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Judit Martinez, Eva Costa, P. Herreros, Antonio Lopez and Juan J. Villanueva. 2003. TV-Screen Quality Inspection by Artificial Vision. Proceedings SPIE 5132, Sixth International Conference on Quality Control by Artificial Vision (QCAV 2003).
Abstract: A real-time vision system for TV screen quality inspection is introduced. The whole system consists of eight cameras and one processor per camera. It acquires and processes 112 images in 6 seconds. The defects to be inspected can be grouped into four main categories (bubble, line-out, line reduction and landing) although there exists a large variability among each particular type of defect. The complexity of the whole inspection process has been reduced by dividing images into smaller ones and grouping the defects into frequency and intensity relevant ones. Tools such as mathematical morphology, Fourier transform, profile analysis and classification have been used. The performance of the system has been successfully proved against human operators in normal production conditions.
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Xavier Soria, Yachuan Li, Mohammad Rouhani and Angel Sappa. 2023. Tiny and Efficient Model for the Edge Detection Generalization. Proceedings of the IEEE/CVF International Conference on Computer Vision (ICCV) Workshops.
Abstract: Most high-level computer vision tasks rely on low-level image operations as their initial processes. Operations such as edge detection, image enhancement, and super-resolution, provide the foundations for higher level image analysis. In this work we address the edge detection considering three main objectives: simplicity, efficiency, and generalization since current state-of-the-art (SOTA) edge detection models are increased in complexity for better accuracy. To achieve this, we present Tiny and Efficient Edge Detector (TEED), a light convolutional neural network with only 58K parameters, less than 0:2% of the state-of-the-art models. Training on the BIPED dataset takes less than 30 minutes, with each epoch requiring less than 5 minutes. Our proposed model is easy to train and it quickly converges within very first few epochs, while the predicted edge-maps are crisp and of high quality. Additionally, we propose a new dataset to test the generalization of edge detection, which comprises samples from popular images used in edge detection and image segmentation. The source code is available in https://github.com/xavysp/TEED.
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David Geronimo, Angel Sappa, Antonio Lopez and Daniel Ponsa. 2007. Adaptive Image Sampling and Windows Classification for On-board Pedestrian Detection. Proceedings of the 5th International Conference on Computer Vision Systems.
Abstract: On–board pedestrian detection is in the frontier of the state–of–the–art since it implies processing outdoor scenarios from a mobile platform and searching for aspect–changing objects in cluttered urban environments. Most promising approaches include the development of classifiers based on feature selection and machine learning. However, they use a large number of features which compromises real–time. Thus, methods for running the classifiers in only a few image windows must be provided. In this paper we contribute in both aspects, proposing a camera
pose estimation method for adaptive sparse image sampling, as well as a classifier for pedestrian detection based on Haar wavelets and edge orientation histograms as features and AdaBoost as learning machine. Both proposals are compared with relevant approaches in the literature, showing comparable results but reducing processing time by four for the sampling tasks and by ten for the classification one.
Keywords: Pedestrian Detection
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Cristina Cañero and 16 others. 1999. Optimal Stent Implantation: Three-dimensional Evaluation of the Mutual Position of Stent and Vessel via Intracoronary Ecography. Proceedings of International Conference on Computer in Cardiology (CIC´99).
Abstract: We present a new automatic technique to visualize and quantify the mutual position between the stent and the vessel wall by considering their three-dimensional reconstruction. Two deformable generalized cylinders adapt to the image features in all IVUS planes corresponding to the vessel wall and the stent in order to reconstruct the boundaries of the stent and the vessel in space. The image features that characterize the stent and the vessel wall are determined in terms of edge and ridge image detectors taking into account the gray level of the image pixels. We show that the 30 reconstruction by deformable cylinders is accurate and robust due to the spatial data coherence in the considered volumetric IVUS image. The main clinic utility of the stent and vessel reconstruction by deformable’ cylinders consists of its possibility to visualize and to assess the optimal stent introduction.
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Cristina Cañero and 16 others. 1999. Three-dimensional reconstruction and quantification of the coronary tree using intravascular ultrasound images. Proceedings of International Conference on Computer in Cardiology (CIC´99).
Abstract: In this paper we propose a new Computer Vision technique to reconstruct the vascular wall in space using a deformable model-based technique and compounding methods, based in biplane angiography and intravascular ultrasound data jicsion. It is also proposed a generalpurpose three-dimensional guided interpolation method. The three dimensional centerline of the vessel is reconstructed from geometrically corrected biplane angiographies using automatic segmentation methods and snakes. The IVUS image planes are located in the threedimensional space and correctly oriented. A led interpolation method based in B-SurJaces and snakes isused to fill the gaps among image planes
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German Ros, J. Guerrero, Angel Sappa and Antonio Lopez. 2013. VSLAM pose initialization via Lie groups and Lie algebras optimization. Proceedings of IEEE International Conference on Robotics and Automation.5740–5747.
Abstract: We present a novel technique for estimating initial 3D poses in the context of localization and Visual SLAM problems. The presented approach can deal with noise, outliers and a large amount of input data and still performs in real time in a standard CPU. Our method produces solutions with an accuracy comparable to those produced by RANSAC but can be much faster when the percentage of outliers is high or for large amounts of input data. On the current work we propose to formulate the pose estimation as an optimization problem on Lie groups, considering their manifold structure as well as their associated Lie algebras. This allows us to perform a fast and simple optimization at the same time that conserve all the constraints imposed by the Lie group SE(3). Additionally, we present several key design concepts related with the cost function and its Jacobian; aspects that are critical for the good performance of the algorithm.
Keywords: SLAM
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Ernest Valveny, Ricardo Toledo, Ramon Baldrich and Enric Marti. 2002. Combining recognition-based in segmentation-based approaches for graphic symol recognition using deformable template matching. Proceeding of the Second IASTED International Conference Visualization, Imaging and Image Proceesing VIIP 2002.502–507.
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J. Weickert, Bart M. Ter Haar Romeny, Antonio Lopez and W. Van Enk. 1997. Orientation Analysis by Coherence-Enhancing Diffusion. Proc. of the Real World Computing Symposium..
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Petia Radeva, Joan Serrat and Enric Marti. 1995. A snake for model-based segmentation. Proc. Conf. Fifth Int Computer Vision.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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Ricardo Toledo, S. Sallent, J. Paradell and Juan J. Villanueva. 1995. CARE: Computer Assisted Radiology Environment. Pattern Recognition and image analysis: preprints of the VI National Symposium on Pattern Recogniotion & Image Analysis.
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