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Author |
Enric Marti; Debora Gil; Carme Julia |

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Title |
A PBL experience in the teaching of Computer Graphics |
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Conference Article |
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Year |
2005 |
Publication |
EUROGRAPHICS Proceedings |
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5 |
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1 |
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95-103 |
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project-based learning; computer graphics education; Open GL; rendering techniques; computer animation techniques; Graphics packages; Hierarchy and geometric transformations; Animation; Color; shading; shadowing and texture; fractals; hidden line/surface removal; Problem Based Learning |
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Abstract |
Project-Based Learning (PBL) is an educational strategy to improve student’s learning capability that, in recent years, has had a progressive acceptance in undergraduate studies. This methodology is based on solving a problem or project in a student working group. In this way, PBL focuses on learning the necessary tools to correctly find a solution to given problems. Since the learning initiative is transferred to the student, the PBL method promotes students own abilities. This allows a better assessment of the true workload that carries out the student in the subject. It follows that the methodology conforms to the guidelines of the Bologna document, which quantifies the student workload in a subject by means of the European credit transfer system (ECTS). PBL is currently applied in undergraduate studies needing strong practical training such as medicine, nursing or law sciences. Although this is also the case in engineering studies, amazingly, few experiences have been reported. In this paper we propose to use PBL in the educational organization of the Computer Graphics subjects in the Computer Science degree. Our PBL project focuses in the development of a C++ graphical environment based on the OpenGL libraries for visualization and handling of different graphical objects. The starting point is a basic skeleton that already includes lighting functions, perspective projection with mouse interaction to change the point of view and three predefined objects. Students have to complete this skeleton by adding their own functions to solve the project. A total number of 10 projects have been proposed and successfully solved. The exercises range from human face rendering to articulated objects, such as robot arms or puppets. In the present paper we extensively report the statement and educational objectives for two of the projects: solar system visualization and a chess game. We report our earlier educational experience based on the standard classroom theoretical, problem and practice sessions and the reasons that motivated searching for other learning methods. We have mainly chosen PBL because it improves the student learning initiative. We have applied the PBL educational model since the beginning of the second semester. The student’s feedback increases in his interest for the subject. We present a comparative study of the teachers’ and students’ workload between PBL and the classic teaching approach, which suggests that the workload increase in PBL is not as high as it seems. |
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Dublin; Ireland; September 2005 |
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EUROGRAPHICS |
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IAM;ADAS; |
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IAM @ iam @ MGJ2005 |
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1593 |
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Author |
Debora Gil; Aura Hernandez-Sabate; Antoni Carol; Oriol Rodriguez; Petia Radeva |


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Title |
A Deterministic-Statistic Adventitia Detection in IVUS Images |
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Conference Article |
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Year |
2005 |
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3rd International workshop on International Workshop on Functional Imaging and Modeling of the Heart |
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65-74 |
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Electron microscopy; Unbending; 2D crystal; Interpolation; Approximation |
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Plaque analysis in IVUS planes needs accurate intima and adventitia models. Large variety in adventitia descriptors difficulties its detection and motivates using a classification strategy for selecting points on the structure. Whatever the set of descriptors used, the selection stage suffers from fake responses due to noise and uncompleted true curves. In order to smooth background noise while strengthening responses, we apply a restricted anisotropic filter that homogenizes grey levels along the image significant structures. Candidate points are extracted by means of a simple semi supervised adaptive classification of the filtered image response to edge and calcium detectors. The final model is obtained by interpolating the former line segments with an anisotropic contour closing technique based on functional extension principles. |
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Barcelona; June 2005 |
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FIMH |
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IAM;MILAB |
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IAM @ iam @ RMF2005 |
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1524 |
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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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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 |
Rosa Maria Ortiz; Debora Gil; Elisa Minchole; Marta Diez-Ferrer; Noelia Cubero de Frutos |

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Title |
Classification of Confolcal Endomicroscopy Patterns for Diagnosis of Lung Cancer |
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Conference Article |
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Year |
2017 |
Publication |
18th World Conference on Lung Cancer |
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Confocal Laser Endomicroscopy (CLE) is an emerging imaging technique that allows the in-vivo acquisition of cell patterns of potentially malignant lesions. Such patterns could discriminate between inflammatory and neoplastic lesions and, thus, serve as a first in-vivo biopsy to discard cases that do not actually require a cell biopsy.
The goal of this work is to explore whether CLE images obtained during videobronchoscopy contain enough visual information to discriminate between benign and malign peripheral lesions for lung cancer diagnosis. To do so, we have performed a pilot comparative study with 12 patients (6 adenocarcinoma and 6 benign-inflammatory) using 2 different methods for CLE pattern analysis: visual analysis by 3 experts and a novel methodology that uses graph methods to find patterns in pre-trained feature spaces. Our preliminary results indicate that although visual analysis can only achieve a 60.2% of accuracy, the accuracy of the proposed unsupervised image pattern classification raises to 84.6%.
We conclude that CLE images visual information allow in-vivo detection of neoplastic lesions and graph structural analysis applied to deep-learning feature spaces can achieve competitive results. |
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Yokohama; Japan; October 2017 |
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IASLC WCLC |
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IAM; 600.096; 600.075; 600.145 |
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no |
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Call Number |
Admin @ si @ OGM2017 |
Serial |
3044 |
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Author |
Patricia Marquez; Debora Gil; Aura Hernandez-Sabate |


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Title |
A Confidence Measure for Assessing Optical Flow Accuracy in the Absence of Ground Truth |
Type |
Conference Article |
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Year |
2011 |
Publication |
IEEE International Conference on Computer Vision – Workshops |
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2042-2049 |
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IEEE International Conference on Computer Vision – Workshops |
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Optical flow is a valuable tool for motion analysis in autonomous navigation systems. A reliable application requires determining the accuracy of the computed optical flow. This is a main challenge given the absence of ground truth in real world sequences. This paper introduces a measure of optical flow accuracy for Lucas-Kanade based flows in terms of the numerical stability of the data-term. We call this measure optical flow condition number. A statistical analysis over ground-truth data show a good statistical correlation between the condition number and optical flow error. Experiments on driving sequences illustrate its potential for autonomous navigation systems. |
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IEEE |
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Barcelona (Spain) |
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English |
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English |
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ICCVW |
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IAM; ADAS |
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IAM @ iam @ MGH2011 |
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1682 |
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Author |
Patricia Marquez; Debora Gil ; Aura Hernandez-Sabate |


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Title |
Error Analysis for Lucas-Kanade Based Schemes |
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Conference Article |
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Year |
2012 |
Publication |
9th International Conference on Image Analysis and Recognition |
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7324 |
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I |
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184-191 |
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Optical flow, Confidence measure, Lucas-Kanade, Cardiac Magnetic Resonance |
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Optical flow is a valuable tool for motion analysis in medical imaging sequences. A reliable application requires determining the accuracy of the computed optical flow. This is a main challenge given the absence of ground truth in medical sequences. This paper presents an error analysis of Lucas-Kanade schemes in terms of intrinsic design errors and numerical stability of the algorithm. Our analysis provides a confidence measure that is naturally correlated to the accuracy of the flow field. Our experiments show the higher predictive value of our confidence measure compared to existing measures. |
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Aveiro, Portugal |
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Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg |
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english |
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Campilho, Aurélio and Kamel, Mohamed |
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Lecture Notes in Computer Science |
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LNCS |
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0302-9743 |
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978-3-642-31294-6 |
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ICIAR |
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IAM |
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no |
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IAM @ iam @ MGH2012a |
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1899 |
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Author |
Francesco Brughi; Debora Gil; Llorenç Badiella; Eva Jove Casabella; Oriol Ramos Terrades |


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Title |
Exploring the impact of inter-query variability on the performance of retrieval systems |
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Conference Article |
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Year |
2014 |
Publication |
11th International Conference on Image Analysis and Recognition |
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8814 |
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413–420 |
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This paper introduces a framework for evaluating the performance of information retrieval systems. Current evaluation metrics provide an average score that does not consider performance variability across the query set. In this manner, conclusions lack of any statistical significance, yielding poor inference to cases outside the query set and possibly unfair comparisons. We propose to apply statistical methods in order to obtain a more informative measure for problems in which different query classes can be identified. In this context, we assess the performance variability on two levels: overall variability across the whole query set and specific query class-related variability. To this end, we estimate confidence bands for precision-recall curves, and we apply ANOVA in order to assess the significance of the performance across different query classes. |
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Algarve; Portugal; October 2014 |
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Springer International Publishing |
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LNCS |
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0302-9743 |
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978-3-319-11757-7 |
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ICIAR |
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IAM; DAG; 600.060; 600.061; 600.077; 600.075 |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ BGB2014 |
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2559 |
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Author |
Debora Gil; Agnes Borras; Sergio Vera; Miguel Angel Gonzalez Ballester |


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Title |
A Validation Benchmark for Assessment of Medial Surface Quality for Medical Applications |
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Conference Article |
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2013 |
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9th International Conference on Computer Vision Systems |
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7963 |
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334-343 |
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Medial Surfaces; Shape Representation; Medical Applications; Performance Evaluation |
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Confident use of medial surfaces in medical decision support systems requires evaluating their quality for detecting pathological deformations and describing anatomical volumes. Validation in the medical imaging field is a challenging task mainly due to the difficulties for getting consensual ground truth. In this paper we propose a validation benchmark for assessing medial surfaces in the context of medical applications. Our benchmark includes a home-made database of synthetic medial surfaces and volumes and specific scores for evaluating surface accuracy, its stability against volume deformations and its capabilities for accurate reconstruction of anatomical volumes. |
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Sant Petersburg; Russia; July 2013 |
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Springer Berlin Heidelberg |
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0302-9743 |
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978-3-642-39401-0 |
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ICVS |
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IAM; 600.044; 600.060 |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ GBV2013 |
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2300 |
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Author |
Patricia Marquez; Debora Gil; Aura Hernandez-Sabate; Daniel Kondermann |



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Title |
When Is A Confidence Measure Good Enough? |
Type |
Conference Article |
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Year |
2013 |
Publication |
9th International Conference on Computer Vision Systems |
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7963 |
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344-353 |
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Optical flow, confidence measure, performance evaluation |
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Confidence estimation has recently become a hot topic in image processing and computer vision.Yet, several definitions exist of the term “confidence” which are sometimes used interchangeably. This is a position paper, in which we aim to give an overview on existing definitions,
thereby clarifying the meaning of the used terms to facilitate further research in this field. Based on these clarifications, we develop a theory to compare confidence measures with respect to their quality. |
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St Petersburg; Russia; July 2013 |
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Springer Link |
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0302-9743 |
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978-3-642-39401-0 |
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ICVS |
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IAM;ADAS; 600.044; 600.057; 600.060; 601.145 |
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IAM @ iam @ MGH2013a |
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2218 |
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Author |
Andrew Nolan; Daniel Serrano; Aura Hernandez-Sabate; Daniel Ponsa; Antonio Lopez |

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Obstacle mapping module for quadrotors on outdoor Search and Rescue operations |
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Conference Article |
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2013 |
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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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