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Author |
Konstantia Georgouli; Katerine Diaz; Jesus Martinez del Rincon; Anastasios Koidis |
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Building generic, easily-updatable chemometric models with harmonisation and augmentation features: The case of FTIR vegetable oils classification |
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Conference Article |
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2017 |
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3rd Ιnternational Conference Metrology Promoting Standardization and Harmonization in Food and Nutrition |
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Thessaloniki; Greece; October 2017 |
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IMEKOFOODS |
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ADAS; 600.118 |
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Admin @ si @ GDM2017 |
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3081 |
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Author |
Hanne Kause; Patricia Marquez; Andrea Fuster; Aura Hernandez-Sabate; Luc Florack; Debora Gil; Hans van Assen |
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Title |
Quality Assessment of Optical Flow in Tagging MRI |
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Conference Article |
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2015 |
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5th Dutch Bio-Medical Engineering Conference BME2015 |
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The Netherlands; January 2015 |
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BME |
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IAM; ADAS; 600.076; 600.075 |
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Admin @ si @ KMF2015 |
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2616 |
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Author |
Yainuvis Socarras; Sebastian Ramos; David Vazquez; Antonio Lopez; Theo Gevers |
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Title |
Adapting Pedestrian Detection from Synthetic to Far Infrared Images |
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Conference Article |
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Year |
2013 |
Publication |
ICCV Workshop on Visual Domain Adaptation and Dataset Bias |
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Domain Adaptation; Far Infrared; Pedestrian Detection |
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We present different techniques to adapt a pedestrian classifier trained with synthetic images and the corresponding automatically generated annotations to operate with far infrared (FIR) images. The information contained in this kind of images allow us to develop a robust pedestrian detector invariant to extreme illumination changes. |
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Sydney; Australia; December 2013 |
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Sydney, Australy |
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English |
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ICCVW-VisDA |
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ADAS; 600.054; 600.055; 600.057; 601.217;ISE |
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ADAS @ adas @ SRV2013 |
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2334 |
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Patricia Marquez; Debora Gil; Aura Hernandez-Sabate |
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Title |
Evaluation of the Capabilities of Confidence Measures for Assessing Optical Flow Quality |
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Conference Article |
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2013 |
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ICCV Workshop on Computer Vision in Vehicle Technology: From Earth to Mars |
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624-631 |
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Assessing Optical Flow (OF) quality is essential for its further use in reliable decision support systems. The absence of ground truth in such situations leads to the computation of OF Confidence Measures (CM) obtained from either input or output data. A fair comparison across the capabilities of the different CM for bounding OF error is required in order to choose the best OF-CM pair for discarding points where OF computation is not reliable. This paper presents a statistical probabilistic framework for assessing the quality of a given CM. Our quality measure is given in terms of the percentage of pixels whose OF error bound can not be determined by CM values. We also provide statistical tools for the computation of CM values that ensures a given accuracy of the flow field. |
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Sydney; Australia; December 2013 |
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CVTT:E2M |
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IAM; ADAS; 600.044; 600.057; 601.145 |
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Call Number |
Admin @ si @ MGH2013b |
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2351 |
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Author |
Javier Marin; David Vazquez; Antonio Lopez; Jaume Amores; Bastian Leibe |
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Title |
Random Forests of Local Experts for Pedestrian Detection |
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Conference Article |
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Year |
2013 |
Publication |
15th IEEE International Conference on Computer Vision |
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2592 - 2599 |
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Keywords |
ADAS; Random Forest; Pedestrian Detection |
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Pedestrian detection is one of the most challenging tasks in computer vision, and has received a lot of attention in the last years. Recently, some authors have shown the advantages of using combinations of part/patch-based detectors in order to cope with the large variability of poses and the existence of partial occlusions. In this paper, we propose a pedestrian detection method that efficiently combines multiple local experts by means of a Random Forest ensemble. The proposed method works with rich block-based representations such as HOG and LBP, in such a way that the same features are reused by the multiple local experts, so that no extra computational cost is needed with respect to a holistic method. Furthermore, we demonstrate how to integrate the proposed approach with a cascaded architecture in order to achieve not only high accuracy but also an acceptable efficiency. In particular, the resulting detector operates at five frames per second using a laptop machine. We tested the proposed method with well-known challenging datasets such as Caltech, ETH, Daimler, and INRIA. The method proposed in this work consistently ranks among the top performers in all the datasets, being either the best method or having a small difference with the best one. |
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Sydney; Australia; December 2013 |
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IEEE |
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1550-5499 |
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ICCV |
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ADAS; 600.057; 600.054 |
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ADAS @ adas @ MVL2013 |
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2333 |
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Author |
Gemma Roig; Xavier Boix; R. de Nijs; Sebastian Ramos; K. Kühnlenz; Luc Van Gool |
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Title |
Active MAP Inference in CRFs for Efficient Semantic Segmentation |
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Conference Article |
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Year |
2013 |
Publication |
15th IEEE International Conference on Computer Vision |
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2312 - 2319 |
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Keywords |
Semantic Segmentation |
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Most MAP inference algorithms for CRFs optimize an energy function knowing all the potentials. In this paper, we focus on CRFs where the computational cost of instantiating the potentials is orders of magnitude higher than MAP inference. This is often the case in semantic image segmentation, where most potentials are instantiated by slow classifiers fed with costly features. We introduce Active MAP inference 1) to on-the-fly select a subset of potentials to be instantiated in the energy function, leaving the rest of the parameters of the potentials unknown, and 2) to estimate the MAP labeling from such incomplete energy function. Results for semantic segmentation benchmarks, namely PASCAL VOC 2010 [5] and MSRC-21 [19], show that Active MAP inference achieves similar levels of accuracy but with major efficiency gains. |
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Sydney; Australia; December 2013 |
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1550-5499 |
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ICCV |
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ADAS; 600.057 |
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ADAS @ adas @ RBN2013 |
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2377 |
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Author |
Jiaolong Xu; David Vazquez; Krystian Mikolajczyk; Antonio Lopez |
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Title |
Hierarchical online domain adaptation of deformable part-based models |
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Conference Article |
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2016 |
Publication |
IEEE International Conference on Robotics and Automation |
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5536-5541 |
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Keywords |
Domain Adaptation; Pedestrian Detection |
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We propose an online domain adaptation method for the deformable part-based model (DPM). The online domain adaptation is based on a two-level hierarchical adaptation tree, which consists of instance detectors in the leaf nodes and a category detector at the root node. Moreover, combined with a multiple object tracking procedure (MOT), our proposal neither requires target-domain annotated data nor revisiting the source-domain data for performing the source-to-target domain adaptation of the DPM. From a practical point of view this means that, given a source-domain DPM and new video for training on a new domain without object annotations, our procedure outputs a new DPM adapted to the domain represented by the video. As proof-of-concept we apply our proposal to the challenging task of pedestrian detection. In this case, each instance detector is an exemplar classifier trained online with only one pedestrian per frame. The pedestrian instances are collected by MOT and the hierarchical model is constructed dynamically according to the pedestrian trajectories. Our experimental results show that the adapted detector achieves the accuracy of recent supervised domain adaptation methods (i.e., requiring manually annotated targetdomain data), and improves the source detector more than 10 percentage points. |
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Stockholm; Sweden; May 2016 |
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ICRA |
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Notes |
ADAS; 600.085; 600.082; 600.076 |
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Admin @ si @ XVM2016 |
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2728 |
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Author |
Jiaolong Xu; Sebastian Ramos;David Vazquez; Antonio Lopez |
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Title |
Cost-sensitive Structured SVM for Multi-category Domain Adaptation |
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Conference Article |
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2014 |
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22nd International Conference on Pattern Recognition |
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3886 - 3891 |
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Domain Adaptation; Pedestrian Detection |
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Domain adaptation addresses the problem of accuracy drop that a classifier may suffer when the training data (source domain) and the testing data (target domain) are drawn from different distributions. In this work, we focus on domain adaptation for structured SVM (SSVM). We propose a cost-sensitive domain adaptation method for SSVM, namely COSS-SSVM. In particular, during the re-training of an adapted classifier based on target and source data, the idea that we explore consists in introducing a non-zero cost even for correctly classified source domain samples. Eventually, we aim to learn a more targetoriented classifier by not rewarding (zero loss) properly classified source-domain training samples. We assess the effectiveness of COSS-SSVM on multi-category object recognition. |
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Stockholm; Sweden; August 2014 |
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IEEE |
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1051-4651 |
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ICPR |
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ADAS; 600.057; 600.054; 601.217; 600.076 |
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ADAS @ adas @ XRV2014a |
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2434 |
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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? |
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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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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 |
Daniel Hernandez; Antonio Espinosa; David Vazquez; Antonio Lopez; Juan Carlos Moure |
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Title |
Embedded Real-time Stixel Computation |
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2017 |
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GPU Technology Conference |
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GPU; CUDA; Stixels; Autonomous Driving |
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Silicon Valley; USA; May 2017 |
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GTC |
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ADAS; 600.118 |
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ADAS @ adas @ HEV2017a |
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2879 |
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