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Thanh Ha Do, Salvatore Tabbone, & Oriol Ramos Terrades. (2014). Spotting Symbol Using Sparsity over Learned Dictionary of Local Descriptors. In 11th IAPR International Workshop on Document Analysis and Systems (pp. 156–160).
Abstract: This paper proposes a new approach to spot symbols into graphical documents using sparse representations. More specifically, a dictionary is learned from a training database of local descriptors defined over the documents. Following their sparse representations, interest points sharing similar properties are used to define interest regions. Using an original adaptation of information retrieval techniques, a vector model for interest regions and for a query symbol is built based on its sparsity in a visual vocabulary where the visual words are columns in the learned dictionary. The matching process is performed comparing the similarity between vector models. Evaluation on SESYD datasets demonstrates that our method is promising.
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Marçal Rusiñol, J. Chazalon, & Jean-Marc Ogier. (2014). Combining Focus Measure Operators to Predict OCR Accuracy in Mobile-Captured Document Images. In 11th IAPR International Workshop on Document Analysis and Systems (pp. 181–185).
Abstract: Mobile document image acquisition is a new trend raising serious issues in business document processing workflows. Such digitization procedure is unreliable, and integrates many distortions which must be detected as soon as possible, on the mobile, to avoid paying data transmission fees, and losing information due to the inability to re-capture later a document with temporary availability. In this context, out-of-focus blur is major issue: users have no direct control over it, and it seriously degrades OCR recognition. In this paper, we concentrate on the estimation of focus quality, to ensure a sufficient legibility of a document image for OCR processing. We propose two contributions to improve OCR accuracy prediction for mobile-captured document images. First, we present 24 focus measures, never tested on document images, which are fast to compute and require no training. Second, we show that a combination of those measures enables state-of-the art performance regarding the correlation with OCR accuracy. The resulting approach is fast, robust, and easy to implement in a mobile device. Experiments are performed on a public dataset, and precise details about image processing are given.
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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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Eloi Puertas, Miguel Angel Bautista, Daniel Sanchez, Sergio Escalera, & Oriol Pujol. (2014). Learning to Segment Humans by Stacking their Body Parts,. In ECCV Workshop on ChaLearn Looking at People (Vol. 8925, pp. 685–697). LNCS.
Abstract: Human segmentation in still images is a complex task due to the wide range of body poses and drastic changes in environmental conditions. Usually, human body segmentation is treated in a two-stage fashion. First, a human body part detection step is performed, and then, human part detections are used as prior knowledge to be optimized by segmentation strategies. In this paper, we present a two-stage scheme based on Multi-Scale Stacked Sequential Learning (MSSL). We define an extended feature set by stacking a multi-scale decomposition of body
part likelihood maps. These likelihood maps are obtained in a first stage
by means of a ECOC ensemble of soft body part detectors. In a second stage, contextual relations of part predictions are learnt by a binary classifier, obtaining an accurate body confidence map. The obtained confidence map is fed to a graph cut optimization procedure to obtain the final segmentation. Results show improved segmentation when MSSL is included in the human segmentation pipeline.
Keywords: Human body segmentation; Stacked Sequential Learning
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Marc Bolaños, Maite Garolera, & Petia Radeva. (2014). Video Segmentation of Life-Logging Videos. In 8th Conference on Articulated Motion and Deformable Objects (Vol. 8563, pp. 1–9).
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Francesco Brughi, Debora Gil, Llorenç Badiella, Eva Jove Casabella, & Oriol Ramos Terrades. (2014). Exploring the impact of inter-query variability on the performance of retrieval systems. In 11th International Conference on Image Analysis and Recognition (Vol. 8814, 413–420). LNCS. Springer International Publishing.
Abstract: This paper introduces a framework for evaluating the performance of information retrieval systems. Current evaluation metrics provide an average score that does not consider performance variability across the query set. In this manner, conclusions lack of any statistical significance, yielding poor inference to cases outside the query set and possibly unfair comparisons. We propose to apply statistical methods in order to obtain a more informative measure for problems in which different query classes can be identified. In this context, we assess the performance variability on two levels: overall variability across the whole query set and specific query class-related variability. To this end, we estimate confidence bands for precision-recall curves, and we apply ANOVA in order to assess the significance of the performance across different query classes.
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Marcelo D. Pistarelli, Angel Sappa, & Ricardo Toledo. (2013). Multispectral Stereo Image Correspondence. In 15th International Conference on Computer Analysis of Images and Patterns (Vol. 8048, pp. 217–224). LNCS. Springer Berlin Heidelberg.
Abstract: This paper presents a novel multispectral stereo image correspondence approach. It is evaluated using a stereo rig constructed with a visible spectrum camera and a long wave infrared spectrum camera. The novelty of the proposed approach lies on the usage of Hough space as a correspondence search domain. In this way it avoids searching for correspondence in the original multispectral image domains, where information is low correlated, and a common domain is used. The proposed approach is intended to be used in outdoor urban scenarios, where images contain large amount of edges. These edges are used as distinctive characteristics for the matching in the Hough space. Experimental results are provided showing the validity of the proposed approach.
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Gioacchino Vino, & Angel Sappa. (2013). Revisiting Harris Corner Detector Algorithm: a Gradual Thresholding Approach. In 10th International Conference on Image Analysis and Recognition (Vol. 7950, pp. 354–363). LNCS. Springer Berlin Heidelberg.
Abstract: This paper presents an adaptive thresholding approach intended to increase the number of detected corners, while reducing the amount of those ones corresponding to noisy data. The proposed approach works by using the classical Harris corner detector algorithm and overcome the difficulty in finding a general threshold that work well for all the images in a given data set by proposing a novel adaptive thresholding scheme. Initially, two thresholds are used to discern between strong corners and flat regions. Then, a region based criteria is used to discriminate between weak corners and noisy points in the midway interval. Experimental results show that the proposed approach has a better capability to reject false corners and, at the same time, to detect weak ones. Comparisons with the state of the art are provided showing the validity of the proposed approach.
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Alejandro Gonzalez Alzate, Gabriel Villalonga, Jiaolong Xu, David Vazquez, Jaume Amores, & Antonio Lopez. (2015). Multiview Random Forest of Local Experts Combining RGB and LIDAR data for Pedestrian Detection. In IEEE Intelligent Vehicles Symposium IV2015 (pp. 356–361).
Abstract: Despite recent significant advances, pedestrian detection continues to be an extremely challenging problem in real scenarios. In order to develop a detector that successfully operates under these conditions, it becomes critical to leverage upon multiple cues, multiple imaging modalities and a strong multi-view classifier that accounts for different pedestrian views and poses. In this paper we provide an extensive evaluation that gives insight into how each of these aspects (multi-cue, multimodality and strong multi-view classifier) affect performance both individually and when integrated together. In the multimodality component we explore the fusion of RGB and depth maps obtained by high-definition LIDAR, a type of modality that is only recently starting to receive attention. As our analysis reveals, although all the aforementioned aspects significantly help in improving the performance, the fusion of visible spectrum and depth information allows to boost the accuracy by a much larger margin. The resulting detector not only ranks among the top best performers in the challenging KITTI benchmark, but it is built upon very simple blocks that are easy to implement and computationally efficient. These simple blocks can be easily replaced with more sophisticated ones recently proposed, such as the use of convolutional neural networks for feature representation, to further improve the accuracy.
Keywords: Pedestrian Detection
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P. Wang, V. Eglin, C. Garcia, C. Largeron, Josep Llados, & Alicia Fornes. (2014). Représentation par graphe de mots manuscrits dans les images pour la recherche par similarité. In Colloque International Francophone sur l'Écrit et le Document (pp. 233–248).
Abstract: Effective information retrieval on handwritten document images has always been
a challenging task. In this paper, we propose a novel handwritten word spotting approach based on graph representation. The presented model comprises both topological and morphological signatures of handwriting. Skeleton-based graphs with the Shape Context labeled vertexes are established for connected components. Each word image is represented as a sequence of graphs. In order to be robust to the handwriting variations, an exhaustive merging process based on DTW alignment results introduced in the similarity measure between word images. With respect to the computation complexity, an approximate graph edit distance approach using bipartite matching is employed for graph matching. The experiments on the George Washington dataset and the marriage records from the Barcelona Cathedral dataset demonstrate that the proposed approach outperforms the state-of-the-art structural methods.
Keywords: word spotting; graph-based representation; shape context description; graph edit distance; DTW; block merging; query by example
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Michal Drozdzal, Jordi Vitria, Santiago Segui, Carolina Malagelada, Fernando Azpiroz, & Petia Radeva. (2014). Intestinal event segmentation for endoluminal video analysis. In 21st IEEE International Conference on Image Processing (pp. 3592–3596).
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Jiaolong Xu, Sebastian Ramos, David Vazquez, & Antonio Lopez. (2013). DA-DPM Pedestrian Detection. In ICCV Workshop on Reconstruction meets Recognition.
Keywords: Domain Adaptation; Pedestrian Detection
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Alejandro Gonzalez Alzate, Gabriel Villalonga, German Ros, David Vazquez, & Antonio Lopez. (2015). 3D-Guided Multiscale Sliding Window for Pedestrian Detection. In Pattern Recognition and Image Analysis, Proceedings of 7th Iberian Conference , ibPRIA 2015 (Vol. 9117, pp. 560–568).
Abstract: The most relevant modules of a pedestrian detector are the candidate generation and the candidate classification. The former aims at presenting image windows to the latter so that they are classified as containing a pedestrian or not. Much attention has being paid to the classification module, while candidate generation has mainly relied on (multiscale) sliding window pyramid. However, candidate generation is critical for achieving real-time. In this paper we assume a context of autonomous driving based on stereo vision. Accordingly, we evaluate the effect of taking into account the 3D information (derived from the stereo) in order to prune the hundred of thousands windows per image generated by classical pyramidal sliding window. For our study we use a multimodal (RGB, disparity) and multi-descriptor (HOG, LBP, HOG+LBP) holistic ensemble based on linear SVM. Evaluation on data from the challenging KITTI benchmark suite shows the effectiveness of using 3D information to dramatically reduce the number of candidate windows, even improving the overall pedestrian detection accuracy.
Keywords: Pedestrian Detection
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Joost Van de Weijer, & Fahad Shahbaz Khan. (2015). An Overview of Color Name Applications in Computer Vision. In Computational Color Imaging Workshop.
Abstract: In this article we provide an overview of color name applications in computer vision. Color names are linguistic labels which humans use to communicate color. Computational color naming learns a mapping from pixels values to color names. In recent years color names have been applied to a wide variety of computer vision applications, including image classification, object recognition, texture classification, visual tracking and action recognition. Here we provide an overview of these results which show that in general color names outperform photometric invariants as a color representation.
Keywords: color features; color names; object recognition
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Sergio Escalera, Jordi Gonzalez, Xavier Baro, Pablo Pardo, Junior Fabian, Marc Oliu, et al. (2015). ChaLearn Looking at People 2015 new competitions: Age Estimation and Cultural Event Recognition. In IEEE International Joint Conference on Neural Networks IJCNN2015 (pp. 1–8).
Abstract: Following previous series on Looking at People (LAP) challenges [1], [2], [3], in 2015 ChaLearn runs two new competitions within the field of Looking at People: age and cultural event recognition in still images. We propose thefirst crowdsourcing application to collect and label data about apparent
age of people instead of the real age. In terms of cultural event recognition, tens of categories have to be recognized. This involves scene understanding and human analysis. This paper summarizes both challenges and data, providing some initial baselines. The results of the first round of the competition were presented at ChaLearn LAP 2015 IJCNN special session on computer vision and robotics http://www.dtic.ua.es/∼jgarcia/IJCNN2015.
Details of the ChaLearn LAP competitions can be found at http://gesture.chalearn.org/.
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