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Antonio Hernandez. (2010). Pose and Face Recovery via Spatio-temporal GrabCut Human Segmentation (Vol. 153). Master's thesis, , .
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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.
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Nataliya Shapovalova. (2010). On Importance of Interaction and Context (Vol. 155). Master's thesis, , .
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Zhanwu Xiong. (2010). A Pompd Model for Active Camera Control (Vol. 156). Master's thesis, , .
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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.
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Lluis Pere de las Heras. (2010). Syntactic Model for Semantic Document Analysis (Vol. 158).
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Anjan Dutta. (2010). Symbol Spotting in Graphical Documents by Serialized Subgraph Matching (Vol. 159). Master's thesis, , .
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Ekain Artola. (2010). Human Attention Map Prediction Combining Visual Features (Vol. 160). Bachelor's thesis, , .
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David Fernandez. (2010). Handwritten Word Spotting in Old Manuscript Images using Shape Descriptors (Vol. 161). Master's thesis, , .
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Monica Piñol. (2010). Adaptative Vocabulary Tree for Image Classification using Reinforcement Learning (Vol. 162). Master's thesis, , .
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Jon Almazan. (2010). Deforming the Blurred Shape Model for Shape Description and Recognition (Vol. 163). Master's thesis, , .
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Sergio Vera. (2010). Finger joint modelling from hand X-ray images for assessing rheumatoid arthritis (Vol. 164). Master's thesis, , Bellaterra 01893, Barcelona, Spain.
Abstract: Rheumatoid arthritis is an autoimmune, systemic, inflammatory disorder that mainly af- fects bone joints. While there is no cure for this disease, continuous advances on palliative treatments require frequent verification of patient’s illness evolution. Such evolution is mea- sured through several available semi-quantitative methods that require evaluation of hand and foot X-ray images. Accurate assessment is a time consuming task that requires highly trained personnel. This hinders a generalized use in clinical practice for early diagnose and disease follow-up. In the context of the automatization of such evaluation methods we present a method for detection and characterization of finger joints in hand radiography images. Several measures for assessing the reduction of joint space width are proposed. We compare for the first time such measures to the Van der Heijde score, the gold standard method for rheumatoid arthritis assessment. The proposed method outperforms existing strategies with a detection rate above 95%. Our comparison to Van der Heijde index shows a promising correlation that encourages further research.
Keywords: Rheumatoid arthritis; joint detection; X-ray; Van der Heijde score
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David Aldavert, Arnau Ramisa, Ramon Lopez de Mantaras, & Ricardo Toledo. (2010). Real-time Object Segmentation using a Bag of Features Approach. In J.Aguilar. A. M. In R.Alquezar (Ed.), 13th International Conference of the Catalan Association for Artificial Intelligence (Vol. 220, 321–329). IOS Press Amsterdam,.
Abstract: In this paper, we propose an object segmentation framework, based on the popular bag of features (BoF), which can process several images per second while achieving a good segmentation accuracy assigning an object category to every pixel of the image. We propose an efficient color descriptor to complement the information obtained by a typical gradient-based local descriptor. Results show that color proves to be a useful cue to increase the segmentation accuracy, specially in large homogeneous regions. Then, we extend the Hierarchical K-Means codebook using the recently proposed Vector of Locally Aggregated Descriptors method. Finally, we show that the BoF method can be easily parallelized since it is applied locally, thus the time necessary to process an image is further reduced. The performance of the proposed method is evaluated in the standard PASCAL 2007 Segmentation Challenge object segmentation dataset.
Keywords: Object Segmentation; Bag Of Features; Feature Quantization; Densely sampled descriptors
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Eloi Puertas, Sergio Escalera, & Oriol Pujol. (2010). Classifying Objects at Different Sizes with Multi-Scale Stacked Sequential Learning. In J. Aguilar A. M. R. Alquezar (Ed.), 13th International Conference of the Catalan Association for Artificial Intelligence (Vol. 220, 193–200).
Abstract: Sequential learning is that discipline of machine learning that deals with dependent data. In this paper, we use the Multi-scale Stacked Sequential Learning approach (MSSL) to solve the task of pixel-wise classification based on contextual information. The main contribution of this work is a shifting technique applied during the testing phase that makes possible, thanks to template images, to classify objects at different sizes. The results show that the proposed method robustly classifies such objects capturing their spatial relationships.
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Sergio Escalera, Oriol Pujol, Eric Laciar, Jordi Vitria, Esther Pueyo, & Petia Radeva. (2010). Classification of Coronary Damage in Chronic Chagasic Patients. In M. H.(eds) V. Sgurev (Ed.), Intelligent Systems – From Theory to Practice. Studies in Computational Intelligence (Vol. 299, pp. 461–478). Springer-Verlag.
Abstract: Post Conference IEEE-IS 2008
The Chagas’ disease is endemic in all Latin America, affecting millions of people in the continent. In order to diagnose and treat the chagas’ disease, it is important to detect and measure the coronary damage of the patient. In this paper,
we analyze and categorize patients into different groups based on the coronary damage produced by the disease. Based on the features of the heart cycle extracted using high resolution ECG, a multi-class scheme of Error-Correcting Output Codes (ECOC)is formulated and successfully applied. The results show that the proposed scheme obtains significant performance improvements compared to previous works and state-of-the-art ECOC designs.
Keywords: Chagas disease; Error-Correcting Output Codes; High resolution ECG; Decoding
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