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Author |
Olivier Penacchio; Xavier Otazu; A. wilkins; J. Harris |
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Title |
Uncomfortable images prevent lateral interactions in the cortex from providing a sparse code |
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Conference Article |
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2015 |
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European Conference on Visual Perception ECVP2015 |
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Liverpool; uk; August 2015 |
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ECVP |
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NEUROBIT; |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ POW2015 |
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2633 |
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Author |
Juan Ramon Terven Salinas; Bogdan Raducanu; Maria Elena Meza-de-Luna; Joaquin Salas |
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Title |
Evaluating Real-Time Mirroring of Head Gestures using Smart Glasses |
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Conference Article |
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Year |
2015 |
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16th IEEE International Conference on Computer Vision Workshops |
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452-460 |
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Mirroring occurs when one person tends to mimic the non-verbal communication of their counterparts. Even though mirroring is a complex phenomenon, in this study, we focus on the detection of head-nodding as a simple non-verbal communication cue due to its significance as a gesture displayed during social interactions. This paper introduces a computer vision-based method to detect mirroring through the analysis of head gestures using wearable cameras (smart glasses). In addition, we study how such a method can be used to explore perceived competence. The proposed method has been evaluated and the experiments demonstrate how static and wearable cameras seem to be equally effective to gather the information required for the analysis. |
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Santiago de Chile; December 2015 |
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ICCVW |
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LAMP; 600.068; 600.072; |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ TRM2015 |
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2722 |
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Author |
Gemma Rotger; Francesc Moreno-Noguer; Felipe Lumbreras; Antonio Agudo |
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Title |
Detailed 3D face reconstruction from a single RGB image |
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2019 |
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Journal of WSCG |
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JWSCG |
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27 |
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2 |
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103-112 |
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3D Wrinkle Reconstruction; Face Analysis, Optimization. |
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This paper introduces a method to obtain a detailed 3D reconstruction of facial skin from a single RGB image.
To this end, we propose the exclusive use of an input image without requiring any information about the observed material nor training data to model the wrinkle properties. They are detected and characterized directly from the image via a simple and effective parametric model, determining several features such as location, orientation, width, and height. With these ingredients, we propose to minimize a photometric error to retrieve the final detailed 3D map, which is initialized by current techniques based on deep learning. In contrast with other approaches, we only require estimating a depth parameter, making our approach fast and intuitive. Extensive experimental evaluation is presented in a wide variety of synthetic and real images, including different skin properties and facial
expressions. In all cases, our method outperforms the current approaches regarding 3D reconstruction accuracy, providing striking results for both large and fine wrinkles. |
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2019/11 |
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MSIAU; 600.086; 600.130; 600.122 |
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Admin @ si @ |
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3708 |
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Author |
Oscar Argudo; Marc Comino; Antonio Chica; Carlos Andujar; Felipe Lumbreras |
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Title |
Segmentation of aerial images for plausible detail synthesis |
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Journal Article |
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Year |
2018 |
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Computers & Graphics |
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CG |
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71 |
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23-34 |
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Keywords |
Terrain editing; Detail synthesis; Vegetation synthesis; Terrain rendering; Image segmentation |
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The visual enrichment of digital terrain models with plausible synthetic detail requires the segmentation of aerial images into a suitable collection of categories. In this paper we present a complete pipeline for segmenting high-resolution aerial images into a user-defined set of categories distinguishing e.g. terrain, sand, snow, water, and different types of vegetation. This segmentation-for-synthesis problem implies that per-pixel categories must be established according to the algorithms chosen for rendering the synthetic detail. This precludes the definition of a universal set of labels and hinders the construction of large training sets. Since artists might choose to add new categories on the fly, the whole pipeline must be robust against unbalanced datasets, and fast on both training and inference. Under these constraints, we analyze the contribution of common per-pixel descriptors, and compare the performance of state-of-the-art supervised learning algorithms. We report the findings of two user studies. The first one was conducted to analyze human accuracy when manually labeling aerial images. The second user study compares detailed terrains built using different segmentation strategies, including official land cover maps. These studies demonstrate that our approach can be used to turn digital elevation models into fully-featured, detailed terrains with minimal authoring efforts. |
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0097-8493 |
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MSIAU; 600.086; 600.118 |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ ACC2018 |
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3147 |
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Author |
Carola Figueroa Flores; Abel Gonzalez-Garcia; Joost Van de Weijer; Bogdan Raducanu |
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Title |
Saliency for fine-grained object recognition in domains with scarce training data |
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Journal Article |
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Year |
2019 |
Publication |
Pattern Recognition |
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PR |
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94 |
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62-73 |
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This paper investigates the role of saliency to improve the classification accuracy of a Convolutional Neural Network (CNN) for the case when scarce training data is available. Our approach consists in adding a saliency branch to an existing CNN architecture which is used to modulate the standard bottom-up visual features from the original image input, acting as an attentional mechanism that guides the feature extraction process. The main aim of the proposed approach is to enable the effective training of a fine-grained recognition model with limited training samples and to improve the performance on the task, thereby alleviating the need to annotate a large dataset. The vast majority of saliency methods are evaluated on their ability to generate saliency maps, and not on their functionality in a complete vision pipeline. Our proposed pipeline allows to evaluate saliency methods for the high-level task of object recognition. We perform extensive experiments on various fine-grained datasets (Flowers, Birds, Cars, and Dogs) under different conditions and show that saliency can considerably improve the network’s performance, especially for the case of scarce training data. Furthermore, our experiments show that saliency methods that obtain improved saliency maps (as measured by traditional saliency benchmarks) also translate to saliency methods that yield improved performance gains when applied in an object recognition pipeline. |
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LAMP; 600.109; 600.141; 600.120 |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ FGW2019 |
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3264 |
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Author |
Hao Fang; Ajian Liu; Jun Wan; Sergio Escalera; Hugo Jair Escalante; Zhen Lei |
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Title |
Surveillance Face Presentation Attack Detection Challenge |
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Conference Article |
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Year |
2023 |
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Proceedings of the IEEE/CVF Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition Workshops |
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6360-6370 |
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Face Anti-spoofing (FAS) is essential to secure face recognition systems from various physical attacks. However, most of the studies lacked consideration of long-distance scenarios. Specifically, compared with FAS in traditional scenes such as phone unlocking, face payment, and self-service security inspection, FAS in long-distance such as station squares, parks, and self-service supermarkets are equally important, but it has not been sufficiently explored yet. In order to fill this gap in the FAS community, we collect a large-scale Surveillance High-Fidelity Mask (SuHiFiMask). SuHiFiMask contains 10,195 videos from 101 subjects of different age groups, which are collected by 7 mainstream surveillance cameras. Based on this dataset and protocol-3 for evaluating the robustness of the algorithm under quality changes, we organized a face presentation attack detection challenge in surveillance scenarios. It attracted 180 teams for the development phase with a total of 37 teams qualifying for the final round. The organization team re-verified and re-ran the submitted code and used the results as the final ranking. In this paper, we present an overview of the challenge, including an introduction to the dataset used, the definition of the protocol, the evaluation metrics, and the announcement of the competition results. Finally, we present the top-ranked algorithms and the research ideas provided by the competition for attack detection in long-range surveillance scenarios. |
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Vancouver; Canada; June 2023 |
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CVPRW |
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HuPBA |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ FLW2023 |
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3917 |
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Author |
Chenshen Wu; Joost Van de Weijer |
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Title |
Density Map Distillation for Incremental Object Counting |
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Conference Article |
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2023 |
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Proceedings of the IEEE/CVF Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition Workshops |
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2505-2514 |
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We investigate the problem of incremental learning for object counting, where a method must learn to count a variety of object classes from a sequence of datasets. A naïve approach to incremental object counting would suffer from catastrophic forgetting, where it would suffer from a dramatic performance drop on previous tasks. In this paper, we propose a new exemplar-free functional regularization method, called Density Map Distillation (DMD). During training, we introduce a new counter head for each task and introduce a distillation loss to prevent forgetting of previous tasks. Additionally, we introduce a cross-task adaptor that projects the features of the current backbone to the previous backbone. This projector allows for the learning of new features while the backbone retains the relevant features for previous tasks. Finally, we set up experiments of incremental learning for counting new objects. Results confirm that our method greatly reduces catastrophic forgetting and outperforms existing methods. |
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Vancouver; Canada; June 2023 |
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LAMP |
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Admin @ si @ WuW2023 |
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3916 |
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Author |
Javad Zolfaghari Bengar; Joost Van de Weijer; Bartlomiej Twardowski; Bogdan Raducanu |
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Title |
Reducing Label Effort: Self- Supervised Meets Active Learning |
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Conference Article |
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2021 |
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International Conference on Computer Vision Workshops |
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1631-1639 |
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Active learning is a paradigm aimed at reducing the annotation effort by training the model on actively selected informative and/or representative samples. Another paradigm to reduce the annotation effort is self-training that learns from a large amount of unlabeled data in an unsupervised way and fine-tunes on few labeled samples. Recent developments in self-training have achieved very impressive results rivaling supervised learning on some datasets. The current work focuses on whether the two paradigms can benefit from each other. We studied object recognition datasets including CIFAR10, CIFAR100 and Tiny ImageNet with several labeling budgets for the evaluations. Our experiments reveal that self-training is remarkably more efficient than active learning at reducing the labeling effort, that for a low labeling budget, active learning offers no benefit to self-training, and finally that the combination of active learning and self-training is fruitful when the labeling budget is high. The performance gap between active learning trained either with self-training or from scratch diminishes as we approach to the point where almost half of the dataset is labeled. |
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October 2021 |
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LAMP; |
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Admin @ si @ ZVT2021 |
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3672 |
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Author |
Javad Zolfaghari Bengar; Bogdan Raducanu; Joost Van de Weijer |
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Title |
When Deep Learners Change Their Mind: Learning Dynamics for Active Learning |
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Conference Article |
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2021 |
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19th International Conference on Computer Analysis of Images and Patterns |
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13052 |
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1 |
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403-413 |
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Active learning aims to select samples to be annotated that yield the largest performance improvement for the learning algorithm. Many methods approach this problem by measuring the informativeness of samples and do this based on the certainty of the network predictions for samples. However, it is well-known that neural networks are overly confident about their prediction and are therefore an untrustworthy source to assess sample informativeness. In this paper, we propose a new informativeness-based active learning method. Our measure is derived from the learning dynamics of a neural network. More precisely we track the label assignment of the unlabeled data pool during the training of the algorithm. We capture the learning dynamics with a metric called label-dispersion, which is low when the network consistently assigns the same label to the sample during the training of the network and high when the assigned label changes frequently. We show that label-dispersion is a promising predictor of the uncertainty of the network, and show on two benchmark datasets that an active learning algorithm based on label-dispersion obtains excellent results. |
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September 2021 |
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CAIP |
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LAMP; |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ ZRV2021 |
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3673 |
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