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Author |
Adrien Gaidon; Antonio Lopez; Florent Perronnin |
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Title |
The Reasonable Effectiveness of Synthetic Visual Data |
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Journal Article |
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Year |
2018 |
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International Journal of Computer Vision |
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IJCV |
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126 |
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9 |
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899–901 |
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ADAS; 600.118 |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ GLP2018 |
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3180 |
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Hugo Jair Escalante; Sergio Escalera; Isabelle Guyon; Xavier Baro; Yagmur Gucluturk; Umut Guçlu; Marcel van Gerven |
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Title |
Explainable and Interpretable Models in Computer Vision and Machine Learning |
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2018 |
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The Springer Series on Challenges in Machine Learning |
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This book compiles leading research on the development of explainable and interpretable machine learning methods in the context of computer vision and machine learning.
Research progress in computer vision and pattern recognition has led to a variety of modeling techniques with almost human-like performance. Although these models have obtained astounding results, they are limited in their explainability and interpretability: what is the rationale behind the decision made? what in the model structure explains its functioning? Hence, while good performance is a critical required characteristic for learning machines, explainability and interpretability capabilities are needed to take learning machines to the next step to include them in decision support systems involving human supervision.
This book, written by leading international researchers, addresses key topics of explainability and interpretability, including the following:
·Evaluation and Generalization in Interpretable Machine Learning
·Explanation Methods in Deep Learning
·Learning Functional Causal Models with Generative Neural Networks
·Learning Interpreatable Rules for Multi-Label Classification
·Structuring Neural Networks for More Explainable Predictions
·Generating Post Hoc Rationales of Deep Visual Classification Decisions
·Ensembling Visual Explanations
·Explainable Deep Driving by Visualizing Causal Attention
·Interdisciplinary Perspective on Algorithmic Job Candidate Search
·Multimodal Personality Trait Analysis for Explainable Modeling of Job Interview Decisions
·Inherent Explainability Pattern Theory-based Video Event Interpretations |
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HuPBA; no menciona |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ EEG2018 |
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3399 |
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Md. Mostafa Kamal Sarker; Hatem A. Rashwan; Farhan Akram; Syeda Furruka Banu; Adel Saleh; Vivek Kumar Singh; Forhad U. H. Chowdhury; Saddam Abdulwahab; Santiago Romani; Petia Radeva; Domenec Puig |
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Title |
SLSDeep: Skin Lesion Segmentation Based on Dilated Residual and Pyramid Pooling Networks. |
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Conference Article |
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Year |
2018 |
Publication |
21st International Conference on Medical Image Computing & Computer Assisted Intervention |
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2 |
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21-29 |
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Skin lesion segmentation (SLS) in dermoscopic images is a crucial task for automated diagnosis of melanoma. In this paper, we present a robust deep learning SLS model, so-called SLSDeep, which is represented as an encoder-decoder network. The encoder network is constructed by dilated residual layers, in turn, a pyramid pooling network followed by three convolution layers is used for the decoder. Unlike the traditional methods employing a cross-entropy loss, we investigated a loss function by combining both Negative Log Likelihood (NLL) and End Point Error (EPE) to accurately segment the melanoma regions with sharp boundaries. The robustness of the proposed model was evaluated on two public databases: ISBI 2016 and 2017 for skin lesion analysis towards melanoma detection challenge. The proposed model outperforms the state-of-the-art methods in terms of segmentation accuracy. Moreover, it is capable to segment more than 100 images of size 384x384 per second on a recent GPU. |
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Granada; Espanya; September 2018 |
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MICCAI |
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MILAB; no proj |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ SRA2018 |
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3112 |
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Author |
Simone Balocco; Mauricio Gonzalez; Ricardo Ñancule; Petia Radeva; Gabriel Thomas |
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Title |
Calcified Plaque Detection in IVUS Sequences: Preliminary Results Using Convolutional Nets |
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Conference Article |
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Year |
2018 |
Publication |
International Workshop on Artificial Intelligence and Pattern Recognition |
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Volume |
11047 |
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34-42 |
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Intravascular ultrasound images; Convolutional nets; Deep learning; Medical image analysis |
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The manual inspection of intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) images to detect clinically relevant patterns is a difficult and laborious task performed routinely by physicians. In this paper, we present a framework based on convolutional nets for the quick selection of IVUS frames containing arterial calcification, a pattern whose detection plays a vital role in the diagnosis of atherosclerosis. Preliminary experiments on a dataset acquired from eighty patients show that convolutional architectures improve detections of a shallow classifier in terms of 𝐹1-measure, precision and recall. |
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Cuba; September 2018 |
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IWAIPR |
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MILAB; no menciona |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ BGÑ2018 |
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3237 |
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Author |
Stefan Schurischuster; Beatriz Remeseiro; Petia Radeva; Martin Kampel |
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Title |
A Preliminary Study of Image Analysis for Parasite Detection on Honey Bees |
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Conference Article |
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Year |
2018 |
Publication |
15th International Conference on Image Analysis and Recognition |
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10882 |
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465-473 |
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Varroa destructor is a parasite harming bee colonies. As the worldwide bee population is in danger, beekeepers as well as researchers are looking for methods to monitor the health of bee hives. In this context, we present a preliminary study to detect parasites on bee videos by means of image analysis and machine learning techniques. For this purpose, each video frame is analyzed individually to extract bee image patches, which are then processed to compute image descriptors and finally classified into mite and no mite bees. The experimental results demonstrated the adequacy of the proposed method, which will be a perfect stepping stone for a further bee monitoring system. |
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Povoa de Varzim; Portugal; June 2018 |
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ICIAR |
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MILAB; no proj |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ SRR2018a |
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3110 |
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Sergio Escalera; Markus Weimer; Mikhail Burtsev; Valentin Malykh; Varvara Logacheva; Ryan Lowe; Iulian Vlad Serban; Yoshua Bengio; Alexander Rudnicky; Alan W. Black; Shrimai Prabhumoye; Łukasz Kidzinski; Mohanty Sharada; Carmichael Ong; Jennifer Hicks; Sergey Levine; Marcel Salathe; Scott Delp; Iker Huerga; Alexander Grigorenko; Leifur Thorbergsson; Anasuya Das; Kyla Nemitz; Jenna Sandker; Stephen King; Alexander S. Ecker; Leon A. Gatys; Matthias Bethge; Jordan Boyd Graber; Shi Feng; Pedro Rodriguez; Mohit Iyyer; He He; Hal Daume III; Sean McGregor; Amir Banifatemi; Alexey Kurakin; Ian Goodfellow; Samy Bengio |
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Title |
Introduction to NIPS 2017 Competition Track |
Type |
Book Chapter |
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Year |
2018 |
Publication |
The NIPS ’17 Competition: Building Intelligent Systems |
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1-23 |
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Competitions have become a popular tool in the data science community to solve hard problems, assess the state of the art and spur new research directions. Companies like Kaggle and open source platforms like Codalab connect people with data and a data science problem to those with the skills and means to solve it. Hence, the question arises: What, if anything, could NIPS add to this rich ecosystem?
In 2017, we embarked to find out. We attracted 23 potential competitions, of which we selected five to be NIPS 2017 competitions. Our final selection features competitions advancing the state of the art in other sciences such as “Classifying Clinically Actionable Genetic Mutations” and “Learning to Run”. Others, like “The Conversational Intelligence Challenge” and “Adversarial Attacks and Defences” generated new data sets that we expect to impact the progress in their respective communities for years to come. And “Human-Computer Question Answering Competition” showed us just how far we as a field have come in ability and efficiency since the break-through performance of Watson in Jeopardy. Two additional competitions, DeepArt and AI XPRIZE Milestions, were also associated to the NIPS 2017 competition track, whose results are also presented within this chapter. |
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Springer |
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Sergio Escalera; Markus Weimer |
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978-3-319-94042-7 |
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HUPBA; no proj |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ EWB2018 |
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3200 |
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Author |
Esmitt Ramirez; Carles Sanchez; Agnes Borras; Marta Diez-Ferrer; Antoni Rosell; Debora Gil |
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Title |
Image-Based Bronchial Anatomy Codification for Biopsy Guiding in Video Bronchoscopy |
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Conference Article |
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Year |
2018 |
Publication |
OR 2.0 Context-Aware Operating Theaters, Computer Assisted Robotic Endoscopy, Clinical Image-Based Procedures, and Skin Image Analysis |
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11041 |
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Biopsy guiding; Bronchoscopy; Lung biopsy; Intervention guiding; Airway codification |
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Bronchoscopy examinations allow biopsy of pulmonary nodules with minimum risk for the patient. Even for experienced bronchoscopists, it is difficult to guide the bronchoscope to most distal lesions and obtain an accurate diagnosis. This paper presents an image-based codification of the bronchial anatomy for bronchoscopy biopsy guiding. The 3D anatomy of each patient is codified as a binary tree with nodes representing bronchial levels and edges labeled using their position on images projecting the 3D anatomy from a set of branching points. The paths from the root to leaves provide a codification of navigation routes with spatially consistent labels according to the anatomy observes in video bronchoscopy explorations. We evaluate our labeling approach as a guiding system in terms of the number of bronchial levels correctly codified, also in the number of labels-based instructions correctly supplied, using generalized mixed models and computer-generated data. Results obtained for three independent observers prove the consistency and reproducibility of our guiding system. We trust that our codification based on viewer’s projection might be used as a foundation for the navigation process in Virtual Bronchoscopy systems. |
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Granada; September 2018 |
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MICCAIW |
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IAM; 600.096; 600.075; 601.323; 600.145 |
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no |
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Call Number |
Admin @ si @ RSB2018b |
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3137 |
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Author |
Raul Gomez; Lluis Gomez; Jaume Gibert; Dimosthenis Karatzas |
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Title |
Learning to Learn from Web Data through Deep Semantic Embeddings |
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Conference Article |
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2018 |
Publication |
15th European Conference on Computer Vision Workshops |
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11134 |
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514-529 |
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In this paper we propose to learn a multimodal image and text embedding from Web and Social Media data, aiming to leverage the semantic knowledge learnt in the text domain and transfer it to a visual model for semantic image retrieval. We demonstrate that the pipeline can learn from images with associated text without supervision and perform a thourough analysis of five different text embeddings in three different benchmarks. We show that the embeddings learnt with Web and Social Media data have competitive performances over supervised methods in the text based image retrieval task, and we clearly outperform state of the art in the MIRFlickr dataset when training in the target data. Further we demonstrate how semantic multimodal image retrieval can be performed using the learnt embeddings, going beyond classical instance-level retrieval problems. Finally, we present a new dataset, InstaCities1M, composed by Instagram images and their associated texts that can be used for fair comparison of image-text embeddings. |
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Munich; Alemanya; September 2018 |
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ECCVW |
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DAG; 600.129; 601.338; 600.121 |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ GGG2018a |
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3175 |
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Raul Gomez; Lluis Gomez; Jaume Gibert; Dimosthenis Karatzas |
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Title |
Learning from# Barcelona Instagram data what Locals and Tourists post about its Neighbourhoods |
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Conference Article |
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2018 |
Publication |
15th European Conference on Computer Vision Workshops |
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11134 |
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530-544 |
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Massive tourism is becoming a big problem for some cities, such as Barcelona, due to its concentration in some neighborhoods. In this work we gather Instagram data related to Barcelona consisting on images-captions pairs and, using the text as a supervisory signal, we learn relations between images, words and neighborhoods. Our goal is to learn which visual elements appear in photos when people is posting about each neighborhood. We perform a language separate treatment of the data and show that it can be extrapolated to a tourists and locals separate analysis, and that tourism is reflected in Social Media at a neighborhood level. The presented pipeline allows analyzing the differences between the images that tourists and locals associate to the different neighborhoods. The proposed method, which can be extended to other cities or subjects, proves that Instagram data can be used to train multi-modal (image and text) machine learning models that are useful to analyze publications about a city at a neighborhood level. We publish the collected dataset, InstaBarcelona and the code used in the analysis. |
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Munich; Alemanya; September 2018 |
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ECCVW |
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DAG; 600.129; 601.338; 600.121 |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ GGG2018b |
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3176 |
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Author |
Santi Puch; Irina Sanchez; Aura Hernandez-Sabate; Gemma Piella; Vesna Prckovska |
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Title |
Global Planar Convolutions for Improved Context Aggregation in Brain Tumor Segmentation |
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Conference Article |
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2018 |
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International MICCAI Brainlesion Workshop |
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11384 |
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393-405 |
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Brain tumors; 3D fully-convolutional CNN; Magnetic resonance imaging; Global planar convolution |
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In this work, we introduce the Global Planar Convolution module as a building-block for fully-convolutional networks that aggregates global information and, therefore, enhances the context perception capabilities of segmentation networks in the context of brain tumor segmentation. We implement two baseline architectures (3D UNet and a residual version of 3D UNet, ResUNet) and present a novel architecture based on these two architectures, ContextNet, that includes the proposed Global Planar Convolution module. We show that the addition of such module eliminates the need of building networks with several representation levels, which tend to be over-parametrized and to showcase slow rates of convergence. Furthermore, we provide a visual demonstration of the behavior of GPC modules via visualization of intermediate representations. We finally participate in the 2018 edition of the BraTS challenge with our best performing models, that are based on ContextNet, and report the evaluation scores on the validation and the test sets of the challenge. |
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MICCAIW |
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ADAS; 600.118 |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ PSH2018 |
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3251 |
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Anguelos Nicolaou; Sounak Dey; V.Christlein; A.Maier; Dimosthenis Karatzas |
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Title |
Non-deterministic Behavior of Ranking-based Metrics when Evaluating Embeddings |
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Conference Article |
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2018 |
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International Workshop on Reproducible Research in Pattern Recognition |
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11455 |
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71-82 |
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Embedding data into vector spaces is a very popular strategy of pattern recognition methods. When distances between embeddings are quantized, performance metrics become ambiguous. In this paper, we present an analysis of the ambiguity quantized distances introduce and provide bounds on the effect. We demonstrate that it can have a measurable effect in empirical data in state-of-the-art systems. We also approach the phenomenon from a computer security perspective and demonstrate how someone being evaluated by a third party can exploit this ambiguity and greatly outperform a random predictor without even access to the input data. We also suggest a simple solution making the performance metrics, which rely on ranking, totally deterministic and impervious to such exploits. |
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DAG; 600.121; 600.129 |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ NDC2018 |
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3178 |
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Author |
Gholamreza Anbarjafari; Sergio Escalera |
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Title |
Human-Robot Interaction: Theory and Application |
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2018 |
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Human-Robot Interaction: Theory and Application |
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978-1-78923-316-2 |
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HUPBA |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ AnE2018 |
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3216 |
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Author |
Esmitt Ramirez; Carles Sanchez; Agnes Borras; Marta Diez-Ferrer; Antoni Rosell; Debora Gil |
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BronchoX: bronchoscopy exploration software for biopsy intervention planning |
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2018 |
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Healthcare Technology Letters |
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HTL |
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5 |
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5 |
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177–182 |
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Virtual bronchoscopy (VB) is a non-invasive exploration tool for intervention planning and navigation of possible pulmonary lesions (PLs). A VB software involves the location of a PL and the calculation of a route, starting from the trachea, to reach it. The selection of a VB software might be a complex process, and there is no consensus in the community of medical software developers in which is the best-suited system to use or framework to choose. The authors present Bronchoscopy Exploration (BronchoX), a VB software to plan biopsy interventions that generate physician-readable instructions to reach the PLs. The authors’ solution is open source, multiplatform, and extensible for future functionalities, designed by their multidisciplinary research and development group. BronchoX is a compound of different algorithms for segmentation, visualisation, and navigation of the respiratory tract. Performed results are a focus on the test the effectiveness of their proposal as an exploration software, also to measure its accuracy as a guiding system to reach PLs. Then, 40 different virtual planning paths were created to guide physicians until distal bronchioles. These results provide a functional software for BronchoX and demonstrate how following simple instructions is possible to reach distal lesions from the trachea. |
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IAM; 600.096; 600.075; 601.323; 601.337; 600.145 |
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Admin @ si @ RSB2018a |
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3132 |
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Xim Cerda-Company; C. Alejandro Parraga; Xavier Otazu |
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Which tone-mapping operator is the best? A comparative study of perceptual quality |
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2018 |
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Journal of the Optical Society of America A |
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JOSA A |
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35 |
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4 |
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626-638 |
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Tone-mapping operators (TMO) are designed to generate perceptually similar low-dynamic range images from high-dynamic range ones. We studied the performance of fifteen TMOs in two psychophysical experiments where observers compared the digitally-generated tone-mapped images to their corresponding physical scenes. All experiments were performed in a controlled environment and the setups were
designed to emphasize different image properties: in the first experiment we evaluated the local relationships among intensity-levels, and in the second one we evaluated global visual appearance among physical scenes and tone-mapped images, which were presented side by side. We ranked the TMOs according
to how well they reproduced the results obtained in the physical scene. Our results show that ranking position clearly depends on the adopted evaluation criteria, which implies that, in general, these tone-mapping algorithms consider either local or global image attributes but rarely both. Regarding the
question of which TMO is the best, KimKautz [1] and Krawczyk [2] obtained the better results across the different experiments. We conclude that a more thorough and standardized evaluation criteria is needed to study all the characteristics of TMOs, as there is ample room for improvement in future developments. |
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NEUROBIT; 600.120; 600.128 |
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Admin @ si @ CPO2018 |
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3088 |
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Ivet Rafegas; Maria Vanrell |
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Color encoding in biologically-inspired convolutional neural networks |
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2018 |
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Vision Research |
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VR |
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151 |
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7-17 |
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Color coding; Computer vision; Deep learning; Convolutional neural networks |
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Convolutional Neural Networks have been proposed as suitable frameworks to model biological vision. Some of these artificial networks showed representational properties that rival primate performances in object recognition. In this paper we explore how color is encoded in a trained artificial network. It is performed by estimating a color selectivity index for each neuron, which allows us to describe the neuron activity to a color input stimuli. The index allows us to classify whether they are color selective or not and if they are of a single or double color. We have determined that all five convolutional layers of the network have a large number of color selective neurons. Color opponency clearly emerges in the first layer, presenting 4 main axes (Black-White, Red-Cyan, Blue-Yellow and Magenta-Green), but this is reduced and rotated as we go deeper into the network. In layer 2 we find a denser hue sampling of color neurons and opponency is reduced almost to one new main axis, the Bluish-Orangish coinciding with the dataset bias. In layers 3, 4 and 5 color neurons are similar amongst themselves, presenting different type of neurons that detect specific colored objects (e.g., orangish faces), specific surrounds (e.g., blue sky) or specific colored or contrasted object-surround configurations (e.g. blue blob in a green surround). Overall, our work concludes that color and shape representation are successively entangled through all the layers of the studied network, revealing certain parallelisms with the reported evidences in primate brains that can provide useful insight into intermediate hierarchical spatio-chromatic representations. |
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CIC; 600.051; 600.087 |
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Admin @ si @RaV2018 |
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3114 |
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