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Katerine Diaz; Jesus Martinez del Rincon; Aura Hernandez-Sabate; Marçal Rusiñol; Francesc J. Ferri |


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Title |
Fast Kernel Generalized Discriminative Common Vectors for Feature Extraction |
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Journal Article |
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Year |
2018 |
Publication |
Journal of Mathematical Imaging and Vision |
Abbreviated Journal |
JMIV |
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60 |
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4 |
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512-524 |
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This paper presents a supervised subspace learning method called Kernel Generalized Discriminative Common Vectors (KGDCV), as a novel extension of the known Discriminative Common Vectors method with Kernels. Our method combines the advantages of kernel methods to model complex data and solve nonlinear
problems with moderate computational complexity, with the better generalization properties of generalized approaches for large dimensional data. These attractive combination makes KGDCV specially suited for feature extraction and classification in computer vision, image processing and pattern recognition applications. Two different approaches to this generalization are proposed, a first one based on the kernel trick (KT) and a second one based on the nonlinear projection trick (NPT) for even higher efficiency. Both methodologies
have been validated on four different image datasets containing faces, objects and handwritten digits, and compared against well known non-linear state-of-art methods. Results show better discriminant properties than other generalized approaches both linear or kernel. In addition, the KGDCV-NPT approach presents a considerable computational gain, without compromising the accuracy of the model. |
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DAG; ADAS; 600.086; 600.130; 600.121; 600.118; 600.129 |
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Admin @ si @ DMH2018a |
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3062 |
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Author |
Katerine Diaz; Francesc J. Ferri; Aura Hernandez-Sabate |


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Title |
An overview of incremental feature extraction methods based on linear subspaces |
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Journal Article |
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Year |
2018 |
Publication |
Knowledge-Based Systems |
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KBS |
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145 |
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219-235 |
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With the massive explosion of machine learning in our day-to-day life, incremental and adaptive learning has become a major topic, crucial to keep up-to-date and improve classification models and their corresponding feature extraction processes. This paper presents a categorized overview of incremental feature extraction based on linear subspace methods which aim at incorporating new information to the already acquired knowledge without accessing previous data. Specifically, this paper focuses on those linear dimensionality reduction methods with orthogonal matrix constraints based on global loss function, due to the extensive use of their batch approaches versus other linear alternatives. Thus, we cover the approaches derived from Principal Components Analysis, Linear Discriminative Analysis and Discriminative Common Vector methods. For each basic method, its incremental approaches are differentiated according to the subspace model and matrix decomposition involved in the updating process. Besides this categorization, several updating strategies are distinguished according to the amount of data used to update and to the fact of considering a static or dynamic number of classes. Moreover, the specific role of the size/dimension ratio in each method is considered. Finally, computational complexity, experimental setup and the accuracy rates according to published results are compiled and analyzed, and an empirical evaluation is done to compare the best approach of each kind. |
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0950-7051 |
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ADAS; 600.118 |
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Call Number |
Admin @ si @ DFH2018 |
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3090 |
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Author |
Katerine Diaz; Jesus Martinez del Rincon; Aura Hernandez-Sabate; Debora Gil |


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Title |
Continuous head pose estimation using manifold subspace embedding and multivariate regression |
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Journal Article |
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Year |
2018 |
Publication |
IEEE Access |
Abbreviated Journal |
ACCESS |
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Volume |
6 |
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Pages |
18325 - 18334 |
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Head Pose estimation; HOG features; Generalized Discriminative Common Vectors; B-splines; Multiple linear regression |
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In this paper, a continuous head pose estimation system is proposed to estimate yaw and pitch head angles from raw facial images. Our approach is based on manifold learningbased methods, due to their promising generalization properties shown for face modelling from images. The method combines histograms of oriented gradients, generalized discriminative common vectors and continuous local regression to achieve successful performance. Our proposal was tested on multiple standard face datasets, as well as in a realistic scenario. Results show a considerable performance improvement and a higher consistence of our model in comparison with other state-of-art methods, with angular errors varying between 9 and 17 degrees. |
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2169-3536 |
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ADAS; 600.118 |
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Admin @ si @ DMH2018b |
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3091 |
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Author |
Joan Serrat; Felipe Lumbreras; Idoia Ruiz |


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Title |
Learning to measure for preshipment garment sizing |
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Journal Article |
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Year |
2018 |
Publication |
Measurement |
Abbreviated Journal |
MEASURE |
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Volume |
130 |
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Pages |
327-339 |
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Keywords |
Apparel; Computer vision; Structured prediction; Regression |
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Abstract |
Clothing is still manually manufactured for the most part nowadays, resulting in discrepancies between nominal and real dimensions, and potentially ill-fitting garments. Hence, it is common in the apparel industry to manually perform measures at preshipment time. We present an automatic method to obtain such measures from a single image of a garment that speeds up this task. It is generic and extensible in the sense that it does not depend explicitly on the garment shape or type. Instead, it learns through a probabilistic graphical model to identify the different contour parts. Subsequently, a set of Lasso regressors, one per desired measure, can predict the actual values of the measures. We present results on a dataset of 130 images of jackets and 98 of pants, of varying sizes and styles, obtaining 1.17 and 1.22 cm of mean absolute error, respectively. |
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ADAS; MSIAU; 600.122; 600.118 |
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Admin @ si @ SLR2018 |
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3128 |
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Author |
Xavier Soria; Angel Sappa; Riad I. Hammoud |


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Title |
Wide-Band Color Imagery Restoration for RGB-NIR Single Sensor Images |
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Journal Article |
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Year |
2018 |
Publication |
Sensors |
Abbreviated Journal |
SENS |
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18 |
Issue |
7 |
Pages |
2059 |
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Keywords |
RGB-NIR sensor; multispectral imaging; deep learning; CNNs |
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Abstract |
Multi-spectral RGB-NIR sensors have become ubiquitous in recent years. These sensors allow the visible and near-infrared spectral bands of a given scene to be captured at the same time. With such cameras, the acquired imagery has a compromised RGB color representation due to near-infrared bands (700–1100 nm) cross-talking with the visible bands (400–700 nm).
This paper proposes two deep learning-based architectures to recover the full RGB color images, thus removing the NIR information from the visible bands. The proposed approaches directly restore the high-resolution RGB image by means of convolutional neural networks. They are evaluated with several outdoor images; both architectures reach a similar performance when evaluated in different
scenarios and using different similarity metrics. Both of them improve the state of the art approaches. |
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ADAS; MSIAU; 600.086; 600.130; 600.122; 600.118 |
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Admin @ si @ SSH2018 |
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3145 |
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Author |
Oscar Argudo; Marc Comino; Antonio Chica; Carlos Andujar; Felipe Lumbreras |

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Title |
Segmentation of aerial images for plausible detail synthesis |
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Journal Article |
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Year |
2018 |
Publication |
Computers & Graphics |
Abbreviated Journal |
CG |
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71 |
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23-34 |
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Terrain editing; Detail synthesis; Vegetation synthesis; Terrain rendering; Image segmentation |
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The visual enrichment of digital terrain models with plausible synthetic detail requires the segmentation of aerial images into a suitable collection of categories. In this paper we present a complete pipeline for segmenting high-resolution aerial images into a user-defined set of categories distinguishing e.g. terrain, sand, snow, water, and different types of vegetation. This segmentation-for-synthesis problem implies that per-pixel categories must be established according to the algorithms chosen for rendering the synthetic detail. This precludes the definition of a universal set of labels and hinders the construction of large training sets. Since artists might choose to add new categories on the fly, the whole pipeline must be robust against unbalanced datasets, and fast on both training and inference. Under these constraints, we analyze the contribution of common per-pixel descriptors, and compare the performance of state-of-the-art supervised learning algorithms. We report the findings of two user studies. The first one was conducted to analyze human accuracy when manually labeling aerial images. The second user study compares detailed terrains built using different segmentation strategies, including official land cover maps. These studies demonstrate that our approach can be used to turn digital elevation models into fully-featured, detailed terrains with minimal authoring efforts. |
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0097-8493 |
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ADAS; 600.086; 600.118 |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ ACC2018 |
Serial |
3147 |
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Author |
Katerine Diaz; Jesus Martinez del Rincon; Marçal Rusiñol; Aura Hernandez-Sabate |


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Title |
Feature Extraction by Using Dual-Generalized Discriminative Common Vectors |
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Journal Article |
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Year |
2019 |
Publication |
Journal of Mathematical Imaging and Vision |
Abbreviated Journal |
JMIV |
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61 |
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3 |
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331-351 |
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Online feature extraction; Generalized discriminative common vectors; Dual learning; Incremental learning; Decremental learning |
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In this paper, a dual online subspace-based learning method called dual-generalized discriminative common vectors (Dual-GDCV) is presented. The method extends incremental GDCV by exploiting simultaneously both the concepts of incremental and decremental learning for supervised feature extraction and classification. Our methodology is able to update the feature representation space without recalculating the full projection or accessing the previously processed training data. It allows both adding information and removing unnecessary data from a knowledge base in an efficient way, while retaining the previously acquired knowledge. The proposed method has been theoretically proved and empirically validated in six standard face recognition and classification datasets, under two scenarios: (1) removing and adding samples of existent classes, and (2) removing and adding new classes to a classification problem. Results show a considerable computational gain without compromising the accuracy of the model in comparison with both batch methodologies and other state-of-art adaptive methods. |
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DAG; ADAS; 600.084; 600.118; 600.121; 600.129 |
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Admin @ si @ DRR2019 |
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3172 |
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Author |
Adrien Gaidon; Antonio Lopez; Florent Perronnin |

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Title |
The Reasonable Effectiveness of Synthetic Visual Data |
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2018 |
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International Journal of Computer Vision |
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IJCV |
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126 |
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9 |
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899–901 |
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ADAS; 600.118 |
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Admin @ si @ GLP2018 |
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3180 |
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Author |
Jiaolong Xu; Liang Xiao; Antonio Lopez |


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Title |
Self-supervised Domain Adaptation for Computer Vision Tasks |
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2019 |
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IEEE Access |
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ACCESS |
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7 |
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156694 - 156706 |
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Recent progress of self-supervised visual representation learning has achieved remarkable success on many challenging computer vision benchmarks. However, whether these techniques can be used for domain adaptation has not been explored. In this work, we propose a generic method for self-supervised domain adaptation, using object recognition and semantic segmentation of urban scenes as use cases. Focusing on simple pretext/auxiliary tasks (e.g. image rotation prediction), we assess different learning strategies to improve domain adaptation effectiveness by self-supervision. Additionally, we propose two complementary strategies to further boost the domain adaptation accuracy on semantic segmentation within our method, consisting of prediction layer alignment and batch normalization calibration. The experimental results show adaptation levels comparable to most studied domain adaptation methods, thus, bringing self-supervision as a new alternative for reaching domain adaptation. The code is available at this link. https://github.com/Jiaolong/self-supervised-da. |
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ADAS; 600.118 |
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Admin @ si @ XXL2019 |
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3302 |
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Author |
Cesar de Souza; Adrien Gaidon; Yohann Cabon; Naila Murray; Antonio Lopez |


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Title |
Generating Human Action Videos by Coupling 3D Game Engines and Probabilistic Graphical Models |
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2020 |
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International Journal of Computer Vision |
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IJCV |
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128 |
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1505–1536 |
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Procedural generation; Human action recognition; Synthetic data; Physics |
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Deep video action recognition models have been highly successful in recent years but require large quantities of manually-annotated data, which are expensive and laborious to obtain. In this work, we investigate the generation of synthetic training data for video action recognition, as synthetic data have been successfully used to supervise models for a variety of other computer vision tasks. We propose an interpretable parametric generative model of human action videos that relies on procedural generation, physics models and other components of modern game engines. With this model we generate a diverse, realistic, and physically plausible dataset of human action videos, called PHAV for “Procedural Human Action Videos”. PHAV contains a total of 39,982 videos, with more than 1000 examples for each of 35 action categories. Our video generation approach is not limited to existing motion capture sequences: 14 of these 35 categories are procedurally-defined synthetic actions. In addition, each video is represented with 6 different data modalities, including RGB, optical flow and pixel-level semantic labels. These modalities are generated almost simultaneously using the Multiple Render Targets feature of modern GPUs. In order to leverage PHAV, we introduce a deep multi-task (i.e. that considers action classes from multiple datasets) representation learning architecture that is able to simultaneously learn from synthetic and real video datasets, even when their action categories differ. Our experiments on the UCF-101 and HMDB-51 benchmarks suggest that combining our large set of synthetic videos with small real-world datasets can boost recognition performance. Our approach also significantly outperforms video representations produced by fine-tuning state-of-the-art unsupervised generative models of videos. |
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ADAS; 600.124; 600.118 |
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Admin @ si @ SGC2019 |
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3303 |
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