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Oriol Pujol, & David Masip. (2009). Geometry-Based Ensembles: Toward a Structural Characterization of the Classification Boundary. TPAMI - IEEE Transactions on Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence, 31(6), 1140–1146.
Abstract: This article introduces a novel binary discriminative learning technique based on the approximation of the non-linear decision boundary by a piece-wise linear smooth additive model. The decision border is geometrically defined by means of the characterizing boundary points – points that belong to the optimal boundary under a certain notion of robustness. Based on these points, a set of locally robust linear classifiers is defined and assembled by means of a Tikhonov regularized optimization procedure in an additive model to create a final lambda-smooth decision rule. As a result, a very simple and robust classifier with a strong geometrical meaning and non-linear behavior is obtained. The simplicity of the method allows its extension to cope with some of nowadays machine learning challenges, such as online learning, large scale learning or parallelization, with linear computational complexity. We validate our approach on the UCI database. Finally, we apply our technique in online and large scale scenarios, and in six real life computer vision and pattern recognition problems: gender recognition, intravascular ultrasound tissue classification, speed traffic sign detection, Chagas' disease severity detection, clef classification and action recognition using a 3D accelerometer data. The results are promising and this paper opens a line of research that deserves further attention
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Sergio Escalera, Oriol Pujol, J. Mauri, & Petia Radeva. (2009). Intravascular Ultrasound Tissue Characterization with Sub-class Error-Correcting Output Codes. Journal of Signal Processing Systems, 55(1-3), 35–47.
Abstract: Intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) represents a powerful imaging technique to explore coronary vessels and to study their morphology and histologic properties. In this paper, we characterize different tissues based on radial frequency, texture-based, and combined features. To deal with the classification of multiple tissues, we require the use of robust multi-class learning techniques. In this sense, error-correcting output codes (ECOC) show to robustly combine binary classifiers to solve multi-class problems. In this context, we propose a strategy to model multi-class classification tasks using sub-classes information in the ECOC framework. The new strategy splits the classes into different sub-sets according to the applied base classifier. Complex IVUS data sets containing overlapping data are learnt by splitting the original set of classes into sub-classes, and embedding the binary problems in a problem-dependent ECOC design. The method automatically characterizes different tissues, showing performance improvements over the state-of-the-art ECOC techniques for different base classifiers. Furthermore, the combination of RF and texture-based features also shows improvements over the state-of-the-art approaches.
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Oriol Pujol, Sergio Escalera, & Petia Radeva. (2008). An Incremental Node Embedding Technique for Error Correcting Output Codes. PR - Pattern Recognition, 713–725.
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Sergio Escalera, David M.J. Tax, Oriol Pujol, Petia Radeva, & Robert P.W. Duin. (2008). Subclass Problem-Dependent Design for Error-Correcting Output Codes. IEEE Trans. on Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence, vol.30(6):1041–1054.
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Sergio Escalera, Oriol Pujol, & Petia Radeva. (2008). Detection of Complex Salient Regions. EURASIP Journal on Advances in Signal Processing, vol. 2008, article ID451389, 11 pages.
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