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Author | Ivan Huerta; Ariel Amato; Xavier Roca; Jordi Gonzalez | ||||
Title | Exploiting Multiple Cues in Motion Segmentation Based on Background Subtraction | Type | Journal Article | ||
Year | 2013 | Publication | Neurocomputing | Abbreviated Journal | NEUCOM |
Volume ![]() |
100 | Issue | Pages | 183–196 | |
Keywords | Motion segmentation; Shadow suppression; Colour segmentation; Edge segmentation; Ghost detection; Background subtraction | ||||
Abstract | This paper presents a novel algorithm for mobile-object segmentation from static background scenes, which is both robust and accurate under most of the common problems found in motionsegmentation. In our first contribution, a case analysis of motionsegmentation errors is presented taking into account the inaccuracies associated with different cues, namely colour, edge and intensity. Our second contribution is an hybrid architecture which copes with the main issues observed in the case analysis by fusing the knowledge from the aforementioned three cues and a temporal difference algorithm. On one hand, we enhance the colour and edge models to solve not only global and local illumination changes (i.e. shadows and highlights) but also the camouflage in intensity. In addition, local information is also exploited to solve the camouflage in chroma. On the other hand, the intensity cue is applied when colour and edge cues are not available because their values are beyond the dynamic range. Additionally, temporal difference scheme is included to segment motion where those three cues cannot be reliably computed, for example in those background regions not visible during the training period. Lastly, our approach is extended for handling ghost detection. The proposed method obtains very accurate and robust motionsegmentation results in multiple indoor and outdoor scenarios, while outperforming the most-referred state-of-art approaches. | ||||
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Publisher | Elsevier | Place of Publication | Editor | ||
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Notes | ISE | Approved | no | ||
Call Number | Admin @ si @ HAR2013 | Serial | 1808 | ||
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Author | Sumit K. Banchhor; Narendra D. Londhe; Tadashi Araki; Luca Saba; Petia Radeva; Narendra N. Khanna; Jasjit S. Suri | ||||
Title | Calcium detection, its quantification, and grayscale morphology-based risk stratification using machine learning in multimodality big data coronary and carotid scans: A review. | Type | Journal Article | ||
Year | 2018 | Publication | Computers in Biology and Medicine | Abbreviated Journal | CBM |
Volume ![]() |
101 | Issue | Pages | 184-198 | |
Keywords | Heart disease; Stroke; Atherosclerosis; Intravascular; Coronary; Carotid; Calcium; Morphology; Risk stratification | ||||
Abstract | Purpose of review
Atherosclerosis is the leading cause of cardiovascular disease (CVD) and stroke. Typically, atherosclerotic calcium is found during the mature stage of the atherosclerosis disease. It is therefore often a challenge to identify and quantify the calcium. This is due to the presence of multiple components of plaque buildup in the arterial walls. The American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association guidelines point to the importance of calcium in the coronary and carotid arteries and further recommend its quantification for the prevention of heart disease. It is therefore essential to stratify the CVD risk of the patient into low- and high-risk bins. Recent finding Calcium formation in the artery walls is multifocal in nature with sizes at the micrometer level. Thus, its detection requires high-resolution imaging. Clinical experience has shown that even though optical coherence tomography offers better resolution, intravascular ultrasound still remains an important imaging modality for coronary wall imaging. For a computer-based analysis system to be complete, it must be scientifically and clinically validated. This study presents a state-of-the-art review (condensation of 152 publications after examining 200 articles) covering the methods for calcium detection and its quantification for coronary and carotid arteries, the pros and cons of these methods, and the risk stratification strategies. The review also presents different kinds of statistical models and gold standard solutions for the evaluation of software systems useful for calcium detection and quantification. Finally, the review concludes with a possible vision for designing the next-generation system for better clinical outcomes. |
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Notes | MILAB; no proj | Approved | no | ||
Call Number | Admin @ si @ BLA2018 | Serial | 3188 | ||
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Author | Eduardo Aguilar; Bhalaji Nagarajan; Beatriz Remeseiro; Petia Radeva | ||||
Title | Bayesian deep learning for semantic segmentation of food images | Type | Journal Article | ||
Year | 2022 | Publication | Computers and Electrical Engineering | Abbreviated Journal | CEE |
Volume ![]() |
103 | Issue | Pages | 108380 | |
Keywords | Deep learning; Uncertainty quantification; Bayesian inference; Image segmentation; Food analysis | ||||
Abstract | Deep learning has provided promising results in various applications; however, algorithms tend to be overconfident in their predictions, even though they may be entirely wrong. Particularly for critical applications, the model should provide answers only when it is very sure of them. This article presents a Bayesian version of two different state-of-the-art semantic segmentation methods to perform multi-class segmentation of foods and estimate the uncertainty about the given predictions. The proposed methods were evaluated on three public pixel-annotated food datasets. As a result, we can conclude that Bayesian methods improve the performance achieved by the baseline architectures and, in addition, provide information to improve decision-making. Furthermore, based on the extracted uncertainty map, we proposed three measures to rank the images according to the degree of noisy annotations they contained. Note that the top 135 images ranked by one of these measures include more than half of the worst-labeled food images. | ||||
Address | October 2022 | ||||
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Publisher | Science Direct | Place of Publication | Editor | ||
Language | Summary Language | Original Title | |||
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Notes | MILAB | Approved | no | ||
Call Number | Admin @ si @ ANR2022 | Serial | 3763 | ||
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Author | Jasper Uilings; Koen E.A. van de Sande; Theo Gevers; Arnold Smeulders | ||||
Title | Selective Search for Object Recognition | Type | Journal Article | ||
Year | 2013 | Publication | International Journal of Computer Vision | Abbreviated Journal | IJCV |
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104 | Issue | 2 | Pages | 154-171 |
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Abstract | This paper addresses the problem of generating possible object locations for use in object recognition. We introduce selective search which combines the strength of both an exhaustive search and segmentation. Like segmentation, we use the image structure to guide our sampling process. Like exhaustive search, we aim to capture all possible object locations. Instead of a single technique to generate possible object locations, we diversify our search and use a variety of complementary image partitionings to deal with as many image conditions as possible. Our selective search results in a small set of data-driven, class-independent, high quality locations, yielding 99 % recall and a Mean Average Best Overlap of 0.879 at 10,097 locations. The reduced number of locations compared to an exhaustive search enables the use of stronger machine learning techniques and stronger appearance models for object recognition. In this paper we show that our selective search enables the use of the powerful Bag-of-Words model for recognition. The selective search software is made publicly available (Software: http://disi.unitn.it/~uijlings/SelectiveSearch.html). | ||||
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Series Volume | Series Issue | Edition | |||
ISSN | 0920-5691 | ISBN | Medium | ||
Area | Expedition | Conference | |||
Notes | ALTRES;ISE | Approved | no | ||
Call Number | Admin @ si @ USG2013 | Serial | 2362 | ||
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Author | Estefania Talavera; Carolin Wuerich; Nicolai Petkov; Petia Radeva | ||||
Title | Topic modelling for routine discovery from egocentric photo-streams | Type | Journal Article | ||
Year | 2020 | Publication | Pattern Recognition | Abbreviated Journal | PR |
Volume ![]() |
104 | Issue | Pages | 107330 | |
Keywords | Routine; Egocentric vision; Lifestyle; Behaviour analysis; Topic modelling | ||||
Abstract | Developing tools to understand and visualize lifestyle is of high interest when addressing the improvement of habits and well-being of people. Routine, defined as the usual things that a person does daily, helps describe the individuals’ lifestyle. With this paper, we are the first ones to address the development of novel tools for automatic discovery of routine days of an individual from his/her egocentric images. In the proposed model, sequences of images are firstly characterized by semantic labels detected by pre-trained CNNs. Then, these features are organized in temporal-semantic documents to later be embedded into a topic models space. Finally, Dynamic-Time-Warping and Spectral-Clustering methods are used for final day routine/non-routine discrimination. Moreover, we introduce a new EgoRoutine-dataset, a collection of 104 egocentric days with more than 100.000 images recorded by 7 users. Results show that routine can be discovered and behavioural patterns can be observed. | ||||
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Notes | MILAB; no proj | Approved | no | ||
Call Number | Admin @ si @ TWP2020 | Serial | 3435 | ||
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Author | P. Canals; Simone Balocco; O. Diaz; J. Li; A. Garcia Tornel; M. Olive Gadea; M. Ribo | ||||
Title | A fully automatic method for vascular tortuosity feature extraction in the supra-aortic region: unraveling possibilities in stroke treatment planning | Type | Journal Article | ||
Year | 2023 | Publication | Computerized Medical Imaging and Graphics | Abbreviated Journal | CMIG |
Volume ![]() |
104 | Issue | 102170 | Pages | |
Keywords | Artificial intelligence; Deep learning; Stroke; Thrombectomy; Vascular feature extraction; Vascular tortuosity | ||||
Abstract | Vascular tortuosity of supra-aortic vessels is widely considered one of the main reasons for failure and delays in endovascular treatment of large vessel occlusion in patients with acute ischemic stroke. Characterization of tortuosity is a challenging task due to the lack of objective, robust and effective analysis tools. We present a fully automatic method for arterial segmentation, vessel labelling and tortuosity feature extraction applied to the supra-aortic region. A sample of 566 computed tomography angiography scans from acute ischemic stroke patients (aged 74.8 ± 12.9, 51.0% females) were used for training, validation and testing of a segmentation module based on a U-Net architecture (162 cases) and a vessel labelling module powered by a graph U-Net (566 cases). Successively, 30 cases were processed for testing of a tortuosity feature extraction module. Measurements obtained through automatic processing were compared to manual annotations from two observers for a thorough validation of the method. The proposed feature extraction method presented similar performance to the inter-rater variability observed in the measurement of 33 geometrical and morphological features of the arterial anatomy in the supra-aortic region. This system will contribute to the development of more complex models to advance the treatment of stroke by adding immediate automation, objectivity, repeatability and robustness to the vascular tortuosity characterization of patients. | ||||
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Notes | MILAB | Approved | no | ||
Call Number | Admin @ si @ CBD2023 | Serial | 4005 | ||
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Author | Fahad Shahbaz Khan; Muhammad Anwer Rao; Joost Van de Weijer; Andrew Bagdanov; Antonio Lopez; Michael Felsberg | ||||
Title | Coloring Action Recognition in Still Images | Type | Journal Article | ||
Year | 2013 | Publication | International Journal of Computer Vision | Abbreviated Journal | IJCV |
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105 | Issue | 3 | Pages | 205-221 |
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Abstract | In this article we investigate the problem of human action recognition in static images. By action recognition we intend a class of problems which includes both action classification and action detection (i.e. simultaneous localization and classification). Bag-of-words image representations yield promising results for action classification, and deformable part models perform very well object detection. The representations for action recognition typically use only shape cues and ignore color information. Inspired by the recent success of color in image classification and object detection, we investigate the potential of color for action classification and detection in static images. We perform a comprehensive evaluation of color descriptors and fusion approaches for action recognition. Experiments were conducted on the three datasets most used for benchmarking action recognition in still images: Willow, PASCAL VOC 2010 and Stanford-40. Our experiments demonstrate that incorporating color information considerably improves recognition performance, and that a descriptor based on color names outperforms pure color descriptors. Our experiments demonstrate that late fusion of color and shape information outperforms other approaches on action recognition. Finally, we show that the different color–shape fusion approaches result in complementary information and combining them yields state-of-the-art performance for action classification. | ||||
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Publisher | Springer US | Place of Publication | Editor | ||
Language | Summary Language | Original Title | |||
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ISSN | 0920-5691 | ISBN | Medium | ||
Area | Expedition | Conference | |||
Notes | CIC; ADAS; 600.057; 600.048 | Approved | no | ||
Call Number | Admin @ si @ KRW2013 | Serial | 2285 | ||
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Author | Meysam Madadi; Hugo Bertiche; Sergio Escalera | ||||
Title | SMPLR: Deep learning based SMPL reverse for 3D human pose and shape recovery | Type | Journal Article | ||
Year | 2020 | Publication | Pattern Recognition | Abbreviated Journal | PR |
Volume ![]() |
106 | Issue | Pages | 107472 | |
Keywords | Deep learning; 3D Human pose; Body shape; SMPL; Denoising autoencoder; Volumetric stack hourglass | ||||
Abstract | In this paper we propose to embed SMPL within a deep-based model to accurately estimate 3D pose and shape from a still RGB image. We use CNN-based 3D joint predictions as an intermediate representation to regress SMPL pose and shape parameters. Later, 3D joints are reconstructed again in the SMPL output. This module can be seen as an autoencoder where the encoder is a deep neural network and the decoder is SMPL model. We refer to this as SMPL reverse (SMPLR). By implementing SMPLR as an encoder-decoder we avoid the need of complex constraints on pose and shape. Furthermore, given that in-the-wild datasets usually lack accurate 3D annotations, it is desirable to lift 2D joints to 3D without pairing 3D annotations with RGB images. Therefore, we also propose a denoising autoencoder (DAE) module between CNN and SMPLR, able to lift 2D joints to 3D and partially recover from structured error. We evaluate our method on SURREAL and Human3.6M datasets, showing improvement over SMPL-based state-of-the-art alternatives by about 4 and 12 mm, respectively. | ||||
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Notes | HuPBA; no proj | Approved | no | ||
Call Number | Admin @ si @ MBE2020 | Serial | 3439 | ||
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Author | F.Negin; Pau Rodriguez; M.Koperski; A.Kerboua; Jordi Gonzalez; J.Bourgeois; E.Chapoulie; P.Robert; F.Bremond | ||||
Title | PRAXIS: Towards automatic cognitive assessment using gesture recognition | Type | Journal Article | ||
Year | 2018 | Publication | Expert Systems with Applications | Abbreviated Journal | ESWA |
Volume ![]() |
106 | Issue | Pages | 21-35 | |
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Abstract | Praxis test is a gesture-based diagnostic test which has been accepted as diagnostically indicative of cortical pathologies such as Alzheimer’s disease. Despite being simple, this test is oftentimes skipped by the clinicians. In this paper, we propose a novel framework to investigate the potential of static and dynamic upper-body gestures based on the Praxis test and their potential in a medical framework to automatize the test procedures for computer-assisted cognitive assessment of older adults.
In order to carry out gesture recognition as well as correctness assessment of the performances we have recollected a novel challenging RGB-D gesture video dataset recorded by Kinect v2, which contains 29 specific gestures suggested by clinicians and recorded from both experts and patients performing the gesture set. Moreover, we propose a framework to learn the dynamics of upper-body gestures, considering the videos as sequences of short-term clips of gestures. Our approach first uses body part detection to extract image patches surrounding the hands and then, by means of a fine-tuned convolutional neural network (CNN) model, it learns deep hand features which are then linked to a long short-term memory to capture the temporal dependencies between video frames. We report the results of four developed methods using different modalities. The experiments show effectiveness of our deep learning based approach in gesture recognition and performance assessment tasks. Satisfaction of clinicians from the assessment reports indicates the impact of framework corresponding to the diagnosis. |
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Notes | ISE | Approved | no | ||
Call Number | Admin @ si @ NRK2018 | Serial | 3669 | ||
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Author | Jorge Charco; Angel Sappa; Boris X. Vintimilla; Henry Velesaca | ||||
Title | Camera pose estimation in multi-view environments: From virtual scenarios to the real world | Type | Journal Article | ||
Year | 2021 | Publication | Image and Vision Computing | Abbreviated Journal | IVC |
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110 | Issue | Pages | 104182 | |
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Abstract | This paper presents a domain adaptation strategy to efficiently train network architectures for estimating the relative camera pose in multi-view scenarios. The network architectures are fed by a pair of simultaneously acquired images, hence in order to improve the accuracy of the solutions, and due to the lack of large datasets with pairs of overlapped images, a domain adaptation strategy is proposed. The domain adaptation strategy consists on transferring the knowledge learned from synthetic images to real-world scenarios. For this, the networks are firstly trained using pairs of synthetic images, which are captured at the same time by a pair of cameras in a virtual environment; and then, the learned weights of the networks are transferred to the real-world case, where the networks are retrained with a few real images. Different virtual 3D scenarios are generated to evaluate the relationship between the accuracy on the result and the similarity between virtual and real scenarios—similarity on both geometry of the objects contained in the scene as well as relative pose between camera and objects in the scene. Experimental results and comparisons are provided showing that the accuracy of all the evaluated networks for estimating the camera pose improves when the proposed domain adaptation strategy is used, highlighting the importance on the similarity between virtual-real scenarios. | ||||
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Notes | MSIAU; 600.130; 600.122 | Approved | no | ||
Call Number | Admin @ si @ CSV2021 | Serial | 3577 | ||
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Author | Wenlong Deng; Yongli Mou; Takahiro Kashiwa; Sergio Escalera; Kohei Nagai; Kotaro Nakayama; Yutaka Matsuo; Helmut Prendinger | ||||
Title | Vision based Pixel-level Bridge Structural Damage Detection Using a Link ASPP Network | Type | Journal Article | ||
Year | 2020 | Publication | Automation in Construction | Abbreviated Journal | AC |
Volume ![]() |
110 | Issue | Pages | 102973 | |
Keywords | Semantic image segmentation; Deep learning | ||||
Abstract | Structural Health Monitoring (SHM) has greatly benefited from computer vision. Recently, deep learning approaches are widely used to accurately estimate the state of deterioration of infrastructure. In this work, we focus on the problem of bridge surface structural damage detection, such as delamination and rebar exposure. It is well known that the quality of a deep learning model is highly dependent on the quality of the training dataset. Bridge damage detection, our application domain, has the following main challenges: (i) labeling the damages requires knowledgeable civil engineering professionals, which makes it difficult to collect a large annotated dataset; (ii) the damage area could be very small, whereas the background area is large, which creates an unbalanced training environment; (iii) due to the difficulty to exactly determine the extension of the damage, there is often a variation among different labelers who perform pixel-wise labeling. In this paper, we propose a novel model for bridge structural damage detection to address the first two challenges. This paper follows the idea of an atrous spatial pyramid pooling (ASPP) module that is designed as a novel network for bridge damage detection. Further, we introduce the weight balanced Intersection over Union (IoU) loss function to achieve accurate segmentation on a highly unbalanced small dataset. The experimental results show that (i) the IoU loss function improves the overall performance of damage detection, as compared to cross entropy loss or focal loss, and (ii) the proposed model has a better ability to detect a minority class than other light segmentation networks. | ||||
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Notes | HuPBA; no proj | Approved | no | ||
Call Number | Admin @ si @ DMK2020 | Serial | 3314 | ||
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Author | Andres Mafla; Ruben Tito; Sounak Dey; Lluis Gomez; Marçal Rusiñol; Ernest Valveny; Dimosthenis Karatzas | ||||
Title | Real-time Lexicon-free Scene Text Retrieval | Type | Journal Article | ||
Year | 2021 | Publication | Pattern Recognition | Abbreviated Journal | PR |
Volume ![]() |
110 | Issue | Pages | 107656 | |
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Abstract | In this work, we address the task of scene text retrieval: given a text query, the system returns all images containing the queried text. The proposed model uses a single shot CNN architecture that predicts bounding boxes and builds a compact representation of spotted words. In this way, this problem can be modeled as a nearest neighbor search of the textual representation of a query over the outputs of the CNN collected from the totality of an image database. Our experiments demonstrate that the proposed model outperforms previous state-of-the-art, while offering a significant increase in processing speed and unmatched expressiveness with samples never seen at training time. Several experiments to assess the generalization capability of the model are conducted in a multilingual dataset, as well as an application of real-time text spotting in videos. | ||||
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Notes | DAG; 600.121; 600.129; 601.338 | Approved | no | ||
Call Number | Admin @ si @ MTD2021 | Serial | 3493 | ||
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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 | ||||
Title | Subgraph spotting in graph representations of comic book images | Type | Journal Article | ||
Year | 2018 | Publication | Pattern Recognition Letters | Abbreviated Journal | PRL |
Volume ![]() |
112 | Issue | Pages | 118-124 | |
Keywords | 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 | ||||
Abstract | 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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Notes | DAG; 600.097; 600.121 | Approved | no | ||
Call Number | Admin @ si @ LLD2018 | Serial | 3150 | ||
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Author | Juan Jose Rubio; Takahiro Kashiwa; Teera Laiteerapong; Wenlong Deng; Kohei Nagai; Sergio Escalera; Kotaro Nakayama; Yutaka Matsuo; Helmut Prendinger | ||||
Title | Multi-class structural damage segmentation using fully convolutional networks | Type | Journal Article | ||
Year | 2019 | Publication | Computers in Industry | Abbreviated Journal | COMPUTIND |
Volume ![]() |
112 | Issue | Pages | 103121 | |
Keywords | Bridge damage detection; Deep learning; Semantic segmentation | ||||
Abstract | Structural Health Monitoring (SHM) has benefited from computer vision and more recently, Deep Learning approaches, to accurately estimate the state of deterioration of infrastructure. In our work, we test Fully Convolutional Networks (FCNs) with a dataset of deck areas of bridges for damage segmentation. We create a dataset for delamination and rebar exposure that has been collected from inspection records of bridges in Niigata Prefecture, Japan. The dataset consists of 734 images with three labels per image, which makes it the largest dataset of images of bridge deck damage. This data allows us to estimate the performance of our method based on regions of agreement, which emulates the uncertainty of in-field inspections. We demonstrate the practicality of FCNs to perform automated semantic segmentation of surface damages. Our model achieves a mean accuracy of 89.7% for delamination and 78.4% for rebar exposure, and a weighted F1 score of 81.9%. | ||||
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Notes | HuPBA; no proj | Approved | no | ||
Call Number | Admin @ si @ RKL2019 | Serial | 3315 | ||
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Author | Lei Kang; Pau Riba; Mauricio Villegas; Alicia Fornes; Marçal Rusiñol | ||||
Title | Candidate Fusion: Integrating Language Modelling into a Sequence-to-Sequence Handwritten Word Recognition Architecture | Type | Journal Article | ||
Year | 2021 | Publication | Pattern Recognition | Abbreviated Journal | PR |
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112 | Issue | Pages | 107790 | |
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Abstract | Sequence-to-sequence models have recently become very popular for tackling
handwritten word recognition problems. However, how to effectively integrate an external language model into such recognizer is still a challenging problem. The main challenge faced when training a language model is to deal with the language model corpus which is usually different to the one used for training the handwritten word recognition system. Thus, the bias between both word corpora leads to incorrectness on the transcriptions, providing similar or even worse performances on the recognition task. In this work, we introduce Candidate Fusion, a novel way to integrate an external language model to a sequence-to-sequence architecture. Moreover, it provides suggestions from an external language knowledge, as a new input to the sequence-to-sequence recognizer. Hence, Candidate Fusion provides two improvements. On the one hand, the sequence-to-sequence recognizer has the flexibility not only to combine the information from itself and the language model, but also to choose the importance of the information provided by the language model. On the other hand, the external language model has the ability to adapt itself to the training corpus and even learn the most commonly errors produced from the recognizer. Finally, by conducting comprehensive experiments, the Candidate Fusion proves to outperform the state-of-the-art language models for handwritten word recognition tasks. |
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Notes | DAG; 600.140; 601.302; 601.312; 600.121 | Approved | no | ||
Call Number | Admin @ si @ KRV2021 | Serial | 3343 | ||
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