Jaume Gibert. (2009). Learning structural representations and graph matching paradigms in the context of object recognition (Vol. 143). Master's thesis, , .
|
Jose Carlos Rubio. (2009). Graph matching based on graphical models with application to vehicle tracking and classification at night (Vol. 144). Master's thesis, , Bellaterra, Barcelona.
|
Farshad Nourbakhsh. (2009). Colour logo recognition (Vol. 145). Master's thesis, , Bellaterra, Barcelona.
|
Enric Sala. (2009). Off-line person-dependent signature verification (Vol. 146). Master's thesis, , Bellaterra, Barcelona.
|
Diego Alejandro Cheda. (2009). Monocular egomotion estimation for ADAS application (Vol. 148). Ph.D. thesis, , Bellaterra, Barcelona.
|
David Vazquez, David Geronimo, & Antonio Lopez. (2009). The effect of the distance in pedestrian detection (Vol. 149). Master's thesis, , .
Abstract: Pedestrian accidents are one of the leading preventable causes of death. In order to reduce the number of accidents, in the last decade the pedestrian protection systems have been introduced, a special type of advanced driver assistance systems, in witch an on-board camera explores the road ahead for possible collisions with pedestrians in order to warn the driver or perform braking actions. As a result of the variability of the appearance, pose and size, pedestrian detection is a very challenging task. So many techniques, models and features have been proposed to solve the problem. As the appearance of pedestrians varies signicantly as a function of distance, a system based on multiple classiers specialized on diferent depths is likely to improve the overall performance with respect to a typical system based on a general detector. Accordingly, the main aim of this work is to explore the eect of the distance in pedestrian detection. We have evaluated three pedestrian detectors (HOG, HAAR and EOH) in two dierent databases (INRIA and Daimler09) for two dierent sizes (small and big). By a extensive set of experiments we answer to questions like which datasets and evaluation methods are the most adequate, which is the best method for each size of the pedestrians and why or how do the method optimum parameters vary with respect to the distance
Keywords: Pedestrian Detection
|
Javier Marin. (2009). Virtual learning for real testing (Vol. 150). Master's thesis, , bell.
|
Marc Serra. (2010). Estimating Intrinsic Images from Physical and Categorical Color Cues (Vol. 151). Master's thesis, , .
|
Ahmed Mounir Gad. (2010). Object Localization Enhancement by Multiple Segmentation Fusion (Vol. 152). Master's thesis, , .
|
Antonio Hernandez. (2010). Pose and Face Recovery via Spatio-temporal GrabCut Human Segmentation (Vol. 153). Master's thesis, , .
|
Jorge Bernal, Fernando Vilariño, & F. Javier Sanchez. (2010). Feature Detectors and Feature Descriptors: Where We Are Now (Vol. 154).
Abstract: Feature Detection and Feature Description are clearly nowadays topics. Many Computer Vision applications rely on the use of several of these techniques in order to extract the most significant aspects of an image so they can help in some tasks such as image retrieval, image registration, object recognition, object categorization and texture classification, among others. In this paper we define what Feature Detection and Description are and then we present an extensive collection of several methods in order to show the different techniques that are being used right now. The aim of this report is to provide a glimpse of what is being used currently in these fields and to serve as a starting point for future endeavours.
|
Nataliya Shapovalova. (2010). On Importance of Interaction and Context (Vol. 155). Master's thesis, , .
|
Zhanwu Xiong. (2010). A Pompd Model for Active Camera Control (Vol. 156). Master's thesis, , .
|
Patricia Marquez. (2010). Conditions Ensuring Accuracy of Local Optical Flow Schemes (Vol. 157). Master's thesis, , Bellaterra 08193, Barcelona, Spain.
Abstract: Accurate computation of optical flow is a key-point in many image processing fields. Detection of anomalous and unpredicted agents (such as pedestrians, bikers or cars) in urban scenes or pathology discrimination in medical imaging sequences, to mention just a two. The above kinds sequences present two main difficulties for standard optical flow techniques. On one hand, variability in acquisition conditions (illuminance, medical imaging modality, ...) force an alterantive representation for images fulfilling the britghtness constancy constrain. On the hand, current variational schemes produce oversmoothed fields unable to properly model discontinuous behaviours such as collisions or functionless pathological areas. This master project explores the abilities and limitations of local and global optical flow approaches. The master student will put especial emphasis in the theoretical grounds behind in order to design a variational framework combining the theoretical advantages of the considered techniques. In particular an optical flow based on Gabor phase tracking (developed in the group for medical imaging) will be generalized to urban scenes.
|
Lluis Pere de las Heras. (2010). Syntactic Model for Semantic Document Analysis (Vol. 158).
|