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Petia Radeva, & Enric Marti. (1995). Facial Features Segmentation by Model-Based Snakes In International Conference on Computing Analysis and Image Processing. Bellaterra (Barcelona), Spain.
Abstract: Deformable models have recently been accepted as a standard technique to segment different features in facial images. Despite they give a good approximation of the salient features in a facial image, the resulting shapes of the segmentation process seem somewhat artificial with respect to the natural feature shapes. In this paper we show that active contour models (in particular, rubber snakes) give more close and natural representation of the detected feature shape. Besides, using snakes for facial segmentation frees us from the problem of determination of the numerous weigths of deformable models. Another advantage of rubber snakes is their reduced computational cost. Our experiments using rubber snakes for segmentation of facial snapshots have shown a significant improvement compared to deformable models.
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Petia Radeva, Joan Serrat, & Enric Marti. (1995). "A snake for model-based segmentation " In Proc. Conf. Fifth Int Computer Vision (pp. 816–821).
Abstract: Despite the promising results of numerous applications, the hitherto proposed snake techniques share some common problems: snake attraction by spurious edge points, snake degeneration (shrinking and attening), convergence and stability of the deformation process, snake initialization and local determination of the parameters of elasticity. We argue here that these problems can be solved only when all the snake aspects are considered. The snakes proposed here implement a new potential eld and external force in order to provide a deformation convergence, attraction by both near and far edges as well as snake behaviour selective according to the edge orientation. Furthermore, we conclude that in the case of model-based seg mentation, the internal force should include structural information about the expected snake shape. Experiments using this kind of snakes for segmenting bones in complex hand radiographs show a signicant improvement.
Keywords: snakes; elastic matching; model-based segmenta tion
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F. Javier Sanchez, Jordi Vitria, & Enric Marti. (1991)." Transformaciones Morfológicas de Polígonos Isotéticos" In Primer Congreso Español de Informática Gráfica..
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Gemma Sanchez, Josep Llados, & Enric Marti. (1997). Segmentation and analysis of linial texture in plans In Intelligence Artificielle et Complexité.. Paris.
Abstract: The problem of texture segmentation and interpretation is one of the main concerns in the field of document analysis. Graphical documents often contain areas characterized by a structural texture whose recognition allows both the document understanding, and its storage in a more compact way. In this work, we focus on structural linial textures of regular repetition contained in plan documents. Starting from an atributed graph which represents the vectorized input image, we develop a method to segment textured areas and recognize their placement rules. We wish to emphasize that the searched textures do not follow a predefined pattern. Minimal closed loops of the input graph are computed, and then hierarchically clustered. In this hierarchical clustering, a distance function between two closed loops is defined in terms of their areas difference and boundary resemblance computed by a string matching procedure. Finally it is noted that, when the texture consists of isolated primitive elements, the same method can be used after computing a Voronoi Tesselation of the input graph.
Keywords: Structural Texture, Voronoi, Hierarchical Clustering, String Matching.
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Gemma Sanchez, Ernest Valveny, Josep Llados, Enric Marti, Oriol Ramos Terrades, N.Lozano, et al. (2003)." A system for virtual prototyping of architectural projects" In Proceedings of Fifth IAPR International Workshop on Pattern Recognition (pp. 65–74).
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Joan Serrat, & Enric Marti. (1991)." Elastic matching using interpolation splines" In IV Spanish Symposium of Pattern Recognition and image Analysis.
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Elena Valderrama, Joan Oliver, Josep Maria-Basart, Enric Marti, Petia Radeva, Ricardo Toledo, et al. (2005)." Convergencia al EEES de la ingeniería informática. Título de Grado en tecnología (Informática)" .
Abstract: Elena Valderrama
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Ernest Valveny, & Enric Marti. (2001). "Learning of structural descriptions of graphic symbols using deformable template matching " In Proc. Sixth Int Document Analysis and Recognition Conf (pp. 455–459).
Abstract: Accurate symbol recognition in graphic documents needs an accurate representation of the symbols to be recognized. If structural approaches are used for recognition, symbols have to be described in terms of their shape, using structural relationships among extracted features. Unlike statistical pattern recognition, in structural methods, symbols are usually manually defined from expertise knowledge, and not automatically infered from sample images. In this work we explain one approach to learn from examples a representative structural description of a symbol, thus providing better information about shape variability. The description of a symbol is based on a probabilistic model. It consists of a set of lines described by the mean and the variance of line parameters, respectively providing information about the model of the symbol, and its shape variability. The representation of each image in the sample set as a set of lines is achieved using deformable template matching.
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Ernest Valveny, & Enric Marti. (2000). "Deformable Template Matching within a Bayesian Framework for Hand-Written Graphic Symbol Recognition " . Graphics Recognition Recent Advances, 1941, 193–208.
Abstract: We describe a method for hand-drawn symbol recognition based on deformable template matching able to handle uncertainty and imprecision inherent to hand-drawing. Symbols are represented as a set of straight lines and their deformations as geometric transformations of these lines. Matching, however, is done over the original binary image to avoid loss of information during line detection. It is defined as an energy minimization problem, using a Bayesian framework which allows to combine fidelity to ideal shape of the symbol and flexibility to modify the symbol in order to get the best fit to the binary input image. Prior to matching, we find the best global transformation of the symbol to start the recognition process, based on the distance between symbol lines and image lines. We have applied this method to the recognition of dimensions and symbols in architectural floor plans and we show its flexibility to recognize distorted symbols.
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Ernest Valveny, & Enric Marti. (2000). "Hand-drawn symbol recognition in graphic documents using deformable template matching and a Bayesian framework " In Proc. 15th Int Pattern Recognition Conf (Vol. 2, pp. 239–242).
Abstract: Hand-drawn symbols can take many different and distorted shapes from their ideal representation. Then, very flexible methods are needed to be able to handle unconstrained drawings. We propose here to extend our previous work in hand-drawn symbol recognition based on a Bayesian framework and deformable template matching. This approach gets flexibility enough to fit distorted shapes in the drawing while keeping fidelity to the ideal shape of the symbol. In this work, we define the similarity measure between an image and a symbol based on the distance from every pixel in the image to the lines in the symbol. Matching is carried out using an implementation of the EM algorithm. Thus, we can improve recognition rates and computation time with respect to our previous formulation based on a simulated annealing algorithm.
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