3,796 research outputs found

    Biosignal and context monitoring: Distributed multimedia applications of body area networks in healthcare

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    We are investigating the use of Body Area Networks (BANs), wearable sensors and wireless communications for measuring, processing, transmission, interpretation and display of biosignals. The goal is to provide telemonitoring and teletreatment services for patients. The remote health professional can view a multimedia display which includes graphical and numerical representation of patients’ biosignals. Addition of feedback-control enables teletreatment services; teletreatment can be delivered to the patient via multiple modalities including tactile, text, auditory and visual. We describe the health BAN and a generic mobile health service platform and two context aware applications. The epilepsy application illustrates processing and interpretation of multi-source, multimedia BAN data. The chronic pain application illustrates multi-modal feedback and treatment, with patients able to view their own biosignals on their handheld device

    From Personalization to Adaptivity: Creating Immersive Visits through Interactive Digital Storytelling at the Acropolis Museum

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    Storytelling has recently become a popular way to guide museum visitors, replacing traditional exhibit-centric descriptions by story-centric cohesive narrations with references to the exhibits and multimedia content. This work presents the fundamental elements of the CHESS project approach, the goal of which is to provide adaptive, personalized, interactive storytelling for museum visits. We shortly present the CHESS project and its background, we detail the proposed storytelling and user models, we describe the provided functionality and we outline the main tools and mechanisms employed. Finally, we present the preliminary results of a recent evaluation study that are informing several directions for future work

    MicroExpNet: An Extremely Small and Fast Model For Expression Recognition From Face Images

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    This paper is aimed at creating extremely small and fast convolutional neural networks (CNN) for the problem of facial expression recognition (FER) from frontal face images. To this end, we employed the popular knowledge distillation (KD) method and identified two major shortcomings with its use: 1) a fine-grained grid search is needed for tuning the temperature hyperparameter and 2) to find the optimal size-accuracy balance, one needs to search for the final network size (or the compression rate). On the other hand, KD is proved to be useful for model compression for the FER problem, and we discovered that its effects gets more and more significant with the decreasing model size. In addition, we hypothesized that translation invariance achieved using max-pooling layers would not be useful for the FER problem as the expressions are sensitive to small, pixel-wise changes around the eye and the mouth. However, we have found an intriguing improvement on generalization when max-pooling is used. We conducted experiments on two widely-used FER datasets, CK+ and Oulu-CASIA. Our smallest model (MicroExpNet), obtained using knowledge distillation, is less than 1MB in size and works at 1851 frames per second on an Intel i7 CPU. Despite being less accurate than the state-of-the-art, MicroExpNet still provides significant insights for designing a microarchitecture for the FER problem.Comment: International Conference on Image Processing Theory, Tools and Applications (IPTA) 2019 camera ready version. Codes are available at: https://github.com/cuguilke/microexpne

    04121 Abstracts Collection -- Evaluating Embodied Conversational Agents

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    From 14.03.04 to 19.03.04, the Dagstuhl Seminar 04121 ``Evaluating Embodied Conversational Agents\u27\u27 was held in the International Conference and Research Center (IBFI), Schloss Dagstuhl. During the seminar, several participants presented their current research, and ongoing work and open problems were discussed. Abstracts of the presentations given during the seminar as well as abstracts of seminar results and ideas are put together in this paper. The first section describes the seminar topics and goals in general. Links to extended abstracts or full papers are provided, if available
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