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Author Diana Ramirez Cifuentes; Ana Freire; Ricardo Baeza Yates; Nadia Sanz Lamora; Aida Alvarez; Alexandre Gonzalez; Meritxell Lozano; Roger Llobet; Diego Velazquez; Josep M. Gonfaus; Jordi Gonzalez
Title Characterization of Anorexia Nervosa on Social Media: Textual, Visual, Relational, Behavioral, and Demographical Analysis Type Journal Article
Year 2021 Publication Journal of Medical Internet Research Abbreviated Journal JMIR
Volume 23 Issue 7 Pages e25925
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Abstract Background: Eating disorders are psychological conditions characterized by unhealthy eating habits. Anorexia nervosa (AN) is defined as the belief of being overweight despite being dangerously underweight. The psychological signs involve emotional and behavioral issues. There is evidence that signs and symptoms can manifest on social media, wherein both harmful and beneficial content is shared daily.
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Notes ISE Approved no
Call Number Admin @ si @ RFB2021 Serial 3665
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Author O.F.Ahmad; Y.Mori; M.Misawa; S.Kudo; J.T.Anderson; Jorge Bernal
Title Establishing key research questions for the implementation of artificial intelligence in colonoscopy: a modified Delphi method Type Journal Article
Year 2021 Publication Endoscopy Abbreviated Journal END
Volume 53 Issue 9 Pages 893-901
Keywords
Abstract BACKGROUND : Artificial intelligence (AI) research in colonoscopy is progressing rapidly but widespread clinical implementation is not yet a reality. We aimed to identify the top implementation research priorities. METHODS : An established modified Delphi approach for research priority setting was used. Fifteen international experts, including endoscopists and translational computer scientists/engineers, from nine countries participated in an online survey over 9 months. Questions related to AI implementation in colonoscopy were generated as a long-list in the first round, and then scored in two subsequent rounds to identify the top 10 research questions. RESULTS : The top 10 ranked questions were categorized into five themes. Theme 1: clinical trial design/end points (4 questions), related to optimum trial designs for polyp detection and characterization, determining the optimal end points for evaluation of AI, and demonstrating impact on interval cancer rates. Theme 2: technological developments (3 questions), including improving detection of more challenging and advanced lesions, reduction of false-positive rates, and minimizing latency. Theme 3: clinical adoption/integration (1 question), concerning the effective combination of detection and characterization into one workflow. Theme 4: data access/annotation (1 question), concerning more efficient or automated data annotation methods to reduce the burden on human experts. Theme 5: regulatory approval (1 question), related to making regulatory approval processes more efficient. CONCLUSIONS : This is the first reported international research priority setting exercise for AI in colonoscopy. The study findings should be used as a framework to guide future research with key stakeholders to accelerate the clinical implementation of AI in endoscopy.
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Notes ISE Approved no
Call Number Admin @ si @ AMM2021 Serial 3670
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Author Shiqi Yang; Yaxing Wang; Joost Van de Weijer; Luis Herranz; Shangling Jui
Title Exploiting the Intrinsic Neighborhood Structure for Source-free Domain Adaptation Type Conference Article
Year 2021 Publication Thirty-fifth Conference on Neural Information Processing Systems (NeurIPS 2021) Abbreviated Journal
Volume Issue Pages
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Abstract Domain adaptation (DA) aims to alleviate the domain shift between source domain and target domain. Most DA methods require access to the source data, but often that is not possible (e.g. due to data privacy or intellectual property). In this paper, we address the challenging source-free domain adaptation (SFDA) problem, where the source pretrained model is adapted to the target domain in the absence of source data. Our method is based on the observation that target data, which might no longer align with the source domain classifier, still forms clear clusters. We capture this intrinsic structure by defining local affinity of the target data, and encourage label consistency among data with high local affinity. We observe that higher affinity should be assigned to reciprocal neighbors, and propose a self regularization loss to decrease the negative impact of noisy neighbors. Furthermore, to aggregate information with more context, we consider expanded neighborhoods with small affinity values. In the experimental results we verify that the inherent structure of the target features is an important source of information for domain adaptation. We demonstrate that this local structure can be efficiently captured by considering the local neighbors, the reciprocal neighbors, and the expanded neighborhood. Finally, we achieve state-of-the-art performance on several 2D image and 3D point cloud recognition datasets. Code is available in https://github.com/Albert0147/SFDA_neighbors.
Address Online; December 7-10, 2021
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Area Expedition Conference NIPS
Notes LAMP; 600.147; 600.141 Approved no
Call Number Admin @ si @ Serial 3691
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Author Dustin Carrion Ojeda; Hong Chen; Adrian El Baz; Sergio Escalera; Chaoyu Guan; Isabelle Guyon; Ihsan Ullah; Xin Wang; Wenwu Zhu
Title NeurIPS’22 Cross-Domain MetaDL competition: Design and baseline results Type Conference Article
Year 2022 Publication Understanding Social Behavior in Dyadic and Small Group Interactions Abbreviated Journal
Volume 191 Issue Pages 24-37
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Abstract We present the design and baseline results for a new challenge in the ChaLearn meta-learning series, accepted at NeurIPS'22, focusing on “cross-domain” meta-learning. Meta-learning aims to leverage experience gained from previous tasks to solve new tasks efficiently (i.e., with better performance, little training data, and/or modest computational resources). While previous challenges in the series focused on within-domain few-shot learning problems, with the aim of learning efficiently N-way k-shot tasks (i.e., N class classification problems with k training examples), this competition challenges the participants to solve “any-way” and “any-shot” problems drawn from various domains (healthcare, ecology, biology, manufacturing, and others), chosen for their humanitarian and societal impact. To that end, we created Meta-Album, a meta-dataset of 40 image classification datasets from 10 domains, from which we carve out tasks with any number of “ways” (within the range 2-20) and any number of “shots” (within the range 1-20). The competition is with code submission, fully blind-tested on the CodaLab challenge platform. The code of the winners will be open-sourced, enabling the deployment of automated machine learning solutions for few-shot image classification across several domains.
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Area Expedition Conference PMLR
Notes HUPBA; no menciona Approved no
Call Number Admin @ si @ CCB2022 Serial 3802
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Author Adam Fodor; Rachid R. Saboundji; Julio C. S. Jacques Junior; Sergio Escalera; David Gallardo Pujol; Andras Lorincz
Title Multimodal Sentiment and Personality Perception Under Speech: A Comparison of Transformer-based Architectures Type Conference Article
Year 2022 Publication Understanding Social Behavior in Dyadic and Small Group Interactions Abbreviated Journal
Volume 173 Issue Pages 218-241
Keywords
Abstract Human-machine, human-robot interaction, and collaboration appear in diverse fields, from homecare to Cyber-Physical Systems. Technological development is fast, whereas real-time methods for social communication analysis that can measure small changes in sentiment and personality states, including visual, acoustic and language modalities are lagging, particularly when the goal is to build robust, appearance invariant, and fair methods. We study and compare methods capable of fusing modalities while satisfying real-time and invariant appearance conditions. We compare state-of-the-art transformer architectures in sentiment estimation and introduce them in the much less explored field of personality perception. We show that the architectures perform differently on automatic sentiment and personality perception, suggesting that each task may be better captured/modeled by a particular method. Our work calls attention to the attractive properties of the linear versions of the transformer architectures. In particular, we show that the best results are achieved by fusing the different architectures{’} preprocessing methods. However, they pose extreme conditions in computation power and energy consumption for real-time computations for quadratic transformers due to their memory requirements. In turn, linear transformers pave the way for quantifying small changes in sentiment estimation and personality perception for real-time social communications for machines and robots.
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Area Expedition Conference PMLR
Notes HuPBA; no menciona Approved no
Call Number Admin @ si @ FSJ2022 Serial 3769
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Author German Barquero; Johnny Nuñez; Sergio Escalera; Zhen Xu; Wei-Wei Tu; Isabelle Guyon
Title Didn’t see that coming: a survey on non-verbal social human behavior forecasting Type Conference Article
Year 2022 Publication Understanding Social Behavior in Dyadic and Small Group Interactions Abbreviated Journal
Volume 173 Issue Pages 139-178
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Abstract Non-verbal social human behavior forecasting has increasingly attracted the interest of the research community in recent years. Its direct applications to human-robot interaction and socially-aware human motion generation make it a very attractive field. In this survey, we define the behavior forecasting problem for multiple interactive agents in a generic way that aims at unifying the fields of social signals prediction and human motion forecasting, traditionally separated. We hold that both problem formulations refer to the same conceptual problem, and identify many shared fundamental challenges: future stochasticity, context awareness, history exploitation, etc. We also propose a taxonomy that comprises
methods published in the last 5 years in a very informative way and describes the current main concerns of the community with regard to this problem. In order to promote further research on this field, we also provide a summarized and friendly overview of audiovisual datasets featuring non-acted social interactions. Finally, we describe the most common metrics used in this task and their particular issues.
Address Virtual; June 2022
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Area Expedition Conference PMLR
Notes HuPBA; no proj Approved no
Call Number Admin @ si @ BNE2022 Serial 3766
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Author Meysam Madadi; Hugo Bertiche; Wafa Bouzouita; Isabelle Guyon; Sergio Escalera
Title Learning Cloth Dynamics: 3D+Texture Garment Reconstruction Benchmark Type Conference Article
Year 2021 Publication Proceedings of Machine Learning Research Abbreviated Journal
Volume 133 Issue Pages 57-76
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Abstract Human avatars are important targets in many computer applications. Accurately tracking, capturing, reconstructing and animating the human body, face and garments in 3D are critical for human-computer interaction, gaming, special effects and virtual reality. In the past, this has required extensive manual animation. Regardless of the advances in human body and face reconstruction, still modeling, learning and analyzing human dynamics need further attention. In this paper we plan to push the research in this direction, e.g. understanding human dynamics in 2D and 3D, with special attention to garments. We provide a large-scale dataset (more than 2M frames) of animated garments with variable topology and type, calledCLOTH3D++. The dataset contains RGBA video sequences paired with its corresponding 3D data. We pay special care to garment dynamics and realistic rendering of RGB data, including lighting, fabric type and texture. With this dataset, we hold a competition at NeurIPS2020. We design three tracks so participants can compete to develop the best method to perform 3D garment reconstruction in a sequence from (1) 3D-to-3D garments, (2) RGB-to-3D garments, and (3) RGB-to-3D garments plus texture. We also provide a baseline method, based on graph convolutional networks, for each track. Baseline results show that there is a lot of room for improvements. However, due to the challenging nature of the problem, no participant could outperform the baselines.
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Notes HUPBA; no proj Approved no
Call Number Admin @ si @ MBB2021 Serial 3655
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Author Domicele Jonauskaite; Lucia Camenzind; C. Alejandro Parraga; Cecile N Diouf; Mathieu Mercapide Ducommun; Lauriane Müller; Melanie Norberg; Christine Mohr
Title Colour-emotion associations in individuals with red-green colour blindness Type Journal Article
Year 2021 Publication PeerJ Abbreviated Journal
Volume 9 Issue Pages e11180
Keywords Affect; Chromotherapy; Colour cognition; Colour vision deficiency; Cross-modal correspondences; Daltonism; Deuteranopia; Dichromatic; Emotion; Protanopia.
Abstract Colours and emotions are associated in languages and traditions. Some of us may convey sadness by saying feeling blue or by wearing black clothes at funerals. The first example is a conceptual experience of colour and the second example is an immediate perceptual experience of colour. To investigate whether one or the other type of experience more strongly drives colour-emotion associations, we tested 64 congenitally red-green colour-blind men and 66 non-colour-blind men. All participants associated 12 colours, presented as terms or patches, with 20 emotion concepts, and rated intensities of the associated emotions. We found that colour-blind and non-colour-blind men associated similar emotions with colours, irrespective of whether colours were conveyed via terms (r = .82) or patches (r = .80). The colour-emotion associations and the emotion intensities were not modulated by participants' severity of colour blindness. Hinting at some additional, although minor, role of actual colour perception, the consistencies in associations for colour terms and patches were higher in non-colour-blind than colour-blind men. Together, these results suggest that colour-emotion associations in adults do not require immediate perceptual colour experiences, as conceptual experiences are sufficient.
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Notes CIC; LAMP; 600.120; 600.128 Approved no
Call Number Admin @ si @ JCP2021 Serial 3564
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Author Bojana Gajic; Eduard Vazquez; Ramon Baldrich
Title Evaluation of Deep Image Descriptors for Texture Retrieval Type Conference Article
Year 2017 Publication Proceedings of the 12th International Joint Conference on Computer Vision, Imaging and Computer Graphics Theory and Applications (VISIGRAPP 2017) Abbreviated Journal
Volume Issue Pages 251-257
Keywords Texture Representation; Texture Retrieval; Convolutional Neural Networks; Psychophysical Evaluation
Abstract The increasing complexity learnt in the layers of a Convolutional Neural Network has proven to be of great help for the task of classification. The topic has received great attention in recently published literature.
Nonetheless, just a handful of works study low-level representations, commonly associated with lower layers. In this paper, we explore recent findings which conclude, counterintuitively, the last layer of the VGG convolutional network is the best to describe a low-level property such as texture. To shed some light on this issue, we are proposing a psychophysical experiment to evaluate the adequacy of different layers of the VGG network for texture retrieval. Results obtained suggest that, whereas the last convolutional layer is a good choice for a specific task of classification, it might not be the best choice as a texture descriptor, showing a very poor performance on texture retrieval. Intermediate layers show the best performance, showing a good combination of basic filters, as in the primary visual cortex, and also a degree of higher level information to describe more complex textures.
Address Porto, Portugal; 27 February – 1 March 2017
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Area Expedition Conference VISIGRAPP
Notes CIC; 600.087 Approved no
Call Number Admin @ si @ Serial 3710
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Author Diego Velazquez; Pau Rodriguez; Alexandre Lacoste; Issam H. Laradji; Xavier Roca; Jordi Gonzalez
Title Evaluating Counterfactual Explainers Type Journal
Year 2023 Publication Transactions on Machine Learning Research Abbreviated Journal TMLR
Volume Issue Pages
Keywords Explainability; Counterfactuals; XAI
Abstract Explainability methods have been widely used to provide insight into the decisions made by statistical models, thus facilitating their adoption in various domains within the industry. Counterfactual explanation methods aim to improve our understanding of a model by perturbing samples in a way that would alter its response in an unexpected manner. This information is helpful for users and for machine learning practitioners to understand and improve their models. Given the value provided by counterfactual explanations, there is a growing interest in the research community to investigate and propose new methods. However, we identify two issues that could hinder the progress in this field. (1) Existing metrics do not accurately reflect the value of an explainability method for the users. (2) Comparisons between methods are usually performed with datasets like CelebA, where images are annotated with attributes that do not fully describe them and with subjective attributes such as ``Attractive''. In this work, we address these problems by proposing an evaluation method with a principled metric to evaluate and compare different counterfactual explanation methods. The evaluation method is based on a synthetic dataset where images are fully described by their annotated attributes. As a result, we are able to perform a fair comparison of multiple explainability methods in the recent literature, obtaining insights about their performance. We make the code public for the benefit of the research community.
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Notes ISE Approved no
Call Number Admin @ si @ VRL2023 Serial 3891
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Author Hunor Laczko; Meysam Madadi; Sergio Escalera; Jordi Gonzalez
Title A Generative Multi-Resolution Pyramid and Normal-Conditioning 3D Cloth Draping Type Conference Article
Year 2024 Publication Winter Conference on Applications of Computer Vision Abbreviated Journal
Volume Issue Pages 8709-8718
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Abstract RGB cloth generation has been deeply studied in the related literature, however, 3D garment generation remains an open problem. In this paper, we build a conditional variational autoencoder for 3D garment generation and draping. We propose a pyramid network to add garment details progressively in a canonical space, i.e. unposing and unshaping the garments w.r.t. the body. We study conditioning the network on surface normal UV maps, as an intermediate representation, which is an easier problem to optimize than 3D coordinates. Our results on two public datasets, CLOTH3D and CAPE, show that our model is robust, controllable in terms of detail generation by the use of multi-resolution pyramids, and achieves state-of-the-art results that can highly generalize to unseen garments, poses, and shapes even when training with small amounts of data.
Address Waikoloa; Hawai; USA; January 2024
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Area Expedition Conference WACV
Notes ISE; HUPBA Approved no
Call Number Admin @ si @ LME2024 Serial 3996
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Author Alex Gomez-Villa; Bartlomiej Twardowski; Kai Wang; Joost van de Weijer
Title Plasticity-Optimized Complementary Networks for Unsupervised Continual Learning Type Conference Article
Year 2024 Publication Winter Conference on Applications of Computer Vision Abbreviated Journal
Volume Issue Pages 1690-1700
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Abstract Continuous unsupervised representation learning (CURL) research has greatly benefited from improvements in self-supervised learning (SSL) techniques. As a result, existing CURL methods using SSL can learn high-quality representations without any labels, but with a notable performance drop when learning on a many-tasks data stream. We hypothesize that this is caused by the regularization losses that are imposed to prevent forgetting, leading to a suboptimal plasticity-stability trade-off: they either do not adapt fully to the incoming data (low plasticity), or incur significant forgetting when allowed to fully adapt to a new SSL pretext-task (low stability). In this work, we propose to train an expert network that is relieved of the duty of keeping the previous knowledge and can focus on performing optimally on the new tasks (optimizing plasticity). In the second phase, we combine this new knowledge with the previous network in an adaptation-retrospection phase to avoid forgetting and initialize a new expert with the knowledge of the old network. We perform several experiments showing that our proposed approach outperforms other CURL exemplar-free methods in few- and many-task split settings. Furthermore, we show how to adapt our approach to semi-supervised continual learning (Semi-SCL) and show that we surpass the accuracy of other exemplar-free Semi-SCL methods and reach the results of some others that use exemplars.
Address Waikoloa; Hawai; USA; January 2024
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Area Expedition Conference WACV
Notes LAMP Approved no
Call Number Admin @ si @ GTW2024 Serial 3989
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Author Sergi Garcia Bordils; Dimosthenis Karatzas; Marçal Rusiñol
Title STEP – Towards Structured Scene-Text Spotting Type Conference Article
Year 2024 Publication Winter Conference on Applications of Computer Vision Abbreviated Journal
Volume Issue Pages 883-892
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Abstract We introduce the structured scene-text spotting task, which requires a scene-text OCR system to spot text in the wild according to a query regular expression. Contrary to generic scene text OCR, structured scene-text spotting seeks to dynamically condition both scene text detection and recognition on user-provided regular expressions. To tackle this task, we propose the Structured TExt sPotter (STEP), a model that exploits the provided text structure to guide the OCR process. STEP is able to deal with regular expressions that contain spaces and it is not bound to detection at the word-level granularity. Our approach enables accurate zero-shot structured text spotting in a wide variety of real-world reading scenarios and is solely trained on publicly available data. To demonstrate the effectiveness of our approach, we introduce a new challenging test dataset that contains several types of out-of-vocabulary structured text, reflecting important reading applications of fields such as prices, dates, serial numbers, license plates etc. We demonstrate that STEP can provide specialised OCR performance on demand in all tested scenarios.
Address Waikoloa; Hawai; USA; January 2024
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Area Expedition Conference WACV
Notes DAG Approved no
Call Number Admin @ si @ GKR2024 Serial 3992
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Author Alloy Das; Sanket Biswas; Ayan Banerjee; Josep Llados; Umapada Pal; Saumik Bhattacharya
Title Harnessing the Power of Multi-Lingual Datasets for Pre-training: Towards Enhancing Text Spotting Performance Type Conference Article
Year 2024 Publication Winter Conference on Applications of Computer Vision Abbreviated Journal
Volume Issue Pages 718-728
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Abstract The adaptation capability to a wide range of domains is crucial for scene text spotting models when deployed to real-world conditions. However, existing state-of-the-art (SOTA) approaches usually incorporate scene text detection and recognition simply by pretraining on natural scene text datasets, which do not directly exploit the intermediate feature representations between multiple domains. Here, we investigate the problem of domain-adaptive scene text spotting, i.e., training a model on multi-domain source data such that it can directly adapt to target domains rather than being specialized for a specific domain or scenario. Further, we investigate a transformer baseline called Swin-TESTR to focus on solving scene-text spotting for both regular and arbitrary-shaped scene text along with an exhaustive evaluation. The results clearly demonstrate the potential of intermediate representations to achieve significant performance on text spotting benchmarks across multiple domains (e.g. language, synth-to-real, and documents). both in terms of accuracy and efficiency.
Address Waikoloa; Hawai; USA; January 2024
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Area Expedition Conference WACV
Notes DAG Approved no
Call Number Admin @ si @ DBB2024 Serial 3986
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Author Matej Kristan; Jiri Matas; Martin Danelljan; Michael Felsberg; Hyung Jin Chang; Luka Cehovin Zajc; Alan Lukezic; Ondrej Drbohlav; Zhongqun Zhang; Khanh-Tung Tran; Xuan-Son Vu; Johanna Bjorklund; Christoph Mayer; Yushan Zhang; Lei Ke; Jie Zhao; Gustavo Fernandez; Noor Al-Shakarji; Dong An; Michael Arens; Stefan Becker; Goutam Bhat; Sebastian Bullinger; Antoni B. Chan; Shijie Chang; Hanyuan Chen; Xin Chen; Yan Chen; Zhenyu Chen; Yangming Cheng; Yutao Cui; Chunyuan Deng; Jiahua Dong; Matteo Dunnhofer; Wei Feng; Jianlong Fu; Jie Gao; Ruize Han; Zeqi Hao; Jun-Yan He; Keji He; Zhenyu He; Xiantao Hu; Kaer Huang; Yuqing Huang; Yi Jiang; Ben Kang; Jin-Peng Lan; Hyungjun Lee; Chenyang Li; Jiahao Li; Ning Li; Wangkai Li; Xiaodi Li; Xin Li; Pengyu Liu; Yue Liu; Huchuan Lu; Bin Luo; Ping Luo; Yinchao Ma; Deshui Miao; Christian Micheloni; Kannappan Palaniappan; Hancheol Park; Matthieu Paul; HouWen Peng; Zekun Qian; Gani Rahmon; Norbert Scherer-Negenborn; Pengcheng Shao; Wooksu Shin; Elham Soltani Kazemi; Tianhui Song; Rainer Stiefelhagen; Rui Sun; Chuanming Tang; Zhangyong Tang; Imad Eddine Toubal; Jack Valmadre; Joost van de Weijer; Luc Van Gool; Jash Vira; Stephane Vujasinovic; Cheng Wan; Jia Wan; Dong Wang; Fei Wang; Feifan Wang; He Wang; Limin Wang; Song Wang; Yaowei Wang; Zhepeng Wang; Gangshan Wu; Jiannan Wu; Qiangqiang Wu; Xiaojun Wu; Anqi Xiao; Jinxia Xie; Chenlong Xu; Min Xu; Tianyang Xu; Yuanyou Xu; Bin Yan; Dawei Yang; Ming-Hsuan Yang; Tianyu Yang; Yi Yang; Zongxin Yang; Xuanwu Yin; Fisher Yu; Hongyuan Yu; Qianjin Yu; Weichen Yu; YongSheng Yuan; Zehuan Yuan; Jianlin Zhang; Lu Zhang; Tianzhu Zhang; Guodongfang Zhao; Shaochuan Zhao; Yaozong Zheng; Bineng Zhong; Jiawen Zhu; Xuefeng Zhu; Yueting Zhuang; ChengAo Zong; Kunlong Zuo
Title The First Visual Object Tracking Segmentation VOTS2023 Challenge Results Type Conference Article
Year 2023 Publication Proceedings of the IEEE/CVF International Conference on Computer Vision (ICCV) Workshops Abbreviated Journal
Volume Issue Pages 1796-1818
Keywords
Abstract The Visual Object Tracking Segmentation VOTS2023 challenge is the eleventh annual tracker benchmarking activity of the VOT initiative. This challenge is the first to merge short-term and long-term as well as single-target and multiple-target tracking with segmentation masks as the only target location specification. A new dataset was created; the ground truth has been withheld to prevent overfitting. New performance measures and evaluation protocols have been created along with a new toolkit and an evaluation server. Results of the presented 47 trackers indicate that modern tracking frameworks are well-suited to deal with convergence of short-term and long-term tracking and that multiple and single target tracking can be considered a single problem. A leaderboard, with participating trackers details, the source code, the datasets, and the evaluation kit are publicly available at the challenge website\footnote https://www.votchallenge.net/vots2023/.
Address Paris; France; October 2023
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Area Expedition Conference ICCVW
Notes LAMP Approved no
Call Number Admin @ si @ KMD2023 Serial 3939
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