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Author |
Mohammad Rouhani; Angel Sappa |
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Title |
Correspondence Free Registration through a Point-to-Model Distance Minimization |
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Conference Article |
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2011 |
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13th IEEE International Conference on Computer Vision |
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2150-2157 |
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This paper presents a novel formulation, which derives in a smooth minimization problem, to tackle the rigid registration between a given point set and a model set. Unlike most of the existing works, which are based on minimizing a point-wise correspondence term, we propose to describe the model set by means of an implicit representation. It allows a new definition of the registration error, which works beyond the point level representation. Moreover, it could be used in a gradient-based optimization framework. The proposed approach consists of two stages. Firstly, a novel formulation is proposed that relates the registration parameters with the distance between the model and data set. Secondly, the registration parameters are obtained by means of the Levengberg-Marquardt algorithm. Experimental results and comparisons with state of the art show the validity of the proposed framework. |
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Barcelona |
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1550-5499 |
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978-1-4577-1101-5 |
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ICCV |
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ADAS |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ RoS2011b; ADAS @ adas @ |
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1832 |
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Author |
Petia Radeva; Joan Serrat; Enric Marti |
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Title |
A snake for model-based segmentation |
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Conference Article |
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Year |
1995 |
Publication |
Proc. Conf. Fifth Int Computer Vision |
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816-821 |
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snakes; elastic matching; model-based segmenta tion |
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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. |
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MILAB;ADAS;IAM |
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no |
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IAM @ iam @ RSM1995 |
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1634 |
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Author |
Patricia Suarez; Angel Sappa; Boris X. Vintimilla |
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Title |
Cross-Spectral Image Patch Similarity using Convolutional Neural Network |
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Conference Article |
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Year |
2017 |
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IEEE International Workshop of Electronics, Control, Measurement, Signals and their application to Mechatronics |
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The ability to compare image regions (patches) has been the basis of many approaches to core computer vision problems, including object, texture and scene categorization. Hence, developing representations for image patches have been of interest in several works. The current work focuses on learning similarity between cross-spectral image patches with a 2 channel convolutional neural network (CNN) model. The proposed approach is an adaptation of a previous work, trying to obtain similar results than the state of the art but with a lowcost hardware. Hence, obtained results are compared with both
classical approaches, showing improvements, and a state of the art CNN based approach. |
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San Sebastian; Spain; May 2017 |
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ECMSM |
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ADAS; 600.086; 600.118 |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ SSV2017a |
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2916 |
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Author |
Patricia Suarez; Angel Sappa; Boris X. Vintimilla |
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Title |
Infrared Image Colorization based on a Triplet DCGAN Architecture |
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Conference Article |
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Year |
2017 |
Publication |
IEEE Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition Workshops |
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This paper proposes a novel approach for colorizing near infrared (NIR) images using Deep Convolutional Generative Adversarial Network (GAN) architectures. The proposed approach is based on the usage of a triplet model for learning each color channel independently, in a more homogeneous way. It allows a fast convergence during the training, obtaining a greater similarity between the given NIR image and the corresponding ground truth. The proposed approach has been evaluated with a large data set of NIR images and compared with a recent approach, which is also based on a GAN architecture but in this case all the
color channels are obtained at the same time. |
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Honolulu; Hawaii; USA; July 2017 |
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CVPRW |
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ADAS; 600.086; 600.118 |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ SSV2017b |
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2920 |
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Author |
Cristhian A. Aguilera-Carrasco; F. Aguilera; Angel Sappa; C. Aguilera; Ricardo Toledo |
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Title |
Learning cross-spectral similarity measures with deep convolutional neural networks |
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Conference Article |
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Year |
2016 |
Publication |
29th IEEE Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition Worshops |
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The simultaneous use of images from different spectracan be helpful to improve the performance of many computer vision tasks. The core idea behind the usage of crossspectral approaches is to take advantage of the strengths of each spectral band providing a richer representation of a scene, which cannot be obtained with just images from one spectral band. In this work we tackle the cross-spectral image similarity problem by using Convolutional Neural Networks (CNNs). We explore three different CNN architectures to compare the similarity of cross-spectral image patches. Specifically, we train each network with images from the visible and the near-infrared spectrum, and then test the result with two public cross-spectral datasets. Experimental results show that CNN approaches outperform the current state-of-art on both cross-spectral datasets. Additionally, our experiments show that some CNN architectures are capable of generalizing between different crossspectral domains. |
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Las vegas; USA; June 2016 |
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Notes |
ADAS; 600.086; 600.076 |
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no |
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Admin @ si @AAS2016 |
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2809 |
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Author |
David Vazquez; Jiaolong Xu; Sebastian Ramos; Antonio Lopez; Daniel Ponsa |
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Title |
Weakly Supervised Automatic Annotation of Pedestrian Bounding Boxes |
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Conference Article |
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Year |
2013 |
Publication |
CVPR Workshop on Ground Truth – What is a good dataset? |
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706 - 711 |
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Pedestrian Detection; Domain Adaptation |
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Among the components of a pedestrian detector, its trained pedestrian classifier is crucial for achieving the desired performance. The initial task of the training process consists in collecting samples of pedestrians and background, which involves tiresome manual annotation of pedestrian bounding boxes (BBs). Thus, recent works have assessed the use of automatically collected samples from photo-realistic virtual worlds. However, learning from virtual-world samples and testing in real-world images may suffer the dataset shift problem. Accordingly, in this paper we assess an strategy to collect samples from the real world and retrain with them, thus avoiding the dataset shift, but in such a way that no BBs of real-world pedestrians have to be provided. In particular, we train a pedestrian classifier based on virtual-world samples (no human annotation required). Then, using such a classifier we collect pedestrian samples from real-world images by detection. After, a human oracle rejects the false detections efficiently (weak annotation). Finally, a new classifier is trained with the accepted detections. We show that this classifier is competitive with respect to the counterpart trained with samples collected by manually annotating hundreds of pedestrian BBs. |
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Portland; Oregon; June 2013 |
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IEEE |
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English |
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English |
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ADAS; 600.054; 600.057; 601.217 |
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no |
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ADAS @ adas @ VXR2013a |
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2219 |
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Author |
Jiaolong Xu; David Vazquez; Sebastian Ramos; Antonio Lopez; Daniel Ponsa |
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Title |
Adapting a Pedestrian Detector by Boosting LDA Exemplar Classifiers |
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Conference Article |
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Year |
2013 |
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CVPR Workshop on Ground Truth – What is a good dataset? |
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688 - 693 |
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Pedestrian Detection; Domain Adaptation |
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Training vision-based pedestrian detectors using synthetic datasets (virtual world) is a useful technique to collect automatically the training examples with their pixel-wise ground truth. However, as it is often the case, these detectors must operate in real-world images, experiencing a significant drop of their performance. In fact, this effect also occurs among different real-world datasets, i.e. detectors' accuracy drops when the training data (source domain) and the application scenario (target domain) have inherent differences. Therefore, in order to avoid this problem, it is required to adapt the detector trained with synthetic data to operate in the real-world scenario. In this paper, we propose a domain adaptation approach based on boosting LDA exemplar classifiers from both virtual and real worlds. We evaluate our proposal on multiple real-world pedestrian detection datasets. The results show that our method can efficiently adapt the exemplar classifiers from virtual to real world, avoiding drops in average precision over the 15%. |
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Portland; oregon; June 2013 |
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English |
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CVPRW |
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ADAS; 600.054; 600.057; 601.217 |
Approved |
yes |
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Call Number |
XVR2013; ADAS @ adas @ xvr2013a |
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2220 |
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Author |
Cesar de Souza; Adrien Gaidon; Yohann Cabon; Antonio Lopez |
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Title |
Procedural Generation of Videos to Train Deep Action Recognition Networks |
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Conference Article |
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2017 |
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30th IEEE Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition |
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2594-2604 |
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Deep learning for human action recognition in videos is making significant progress, but is slowed down by its dependency on expensive manual labeling of large video collections. In this work, we investigate the generation of synthetic training data for action recognition, as it has recently shown promising results for a variety of other computer vision tasks. We propose an interpretable parametric generative model of human action videos that relies on procedural generation and other computer graphics techniques of modern game engines. We generate a diverse, realistic, and physically plausible dataset of human action videos, called PHAV for ”Procedural Human Action Videos”. It contains a total of 39, 982 videos, with more than 1, 000 examples for each action of 35 categories. Our approach is not limited to existing motion capture sequences, and we procedurally define 14 synthetic actions. We introduce a deep multi-task representation learning architecture to mix synthetic and real videos, even if the action categories differ. Our experiments on the UCF101 and HMDB51 benchmarks suggest that combining our large set of synthetic videos with small real-world datasets can boost recognition performance, significantly
outperforming fine-tuning state-of-the-art unsupervised generative models of videos. |
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Honolulu; Hawaii; July 2017 |
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CVPR |
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ADAS; 600.076; 600.085; 600.118 |
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no |
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Call Number |
Admin @ si @ SGC2017 |
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3051 |
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Author |
German Ros; Laura Sellart; Joanna Materzynska; David Vazquez; Antonio Lopez |
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Title |
The SYNTHIA Dataset: A Large Collection of Synthetic Images for Semantic Segmentation of Urban Scenes |
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Conference Article |
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2016 |
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29th IEEE Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition |
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3234-3243 |
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Domain Adaptation; Autonomous Driving; Virtual Data; Semantic Segmentation |
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Vision-based semantic segmentation in urban scenarios is a key functionality for autonomous driving. The irruption of deep convolutional neural networks (DCNNs) allows to foresee obtaining reliable classifiers to perform such a visual task. However, DCNNs require to learn many parameters from raw images; thus, having a sufficient amount of diversified images with this class annotations is needed. These annotations are obtained by a human cumbersome labour specially challenging for semantic segmentation, since pixel-level annotations are required. In this paper, we propose to use a virtual world for automatically generating realistic synthetic images with pixel-level annotations. Then, we address the question of how useful can be such data for the task of semantic segmentation; in particular, when using a DCNN paradigm. In order to answer this question we have generated a synthetic diversified collection of urban images, named SynthCity, with automatically generated class annotations. We use SynthCity in combination with publicly available real-world urban images with manually provided annotations. Then, we conduct experiments on a DCNN setting that show how the inclusion of SynthCity in the training stage significantly improves the performance of the semantic segmentation task |
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Las Vegas; USA; June 2016 |
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ADAS; 600.085; 600.082; 600.076 |
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ADAS @ adas @ RSM2016 |
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2739 |
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Author |
Jose Carlos Rubio; Joan Serrat; Antonio Lopez |
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Title |
Unsupervised co-segmentation through region matching |
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Conference Article |
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2012 |
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25th IEEE Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition |
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749-756 |
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Co-segmentation is defined as jointly partitioning multiple images depicting the same or similar object, into foreground and background. Our method consists of a multiple-scale multiple-image generative model, which jointly estimates the foreground and background appearance distributions from several images, in a non-supervised manner. In contrast to other co-segmentation methods, our approach does not require the images to have similar foregrounds and different backgrounds to function properly. Region matching is applied to exploit inter-image information by establishing correspondences between the common objects that appear in the scene. Moreover, computing many-to-many associations of regions allow further applications, like recognition of object parts across images. We report results on iCoseg, a challenging dataset that presents extreme variability in camera viewpoint, illumination and object deformations and poses. We also show that our method is robust against large intra-class variability in the MSRC database. |
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Providence, Rhode Island |
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IEEE Xplore |
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1063-6919 |
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978-1-4673-1226-4 |
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CVPR |
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ADAS |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ RSL2012b; ADAS @ adas @ |
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2033 |
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