we focus on fashion image retrieval, which involves matching an image of a fashion item taken by users, to the images of the same item taken in controlled condition, usually by professional photographer. When facing this problem, we have different products
in train and test time, and we use triplet loss to train the network. We stress the importance of proper training of simple architecture, as well as adapting general models to the specific task. |
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Salt Lake City, USA; 22 June 2018 |
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CVPRW |
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CIC; 600.087 |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ |
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3709 |
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Author |
Jaime Moreno; Xavier Otazu; Maria Vanrell |
Title |
Contribution of CIWaM in JPEG2000 Quantization for Color Images |
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Conference Article |
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2010 |
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Proceedings of The CREATE 2010 Conference |
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132–136 |
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The aim of this work is to explain how to apply perceptual concepts to define a perceptual pre-quantizer and to improve JPEG2000 compressor. The approach consists in quantizing wavelet transform coefficients using some of the human visual system behavior properties. Noise is fatal to image compression performance, because it can be both annoying for the observer and consumes excessive bandwidth when the imagery is transmitted. Perceptual pre-quantization reduces unperceivable details and thus improve both visual impression and transmission properties. The comparison between JPEG2000 without and with perceptual pre-quantization shows that the latter is not favorable in PSNR, but the recovered image is more compressed at the same or even better visual quality measured with a weighted PSNR. Perceptual criteria were taken from the CIWaM(ChromaticInductionWaveletModel). |
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Gjovik (Norway) |
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CREATE |
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CIC |
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no |
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CAT @ cat @ MOV2010b |
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1308 |
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Author |
Javier Vazquez |
Title |
Content-based Colour Space |
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Report |
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2007 |
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CVC Technical Report #116 |
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CVC (UAB) |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ Vaz2007b |
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828 |
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Author |
Jordi Roca |
Title |
Constancy and inconstancy in categorical colour perception |
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Book Whole |
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2012 |
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PhD Thesis, Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona-CVC |
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To recognise objects is perhaps the most important task an autonomous system, either biological or artificial needs to perform. In the context of human vision, this is partly achieved by recognizing the colour of surfaces despite changes in the wavelength distribution of the illumination, a property called colour constancy. Correct surface colour recognition may be adequately accomplished by colour category matching without the need to match colours precisely, therefore categorical colour constancy is likely to play an important role for object identification to be successful. The main aim of this work is to study the relationship between colour constancy and categorical colour perception. Previous studies of colour constancy have shown the influence of factors such the spatio-chromatic properties of the background, individual observer's performance, semantics, etc. However there is very little systematic study of these influences. To this end, we developed a new approach to colour constancy which includes both individual observers' categorical perception, the categorical structure of the background, and their interrelations resulting in a more comprehensive characterization of the phenomenon. In our study, we first developed a new method to analyse the categorical structure of 3D colour space, which allowed us to characterize individual categorical colour perception as well as quantify inter-individual variations in terms of shape and centroid location of 3D categorical regions. Second, we developed a new colour constancy paradigm, termed chromatic setting, which allows measuring the precise location of nine categorically-relevant points in colour space under immersive illumination. Additionally, we derived from these measurements a new colour constancy index which takes into account the magnitude and orientation of the chromatic shift, memory effects and the interrelations among colours and a model of colour naming tuned to each observer/adaptation state. Our results lead to the following conclusions: (1) There exists large inter-individual variations in the categorical structure of colour space, and thus colour naming ability varies significantly but this is not well predicted by low-level chromatic discrimination ability; (2) Analysis of the average colour naming space suggested the need for an additional three basic colour terms (turquoise, lilac and lime) for optimal colour communication; (3) Chromatic setting improved the precision of more complex linear colour constancy models and suggested that mechanisms other than cone gain might be best suited to explain colour constancy; (4) The categorical structure of colour space is broadly stable under illuminant changes for categorically balanced backgrounds; (5) Categorical inconstancy exists for categorically unbalanced backgrounds thus indicating that categorical information perceived in the initial stages of adaptation may constrain further categorical perception. |
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Maria Vanrell;C. Alejandro Parraga |
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Admin @ si @ Roc2012 |
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2893 |
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Author |
Arjan Gijsenij; Theo Gevers; Joost Van de Weijer |
Title |
Computational Color Constancy: Survey and Experiments |
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Journal Article |
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2011 |
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IEEE Transactions on Image Processing |
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TIP |
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20 |
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9 |
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2475-2489 |
Keywords |
computational color constancy;computer vision application;gamut-based method;learning-based method;static method;colour vision;computer vision;image colour analysis;learning (artificial intelligence);lighting |
Abstract |
Computational color constancy is a fundamental prerequisite for many computer vision applications. This paper presents a survey of many recent developments and state-of-the- art methods. Several criteria are proposed that are used to assess the approaches. A taxonomy of existing algorithms is proposed and methods are separated in three groups: static methods, gamut-based methods and learning-based methods. Further, the experimental setup is discussed including an overview of publicly available data sets. Finally, various freely available methods, of which some are considered to be state-of-the-art, are evaluated on two data sets. |
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1057-7149 |
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Admin @ si @ GGW2011 |
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1717 |
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