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Author |
Patricia Marquez; Debora Gil; R.Mester; Aura Hernandez-Sabate |
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Title |
Local Analysis of Confidence Measures for Optical Flow Quality Evaluation |
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Conference Article |
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Year |
2014 |
Publication |
9th International Conference on Computer Vision Theory and Applications |
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3 |
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450-457 |
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Keywords |
Optical Flow; Confidence Measure; Performance Evaluation. |
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Abstract |
Optical Flow (OF) techniques facing the complexity of real sequences have been developed in the last years. Even using the most appropriate technique for our specific problem, at some points the output flow might fail to achieve the minimum error required for the system. Confidence measures computed from either input data or OF output should discard those points where OF is not accurate enough for its further use. It follows that evaluating the capabilities of a confidence measure for bounding OF error is as important as the definition
itself. In this paper we analyze different confidence measures and point out their advantages and limitations for their use in real world settings. We also explore the agreement with current tools for their evaluation of confidence measures performance. |
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Lisboa; January 2014 |
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VISAPP |
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IAM; ADAS; 600.044; 600.060; 600.057; 601.145; 600.076; 600.075 |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ MGM2014 |
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2432 |
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Author |
Patricia Marquez; H. Kause; A. Fuster; Aura Hernandez-Sabate; L. Florack; Debora Gil; Hans van Assen |
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Title |
Factors Affecting Optical Flow Performance in Tagging Magnetic Resonance Imaging |
Type |
Conference Article |
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Year |
2014 |
Publication |
17th International Conference on Medical Image Computing and Computer Assisted Intervention |
Abbreviated Journal |
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Volume |
8896 |
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231-238 |
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Keywords |
Optical flow; Performance Evaluation; Synthetic Database; ANOVA; Tagging Magnetic Resonance Imaging |
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Abstract |
Changes in cardiac deformation patterns are correlated with cardiac pathologies. Deformation can be extracted from tagging Magnetic Resonance Imaging (tMRI) using Optical Flow (OF) techniques. For applications of OF in a clinical setting it is important to assess to what extent the performance of a particular OF method is stable across dierent clinical acquisition artifacts. This paper presents a statistical validation framework, based on ANOVA, to assess the motion and appearance factors that have the largest in uence on OF accuracy drop.
In order to validate this framework, we created a database of simulated tMRI data including the most common artifacts of MRI and test three dierent OF methods, including HARP. |
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Boston; USA; September 2014 |
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Springer International Publishing |
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0302-9743 |
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978-3-319-14677-5 |
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STACOM |
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IAM; ADAS; 600.060; 601.145; 600.076; 600.075 |
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Admin @ si @ MKF2014 |
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2495 |
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Author |
Aura Hernandez-Sabate; Lluis Albarracin; Daniel Calvo; Nuria Gorgorio |
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Title |
EyeMath: Identifying Mathematics Problem Solving Processes in a RTS Video Game |
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Conference Article |
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Year |
2016 |
Publication |
5th International Conference Games and Learning Alliance |
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10056 |
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50-59 |
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Simulation environment; Automated Driving; Driver-Vehicle interaction |
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Photorealistic virtual environments are crucial for developing and testing automated driving systems in a safe way during trials. As commercially available simulators are expensive and bulky, this paper presents a low-cost, extendable, and easy-to-use (LEE) virtual environment with the aim to highlight its utility for level 3 driving automation. In particular, an experiment is performed using the presented simulator to explore the influence of different variables regarding control transfer of the car after the system was driving autonomously in a highway scenario. The results show that the speed of the car at the time when the system needs to transfer the control to the human driver is critical. |
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GALA |
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ADAS;IAM; |
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HAC2016 |
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2864 |
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Author |
Saad Minhas; Aura Hernandez-Sabate; Shoaib Ehsan; Katerine Diaz; Ales Leonardis; Antonio Lopez; Klaus McDonald Maier |
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Title |
LEE: A photorealistic Virtual Environment for Assessing Driver-Vehicle Interactions in Self-Driving Mode |
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Conference Article |
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Year |
2016 |
Publication |
14th European Conference on Computer Vision Workshops |
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Volume |
9915 |
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Pages |
894-900 |
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Keywords |
Simulation environment; Automated Driving; Driver-Vehicle interaction |
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Photorealistic virtual environments are crucial for developing and testing automated driving systems in a safe way during trials. As commercially available simulators are expensive and bulky, this paper presents a low-cost, extendable, and easy-to-use (LEE) virtual environment with the aim to highlight its utility for level 3 driving automation. In particular, an experiment is performed using the presented simulator to explore the influence of different variables regarding control transfer of the car after the system was driving autonomously in a highway scenario. The results show that the speed of the car at the time when the system needs to transfer the control to the human driver is critical. |
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Amsterdam; The Netherlands; October 2016 |
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ECCVW |
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ADAS;IAM; 600.085; 600.076 |
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MHE2016 |
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2865 |
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Author |
Andrew Nolan; Daniel Serrano; Aura Hernandez-Sabate; Daniel Ponsa; Antonio Lopez |
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Title |
Obstacle mapping module for quadrotors on outdoor Search and Rescue operations |
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Conference Article |
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Year |
2013 |
Publication |
International Micro Air Vehicle Conference and Flight Competition |
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UAV |
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Obstacle avoidance remains a challenging task for Micro Aerial Vehicles (MAV), due to their limited payload capacity to carry advanced sensors. Unlike larger vehicles, MAV can only carry light weight sensors, for instance a camera, which is our main assumption in this work. We explore passive monocular depth estimation and propose a novel method Position Aided Depth Estimation
(PADE). We analyse PADE performance and compare it against the extensively used Time To Collision (TTC). We evaluate the accuracy, robustness to noise and speed of three Optical Flow (OF) techniques, combined with both depth estimation methods. Our results show PADE is more accurate than TTC at depths between 0-12 meters and is less sensitive to noise. Our findings highlight the potential application of PADE for MAV to perform safe autonomous navigation in
unknown and unstructured environments. |
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Toulouse; France; September 2013 |
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IMAV |
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ADAS; 600.054; 600.057;IAM |
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Admin @ si @ NSH2013 |
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2371 |
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Author |
Aura Hernandez-Sabate; Debora Gil; Albert Teis |
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Title |
How Do Conservation Laws Define a Motion Suppression Score in In-Vivo Ivus Sequences? |
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Conference Article |
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2007 |
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Proc. IEEE Ultrasonics Symp |
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2231-2234 |
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validation standards; IVUS motion compensation; conservation laws. |
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Evaluation of arterial tissue biomechanics for diagnosis and treatment of cardiovascular diseases is an active research field in the biomedical imaging processing area. IntraVascular UltraSound (IVUS) is a unique tool for such assessment since it reflects tissue morphology and deformation. A proper quantification and visualization of both properties is hindered by vessel structures misalignments introduced by cardiac dynamics. This has encouraged development of IVUS motion compensation techniques. However, there is a lack of an objective evaluation of motion reduction ensuring a reliable clinical application This work reports a novel score, the Conservation of Density Rate (CDR), for validation of motion compensation in in-vivo pullbacks. Synthetic experiments validate the proposed score as measure of motion parameters accuracy; while results in in vivo pullbacks show its reliability in clinical cases. |
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IAM |
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IAM @ iam @ HTG2007 |
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1550 |
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Author |
Aura Hernandez-Sabate; Debora Gil; David Roche; Monica M. S. Matsumoto; Sergio S. Furuie |
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Title |
Inferring the Performance of Medical Imaging Algorithms |
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Conference Article |
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Year |
2011 |
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14th International Conference on Computer Analysis of Images and Patterns |
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6854 |
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520-528 |
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Keywords |
Validation, Statistical Inference, Medical Imaging Algorithms. |
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Evaluation of the performance and limitations of medical imaging algorithms is essential to estimate their impact in social, economic or clinical aspects. However, validation of medical imaging techniques is a challenging task due to the variety of imaging and clinical problems involved, as well as, the difficulties for systematically extracting a reliable solely ground truth. Although specific validation protocols are reported in any medical imaging paper, there are still two major concerns: definition of standardized methodologies transversal to all problems and generalization of conclusions to the whole clinical data set.
We claim that both issues would be fully solved if we had a statistical model relating ground truth and the output of computational imaging techniques. Such a statistical model could conclude to what extent the algorithm behaves like the ground truth from the analysis of a sampling of the validation data set. We present a statistical inference framework reporting the agreement and describing the relationship of two quantities. We show its transversality by applying it to validation of two different tasks: contour segmentation and landmark correspondence. |
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Sevilla |
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Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg |
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Berlin |
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Pedro Real; Daniel Diaz-Pernil; Helena Molina-Abril; Ainhoa Berciano; Walter Kropatsch |
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CAIP |
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IAM; ADAS |
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IAM @ iam @ HGR2011 |
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1676 |
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