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Ivet Rafegas; Maria Vanrell; Luis A Alexandre; G. Arias |
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Title |
Understanding trained CNNs by indexing neuron selectivity |
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Journal Article |
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2020 |
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Pattern Recognition Letters |
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PRL |
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136 |
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318-325 |
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The impressive performance of Convolutional Neural Networks (CNNs) when solving different vision problems is shadowed by their black-box nature and our consequent lack of understanding of the representations they build and how these representations are organized. To help understanding these issues, we propose to describe the activity of individual neurons by their Neuron Feature visualization and quantify their inherent selectivity with two specific properties. We explore selectivity indexes for: an image feature (color); and an image label (class membership). Our contribution is a framework to seek or classify neurons by indexing on these selectivity properties. It helps to find color selective neurons, such as a red-mushroom neuron in layer Conv4 or class selective neurons such as dog-face neurons in layer Conv5 in VGG-M, and establishes a methodology to derive other selectivity properties. Indexing on neuron selectivity can statistically draw how features and classes are represented through layers in a moment when the size of trained nets is growing and automatic tools to index neurons can be helpful. |
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CIC; 600.087; 600.140; 600.118 |
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Admin @ si @ RVL2019 |
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3310 |
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Author |
Ivet Rafegas; Javier Vazquez; Robert Benavente; Maria Vanrell; Susana Alvarez |
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Title |
Enhancing spatio-chromatic representation with more-than-three color coding for image description |
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Journal Article |
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2017 |
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Journal of the Optical Society of America A |
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JOSA A |
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34 |
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5 |
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827-837 |
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Extraction of spatio-chromatic features from color images is usually performed independently on each color channel. Usual 3D color spaces, such as RGB, present a high inter-channel correlation for natural images. This correlation can be reduced using color-opponent representations, but the spatial structure of regions with small color differences is not fully captured in two generic Red-Green and Blue-Yellow channels. To overcome these problems, we propose a new color coding that is adapted to the specific content of each image. Our proposal is based on two steps: (a) setting the number of channels to the number of distinctive colors we find in each image (avoiding the problem of channel correlation), and (b) building a channel representation that maximizes contrast differences within each color channel (avoiding the problem of low local contrast). We call this approach more-than-three color coding (MTT) to enhance the fact that the number of channels is adapted to the image content. The higher color complexity an image has, the more channels can be used to represent it. Here we select distinctive colors as the most predominant in the image, which we call color pivots, and we build the new color coding using these color pivots as a basis. To evaluate the proposed approach we measure its efficiency in an image categorization task. We show how a generic descriptor improves its performance at the description level when applied on the MTT coding. |
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CIC; 600.087 |
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Admin @ si @ RVB2017 |
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2892 |
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Author |
Hassan Ahmed Sial; Ramon Baldrich; Maria Vanrell |
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Title |
Deep intrinsic decomposition trained on surreal scenes yet with realistic light effects |
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Journal Article |
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2020 |
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Journal of the Optical Society of America A |
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JOSA A |
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37 |
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1 |
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1-15 |
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Estimation of intrinsic images still remains a challenging task due to weaknesses of ground-truth datasets, which either are too small or present non-realistic issues. On the other hand, end-to-end deep learning architectures start to achieve interesting results that we believe could be improved if important physical hints were not ignored. In this work, we present a twofold framework: (a) a flexible generation of images overcoming some classical dataset problems such as larger size jointly with coherent lighting appearance; and (b) a flexible architecture tying physical properties through intrinsic losses. Our proposal is versatile, presents low computation time, and achieves state-of-the-art results. |
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CIC; 600.140; 600.12; 600.118 |
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Admin @ si @ SBV2019 |
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3311 |
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Author |
Hassan Ahmed Sial; S. Sancho; Ramon Baldrich; Robert Benavente; Maria Vanrell |
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Title |
Color-based data augmentation for Reflectance Estimation |
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Conference Article |
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Year |
2018 |
Publication |
26th Color Imaging Conference |
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284-289 |
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Deep convolutional architectures have shown to be successful frameworks to solve generic computer vision problems. The estimation of intrinsic reflectance from single image is not a solved problem yet. Encoder-Decoder architectures are a perfect approach for pixel-wise reflectance estimation, although it usually suffers from the lack of large datasets. Lack of data can be partially solved with data augmentation, however usual techniques focus on geometric changes which does not help for reflectance estimation. In this paper we propose a color-based data augmentation technique that extends the training data by increasing the variability of chromaticity. Rotation on the red-green blue-yellow plane of an opponent space enable to increase the training set in a coherent and sound way that improves network generalization capability for reflectance estimation. We perform some experiments on the Sintel dataset showing that our color-based augmentation increase performance and overcomes one of the state-of-the-art methods. |
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Vancouver; November 2018 |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ SSB2018a |
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3129 |
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Author |
Ivet Rafegas; Maria Vanrell |
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Title |
Color encoding in biologically-inspired convolutional neural networks |
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Journal Article |
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Year |
2018 |
Publication |
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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Robert Benavente; Maria Vanrell; Ramon Baldrich |
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A data set for fuzzy colour naming |
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2006 |
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Color Research & Application, 31(1):48–56 |
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CAT @ cat @ BVB2006 |
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590 |
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