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Marc Bolaños, R. Mestre, Estefania Talavera, Xavier Giro, & Petia Radeva. (2015). Visual Summary of Egocentric Photostreams by Representative Keyframes. In IEEE International Conference on Multimedia and Expo ICMEW2015 (pp. 1–6).
Abstract: Building a visual summary from an egocentric photostream captured by a lifelogging wearable camera is of high interest for different applications (e.g. memory reinforcement). In this paper, we propose a new summarization method based on keyframes selection that uses visual features extracted bymeans of a convolutional neural network. Our method applies an unsupervised clustering for dividing the photostreams into events, and finally extracts the most relevant keyframe for each event. We assess the results by applying a blind-taste test on a group of 20 people who assessed the quality of the
summaries.
Keywords: egocentric; lifelogging; summarization; keyframes
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X. Varona, A. Pujol, & Juan J. Villanueva. (1999). Visual tracking in application domains..
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X. Varona, A. Pujol, & Juan J. Villanueva. (2000). Visual Tracking in Application Domains..
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Vacit Oguz Yazici, Joost Van de Weijer, & Longlong Yu. (2022). Visual Transformers with Primal Object Queries for Multi-Label Image Classification. In 26th International Conference on Pattern Recognition.
Abstract: Multi-label image classification is about predicting a set of class labels that can be considered as orderless sequential data. Transformers process the sequential data as a whole, therefore they are inherently good at set prediction. The first vision-based transformer model, which was proposed for the object detection task introduced the concept of object queries. Object queries are learnable positional encodings that are used by attention modules in decoder layers to decode the object classes or bounding boxes using the region of interests in an image. However, inputting the same set of object queries to different decoder layers hinders the training: it results in lower performance and delays convergence. In this paper, we propose the usage of primal object queries that are only provided at the start of the transformer decoder stack. In addition, we improve the mixup technique proposed for multi-label classification. The proposed transformer model with primal object queries improves the state-of-the-art class wise F1 metric by 2.1% and 1.8%; and speeds up the convergence by 79.0% and 38.6% on MS-COCO and NUS-WIDE datasets respectively.
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Eric Amiel. (2005). Visualisation de vaisseaux sanguins (Enric Marti, Ed.). Bachelor's thesis, Université Paul Sabatier Toulouse III, Toulouse.
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Ferran Poveda. (2009). Visualització i interpretació tridimensional de l’arquitectura de les fibres musculars del miocardi. Master's thesis, , 08193 Bellaterra, Barcelona (Spain).
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Juan J. Villanueva. (2002). Visualization, Imaging and Image Processing..
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Juan J. Villanueva. (2008). Visualization, Imaging, and Image Processing,.
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Yagmur Gucluturk, Umut Guclu, Marc Perez, Hugo Jair Escalante, Xavier Baro, Isabelle Guyon, et al. (2017). Visualizing Apparent Personality Analysis with Deep Residual Networks. In Chalearn Workshop on Action, Gesture, and Emotion Recognition: Large Scale Multimodal Gesture Recognition and Real versus Fake expressed emotions at ICCV (pp. 3101–3109).
Abstract: Automatic prediction of personality traits is a subjective task that has recently received much attention. Specifically, automatic apparent personality trait prediction from multimodal data has emerged as a hot topic within the filed of computer vision and, more particularly, the so called “looking
at people” sub-field. Considering “apparent” personality traits as opposed to real ones considerably reduces the subjectivity of the task. The real world applications are encountered in a wide range of domains, including entertainment, health, human computer interaction, recruitment and security. Predictive models of personality traits are useful for individuals in many scenarios (e.g., preparing for job interviews, preparing for public speaking). However, these predictions in and of themselves might be deemed to be untrustworthy without human understandable supportive evidence. Through a series of experiments on a recently released benchmark dataset for automatic apparent personality trait prediction, this paper characterizes the audio and
visual information that is used by a state-of-the-art model while making its predictions, so as to provide such supportive evidence by explaining predictions made. Additionally, the paper describes a new web application, which gives feedback on apparent personality traits of its users by combining
model predictions with their explanations.
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Joan Arnedo-Moreno, & Agata Lapedriza. (2010). Visualizing key authenticity: turning your face into your public key. In 6th China International Conference on Information Security and Cryptology (pp. 605–618). LNCS.
Abstract: Biometric information has become a technology complementary to cryptography, allowing to conveniently manage cryptographic data. Two important needs are ful lled: rst of all, making such data always readily available, and additionally, making its legitimate owner easily identi able. In this work we propose a signature system which integrates face recognition biometrics with and identity-based signature scheme, so the user's face e ectively becomes his public key and system ID. Thus, other users may verify messages using photos of the claimed sender, providing a reasonable trade-o between system security and usability, as well as a much more straightforward public key authenticity and distribution process.
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Souhail Bakkali, Zuheng Ming, Mickael Coustaty, Marçal Rusiñol, & Oriol Ramos Terrades. (2023). VLCDoC: Vision-Language Contrastive Pre-Training Model for Cross-Modal Document Classification. PR - Pattern Recognition, 139, 109419.
Abstract: Multimodal learning from document data has achieved great success lately as it allows to pre-train semantically meaningful features as a prior into a learnable downstream approach. In this paper, we approach the document classification problem by learning cross-modal representations through language and vision cues, considering intra- and inter-modality relationships. Instead of merging features from different modalities into a common representation space, the proposed method exploits high-level interactions and learns relevant semantic information from effective attention flows within and across modalities. The proposed learning objective is devised between intra- and inter-modality alignment tasks, where the similarity distribution per task is computed by contracting positive sample pairs while simultaneously contrasting negative ones in the common feature representation space}. Extensive experiments on public document classification datasets demonstrate the effectiveness and the generalization capacity of our model on both low-scale and large-scale datasets.
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Jaume Gibert, Ernest Valveny, & Horst Bunke. (2011). Vocabulary Selection for Graph of Words Embedding. In J. Vitria, J. M. R. Sanches, & M. Hernández (Eds.), 5th Iberian Conference on Pattern Recognition and Image Analysis (Vol. 6669, pp. 216–223). LNCS. Berlin: Springer.
Abstract: The Graph of Words Embedding consists in mapping every graph in a given dataset to a feature vector by counting unary and binary relations between node attributes of the graph. It has been shown to perform well for graphs with discrete label alphabets. In this paper we extend the methodology to graphs with n-dimensional continuous attributes by selecting node representatives. We propose three different discretization procedures for the attribute space and experimentally evaluate the dependence on both the selector and the number of node representatives. In the context of graph classification, the experimental results reveal that on two out of three public databases the proposed extension achieves superior performance over a standard reference system.
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Jaume Amores. (2010). Vocabulary-based Approaches for Multiple-Instance Data: a Comparative Study. In 20th International Conference on Pattern Recognition (4246–4250).
Abstract: Multiple Instance Learning (MIL) has become a hot topic and many different algorithms have been proposed in the last years. Despite this fact, there is a lack of comparative studies that shed light into the characteristics of the different methods and their behavior in different scenarios. In this paper we provide such an analysis. We include methods from different families, and pay special attention to vocabulary-based approaches, a new family of methods that has not received much attention in the MIL literature. The empirical comparison includes seven databases from four heterogeneous domains, implementations of eight popular MIL methods, and a study of the behavior under synthetic conditions. Based on this analysis, we show that, with an appropriate implementation, vocabulary-based approaches outperform other MIL methods in most of the cases, showing in general a more consistent performance.
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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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German Ros, J. Guerrero, Angel Sappa, & Antonio Lopez. (2013). VSLAM pose initialization via Lie groups and Lie algebras optimization. In Proceedings of IEEE International Conference on Robotics and Automation (pp. 5740–5747).
Abstract: We present a novel technique for estimating initial 3D poses in the context of localization and Visual SLAM problems. The presented approach can deal with noise, outliers and a large amount of input data and still performs in real time in a standard CPU. Our method produces solutions with an accuracy comparable to those produced by RANSAC but can be much faster when the percentage of outliers is high or for large amounts of input data. On the current work we propose to formulate the pose estimation as an optimization problem on Lie groups, considering their manifold structure as well as their associated Lie algebras. This allows us to perform a fast and simple optimization at the same time that conserve all the constraints imposed by the Lie group SE(3). Additionally, we present several key design concepts related with the cost function and its Jacobian; aspects that are critical for the good performance of the algorithm.
Keywords: SLAM
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