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Author |
Zhijie Fang; Antonio Lopez |
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Title |
Is the Pedestrian going to Cross? Answering by 2D Pose Estimation |
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Conference Article |
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2018 |
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IEEE Intelligent Vehicles Symposium |
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1271 - 1276 |
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Our recent work suggests that, thanks to nowadays powerful CNNs, image-based 2D pose estimation is a promising cue for determining pedestrian intentions such as crossing the road in the path of the ego-vehicle, stopping before entering the road, and starting to walk or bending towards the road. This statement is based on the results obtained on non-naturalistic sequences (Daimler dataset), i.e. in sequences choreographed specifically for performing the study. Fortunately, a new publicly available dataset (JAAD) has appeared recently to allow developing methods for detecting pedestrian intentions in naturalistic driving conditions; more specifically, for addressing the relevant question is the pedestrian going to cross? Accordingly, in this paper we use JAAD to assess the usefulness of 2D pose estimation for answering such a question. We combine CNN-based pedestrian detection, tracking and pose estimation to predict the crossing action from monocular images. Overall, the proposed pipeline provides new state-ofthe-art results. |
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IV |
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ADAS; 600.124; 600.116; 600.118 |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ FaL2018 |
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3181 |
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Author |
Lluis Gomez; Marçal Rusiñol; Dimosthenis Karatzas |
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Title |
Cutting Sayre's Knot: Reading Scene Text without Segmentation. Application to Utility Meters |
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Conference Article |
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Year |
2018 |
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13th IAPR International Workshop on Document Analysis Systems |
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97-102 |
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Robust Reading; End-to-end Systems; CNN; Utility Meters |
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In this paper we present a segmentation-free system for reading text in natural scenes. A CNN architecture is trained in an end-to-end manner, and is able to directly output readings without any explicit text localization step. In order to validate our proposal, we focus on the specific case of reading utility meters. We present our results in a large dataset of images acquired by different users and devices, so text appears in any location, with different sizes, fonts and lengths, and the images present several distortions such as
dirt, illumination highlights or blur. |
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Viena; Austria; April 2018 |
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DAS |
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DAG; 600.084; 600.121; 600.129 |
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Admin @ si @ GRK2018 |
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3102 |
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Author |
Dimosthenis Karatzas; Lluis Gomez; Marçal Rusiñol; Anguelos Nicolaou |
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Title |
The Robust Reading Competition Annotation and Evaluation Platform |
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Conference Article |
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Year |
2018 |
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13th IAPR International Workshop on Document Analysis Systems |
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61-66 |
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The ICDAR Robust Reading Competition (RRC), initiated in 2003 and reestablished in 2011, has become the defacto evaluation standard for the international community. Concurrent with its second incarnation in 2011, a continuous
effort started to develop an online framework to facilitate the hosting and management of competitions. This short paper briefly outlines the Robust Reading Competition Annotation and Evaluation Platform, the backbone of the
Robust Reading Competition, comprising a collection of tools and processes that aim to simplify the management and annotation of data, and to provide online and offline performance evaluation and analysis services. |
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Viena; Austria; April 2018 |
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DAG; 600.084; 600.121 |
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KGR2018 |
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3103 |
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Author |
Xavier Soria; Angel Sappa; Riad I. Hammoud |
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Title |
Wide-Band Color Imagery Restoration for RGB-NIR Single Sensor Images |
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Journal Article |
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Year |
2018 |
Publication |
Sensors |
Abbreviated Journal |
SENS |
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18 |
Issue |
7 |
Pages |
2059 |
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RGB-NIR sensor; multispectral imaging; deep learning; CNNs |
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Multi-spectral RGB-NIR sensors have become ubiquitous in recent years. These sensors allow the visible and near-infrared spectral bands of a given scene to be captured at the same time. With such cameras, the acquired imagery has a compromised RGB color representation due to near-infrared bands (700–1100 nm) cross-talking with the visible bands (400–700 nm).
This paper proposes two deep learning-based architectures to recover the full RGB color images, thus removing the NIR information from the visible bands. The proposed approaches directly restore the high-resolution RGB image by means of convolutional neural networks. They are evaluated with several outdoor images; both architectures reach a similar performance when evaluated in different
scenarios and using different similarity metrics. Both of them improve the state of the art approaches. |
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ADAS; MSIAU; 600.086; 600.130; 600.122; 600.118 |
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Admin @ si @ SSH2018 |
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3145 |
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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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CIC |
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CIC |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ SSB2018a |
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3129 |
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Author |
Patrick Brandao; O. Zisimopoulos; E. Mazomenos; G. Ciutib; Jorge Bernal; M. Visentini-Scarzanell; A. Menciassi; P. Dario; A. Koulaouzidis; A. Arezzo; D.J. Hawkes; D. Stoyanov |
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Towards a computed-aided diagnosis system in colonoscopy: Automatic polyp segmentation using convolution neural networks |
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2018 |
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Journal of Medical Robotics Research |
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JMRR |
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3 |
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2 |
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convolutional neural networks; colonoscopy; computer aided diagnosis |
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Early diagnosis is essential for the successful treatment of bowel cancers including colorectal cancer (CRC) and capsule endoscopic imaging with robotic actuation can be a valuable diagnostic tool when combined with automated image analysis. We present a deep learning rooted detection and segmentation framework for recognizing lesions in colonoscopy and capsule endoscopy images. We restructure established convolution architectures, such as VGG and ResNets, by converting them into fully-connected convolution networks (FCNs), ne-tune them and study their capabilities for polyp segmentation and detection. We additionally use Shape-from-Shading (SfS) to recover depth and provide a richer representation of the tissue's structure in colonoscopy images. Depth is
incorporated into our network models as an additional input channel to the RGB information and we demonstrate that the resulting network yields improved performance. Our networks are tested on publicly available datasets and the most accurate segmentation model achieved a mean segmentation IU of 47.78% and 56.95% on the ETIS-Larib and CVC-Colon datasets, respectively. For polyp
detection, the top performing models we propose surpass the current state of the art with detection recalls superior to 90% for all datasets tested. To our knowledge, we present the rst work to use FCNs for polyp segmentation in addition to proposing a novel combination of SfS and RGB that boosts performance. |
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MV; no menciona |
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no |
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BZM2018 |
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2976 |
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Author |
I. Sorodoc; S. Pezzelle; A. Herbelot; Mariella Dimiccoli; R. Bernardi |
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Title |
Learning quantification from images: A structured neural architecture |
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Journal Article |
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2018 |
Publication |
Natural Language Engineering |
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NLE |
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24 |
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3 |
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363-392 |
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Major advances have recently been made in merging language and vision representations. Most tasks considered so far have confined themselves to the processing of objects and lexicalised relations amongst objects (content words). We know, however, that humans (even pre-school children) can abstract over raw multimodal data to perform certain types of higher level reasoning, expressed in natural language by function words. A case in point is given by their ability to learn quantifiers, i.e. expressions like few, some and all. From formal semantics and cognitive linguistics, we know that quantifiers are relations over sets which, as a simplification, we can see as proportions. For instance, in most fish are red, most encodes the proportion of fish which are red fish. In this paper, we study how well current neural network strategies model such relations. We propose a task where, given an image and a query expressed by an object–property pair, the system must return a quantifier expressing which proportions of the queried object have the queried property. Our contributions are twofold. First, we show that the best performance on this task involves coupling state-of-the-art attention mechanisms with a network architecture mirroring the logical structure assigned to quantifiers by classic linguistic formalisation. Second, we introduce a new balanced dataset of image scenarios associated with quantification queries, which we hope will foster further research in this area. |
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MILAB; no menciona |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ SPH2018 |
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3021 |
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Author |
Thanh Nam Le; Muhammad Muzzamil Luqman; Anjan Dutta; Pierre Heroux; Christophe Rigaud; Clement Guerin; Pasquale Foggia; Jean Christophe Burie; Jean Marc Ogier; Josep Llados; Sebastien Adam |
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Subgraph spotting in graph representations of comic book images |
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Journal Article |
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2018 |
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Pattern Recognition Letters |
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PRL |
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112 |
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118-124 |
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Attributed graph; Region adjacency graph; Graph matching; Graph isomorphism; Subgraph isomorphism; Subgraph spotting; Graph indexing; Graph retrieval; Query by example; Dataset and comic book images |
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Graph-based representations are the most powerful data structures for extracting, representing and preserving the structural information of underlying data. Subgraph spotting is an interesting research problem, especially for studying and investigating the structural information based content-based image retrieval (CBIR) and query by example (QBE) in image databases. In this paper we address the problem of lack of freely available ground-truthed datasets for subgraph spotting and present a new dataset for subgraph spotting in graph representations of comic book images (SSGCI) with its ground-truth and evaluation protocol. Experimental results of two state-of-the-art methods of subgraph spotting are presented on the new SSGCI dataset. |
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DAG; 600.097; 600.121 |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ LLD2018 |
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3150 |
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Author |
Jun Wan; Sergio Escalera; Francisco Perales; Josef Kittler |
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Title |
Articulated Motion and Deformable Objects |
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Journal Article |
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2018 |
Publication |
Pattern Recognition |
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PR |
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79 |
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55-64 |
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This guest editorial introduces the twenty two papers accepted for this Special Issue on Articulated Motion and Deformable Objects (AMDO). They are grouped into four main categories within the field of AMDO: human motion analysis (action/gesture), human pose estimation, deformable shape segmentation, and face analysis. For each of the four topics, a survey of the recent developments in the field is presented. The accepted papers are briefly introduced in the context of this survey. They contribute novel methods, algorithms with improved performance as measured on benchmarking datasets, as well as two new datasets for hand action detection and human posture analysis. The special issue should be of high relevance to the reader interested in AMDO recognition and promote future research directions in the field. |
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HUPBA; no proj |
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Admin @ si @ WEP2018 |
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3126 |
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Anjan Dutta; Josep Llados; Horst Bunke; Umapada Pal |
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Product graph-based higher order contextual similarities for inexact subgraph matching |
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Journal Article |
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2018 |
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Pattern Recognition |
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PR |
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76 |
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596-611 |
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Many algorithms formulate graph matching as an optimization of an objective function of pairwise quantification of nodes and edges of two graphs to be matched. Pairwise measurements usually consider local attributes but disregard contextual information involved in graph structures. We address this issue by proposing contextual similarities between pairs of nodes. This is done by considering the tensor product graph (TPG) of two graphs to be matched, where each node is an ordered pair of nodes of the operand graphs. Contextual similarities between a pair of nodes are computed by accumulating weighted walks (normalized pairwise similarities) terminating at the corresponding paired node in TPG. Once the contextual similarities are obtained, we formulate subgraph matching as a node and edge selection problem in TPG. We use contextual similarities to construct an objective function and optimize it with a linear programming approach. Since random walk formulation through TPG takes into account higher order information, it is not a surprise that we obtain more reliable similarities and better discrimination among the nodes and edges. Experimental results shown on synthetic as well as real benchmarks illustrate that higher order contextual similarities increase discriminating power and allow one to find approximate solutions to the subgraph matching problem. |
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DAG; 602.167; 600.097; 600.121 |
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Admin @ si @ DLB2018 |
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3083 |
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Joan Serrat; Felipe Lumbreras; Idoia Ruiz |
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Learning to measure for preshipment garment sizing |
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Journal Article |
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2018 |
Publication |
Measurement |
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MEASURE |
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130 |
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327-339 |
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Apparel; Computer vision; Structured prediction; Regression |
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Clothing is still manually manufactured for the most part nowadays, resulting in discrepancies between nominal and real dimensions, and potentially ill-fitting garments. Hence, it is common in the apparel industry to manually perform measures at preshipment time. We present an automatic method to obtain such measures from a single image of a garment that speeds up this task. It is generic and extensible in the sense that it does not depend explicitly on the garment shape or type. Instead, it learns through a probabilistic graphical model to identify the different contour parts. Subsequently, a set of Lasso regressors, one per desired measure, can predict the actual values of the measures. We present results on a dataset of 130 images of jackets and 98 of pants, of varying sizes and styles, obtaining 1.17 and 1.22 cm of mean absolute error, respectively. |
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ADAS; MSIAU; 600.122; 600.118 |
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Admin @ si @ SLR2018 |
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3128 |
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Marc Bolaños; Alvaro Peris; Francisco Casacuberta; Sergi Solera; Petia Radeva |
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Egocentric video description based on temporally-linked sequences |
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Journal Article |
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2018 |
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Journal of Visual Communication and Image Representation |
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JVCIR |
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50 |
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205-216 |
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egocentric vision; video description; deep learning; multi-modal learning |
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Egocentric vision consists in acquiring images along the day from a first person point-of-view using wearable cameras. The automatic analysis of this information allows to discover daily patterns for improving the quality of life of the user. A natural topic that arises in egocentric vision is storytelling, that is, how to understand and tell the story relying behind the pictures.
In this paper, we tackle storytelling as an egocentric sequences description problem. We propose a novel methodology that exploits information from temporally neighboring events, matching precisely the nature of egocentric sequences. Furthermore, we present a new method for multimodal data fusion consisting on a multi-input attention recurrent network. We also release the EDUB-SegDesc dataset. This is the first dataset for egocentric image sequences description, consisting of 1,339 events with 3,991 descriptions, from 55 days acquired by 11 people. Finally, we prove that our proposal outperforms classical attentional encoder-decoder methods for video description. |
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MILAB; no proj |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ BPC2018 |
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3109 |
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Muhammad Anwer Rao; Fahad Shahbaz Khan; Joost Van de Weijer; Matthieu Molinier; Jorma Laaksonen |
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Binary patterns encoded convolutional neural networks for texture recognition and remote sensing scene classification |
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Journal Article |
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2018 |
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ISPRS Journal of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing |
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ISPRS J |
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138 |
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74-85 |
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Remote sensing; Deep learning; Scene classification; Local Binary Patterns; Texture analysis |
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Designing discriminative powerful texture features robust to realistic imaging conditions is a challenging computer vision problem with many applications, including material recognition and analysis of satellite or aerial imagery. In the past, most texture description approaches were based on dense orderless statistical distribution of local features. However, most recent approaches to texture recognition and remote sensing scene classification are based on Convolutional Neural Networks (CNNs). The de facto practice when learning these CNN models is to use RGB patches as input with training performed on large amounts of labeled data (ImageNet). In this paper, we show that Local Binary Patterns (LBP) encoded CNN models, codenamed TEX-Nets, trained using mapped coded images with explicit LBP based texture information provide complementary information to the standard RGB deep models. Additionally, two deep architectures, namely early and late fusion, are investigated to combine the texture and color information. To the best of our knowledge, we are the first to investigate Binary Patterns encoded CNNs and different deep network fusion architectures for texture recognition and remote sensing scene classification. We perform comprehensive experiments on four texture recognition datasets and four remote sensing scene classification benchmarks: UC-Merced with 21 scene categories, WHU-RS19 with 19 scene classes, RSSCN7 with 7 categories and the recently introduced large scale aerial image dataset (AID) with 30 aerial scene types. We demonstrate that TEX-Nets provide complementary information to standard RGB deep model of the same network architecture. Our late fusion TEX-Net architecture always improves the overall performance compared to the standard RGB network on both recognition problems. Furthermore, our final combination leads to consistent improvement over the state-of-the-art for remote sensing scene |
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LAMP; 600.109; 600.106; 600.120 |
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Admin @ si @ RKW2018 |
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3158 |
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Meysam Madadi; Sergio Escalera; Alex Carruesco Llorens; Carlos Andujar; Xavier Baro; Jordi Gonzalez |
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Top-down model fitting for hand pose recovery in sequences of depth images |
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Journal Article |
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2018 |
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Image and Vision Computing |
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IMAVIS |
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79 |
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63-75 |
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State-of-the-art approaches on hand pose estimation from depth images have reported promising results under quite controlled considerations. In this paper we propose a two-step pipeline for recovering the hand pose from a sequence of depth images. The pipeline has been designed to deal with images taken from any viewpoint and exhibiting a high degree of finger occlusion. In a first step we initialize the hand pose using a part-based model, fitting a set of hand components in the depth images. In a second step we consider temporal data and estimate the parameters of a trained bilinear model consisting of shape and trajectory bases. We evaluate our approach on a new created synthetic hand dataset along with NYU and MSRA real datasets. Results demonstrate that the proposed method outperforms the most recent pose recovering approaches, including those based on CNNs. |
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HUPBA; 600.098 |
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Admin @ si @ MEC2018 |
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3203 |
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Julio C. S. Jacques Junior; Xavier Baro; Sergio Escalera |
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Exploiting feature representations through similarity learning, post-ranking and ranking aggregation for person re-identification |
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2018 |
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Image and Vision Computing |
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IMAVIS |
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79 |
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76-85 |
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Person re-identification has received special attention by the human analysis community in the last few years. To address the challenges in this field, many researchers have proposed different strategies, which basically exploit either cross-view invariant features or cross-view robust metrics. In this work, we propose to exploit a post-ranking approach and combine different feature representations through ranking aggregation. Spatial information, which potentially benefits the person matching, is represented using a 2D body model, from which color and texture information are extracted and combined. We also consider background/foreground information, automatically extracted via Deep Decompositional Network, and the usage of Convolutional Neural Network (CNN) features. To describe the matching between images we use the polynomial feature map, also taking into account local and global information. The Discriminant Context Information Analysis based post-ranking approach is used to improve initial ranking lists. Finally, the Stuart ranking aggregation method is employed to combine complementary ranking lists obtained from different feature representations. Experimental results demonstrated that we improve the state-of-the-art on VIPeR and PRID450s datasets, achieving 67.21% and 75.64% on top-1 rank recognition rate, respectively, as well as obtaining competitive results on CUHK01 dataset. |
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HuPBA; 602.143 |
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Admin @ si @ JBE2018 |
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3138 |
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