|
Joan Serrat, Jordi Vitria, & J. Pladellorens. (1991). Morphological Segmentation of Heart Scintigraphic image Sequences. In Computer Assisted Radiology..
|
|
|
Francisco Jose Perales, Juan J. Villanueva, & Yuhua Luo. (1991). Matching Criteria. In Computer and Information Sciences VI, Proceedings of the 1991 International Symposium on Computer and Information Sciences (Vol. 1, pp. 1029–1038). Elsevier Science Pub.
|
|
|
Francisco Jose Perales, Juan J. Villanueva, & Yuhua Luo. (1991). An automatic two-camera human motion perception system based on biomechanical model matching. In IEEE International Conference on Systems, Man and Cybernetics (Vol. 2, pp. 856–858).
|
|
|
Francisco Jose Perales, Yuhua Luo, & Juan J. Villanueva. (1991). Un metodo Automatico de Rotoscopia Sin Marcas para el Estudio del Movimiento Humano Basado en un modelo Biomecanico. In Primer Congreso Español de Informatica Grafica (pp. 53–65).
|
|
|
Francesc Tous, Agnes Borras, Robert Benavente, Ramon Baldrich, Maria Vanrell, & Josep Llados. (2002). Textual Descriptors for browsing people by visual appearence. In 5è. Congrés Català d’Intel·ligència Artificial CCIA.
Abstract: This paper presents a first approach to build colour and structural descriptors for information retrieval on a people database. Queries are formulated in terms of their appearance that allows to seek people wearing specific clothes of a given colour name or texture. Descriptors are automatically computed by following three essential steps. A colour naming labelling from pixel properties. A region seg- mentation step based on colour properties of pixels combined with edge information. And a high level step that models the region arrangements in order to build clothes structure. Results are tested on large set of images from real scenes taken at the entrance desk of a building.
Keywords: Image retrieval, textual descriptors, colour naming, colour normalization, graph matching.
|
|
|
M. Bressan, & Jordi Vitria. (2002). Independent Component Analysis and Naïve Bayes Classification. In Proceedings of the Second IASTED International Conference Visualilzation, Imaging and Image Proceesing VIIP 2002: 496–501..
|
|
|
Fernando Vilariño, & Petia Radeva. (2002). Patch-Optimized Discriminant Active Contours for Medical Image Segmentation. In Iberoamerican Conference on Artificial Intelligence. Springer Verlag.
|
|
|
Joan Serrat, Antonio Lopez, & David Lloret. (2000). On ridges and valleys. In 15 th International Conference on Pattern Recognition (Vol. 4, pp. 59–66).
|
|
|
Agnes Borras, Francesc Tous, Josep Llados, & Maria Vanrell. (2003). High-Level Clothes Description Based on Colour-Texture and Structural Features. In 1rst. Iberian Conference on Pattern Recognition and Image Analysis IbPRIA 2003.
|
|
|
Judit Martinez, Eva Costa, P. Herreros, Antonio Lopez, & Juan J. Villanueva. (2003). TV-Screen Quality Inspection by Artificial Vision. In Proceedings SPIE 5132, Sixth International Conference on Quality Control by Artificial Vision (QCAV 2003).
Abstract: A real-time vision system for TV screen quality inspection is introduced. The whole system consists of eight cameras and one processor per camera. It acquires and processes 112 images in 6 seconds. The defects to be inspected can be grouped into four main categories (bubble, line-out, line reduction and landing) although there exists a large variability among each particular type of defect. The complexity of the whole inspection process has been reduced by dividing images into smaller ones and grouping the defects into frequency and intensity relevant ones. Tools such as mathematical morphology, Fourier transform, profile analysis and classification have been used. The performance of the system has been successfully proved against human operators in normal production conditions.
|
|
|
Angel Sappa, Niki Aifanti, Sotiris Malassiotis, & Michael G. Strintzis. (2003). Monocular 3D Human Body Reconstruction Towards Depth Augmentation of Television Sequences. In IEEE International Conference on Image Processing, Barcelona, Spain, September 2003 (pp. 325–328).
|
|
|
Anna Salvatella, Maria Vanrell, & Juan J. Villanueva. (2003). Texture Description based on Subtexture Components, 3rd International Workshop on Texture Syntesis and Analysis. In 3rd International Workshop on Texture Synthesis and Analysis, (77–82).
|
|
|
Angel Sappa, & M.A. Garcia. (2004). Hierarchical Clustering of 3D Objects and its Application to Minimum Distance Computation. In IEEE International Conference on Robotics & Automation, 5287–5292, New Orleans, LA (USA), ISBN: 0–7803–8232–3.
|
|
|
Muhammad Anwer Rao, David Vazquez, & Antonio Lopez. (2011). Opponent Colors for Human Detection. In J. Vitria, J.M. Sanches, & M. Hernandez (Eds.), 5th Iberian Conference on Pattern Recognition and Image Analysis (Vol. 6669, pp. 363–370). LNCS. Berlin Heidelberg: Springer.
Abstract: Human detection is a key component in fields such as advanced driving assistance and video surveillance. However, even detecting non-occluded standing humans remains a challenge of intensive research. Finding good features to build human models for further detection is probably one of the most important issues to face. Currently, shape, texture and motion features have deserve extensive attention in the literature. However, color-based features, which are important in other domains (e.g., image categorization), have received much less attention. In fact, the use of RGB color space has become a kind of choice by default. The focus has been put in developing first and second order features on top of RGB space (e.g., HOG and co-occurrence matrices, resp.). In this paper we evaluate the opponent colors (OPP) space as a biologically inspired alternative for human detection. In particular, by feeding OPP space in the baseline framework of Dalal et al. for human detection (based on RGB, HOG and linear SVM), we will obtain better detection performance than by using RGB space. This is a relevant result since, up to the best of our knowledge, OPP space has not been previously used for human detection. This suggests that in the future it could be worth to compute co-occurrence matrices, self-similarity features, etc., also on top of OPP space, i.e., as we have done with HOG in this paper.
Keywords: Pedestrian Detection; Color; Part Based Models
|
|
|
Joel Barajas, Jaume Garcia, Francesc Carreras, Sandra Pujades, & Petia Radeva. (2005). Angle Images Using Gabor Filters in Cardiac Tagged MRI. In Proceeding of the 2005 conference on Artificial Intelligence Research and Development (pp. 107–114). Amsterdam, The Netherlands: IOS Press.
Abstract: Tagged Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) is a non-invasive technique used to examine cardiac deformation in vivo. An Angle Image is a representation of a Tagged MRI which recovers the relative position of the tissue respect to the distorted tags. Thus cardiac deformation can be estimated. This paper describes a new approach to generate Angle Images using a bank of Gabor filters in short axis cardiac Tagged MRI. Our method improves the Angle Images obtained by global techniques, like HARP, with a local frequency analysis. We propose to use the phase response of a combination of a Gabor filters bank, and use it to find a more precise deformation of the left ventricle. We demonstrate the accuracy of our method over HARP by several experimental results.
Keywords: Angle Images, Gabor Filters, Harp, Tagged Mri
|
|