35 research outputs found

    Lip contour extraction from color images using a deformable model

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    Abstract The use of visual information from lip movements can improve the accuracy and robustness of a speech recognition system. In this paper, a region-based lip contour extraction algorithm based on deformable model is proposed. The algorithm employs a stochastic cost function to partition a color lip image into lip and non-lip regions such that the joint probability of the two regions is maximized. Given a discrete probability map generated by spatial fuzzy clustering, we show how the optimization of the cost function can be done in the continuous setting. The region-based approach makes the algorithm more tolerant to noise and artifacts in the image. It also allows larger region of attraction, thus making the algorithm less sensitive to initial parameter settings. The algorithm works on unadorned lips and accurate extraction of lip contour is possible.

    Introduction to Facial Micro Expressions Analysis Using Color and Depth Images: A Matlab Coding Approach (Second Edition, 2023)

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    The book attempts to introduce a gentle introduction to the field of Facial Micro Expressions Recognition (FMER) using Color and Depth images, with the aid of MATLAB programming environment. FMER is a subset of image processing and it is a multidisciplinary topic to analysis. So, it requires familiarity with other topics of Artifactual Intelligence (AI) such as machine learning, digital image processing, psychology and more. So, it is a great opportunity to write a book which covers all of these topics for beginner to professional readers in the field of AI and even without having background of AI. Our goal is to provide a standalone introduction in the field of MFER analysis in the form of theorical descriptions for readers with no background in image processing with reproducible Matlab practical examples. Also, we describe any basic definitions for FMER analysis and MATLAB library which is used in the text, that helps final reader to apply the experiments in the real-world applications. We believe that this book is suitable for students, researchers, and professionals alike, who need to develop practical skills, along with a basic understanding of the field. We expect that, after reading this book, the reader feels comfortable with different key stages such as color and depth image processing, color and depth image representation, classification, machine learning, facial micro-expressions recognition, feature extraction and dimensionality reduction. The book attempts to introduce a gentle introduction to the field of Facial Micro Expressions Recognition (FMER) using Color and Depth images, with the aid of MATLAB programming environment.Comment: This is the second edition of the boo

    Learning as a Nonlinear Line of Attraction for Pattern Association, Classification and Recognition

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    Development of a mathematical model for learning a nonlinear line of attraction is presented in this dissertation, in contrast to the conventional recurrent neural network model in which the memory is stored in an attractive fixed point at discrete location in state space. A nonlinear line of attraction is the encapsulation of attractive fixed points scattered in state space as an attractive nonlinear line, describing patterns with similar characteristics as a family of patterns. It is usually of prime imperative to guarantee the convergence of the dynamics of the recurrent network for associative learning and recall. We propose to alter this picture. That is, if the brain remembers by converging to the state representing familiar patterns, it should also diverge from such states when presented by an unknown encoded representation of a visual image. The conception of the dynamics of the nonlinear line attractor network to operate between stable and unstable states is the second contribution in this dissertation research. These criteria can be used to circumvent the plasticity-stability dilemma by using the unstable state as an indicator to create a new line for an unfamiliar pattern. This novel learning strategy utilizes stability (convergence) and instability (divergence) criteria of the designed dynamics to induce self-organizing behavior. The self-organizing behavior of the nonlinear line attractor model can manifest complex dynamics in an unsupervised manner. The third contribution of this dissertation is the introduction of the concept of manifold of color perception. The fourth contribution of this dissertation is the development of a nonlinear dimensionality reduction technique by embedding a set of related observations into a low-dimensional space utilizing the result attained by the learned memory matrices of the nonlinear line attractor network. Development of a system for affective states computation is also presented in this dissertation. This system is capable of extracting the user\u27s mental state in real time using a low cost computer. It is successfully interfaced with an advanced learning environment for human-computer interaction

    Optical Coherence Tomography guided Laser-Cochleostomy

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    Despite the high precision of laser, it remains challenging to control the laser-bone ablation without injuring the underlying critical structures. Providing an axial resolution on micrometre scale, OCT is a promising candidate for imaging microstructures beneath the bone surface and monitoring the ablation process. In this work, a bridge connecting these two technologies is established. A closed-loop control of laser-bone ablation under the monitoring with OCT has been successfully realised

    Biologically motivated keypoint detection for RGB-D data

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    With the emerging interest in active vision, computer vision researchers have been increasingly concerned with the mechanisms of attention. Therefore, several visual attention computational models inspired by the human visual system, have been developed, aiming at the detection of regions of interest in images. This thesis is focused on selective visual attention, which provides a mechanism for the brain to focus computational resources on an object at a time, guided by low-level image properties (Bottom-Up attention). The task of recognizing objects in different locations is achieved by focusing on different locations, one at a time. Given the computational requirements of the models proposed, the research in this area has been mainly of theoretical interest. More recently, psychologists, neurobiologists and engineers have developed cooperation's and this has resulted in considerable benefits. The first objective of this doctoral work is to bring together concepts and ideas from these different research areas, providing a study of the biological research on human visual system and a discussion of the interdisciplinary knowledge in this area, as well as the state-of-art on computational models of visual attention (bottom-up). Normally, the visual attention is referred by engineers as saliency: when people fix their look in a particular region of the image, that's because that region is salient. In this research work, saliency methods are presented based on their classification (biological plausible, computational or hybrid) and in a chronological order. A few salient structures can be used for applications like object registration, retrieval or data simplification, being possible to consider these few salient structures as keypoints when aiming at performing object recognition. Generally, object recognition algorithms use a large number of descriptors extracted in a dense set of points, which comes along with very high computational cost, preventing real-time processing. To avoid the problem of the computational complexity required, the features have to be extracted from a small set of points, usually called keypoints. The use of keypoint-based detectors allows the reduction of the processing time and the redundancy in the data. Local descriptors extracted from images have been extensively reported in the computer vision literature. Since there is a large set of keypoint detectors, this suggests the need of a comparative evaluation between them. In this way, we propose to do a description of 2D and 3D keypoint detectors, 3D descriptors and an evaluation of existing 3D keypoint detectors in a public available point cloud library with 3D real objects. The invariance of the 3D keypoint detectors was evaluated according to rotations, scale changes and translations. This evaluation reports the robustness of a particular detector for changes of point-of-view and the criteria used are the absolute and the relative repeatability rate. In our experiments, the method that achieved better repeatability rate was the ISS3D method. The analysis of the human visual system and saliency maps detectors with biological inspiration led to the idea of making an extension for a keypoint detector based on the color information in the retina. Such proposal produced a 2D keypoint detector inspired by the behavior of the early visual system. Our method is a color extension of the BIMP keypoint detector, where we include both color and intensity channels of an image: color information is included in a biological plausible way and multi-scale image features are combined into a single keypoints map. This detector is compared against state-of-art detectors and found particularly well-suited for tasks such as category and object recognition. The recognition process is performed by comparing the extracted 3D descriptors in the locations indicated by the keypoints after mapping the 2D keypoints locations to the 3D space. The evaluation allowed us to obtain the best pair keypoint detector/descriptor on a RGB-D object dataset. Using our keypoint detector and the SHOTCOLOR descriptor a good category recognition rate and object recognition rate were obtained, and it is with the PFHRGB descriptor that we obtain the best results. A 3D recognition system involves the choice of keypoint detector and descriptor. A new method for the detection of 3D keypoints on point clouds is presented and a benchmarking is performed between each pair of 3D keypoint detector and 3D descriptor to evaluate their performance on object and category recognition. These evaluations are done in a public database of real 3D objects. Our keypoint detector is inspired by the behavior and neural architecture of the primate visual system: the 3D keypoints are extracted based on a bottom-up 3D saliency map, which is a map that encodes the saliency of objects in the visual environment. The saliency map is determined by computing conspicuity maps (a combination across different modalities) of the orientation, intensity and color information, in a bottom-up and in a purely stimulusdriven manner. These three conspicuity maps are fused into a 3D saliency map and, finally, the focus of attention (or "keypoint location") is sequentially directed to the most salient points in this map. Inhibiting this location automatically allows the system to attend to the next most salient location. The main conclusions are: with a similar average number of keypoints, our 3D keypoint detector outperforms the other eight 3D keypoint detectors evaluated by achiving the best result in 32 of the evaluated metrics in the category and object recognition experiments, when the second best detector only obtained the best result in 8 of these metrics. The unique drawback is the computational time, since BIK-BUS is slower than the other detectors. Given that differences are big in terms of recognition performance, size and time requirements, the selection of the keypoint detector and descriptor has to be matched to the desired task and we give some directions to facilitate this choice. After proposing the 3D keypoint detector, the research focused on a robust detection and tracking method for 3D objects by using keypoint information in a particle filter. This method consists of three distinct steps: Segmentation, Tracking Initialization and Tracking. The segmentation is made to remove all the background information, reducing the number of points for further processing. In the initialization, we use a keypoint detector with biological inspiration. The information of the object that we want to follow is given by the extracted keypoints. The particle filter does the tracking of the keypoints, so with that we can predict where the keypoints will be in the next frame. In a recognition system, one of the problems is the computational cost of keypoint detectors with this we intend to solve this problem. The experiments with PFBIKTracking method are done indoors in an office/home environment, where personal robots are expected to operate. The Tracking Error evaluates the stability of the general tracking method. We also quantitatively evaluate this method using a "Tracking Error". Our evaluation is done by the computation of the keypoint and particle centroid. Comparing our system that the tracking method which exists in the Point Cloud Library, we archive better results, with a much smaller number of points and computational time. Our method is faster and more robust to occlusion when compared to the OpenniTracker.Com o interesse emergente na visão ativa, os investigadores de visão computacional têm estado cada vez mais preocupados com os mecanismos de atenção. Por isso, uma série de modelos computacionais de atenção visual, inspirado no sistema visual humano, têm sido desenvolvidos. Esses modelos têm como objetivo detetar regiões de interesse nas imagens. Esta tese está focada na atenção visual seletiva, que fornece um mecanismo para que o cérebro concentre os recursos computacionais num objeto de cada vez, guiado pelas propriedades de baixo nível da imagem (atenção Bottom-Up). A tarefa de reconhecimento de objetos em diferentes locais é conseguida através da concentração em diferentes locais, um de cada vez. Dados os requisitos computacionais dos modelos propostos, a investigação nesta área tem sido principalmente de interesse teórico. Mais recentemente, psicólogos, neurobiólogos e engenheiros desenvolveram cooperações e isso resultou em benefícios consideráveis. No início deste trabalho, o objetivo é reunir os conceitos e ideias a partir dessas diferentes áreas de investigação. Desta forma, é fornecido o estudo sobre a investigação da biologia do sistema visual humano e uma discussão sobre o conhecimento interdisciplinar da matéria, bem como um estado de arte dos modelos computacionais de atenção visual (bottom-up). Normalmente, a atenção visual é denominada pelos engenheiros como saliência, se as pessoas fixam o olhar numa determinada região da imagem é porque esta região é saliente. Neste trabalho de investigação, os métodos saliência são apresentados em função da sua classificação (biologicamente plausível, computacional ou híbrido) e numa ordem cronológica. Algumas estruturas salientes podem ser usadas, em vez do objeto todo, em aplicações tais como registo de objetos, recuperação ou simplificação de dados. É possível considerar estas poucas estruturas salientes como pontos-chave, com o objetivo de executar o reconhecimento de objetos. De um modo geral, os algoritmos de reconhecimento de objetos utilizam um grande número de descritores extraídos num denso conjunto de pontos. Com isso, estes têm um custo computacional muito elevado, impedindo que o processamento seja realizado em tempo real. A fim de evitar o problema da complexidade computacional requerido, as características devem ser extraídas a partir de um pequeno conjunto de pontos, geralmente chamados pontoschave. O uso de detetores de pontos-chave permite a redução do tempo de processamento e a quantidade de redundância dos dados. Os descritores locais extraídos a partir das imagens têm sido amplamente reportados na literatura de visão por computador. Uma vez que existe um grande conjunto de detetores de pontos-chave, sugere a necessidade de uma avaliação comparativa entre eles. Desta forma, propomos a fazer uma descrição dos detetores de pontos-chave 2D e 3D, dos descritores 3D e uma avaliação dos detetores de pontos-chave 3D existentes numa biblioteca de pública disponível e com objetos 3D reais. A invariância dos detetores de pontoschave 3D foi avaliada de acordo com variações nas rotações, mudanças de escala e translações. Essa avaliação retrata a robustez de um determinado detetor no que diz respeito às mudanças de ponto-de-vista e os critérios utilizados são as taxas de repetibilidade absoluta e relativa. Nas experiências realizadas, o método que apresentou melhor taxa de repetibilidade foi o método ISS3D. Com a análise do sistema visual humano e dos detetores de mapas de saliência com inspiração biológica, surgiu a ideia de se fazer uma extensão para um detetor de ponto-chave com base na informação de cor na retina. A proposta produziu um detetor de ponto-chave 2D inspirado pelo comportamento do sistema visual. O nosso método é uma extensão com base na cor do detetor de ponto-chave BIMP, onde se incluem os canais de cor e de intensidade de uma imagem. A informação de cor é incluída de forma biológica plausível e as características multi-escala da imagem são combinadas num único mapas de pontos-chave. Este detetor é comparado com os detetores de estado-da-arte e é particularmente adequado para tarefas como o reconhecimento de categorias e de objetos. O processo de reconhecimento é realizado comparando os descritores 3D extraídos nos locais indicados pelos pontos-chave. Para isso, as localizações do pontos-chave 2D têm de ser convertido para o espaço 3D. Isto foi possível porque o conjunto de dados usado contém a localização de cada ponto de no espaço 2D e 3D. A avaliação permitiu-nos obter o melhor par detetor de ponto-chave/descritor num RGB-D object dataset. Usando o nosso detetor de ponto-chave e o descritor SHOTCOLOR, obtemos uma noa taxa de reconhecimento de categorias e para o reconhecimento de objetos é com o descritor PFHRGB que obtemos os melhores resultados. Um sistema de reconhecimento 3D envolve a escolha de detetor de ponto-chave e descritor, por isso é apresentado um novo método para a deteção de pontos-chave em nuvens de pontos 3D e uma análise comparativa é realizada entre cada par de detetor de ponto-chave 3D e descritor 3D para avaliar o desempenho no reconhecimento de categorias e de objetos. Estas avaliações são feitas numa base de dados pública de objetos 3D reais. O nosso detetor de ponto-chave é inspirado no comportamento e na arquitetura neural do sistema visual dos primatas. Os pontos-chave 3D são extraídas com base num mapa de saliências 3D bottom-up, ou seja, um mapa que codifica a saliência dos objetos no ambiente visual. O mapa de saliência é determinada pelo cálculo dos mapas de conspicuidade (uma combinação entre diferentes modalidades) da orientação, intensidade e informações de cor de forma bottom-up e puramente orientada para o estímulo. Estes três mapas de conspicuidade são fundidos num mapa de saliência 3D e, finalmente, o foco de atenção (ou "localização do ponto-chave") está sequencialmente direcionado para os pontos mais salientes deste mapa. Inibir este local permite que o sistema automaticamente orientado para próximo local mais saliente. As principais conclusões são: com um número médio similar de pontos-chave, o nosso detetor de ponto-chave 3D supera os outros oito detetores de pontos-chave 3D avaliados, obtendo o melhor resultado em 32 das métricas avaliadas nas experiências do reconhecimento das categorias e dos objetos, quando o segundo melhor detetor obteve apenas o melhor resultado em 8 dessas métricas. A única desvantagem é o tempo computacional, uma vez que BIK-BUS é mais lento do que os outros detetores. Dado que existem grandes diferenças em termos de desempenho no reconhecimento, de tamanho e de tempo, a seleção do detetor de ponto-chave e descritor tem de ser interligada com a tarefa desejada e nós damos algumas orientações para facilitar esta escolha neste trabalho de investigação. Depois de propor um detetor de ponto-chave 3D, a investigação incidiu sobre um método robusto de deteção e tracking de objetos 3D usando as informações dos pontos-chave num filtro de partículas. Este método consiste em três etapas distintas: Segmentação, Inicialização do Tracking e Tracking. A segmentação é feita de modo a remover toda a informação de fundo, a fim de reduzir o número de pontos para processamento futuro. Na inicialização, usamos um detetor de ponto-chave com inspiração biológica. A informação do objeto que queremos seguir é dada pelos pontos-chave extraídos. O filtro de partículas faz o acompanhamento dos pontoschave, de modo a se poder prever onde os pontos-chave estarão no próximo frame. As experiências com método PFBIK-Tracking são feitas no interior, num ambiente de escritório/casa, onde se espera que robôs pessoais possam operar. Também avaliado quantitativamente este método utilizando um "Tracking Error". A avaliação passa pelo cálculo das centróides dos pontos-chave e das partículas. Comparando o nosso sistema com o método de tracking que existe na biblioteca usada no desenvolvimento, nós obtemos melhores resultados, com um número muito menor de pontos e custo computacional. O nosso método é mais rápido e mais robusto em termos de oclusão, quando comparado com o OpenniTracker

    Humanoid Robots

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    For many years, the human being has been trying, in all ways, to recreate the complex mechanisms that form the human body. Such task is extremely complicated and the results are not totally satisfactory. However, with increasing technological advances based on theoretical and experimental researches, man gets, in a way, to copy or to imitate some systems of the human body. These researches not only intended to create humanoid robots, great part of them constituting autonomous systems, but also, in some way, to offer a higher knowledge of the systems that form the human body, objectifying possible applications in the technology of rehabilitation of human beings, gathering in a whole studies related not only to Robotics, but also to Biomechanics, Biomimmetics, Cybernetics, among other areas. This book presents a series of researches inspired by this ideal, carried through by various researchers worldwide, looking for to analyze and to discuss diverse subjects related to humanoid robots. The presented contributions explore aspects about robotic hands, learning, language, vision and locomotion

    Audio-coupled video content understanding of unconstrained video sequences

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    Unconstrained video understanding is a difficult task. The main aim of this thesis is to recognise the nature of objects, activities and environment in a given video clip using both audio and video information. Traditionally, audio and video information has not been applied together for solving such complex task, and for the first time we propose, develop, implement and test a new framework of multi-modal (audio and video) data analysis for context understanding and labelling of unconstrained videos. The framework relies on feature selection techniques and introduces a novel algorithm (PCFS) that is faster than the well-established SFFS algorithm. We use the framework for studying the benefits of combining audio and video information in a number of different problems. We begin by developing two independent content recognition modules. The first one is based on image sequence analysis alone, and uses a range of colour, shape, texture and statistical features from image regions with a trained classifier to recognise the identity of objects, activities and environment present. The second module uses audio information only, and recognises activities and environment. Both of these approaches are preceded by detailed pre-processing to ensure that correct video segments containing both audio and video content are present, and that the developed system can be made robust to changes in camera movement, illumination, random object behaviour etc. For both audio and video analysis, we use a hierarchical approach of multi-stage classification such that difficult classification tasks can be decomposed into simpler and smaller tasks. When combining both modalities, we compare fusion techniques at different levels of integration and propose a novel algorithm that combines advantages of both feature and decision-level fusion. The analysis is evaluated on a large amount of test data comprising unconstrained videos collected for this work. We finally, propose a decision correction algorithm which shows that further steps towards combining multi-modal classification information effectively with semantic knowledge generates the best possible results

    Augmented Reality

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    Augmented Reality (AR) is a natural development from virtual reality (VR), which was developed several decades earlier. AR complements VR in many ways. Due to the advantages of the user being able to see both the real and virtual objects simultaneously, AR is far more intuitive, but it's not completely detached from human factors and other restrictions. AR doesn't consume as much time and effort in the applications because it's not required to construct the entire virtual scene and the environment. In this book, several new and emerging application areas of AR are presented and divided into three sections. The first section contains applications in outdoor and mobile AR, such as construction, restoration, security and surveillance. The second section deals with AR in medical, biological, and human bodies. The third and final section contains a number of new and useful applications in daily living and learning

    On Improving Generalization of CNN-Based Image Classification with Delineation Maps Using the CORF Push-Pull Inhibition Operator

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    Deployed image classification pipelines are typically dependent on the images captured in real-world environments. This means that images might be affected by different sources of perturbations (e.g. sensor noise in low-light environments). The main challenge arises by the fact that image quality directly impacts the reliability and consistency of classification tasks. This challenge has, hence, attracted wide interest within the computer vision communities. We propose a transformation step that attempts to enhance the generalization ability of CNN models in the presence of unseen noise in the test set. Concretely, the delineation maps of given images are determined using the CORF push-pull inhibition operator. Such an operation transforms an input image into a space that is more robust to noise before being processed by a CNN. We evaluated our approach on the Fashion MNIST data set with an AlexNet model. It turned out that the proposed CORF-augmented pipeline achieved comparable results on noise-free images to those of a conventional AlexNet classification model without CORF delineation maps, but it consistently achieved significantly superior performance on test images perturbed with different levels of Gaussian and uniform noise
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