10,381 research outputs found
Object Edge Contour Localisation Based on HexBinary Feature Matching
This paper addresses the issue of localising object
edge contours in cluttered backgrounds to support robotics
tasks such as grasping and manipulation and also to improve
the potential perceptual capabilities of robot vision systems. Our
approach is based on coarse-to-fine matching of a new recursively
constructed hierarchical, dense, edge-localised descriptor,
the HexBinary, based on the HexHog descriptor structure first
proposed in [1]. Since Binary String image descriptors [2]–
[5] require much lower computational resources, but provide
similar or even better matching performance than Histogram
of Orientated Gradient (HoG) descriptors, we have replaced
the HoG base descriptor fields used in HexHog with Binary
Strings generated from first and second order polar derivative
approximations. The ALOI [6] dataset is used to evaluate
the HexBinary descriptors which we demonstrate to achieve
a superior performance to that of HexHoG [1] for pose
refinement. The validation of our object contour localisation
system shows promising results with correctly labelling ~86% of edgel positions and mis-labelling ~3%
Gait recognition and understanding based on hierarchical temporal memory using 3D gait semantic folding
Gait recognition and understanding systems have shown a wide-ranging application prospect. However, their use of unstructured data from image and video has affected their performance, e.g., they are easily influenced by multi-views, occlusion, clothes, and object carrying conditions. This paper addresses these problems using a realistic 3-dimensional (3D) human structural data and sequential pattern learning framework with top-down attention modulating mechanism based on Hierarchical Temporal Memory (HTM). First, an accurate 2-dimensional (2D) to 3D human body pose and shape semantic parameters estimation method is proposed, which exploits the advantages of an instance-level body parsing model and a virtual dressing method. Second, by using gait semantic folding, the estimated body parameters are encoded using a sparse 2D matrix to construct the structural gait semantic image. In order to achieve time-based gait recognition, an HTM Network is constructed to obtain the sequence-level gait sparse distribution representations (SL-GSDRs). A top-down attention mechanism is introduced to deal with various conditions including multi-views by refining the SL-GSDRs, according to prior knowledge. The proposed gait learning model not only aids gait recognition tasks to overcome the difficulties in real application scenarios but also provides the structured gait semantic images for visual cognition. Experimental analyses on CMU MoBo, CASIA B, TUM-IITKGP, and KY4D datasets show a significant performance gain in terms of accuracy and robustness
Cortical spatio-temporal dimensionality reduction for visual grouping
The visual systems of many mammals, including humans, is able to integrate
the geometric information of visual stimuli and to perform cognitive tasks
already at the first stages of the cortical processing. This is thought to be
the result of a combination of mechanisms, which include feature extraction at
single cell level and geometric processing by means of cells connectivity. We
present a geometric model of such connectivities in the space of detected
features associated to spatio-temporal visual stimuli, and show how they can be
used to obtain low-level object segmentation. The main idea is that of defining
a spectral clustering procedure with anisotropic affinities over datasets
consisting of embeddings of the visual stimuli into higher dimensional spaces.
Neural plausibility of the proposed arguments will be discussed
A perception and manipulation system for collecting rock samples
An important part of a planetary exploration mission is to collect and analyze surface samples. As part of the Carnegie Mellon University Ambler Project, researchers are investigating techniques for collecting samples using a robot arm and a range sensor. The aim of this work is to make the sample collection operation fully autonomous. Described here are the components of the experimental system, including a perception module that extracts objects of interest from range images and produces models of their shapes, and a manipulation module that enables the system to pick up the objects identified by the perception module. The system was tested on a small testbed using natural terrain
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