54,066 research outputs found
Surface reconstruction of wear in carpets by using a wavelet edge detector
Carpet manufacturers have wear labels assigned to their products by human experts who evaluate carpet samples subjected to accelerated wear in a test device. There is considerable industrial and academic interest in going from human to automated evaluation, which should be less cumbersome and more objective. In this paper, we present image analysis research on videos of carpet surfaces scanned with a 3D laser. The purpose is obtaining good depth Images for an automated system that should have a high percentage of correct assessments for a wide variety of carpets. The innovation is the use of a wavelet edge detector to obtain a more continuously defined surface shape. The evaluation is based on how well the algorithms allow a good linear ranking and a good discriminance of consecutive wear labels. The results show an improved linear ranking for most carpet types, for two carpet types the results are quite significant
Second-order Temporal Pooling for Action Recognition
Deep learning models for video-based action recognition usually generate
features for short clips (consisting of a few frames); such clip-level features
are aggregated to video-level representations by computing statistics on these
features. Typically zero-th (max) or the first-order (average) statistics are
used. In this paper, we explore the benefits of using second-order statistics.
Specifically, we propose a novel end-to-end learnable feature aggregation
scheme, dubbed temporal correlation pooling that generates an action descriptor
for a video sequence by capturing the similarities between the temporal
evolution of clip-level CNN features computed across the video. Such a
descriptor, while being computationally cheap, also naturally encodes the
co-activations of multiple CNN features, thereby providing a richer
characterization of actions than their first-order counterparts. We also
propose higher-order extensions of this scheme by computing correlations after
embedding the CNN features in a reproducing kernel Hilbert space. We provide
experiments on benchmark datasets such as HMDB-51 and UCF-101, fine-grained
datasets such as MPII Cooking activities and JHMDB, as well as the recent
Kinetics-600. Our results demonstrate the advantages of higher-order pooling
schemes that when combined with hand-crafted features (as is standard practice)
achieves state-of-the-art accuracy.Comment: Accepted in the International Journal of Computer Vision (IJCV
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