|
ChunYang, Xu Cheng Yin, Hong Yu, Dimosthenis Karatzas and Yu Cao. 2017. ICDAR2017 Robust Reading Challenge on Text Extraction from Biomedical Literature Figures (DeTEXT). 14th International Conference on Document Analysis and Recognition.1444–1447.
Abstract: Hundreds of millions of figures are available in the biomedical literature, representing important biomedical experimental evidence. Since text is a rich source of information in figures, automatically extracting such text may assist in the task of mining figure information and understanding biomedical documents. Unlike images in the open domain, biomedical figures present a variety of unique challenges. For example, biomedical figures typically have complex layouts, small font sizes, short text, specific text, complex symbols and irregular text arrangements. This paper presents the final results of the ICDAR 2017 Competition on Text Extraction from Biomedical Literature Figures (ICDAR2017 DeTEXT Competition), which aims at extracting (detecting and recognizing) text from biomedical literature figures. Similar to text extraction from scene images and web pictures, ICDAR2017 DeTEXT Competition includes three major tasks, i.e., text detection, cropped word recognition and end-to-end text recognition. Here, we describe in detail the data set, tasks, evaluation protocols and participants of this competition, and report the performance of the participating methods.
|
|
|
Lluis Gomez, Marçal Rusiñol, Ali Furkan Biten and Dimosthenis Karatzas. 2018. Subtitulació automàtica d'imatges. Estat de l'art i limitacions en el context arxivístic. Jornades Imatge i Recerca.
|
|
|
Dimosthenis Karatzas, Lluis Gomez, Marçal Rusiñol and Anguelos Nicolaou. 2018. The Robust Reading Competition Annotation and Evaluation Platform. 13th IAPR International Workshop on Document Analysis Systems.61–66.
Abstract: The ICDAR Robust Reading Competition (RRC), initiated in 2003 and reestablished in 2011, has become the defacto evaluation standard for the international community. Concurrent with its second incarnation in 2011, a continuous
effort started to develop an online framework to facilitate the hosting and management of competitions. This short paper briefly outlines the Robust Reading Competition Annotation and Evaluation Platform, the backbone of the
Robust Reading Competition, comprising a collection of tools and processes that aim to simplify the management and annotation of data, and to provide online and offline performance evaluation and analysis services.
|
|
|
Mohammed Al Rawi and Dimosthenis Karatzas. 2018. On the Labeling Correctness in Computer Vision Datasets. Proceedings of the Workshop on Interactive Adaptive Learning, co-located with European Conference on Machine Learning and Principles and Practice of Knowledge Discovery in Databases.
Abstract: Image datasets have heavily been used to build computer vision systems.
These datasets are either manually or automatically labeled, which is a
problem as both labeling methods are prone to errors. To investigate this problem, we use a majority voting ensemble that combines the results from several Convolutional Neural Networks (CNNs). Majority voting ensembles not only enhance the overall performance, but can also be used to estimate the confidence level of each sample. We also examined Softmax as another form to estimate posterior probability. We have designed various experiments with a range of different ensembles built from one or different, or temporal/snapshot CNNs, which have been trained multiple times stochastically. We analyzed CIFAR10, CIFAR100, EMNIST, and SVHN datasets and we found quite a few incorrect
labels, both in the training and testing sets. We also present detailed confidence analysis on these datasets and we found that the ensemble is better than the Softmax when used estimate the per-sample confidence. This work thus proposes an approach that can be used to scrutinize and verify the labeling of computer vision datasets, which can later be applied to weakly/semi-supervised learning. We propose a measure, based on the Odds-Ratio, to quantify how many of these incorrectly classified labels are actually incorrectly labeled and how many of these are confusing. The proposed methods are easily scalable to larger datasets, like ImageNet, LSUN and SUN, as each CNN instance is trained for 60 epochs; or even faster, by implementing a temporal (snapshot) ensemble.
|
|
|
Sounak Dey, Anjan Dutta, Suman Ghosh, Ernest Valveny and Josep Llados. 2018. Aligning Salient Objects to Queries: A Multi-modal and Multi-object Image Retrieval Framework. 14th Asian Conference on Computer Vision.
Abstract: In this paper we propose an approach for multi-modal image retrieval in multi-labelled images. A multi-modal deep network architecture is formulated to jointly model sketches and text as input query modalities into a common embedding space, which is then further aligned with the image feature space. Our architecture also relies on a salient object detection through a supervised LSTM-based visual attention model learned from convolutional features. Both the alignment between the queries and the image and the supervision of the attention on the images are obtained by generalizing the Hungarian Algorithm using different loss functions. This permits encoding the object-based features and its alignment with the query irrespective of the availability of the co-occurrence of different objects in the training set. We validate the performance of our approach on standard single/multi-object datasets, showing state-of-the art performance in every dataset.
|
|
|
Sounak Dey, Anjan Dutta, Suman Ghosh, Ernest Valveny, Josep Llados and Umapada Pal. 2018. Learning Cross-Modal Deep Embeddings for Multi-Object Image Retrieval using Text and Sketch. 24th International Conference on Pattern Recognition.916–921.
Abstract: In this work we introduce a cross modal image retrieval system that allows both text and sketch as input modalities for the query. A cross-modal deep network architecture is formulated to jointly model the sketch and text input modalities as well as the the image output modality, learning a common embedding between text and images and between sketches and images. In addition, an attention model is used to selectively focus the attention on the different objects of the image, allowing for retrieval with multiple objects in the query. Experiments show that the proposed method performs the best in both single and multiple object image retrieval in standard datasets.
|
|
|
Fernando Vilariño, Dimosthenis Karatzas and Alberto Valcarce. 2018. The Library Living Lab Barcelona: A participative approach to technology as an enabling factor for innovation in cultural spaces.
|
|
|
Fernando Vilariño, Dimosthenis Karatzas and Alberto Valcarce. 2018. Libraries as New Innovation Hubs: The Library Living Lab. 30th ISPIM Innovation Conference.
Abstract: Libraries are in deep transformation both in EU and around the world, and they are thriving within a great window of opportunity for innovation. In this paper, we show how the Library Living Lab in Barcelona participated of this changing scenario and contributed to create the Bibliolab program, where more than 200 public libraries give voice to their users in a global user-centric innovation initiative, using technology as enabling factor. The Library Living Lab is a real 4-helix implementation where Universities, Research Centers, Public Administration, Companies and the Neighbors are joint together to explore how technology transforms the cultural experience of people. This case is an example of scalability and provides reference tools for policy making, sustainability, user engage methodologies and governance. We provide specific examples of new prototypes and services that help to understand how to redefine the role of the Library as a real hub for social innovation.
|
|
|
Lei Kang, Juan Ignacio Toledo, Pau Riba, Mauricio Villegas, Alicia Fornes and Marçal Rusiñol. 2018. Convolve, Attend and Spell: An Attention-based Sequence-to-Sequence Model for Handwritten Word Recognition. 40th German Conference on Pattern Recognition.459–472.
Abstract: This paper proposes Convolve, Attend and Spell, an attention based sequence-to-sequence model for handwritten word recognition. The proposed architecture has three main parts: an encoder, consisting of a CNN and a bi-directional GRU, an attention mechanism devoted to focus on the pertinent features and a decoder formed by a one-directional GRU, able to spell the corresponding word, character by character. Compared with the recent state-of-the-art, our model achieves competitive results on the IAM dataset without needing any pre-processing step, predefined lexicon nor language model. Code and additional results are available in https://github.com/omni-us/research-seq2seq-HTR.
|
|
|
Alicia Fornes and Bart Lamiroy. 2018. Graphics Recognition, Current Trends and Evolutions. Springer International Publishing. (LNCS.)
Abstract: This book constitutes the thoroughly refereed post-conference proceedings of the 12th International Workshop on Graphics Recognition, GREC 2017, held in Kyoto, Japan, in November 2017.
The 10 revised full papers presented were carefully reviewed and selected from 14 initial submissions. They contain both classical and emerging topics of graphics rcognition, namely analysis and detection of diagrams, search and classification, optical music recognition, interpretation of engineering drawings and maps.
|
|