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Carme Julia, Angel Sappa, Felipe Lumbreras, Joan Serrat and Antonio Lopez. 2007. Motion Segmentation from Feature Trajectories with Missing Data. In J. Marti et al.(Eds.), ed. 3rd. Iberian Conference on Pattern Recognition and Image Analysis.483–490.
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Joan Serrat, Jordi Vitria and J. Pladellorens. 1991. Morphological Segmentation of Heart Scintigraphic image Sequences. Computer Assisted Radiology..
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Diego Cheda, Daniel Ponsa and Antonio Lopez. 2012. Monocular Egomotion Estimation based on Image Matching. 1st International Conference on Pattern Recognition Applications and Methods.425–430.
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Diego Cheda, Daniel Ponsa and Antonio Lopez. 2012. Monocular Depth-based Background Estimation. 7th International Conference on Computer Vision Theory and Applications.323–328.
Abstract: In this paper, we address the problem of reconstructing the background of a scene from a video sequence with occluding objects. The images are taken by hand-held cameras. Our method composes the background by selecting the appropriate pixels from previously aligned input images. To do that, we minimize a cost function that penalizes the deviations from the following assumptions: background represents objects whose distance to the camera is maximal, and background objects are stationary. Distance information is roughly obtained by a supervised learning approach that allows us to distinguish between close and distant image regions. Moving foreground objects are filtered out by using stationariness and motion boundary constancy measurements. The cost function is minimized by a graph cuts method. We demonstrate the applicability of our approach to recover an occlusion-free background in a set of sequences.
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Akhil Gurram, Onay Urfalioglu, Ibrahim Halfaoui, Fahd Bouzaraa and Antonio Lopez. 2018. Monocular Depth Estimation by Learning from Heterogeneous Datasets. IEEE Intelligent Vehicles Symposium.2176–2181.
Abstract: Depth estimation provides essential information to perform autonomous driving and driver assistance. Especially, Monocular Depth Estimation is interesting from a practical point of view, since using a single camera is cheaper than many other options and avoids the need for continuous calibration strategies as required by stereo-vision approaches. State-of-the-art methods for Monocular Depth Estimation are based on Convolutional Neural Networks (CNNs). A promising line of work consists of introducing additional semantic information about the traffic scene when training CNNs for depth estimation. In practice, this means that the depth data used for CNN training is complemented with images having pixel-wise semantic labels, which usually are difficult to annotate (eg crowded urban images). Moreover, so far it is common practice to assume that the same raw training data is associated with both types of ground truth, ie, depth and semantic labels. The main contribution of this paper is to show that this hard constraint can be circumvented, ie, that we can train CNNs for depth estimation by leveraging the depth and semantic information coming from heterogeneous datasets. In order to illustrate the benefits of our approach, we combine KITTI depth and Cityscapes semantic segmentation datasets, outperforming state-of-the-art results on Monocular Depth Estimation.
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Angel Sappa, Niki Aifanti, Sotiris Malassiotis and Michael G. Strintzis. 2003. Monocular 3D Human Body Reconstruction Towards Depth Augmentation of Television Sequences. IEEE International Conference on Image Processing, Barcelona, Spain, September 2003.325–328.
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Arnau Ramisa, Adriana Tapus, Ramon Lopez de Mantaras and Ricardo Toledo. 2008. Mobile Robot Localization using Panoramic Vision and Combination of Feature Region Detectors. IEEE International Conference on Robotics and Automation,.538–543.
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Marc Masana, Idoia Ruiz, Joan Serrat, Joost Van de Weijer and Antonio Lopez. 2018. Metric Learning for Novelty and Anomaly Detection. 29th British Machine Vision Conference.
Abstract: When neural networks process images which do not resemble the distribution seen during training, so called out-of-distribution images, they often make wrong predictions, and do so too confidently. The capability to detect out-of-distribution images is therefore crucial for many real-world applications. We divide out-of-distribution detection between novelty detection ---images of classes which are not in the training set but are related to those---, and anomaly detection ---images with classes which are unrelated to the training set. By related we mean they contain the same type of objects, like digits in MNIST and SVHN. Most existing work has focused on anomaly detection, and has addressed this problem considering networks trained with the cross-entropy loss. Differently from them, we propose to use metric learning which does not have the drawback of the softmax layer (inherent to cross-entropy methods), which forces the network to divide its prediction power over the learned classes. We perform extensive experiments and evaluate both novelty and anomaly detection, even in a relevant application such as traffic sign recognition, obtaining comparable or better results than previous works.
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A. Pujol, Felipe Lumbreras, Javier Varona and Juan J. Villanueva. 2000. Locating people in indoor scenes for real applications. 15 th International Conference on Pattern Recognition.632–635.
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Patricia Marquez, Debora Gil, R.Mester and Aura Hernandez-Sabate. 2014. Local Analysis of Confidence Measures for Optical Flow Quality Evaluation. 9th International Conference on Computer Vision Theory and Applications.450–457.
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.
Keywords: Optical Flow; Confidence Measure; Performance Evaluation.
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