|
Xinhang Song, Luis Herranz, & Shuqiang Jiang. (2017). Depth CNNs for RGB-D Scene Recognition: Learning from Scratch Better than Transferring from RGB-CNNs. In 31st AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence.
Abstract: Scene recognition with RGB images has been extensively studied and has reached very remarkable recognition levels, thanks to convolutional neural networks (CNN) and large scene datasets. In contrast, current RGB-D scene data is much more limited, so often leverages RGB large datasets, by transferring pretrained RGB CNN models and fine-tuning with the target RGB-D dataset. However, we show that this approach has the limitation of hardly reaching bottom layers, which is key to learn modality-specific features. In contrast, we focus on the bottom layers, and propose an alternative strategy to learn depth features combining local weakly supervised training from patches followed by global fine tuning with images. This strategy is capable of learning very discriminative depth-specific features with limited depth images, without resorting to Places-CNN. In addition we propose a modified CNN architecture to further match the complexity of the model and the amount of data available. For RGB-D scene recognition, depth and RGB features are combined by projecting them in a common space and further leaning a multilayer classifier, which is jointly optimized in an end-to-end network. Our framework achieves state-of-the-art accuracy on NYU2 and SUN RGB-D in both depth only and combined RGB-D data.
Keywords: RGB-D scene recognition; weakly supervised; fine tune; CNN
|
|
|
Laura Lopez-Fuentes, Joost Van de Weijer, Marc Bolaños, & Harald Skinnemoen. (2017). Multi-modal Deep Learning Approach for Flood Detection. In MediaEval Benchmarking Initiative for Multimedia Evaluation.
Abstract: In this paper we propose a multi-modal deep learning approach to detect floods in social media posts. Social media posts normally contain some metadata and/or visual information, therefore in order to detect the floods we use this information. The model is based on a Convolutional Neural Network which extracts the visual features and a bidirectional Long Short-Term Memory network to extract the semantic features from the textual metadata. We validate the
method on images extracted from Flickr which contain both visual information and metadata and compare the results when using both, visual information only or metadata only. This work has been done in the context of the MediaEval Multimedia Satellite Task.
|
|
|
Daniel Hernandez, Lukas Schneider, Antonio Espinosa, David Vazquez, Antonio Lopez, Uwe Franke, et al. (2017). Slanted Stixels: Representing San Francisco's Steepest Streets. In 28th British Machine Vision Conference.
Abstract: In this work we present a novel compact scene representation based on Stixels that infers geometric and semantic information. Our approach overcomes the previous rather restrictive geometric assumptions for Stixels by introducing a novel depth model to account for non-flat roads and slanted objects. Both semantic and depth cues are used jointly to infer the scene representation in a sound global energy minimization formulation. Furthermore, a novel approximation scheme is introduced that uses an extremely efficient over-segmentation. In doing so, the computational complexity of the Stixel inference algorithm is reduced significantly, achieving real-time computation capabilities with only a slight drop in accuracy. We evaluate the proposed approach in terms of semantic and geometric accuracy as well as run-time on four publicly available benchmark datasets. Our approach maintains accuracy on flat road scene datasets while improving substantially on a novel non-flat road dataset.
|
|
|
Carles Sanchez, Antonio Esteban Lansaque, Agnes Borras, Marta Diez-Ferrer, Antoni Rosell, & Debora Gil. (2017). Towards a Videobronchoscopy Localization System from Airway Centre Tracking. In 12th International Conference on Computer Vision Theory and Applications (pp. 352–359).
Abstract: Bronchoscopists use fluoroscopy to guide flexible bronchoscopy to the lesion to be biopsied without any kind of incision. Being fluoroscopy an imaging technique based on X-rays, the risk of developmental problems and cancer is increased in those subjects exposed to its application, so minimizing radiation is crucial. Alternative guiding systems such as electromagnetic navigation require specific equipment, increase the cost of the clinical procedure and still require fluoroscopy. In this paper we propose an image based guiding system based on the extraction of airway centres from intra-operative videos. Such anatomical landmarks are matched to the airway centreline extracted from a pre-planned CT to indicate the best path to the nodule. We present a
feasibility study of our navigation system using simulated bronchoscopic videos and a multi-expert validation of landmarks extraction in 3 intra-operative ultrathin explorations.
Keywords: Video-bronchoscopy; Lung cancer diagnosis; Airway lumen detection; Region tracking; Guided bronchoscopy navigation
|
|
|
Umut Guclu, Yagmur Gucluturk, Meysam Madadi, Sergio Escalera, Xavier Baro, Jordi Gonzalez, et al. (2017). End-to-end semantic face segmentation with conditional random fields as convolutional, recurrent and adversarial networks.
Abstract: arXiv:1703.03305
Recent years have seen a sharp increase in the number of related yet distinct advances in semantic segmentation. Here, we tackle this problem by leveraging the respective strengths of these advances. That is, we formulate a conditional random field over a four-connected graph as end-to-end trainable convolutional and recurrent networks, and estimate them via an adversarial process. Importantly, our model learns not only unary potentials but also pairwise
potentials, while aggregating multi-scale contexts and controlling higher-order inconsistencies.
We evaluate our model on two standard benchmark datasets for semantic face segmentation, achieving state-of-the-art results on both of them.
|
|
|
Ozan Caglayan, Walid Aransa, Adrien Bardet, Mercedes Garcia-Martinez, Fethi Bougares, Loic Barrault, et al. (2017). LIUM-CVC Submissions for WMT17 Multimodal Translation Task. In 2nd Conference on Machine Translation.
Abstract: This paper describes the monomodal and multimodal Neural Machine Translation systems developed by LIUM and CVC for WMT17 Shared Task on Multimodal Translation. We mainly explored two multimodal architectures where either global visual features or convolutional feature maps are integrated in order to benefit from visual context. Our final systems ranked first for both En-De and En-Fr language pairs according to the automatic evaluation metrics METEOR and BLEU.
|
|
|
Joan Serrat, Ferran Diego, Felipe Lumbreras, Jose Manuel Alvarez, Antonio Lopez, & C. Elvira. (2008). Dynamic Comparison of Headlights. Journal of Automobile Engineering, 222(5), 643–656.
Keywords: video alignment
|
|
|
Antoni Rosell, Sonia Baeza, S. Garcia-Reina, JL. Mate, Ignasi Guasch, I. Nogueira, et al. (2022). Radiomics to increase the effectiveness of lung cancer screening programs. Radiolung preliminary results. ERJ - European Respiratory Journal, 60(66).
|
|
|
David Berga, Xavier Otazu, Xose R. Fernandez-Vidal, Victor Leboran, & Xose M. Pardo. (2019). Generating Synthetic Images for Visual Attention Modeling. PER - Perception, 48, 99.
|
|
|
C. Alejandro Parraga, Robert Benavente, & Maria Vanrell. (2010). Towards a general model of colour categorization which considers context. PER - Perception. ECVP Abstract Supplement, 39, 86.
Abstract: In two previous experiments [Parraga et al, 2009 J. of Im. Sci. and Tech 53(3) 031106; Benavente et al,2009 Perception 38 ECVP Supplement, 36] the boundaries of basic colour categories were measured.
In the first experiment, samples were presented in isolation (ie on a dark background) and boundaries were measured using a yes/no paradigm. In the second, subjects adjusted the chromaticity of a sample presented on a random Mondrian background to find the boundary between pairs of adjacent colours.
Results from these experiments showed significant dierences but it was not possible to conclude whether this discrepancy was due to the absence/presence of a colourful background or to the dierences in the paradigms used. In this work, we settle this question by repeating the first experiment (ie samples presented on a dark background) using the second paradigm. A comparison of results shows that
although boundary locations are very similar, boundaries measured in context are significantly dierent(more diuse) than those measured in isolation (confirmed by a Student’s t-test analysis on the subject’s answers statistical distributions). In addition, we completed the mapping of colour name space by measuring the boundaries between chromatic colours and the achromatic centre. With these results we
completed our parametric fuzzy-sets model of colour naming space.
|
|
|
V. Valev, & Petia Radeva. (1992). Determining Structural Description by Boolean Formulas. In H. Bunke (Ed.), Advances in Structural and Syntactic Pattern Recognition (Vol. 5, 131–140). Machine Perception and Artificial Intelligence:. World Scientific.
Abstract: Pattern recognition is an active area of research with many applications, some of which have reached commercial maturity. Structural and syntactic methods are very powerful. They are based on symbolic data structures together with matching, parsing, and reasoning procedures that are able to infer interpretations of complex input patterns.
This book gives an overview of the latest developments and achievements in the field.
|
|
|
Josep Llados, Horst Bunke, & Enric Marti. (1996). Using cyclic string matching to find rotational and reflectional symmetric shapes. In H. B. H. N. R.C. Bolles (Ed.), Intelligent Robots: Sensing, Modeling and Planning (Dagstuhl Workshop) (pp. 164–179). Saarbrucken (Germany).: World Scientific.
|
|
|
Javier Varona, & Juan J. Villanueva. (1997). NeuroFilters: Neural Networks for image Processing. In Proceedings Volume 3101, New Image Processing Techniques and Applications: Algorithms, Methods, and Components II (Vol. 3101).
|
|
|
Felipe Lumbreras, & Joan Serrat. (1996). Wavelet filtering for the segmentation of marble images. Optical Engineering, 35(10).
|
|
|
Maria Salamo, & Sergio Escalera. (2011). Increasing Retrieval Quality in Conversational Recommenders. TKDE - IEEE Transactions on Knowledge and Data Engineering, 99, 1.
Abstract: IF JCR CCIA 2.286 2009 24/103
JCR Impact Factor 2010: 1.851
A major task of research in conversational recommender systems is personalization. Critiquing is a common and powerful form of feedback, where a user can express her feature preferences by applying a series of directional critiques over the recommendations instead of providing specific preference values. Incremental Critiquing is a conversational recommender system that uses critiquing as a feedback to efficiently personalize products. The expectation is that in each cycle the system retrieves the products that best satisfy the user’s soft product preferences from a minimal information input. In this paper, we present a novel technique that increases retrieval quality based on a combination of compatibility and similarity scores. Under the hypothesis that a user learns Turing the recommendation process, we propose two novel exponential reinforcement learning approaches for compatibility that take into account both the instant at which the user makes a critique and the number of satisfied critiques. Moreover, we consider that the impact of features on the similarity differs according to the preferences manifested by the user. We propose a global weighting approach that uses a common weight for nearest cases in order to focus on groups of relevant products. We show that our methodology significantly improves recommendation efficiency in four data sets of different sizes in terms of session length in comparison with state-of-the-art approaches. Moreover, our recommender shows higher robustness against noisy user data when compared to classical approaches
|
|