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F. Pla, Petia Radeva, & Jordi Vitria. (2008). Non-parametric distance-based classification techniques and their applications. Pattern Analysis and Applications, Special Issue: Non–Parametric Distance–Based Classification Techniques and Their Applications, 223–225.
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Carlo Gatta, Simone Balocco, Victoria Martin Yuste, Ruben Leta, & Petia Radeva. (2011). Non-rigid Multi-modal Registration of Coronary Arteries Using SIFTflow. In Jordi Vitria, Joao Miguel Sanches, & Mario Hernandez (Eds.), 5th Iberian Conference on Pattern Recognition and Image Analysis (Vol. 6669, pp. 159–166). LNCS. Berlin: Springer Berlin Heidelberg.
Abstract: The fusion of clinically relevant information coming from different image modalities is an important topic in medical imaging. In particular, different cardiac imaging modalities provides complementary information for the physician: Computer Tomography Angiography (CTA) provides reliable pre-operative information on arteries geometry, even in the presence of chronic total occlusions, while X-Ray Angiography (XRA) allows intra-operative high resolution projections of a specific artery. The non-rigid registration of arteries between these two modalities is a difficult task. In this paper we propose the use of SIFTflow, in registering CTA and XRA images. At the best of our knowledge, this paper proposed SIFTflow as a XRay-CTA registration method for the first time in the literature. To highlight the arteries, so to guide the registration process, the well known Vesselness method has been employed. Results confirm that, to the aim of registration, the arteries must be highlighted and background objects removed as much as possible. Moreover, the comparison with the well known Free Form Deformation technique, suggests that SIFTflow has a great potential in the registration of multi-modal medical images.
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Mohammad Rouhani, E. Boyer, & Angel Sappa. (2014). Non-Rigid Registration meets Surface Reconstruction. In International Conference on 3D Vision (pp. 617–624).
Abstract: Non rigid registration is an important task in computer vision with many applications in shape and motion modeling. A fundamental step of the registration is the data association between the source and the target sets. Such association proves difficult in practice, due to the discrete nature of the information and its corruption by various types of noise, e.g. outliers and missing data. In this paper we investigate the benefit of the implicit representations for the non-rigid registration of 3D point clouds. First, the target points are described with small quadratic patches that are blended through partition of unity weighting. Then, the discrete association between the source and the target can be replaced by a continuous distance field induced by the interface. By combining this distance field with a proper deformation term, the registration energy can be expressed in a linear least square form that is easy and fast to solve. This significantly eases the registration by avoiding direct association between points. Moreover, a hierarchical approach can be easily implemented by employing coarse-to-fine representations. Experimental results are provided for point clouds from multi-view data sets. The qualitative and quantitative comparisons show the outperformance and robustness of our framework. %in presence of noise and outliers.
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Jaume Amores, & Petia Radeva. (2003). Non-rigid Registration of Vessel Structures in IVUS Images.
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Mohammad Rouhani, & Angel Sappa. (2012). Non-Rigid Shape Registration: A Single Linear Least Squares Framework. In 12th European Conference on Computer Vision (Vol. 7578, pp. 264–277). LNCS. Springer Berlin Heidelberg.
Abstract: This paper proposes a non-rigid registration formulation capturing both global and local deformations in a single framework. This formulation is based on a quadratic estimation of the registration distance together with a quadratic regularization term. Hence, the optimal transformation parameters are easily obtained by solving a liner system of equations, which guarantee a fast convergence. Experimental results with challenging 2D and 3D shapes are presented to show the validity of the proposed framework. Furthermore, comparisons with the most relevant approaches are provided.
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Eduard Vazquez, & Ramon Baldrich. (2010). Non-supervised goodness measure for image segmentation. In Proceedings of The CREATE 2010 Conference (334–335).
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Victor Ponce, Sergio Escalera, Marc Perez, Oriol Janes, & Xavier Baro. (2015). Non-Verbal Communication Analysis in Victim-Offender Mediations. PRL - Pattern Recognition Letters, 67(1), 19–27.
Abstract: We present a non-invasive ambient intelligence framework for the semi-automatic analysis of non-verbal communication applied to the restorative justice field. We propose the use of computer vision and social signal processing technologies in real scenarios of Victim–Offender Mediations, applying feature extraction techniques to multi-modal audio-RGB-depth data. We compute a set of behavioral indicators that define communicative cues from the fields of psychology and observational methodology. We test our methodology on data captured in real Victim–Offender Mediation sessions in Catalonia. We define the ground truth based on expert opinions when annotating the observed social responses. Using different state of the art binary classification approaches, our system achieves recognition accuracies of 86% when predicting satisfaction, and 79% when predicting both agreement and receptivity. Applying a regression strategy, we obtain a mean deviation for the predictions between 0.5 and 0.7 in the range [1–5] for the computed social signals.
Keywords: Victim–Offender Mediation; Multi-modal human behavior analysis; Face and gesture recognition; Social signal processing; Computer vision; Machine learning
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Mikhail Mozerov, Ignasi Rius, Xavier Roca, & Jordi Gonzalez. (2010). Nonlinear synchronization for automatic learning of 3D pose variability in human motion sequences. EURASIPJ - EURASIP Journal on Advances in Signal Processing, .
Abstract: Article ID 507247
A dense matching algorithm that solves the problem of synchronizing prerecorded human motion sequences, which show different speeds and accelerations, is proposed. The approach is based on minimization of MRF energy and solves the problem by using Dynamic Programming. Additionally, an optimal sequence is automatically selected from the input dataset to be a time-scale pattern for all other sequences. The paper utilizes an action specific model which automatically learns the variability of 3D human postures observed in a set of training sequences. The model is trained using the public CMU motion capture dataset for the walking action, and a mean walking performance is automatically learnt. Additionally, statistics about the observed variability of the postures and motion direction are also computed at each time step. The synchronized motion sequences are used to learn a model of human motion for action recognition and full-body tracking purposes.
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M. Bressan, & Jordi Vitria. (2003). Nonparametric Discriminant Analysis and Nearest Neighbor Classification. PRL - Pattern Recognition Letters, 24(15), 2743–2749.
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Marçal Rusiñol, J. Chazalon, & Jean-Marc Ogier. (2014). Normalisation et validation d'images de documents capturées en mobilité. In Colloque International Francophone sur l'Écrit et le Document (pp. 109–124).
Abstract: Mobile document image acquisition integrates many distortions which must be corrected or detected on the device, before the document becomes unavailable or paying data transmission fees. In this paper, we propose a system to correct perspective and illumination issues, and estimate the sharpness of the image for OCR recognition. The correction step relies on fast and accurate border detection followed by illumination normalization. Its evaluation on a private dataset shows a clear improvement on OCR accuracy. The quality assessment
step relies on a combination of focus measures. Its evaluation on a public dataset shows that this simple method compares well to state of the art, learning-based methods which cannot be embedded on a mobile, and outperforms metric-based methods.
Keywords: mobile document image acquisition; perspective correction; illumination correction; quality assessment; focus measure; OCR accuracy prediction
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Robert Benavente, Gemma Sanchez, Ramon Baldrich, Maria Vanrell, & Josep Llados. (2000). Normalized colour segmentation for human appearance description. In 15 th International Conference on Pattern Recognition (Vol. 3, pp. 637–641).
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Lluis Pere de las Heras, Joan Mas, Gemma Sanchez, & Ernest Valveny. (2013). Notation-invariant patch-based wall detector in architectural floor plans. In Graphics Recognition. New Trends and Challenges (Vol. 7423, pp. 79–88). LNCS. Springer Berlin Heidelberg.
Abstract: Architectural floor plans exhibit a large variability in notation. Therefore, segmenting and identifying the elements of any kind of plan becomes a challenging task for approaches based on grouping structural primitives obtained by vectorization. Recently, a patch-based segmentation method working at pixel level and relying on the construction of a visual vocabulary has been proposed in [1], showing its adaptability to different notations by automatically learning the visual appearance of the elements in each different notation. This paper presents an evolution of that previous work, after analyzing and testing several alternatives for each of the different steps of the method: Firstly, an automatic plan-size normalization process is done. Secondly we evaluate different features to obtain the description of every patch. Thirdly, we train an SVM classifier to obtain the category of every patch instead of constructing a visual vocabulary. These variations of the method have been tested for wall detection on two datasets of architectural floor plans with different notations. After studying in deep each of the steps in the process pipeline, we are able to find the best system configuration, which highly outperforms the results on wall segmentation obtained by the original paper.
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Jose Manuel Alvarez, & Antonio Lopez. (2008). Novel Index for Objective Evaluation of Road Detection Algorithms. In Intelligent Transportation Systems. 11th International IEEE Conference on, (815–820).
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Hongxing Gao, Marçal Rusiñol, Dimosthenis Karatzas, Josep Llados, R.Jain, & D.Doermann. (2015). Novel Line Verification for Multiple Instance Focused Retrieval in Document Collections. In 13th International Conference on Document Analysis and Recognition ICDAR2015 (pp. 481–485).
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Jose Luis Alba, A. Pujol, & Juan J. Villanueva. (2001). Novel SOM-PCA Network for Face Identification..
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