10,685 research outputs found
Are object detection assessment criteria ready for maritime computer vision?
Maritime vessels equipped with visible and infrared cameras can complement
other conventional sensors for object detection. However, application of
computer vision techniques in maritime domain received attention only recently.
The maritime environment offers its own unique requirements and challenges.
Assessment of the quality of detections is a fundamental need in computer
vision. However, the conventional assessment metrics suitable for usual object
detection are deficient in the maritime setting. Thus, a large body of related
work in computer vision appears inapplicable to the maritime setting at the
first sight. We discuss the problem of defining assessment metrics suitable for
maritime computer vision. We consider new bottom edge proximity metrics as
assessment metrics for maritime computer vision. These metrics indicate that
existing computer vision approaches are indeed promising for maritime computer
vision and can play a foundational role in the emerging field of maritime
computer vision
Accelerated hardware video object segmentation: From foreground detection to connected components labelling
This is the preprint version of the Article - Copyright @ 2010 ElsevierThis paper demonstrates the use of a single-chip FPGA for the segmentation of moving objects in a video sequence. The system maintains highly accurate background models, and integrates the detection of foreground pixels with the labelling of objects using a connected components algorithm. The background models are based on 24-bit RGB values and 8-bit gray scale intensity values. A multimodal background differencing algorithm is presented, using a single FPGA chip and four blocks of RAM. The real-time connected component labelling algorithm, also designed for FPGA implementation, run-length encodes the output of the background subtraction, and performs connected component analysis on this representation. The run-length encoding, together with other parts of the algorithm, is performed in parallel; sequential operations are minimized as the number of run-lengths are typically less than the number of pixels. The two algorithms are pipelined together for maximum efficiency
Fuzzy Jets
Collimated streams of particles produced in high energy physics experiments
are organized using clustering algorithms to form jets. To construct jets, the
experimental collaborations based at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) primarily
use agglomerative hierarchical clustering schemes known as sequential
recombination. We propose a new class of algorithms for clustering jets that
use infrared and collinear safe mixture models. These new algorithms, known as
fuzzy jets, are clustered using maximum likelihood techniques and can
dynamically determine various properties of jets like their size. We show that
the fuzzy jet size adds additional information to conventional jet tagging
variables. Furthermore, we study the impact of pileup and show that with some
slight modifications to the algorithm, fuzzy jets can be stable up to high
pileup interaction multiplicities
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