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Author |
Arjan Gijsenji; Theo Gevers |
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Title |
Color Constancy Using Natural Image Statistics and Scene Semantics |
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Journal Article |
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Year |
2011 |
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IEEE Transactions on Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence |
Abbreviated Journal |
TPAMI |
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33 |
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4 |
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687-698 |
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Existing color constancy methods are all based on specific assumptions such as the spatial and spectral characteristics of images. As a consequence, no algorithm can be considered as universal. However, with the large variety of available methods, the question is how to select the method that performs best for a specific image. To achieve selection and combining of color constancy algorithms, in this paper natural image statistics are used to identify the most important characteristics of color images. Then, based on these image characteristics, the proper color constancy algorithm (or best combination of algorithms) is selected for a specific image. To capture the image characteristics, the Weibull parameterization (e.g., grain size and contrast) is used. It is shown that the Weibull parameterization is related to the image attributes to which the used color constancy methods are sensitive. An MoG-classifier is used to learn the correlation and weighting between the Weibull-parameters and the image attributes (number of edges, amount of texture, and SNR). The output of the classifier is the selection of the best performing color constancy method for a certain image. Experimental results show a large improvement over state-of-the-art single algorithms. On a data set consisting of more than 11,000 images, an increase in color constancy performance up to 20 percent (median angular error) can be obtained compared to the best-performing single algorithm. Further, it is shown that for certain scene categories, one specific color constancy algorithm can be used instead of the classifier considering several algorithms. |
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0162-8828 |
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Admin @ si @ GiG2011 |
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1724 |
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Author |
Albert Ali Salah; Theo Gevers; Nicu Sebe; Alessandro Vinciarelli |
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Computer Vision for Ambient Intelligence |
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Journal Article |
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2011 |
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Journal of Ambient Intelligence and Smart Environments |
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JAISE |
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3 |
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3 |
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187-191 |
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Admin @ si @ SGS2011a |
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1725 |
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Author |
Koen E.A. van de Sande; Theo Gevers; Cees G.M. Snoek |
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Title |
Empowering Visual Categorization with the GPU |
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Journal Article |
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Year |
2011 |
Publication |
IEEE Transactions on Multimedia |
Abbreviated Journal |
TMM |
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13 |
Issue |
1 |
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60-70 |
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Visual categorization is important to manage large collections of digital images and video, where textual meta-data is often incomplete or simply unavailable. The bag-of-words model has become the most powerful method for visual categorization of images and video. Despite its high accuracy, a severe drawback of this model is its high computational cost. As the trend to increase computational power in newer CPU and GPU architectures is to increase their level of parallelism, exploiting this parallelism becomes an important direction to handle the computational cost of the bag-of-words approach. When optimizing a system based on the bag-of-words approach, the goal is to minimize the time it takes to process batches of images. Additionally, we also consider power usage as an evaluation metric. In this paper, we analyze the bag-of-words model for visual categorization in terms of computational cost and identify two major bottlenecks: the quantization step and the classification step. We address these two bottlenecks by proposing two efficient algorithms for quantization and classification by exploiting the GPU hardware and the CUDA parallel programming model. The algorithms are designed to (1) keep categorization accuracy intact, (2) decompose the problem and (3) give the same numerical results. In the experiments on large scale datasets it is shown that, by using a parallel implementation on the Geforce GTX260 GPU, classifying unseen images is 4.8 times faster than a quad-core CPU version on the Core i7 920, while giving the exact same numerical results. In addition, we show how the algorithms can be generalized to other applications, such as text retrieval and video retrieval. Moreover, when the obtained speedup is used to process extra video frames in a video retrieval benchmark, the accuracy of visual categorization is improved by 29%. |
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Admin @ si @ SGS2011b |
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1729 |
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Author |
Noha Elfiky; Fahad Shahbaz Khan; Joost Van de Weijer; Jordi Gonzalez |
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Title |
Discriminative Compact Pyramids for Object and Scene Recognition |
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Journal Article |
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Year |
2012 |
Publication |
Pattern Recognition |
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PR |
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45 |
Issue |
4 |
Pages |
1627-1636 |
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Spatial pyramids have been successfully applied to incorporating spatial information into bag-of-words based image representation. However, a major drawback is that it leads to high dimensional image representations. In this paper, we present a novel framework for obtaining compact pyramid representation. First, we investigate the usage of the divisive information theoretic feature clustering (DITC) algorithm in creating a compact pyramid representation. In many cases this method allows us to reduce the size of a high dimensional pyramid representation up to an order of magnitude with little or no loss in accuracy. Furthermore, comparison to clustering based on agglomerative information bottleneck (AIB) shows that our method obtains superior results at significantly lower computational costs. Moreover, we investigate the optimal combination of multiple features in the context of our compact pyramid representation. Finally, experiments show that the method can obtain state-of-the-art results on several challenging data sets. |
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0031-3203 |
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ISE; CAT;CIC |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ EKW2012 |
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1807 |
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Author |
Bhaskar Chakraborty; Andrew Bagdanov; Jordi Gonzalez; Xavier Roca |
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Title |
Human Action Recognition Using an Ensemble of Body-Part Detectors |
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Journal Article |
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Year |
2013 |
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Expert Systems |
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EXSY |
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30 |
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2 |
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101-114 |
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Human action recognition;body-part detection;hidden Markov model |
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This paper describes an approach to human action recognition based on a probabilistic optimization model of body parts using hidden Markov model (HMM). Our method is able to distinguish between similar actions by only considering the body parts having major contribution to the actions, for example, legs for walking, jogging and running; arms for boxing, waving and clapping. We apply HMMs to model the stochastic movement of the body parts for action recognition. The HMM construction uses an ensemble of body-part detectors, followed by grouping of part detections, to perform human identification. Three example-based body-part detectors are trained to detect three components of the human body: the head, legs and arms. These detectors cope with viewpoint changes and self-occlusions through the use of ten sub-classifiers that detect body parts over a specific range of viewpoints. Each sub-classifier is a support vector machine trained on features selected for the discriminative power for each particular part/viewpoint combination. Grouping of these detections is performed using a simple geometric constraint model that yields a viewpoint-invariant human detector. We test our approach on three publicly available action datasets: the KTH dataset, Weizmann dataset and HumanEva dataset. Our results illustrate that with a simple and compact representation we can achieve robust recognition of human actions comparable to the most complex, state-of-the-art methods. |
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Admin @ si @ CBG2013 |
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1809 |
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