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Author |
Graham D. Finlayson; Javier Vazquez; Sabine Süsstrunk; Maria Vanrell |
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Title |
Spectral sharpening by spherical sampling |
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Journal Article |
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2012 |
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Journal of the Optical Society of America A |
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JOSA A |
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29 |
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7 |
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1199-1210 |
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There are many works in color that assume illumination change can be modeled by multiplying sensor responses by individual scaling factors. The early research in this area is sometimes grouped under the heading “von Kries adaptation”: the scaling factors are applied to the cone responses. In more recent studies, both in psychophysics and in computational analysis, it has been proposed that scaling factors should be applied to linear combinations of the cones that have narrower support: they should be applied to the so-called “sharp sensors.” In this paper, we generalize the computational approach to spectral sharpening in three important ways. First, we introduce spherical sampling as a tool that allows us to enumerate in a principled way all linear combinations of the cones. This allows us to, second, find the optimal sharp sensors that minimize a variety of error measures including CIE Delta E (previous work on spectral sharpening minimized RMS) and color ratio stability. Lastly, we extend the spherical sampling paradigm to the multispectral case. Here the objective is to model the interaction of light and surface in terms of color signal spectra. Spherical sampling is shown to improve on the state of the art. |
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1084-7529 |
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CIC |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ FVS2012 |
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2000 |
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Author |
Xavier Otazu; Oriol Pujol |
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Wavelet based approach to cluster analysis. Application on low dimensional data sets |
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2006 |
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Pattern Recognition Letters |
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PRL |
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27 |
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14 |
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1590–1605 |
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MILAB; CIC; HuPBA |
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BCNPCL @ bcnpcl @ OtP2006 |
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658 |
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Eduard Vazquez; Theo Gevers; M. Lucassen; Joost Van de Weijer; Ramon Baldrich |
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Title |
Saliency of Color Image Derivatives: A Comparison between Computational Models and Human Perception |
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Journal Article |
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2010 |
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Journal of the Optical Society of America A |
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JOSA A |
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27 |
Issue |
3 |
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613–621 |
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In this paper, computational methods are proposed to compute color edge saliency based on the information content of color edges. The computational methods are evaluated on bottom-up saliency in a psychophysical experiment, and on a more complex task of salient object detection in real-world images. The psychophysical experiment demonstrates the relevance of using information theory as a saliency processing model and that the proposed methods are significantly better in predicting color saliency (with a human-method correspondence up to 74.75% and an observer agreement of 86.8%) than state-of-the-art models. Furthermore, results from salient object detection confirm that an early fusion of color and contrast provide accurate performance to compute visual saliency with a hit rate up to 95.2%. |
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ISE;CIC |
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CAT @ cat @ VGL2010 |
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1275 |
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Robert Benavente; Maria Vanrell; Ramon Baldrich |
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Title |
Parametric Fuzzy Sets for Automatic Color Naming |
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2008 |
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Journal of the Optical Society of America A |
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25 |
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10 |
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2582–2593 |
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CIC |
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CAT @ cat @ BVB2008 |
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1004 |
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Author |
Fahad Shahbaz Khan; Shida Beigpour; Joost Van de Weijer; Michael Felsberg |
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Title |
Painting-91: A Large Scale Database for Computational Painting Categorization |
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2014 |
Publication |
Machine Vision and Applications |
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MVAP |
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25 |
Issue |
6 |
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1385-1397 |
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Computer analysis of visual art, especially paintings, is an interesting cross-disciplinary research domain. Most of the research in the analysis of paintings involve medium to small range datasets with own specific settings. Interestingly, significant progress has been made in the field of object and scene recognition lately. A key factor in this success is the introduction and availability of benchmark datasets for evaluation. Surprisingly, such a benchmark setup is still missing in the area of computational painting categorization. In this work, we propose a novel large scale dataset of digital paintings. The dataset consists of paintings from 91 different painters. We further show three applications of our dataset namely: artist categorization, style classification and saliency detection. We investigate how local and global features popular in image classification perform for the tasks of artist and style categorization. For both categorization tasks, our experimental results suggest that combining multiple features significantly improves the final performance. We show that state-of-the-art computer vision methods can correctly classify 50 % of unseen paintings to its painter in a large dataset and correctly attribute its artistic style in over 60 % of the cases. Additionally, we explore the task of saliency detection on paintings and show experimental findings using state-of-the-art saliency estimation algorithms. |
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Springer Berlin Heidelberg |
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0932-8092 |
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CIC; LAMP; 600.074; 600.079 |
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Admin @ si @ KBW2014 |
Serial |
2510 |
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