699 research outputs found
Fusion architectures for automatic subject indexing under concept drift:Analysis and empirical results on short texts
Indexing documents with controlled vocabularies enables a wealth of semantic applications for digital libraries. Due to the rapid growth of scientific publications, machine learning-based methods are required that assign subject descriptors automatically. While stability of generative processes behind the underlying data is often assumed tacitly, it is being violated in practice. Addressing this problem, this article studies explicit and implicit concept drift, that is, settings with new descriptor terms and new types of documents, respectively. First, the existence of concept drift in automatic subject indexing is discussed in detail and demonstrated by example. Subsequently, architectures for automatic indexing are analyzed in this regard, highlighting individual strengths and weaknesses. The results of the theoretical analysis justify research on fusion of different indexing approaches with special consideration on information sharing among descriptors. Experimental results on titles and author keywords in the domain of economics underline the relevance of the fusion methodology, especially under concept drift. Fusion approaches outperformed non-fusion strategies on the tested data sets, which comprised shifts in priors of descriptors as well as covariates. These findings can help researchers and practitioners in digital libraries to choose appropriate methods for automatic subject indexing, as is finally shown by a recent case study
Unsupervised video indexing on audiovisual characterization of persons
Cette thèse consiste à proposer une méthode de caractérisation non-supervisée des intervenants dans les documents audiovisuels, en exploitant des données liées à leur apparence physique et à leur voix. De manière générale, les méthodes d'identification automatique, que ce soit en vidéo ou en audio, nécessitent une quantité importante de connaissances a priori sur le contenu. Dans ce travail, le but est d'étudier les deux modes de façon corrélée et d'exploiter leur propriété respective de manière collaborative et robuste, afin de produire un résultat fiable aussi indépendant que possible de toute connaissance a priori. Plus particulièrement, nous avons étudié les caractéristiques du flux audio et nous avons proposé plusieurs méthodes pour la segmentation et le regroupement en locuteurs que nous avons évaluées dans le cadre d'une campagne d'évaluation. Ensuite, nous avons mené une étude approfondie sur les descripteurs visuels (visage, costume) qui nous ont servis à proposer de nouvelles approches pour la détection, le suivi et le regroupement des personnes. Enfin, le travail s'est focalisé sur la fusion des données audio et vidéo en proposant une approche basée sur le calcul d'une matrice de cooccurrence qui nous a permis d'établir une association entre l'index audio et l'index vidéo et d'effectuer leur correction. Nous pouvons ainsi produire un modèle audiovisuel dynamique des intervenants.This thesis consists to propose a method for an unsupervised characterization of persons within audiovisual documents, by exploring the data related for their physical appearance and their voice. From a general manner, the automatic recognition methods, either in video or audio, need a huge amount of a priori knowledge about their content. In this work, the goal is to study the two modes in a correlated way and to explore their properties in a collaborative and robust way, in order to produce a reliable result as independent as possible from any a priori knowledge. More particularly, we have studied the characteristics of the audio stream and we have proposed many methods for speaker segmentation and clustering and that we have evaluated in a french competition. Then, we have carried a deep study on visual descriptors (face, clothing) that helped us to propose novel approches for detecting, tracking, and clustering of people within the document. Finally, the work was focused on the audiovisual fusion by proposing a method based on computing the cooccurrence matrix that allowed us to establish an association between audio and video indexes, and to correct them. That will enable us to produce a dynamic audiovisual model for each speaker
LOMo: Latent Ordinal Model for Facial Analysis in Videos
We study the problem of facial analysis in videos. We propose a novel weakly
supervised learning method that models the video event (expression, pain etc.)
as a sequence of automatically mined, discriminative sub-events (eg. onset and
offset phase for smile, brow lower and cheek raise for pain). The proposed
model is inspired by the recent works on Multiple Instance Learning and latent
SVM/HCRF- it extends such frameworks to model the ordinal or temporal aspect in
the videos, approximately. We obtain consistent improvements over relevant
competitive baselines on four challenging and publicly available video based
facial analysis datasets for prediction of expression, clinical pain and intent
in dyadic conversations. In combination with complimentary features, we report
state-of-the-art results on these datasets.Comment: 2016 IEEE Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition
(CVPR
Recuperação de informação multimodal em repositórios de imagem médica
The proliferation of digital medical imaging modalities in hospitals and other
diagnostic facilities has created huge repositories of valuable data, often
not fully explored. Moreover, the past few years show a growing trend
of data production. As such, studying new ways to index, process and
retrieve medical images becomes an important subject to be addressed by
the wider community of radiologists, scientists and engineers. Content-based
image retrieval, which encompasses various methods, can exploit the visual
information of a medical imaging archive, and is known to be beneficial to
practitioners and researchers. However, the integration of the latest systems
for medical image retrieval into clinical workflows is still rare, and their
effectiveness still show room for improvement.
This thesis proposes solutions and methods for multimodal information
retrieval, in the context of medical imaging repositories. The major
contributions are a search engine for medical imaging studies supporting
multimodal queries in an extensible archive; a framework for automated
labeling of medical images for content discovery; and an assessment and
proposal of feature learning techniques for concept detection from medical
images, exhibiting greater potential than feature extraction algorithms that
were pertinently used in similar tasks. These contributions, each in their
own dimension, seek to narrow the scientific and technical gap towards
the development and adoption of novel multimodal medical image retrieval
systems, to ultimately become part of the workflows of medical practitioners,
teachers, and researchers in healthcare.A proliferação de modalidades de imagem médica digital, em hospitais,
clínicas e outros centros de diagnóstico, levou à criação de enormes
repositórios de dados, frequentemente não explorados na sua totalidade.
Além disso, os últimos anos revelam, claramente, uma tendência para o
crescimento da produção de dados. Portanto, torna-se importante estudar
novas maneiras de indexar, processar e recuperar imagens médicas, por
parte da comunidade alargada de radiologistas, cientistas e engenheiros. A
recuperação de imagens baseada em conteúdo, que envolve uma grande
variedade de métodos, permite a exploração da informação visual num
arquivo de imagem médica, o que traz benefícios para os médicos e
investigadores. Contudo, a integração destas soluções nos fluxos de trabalho
é ainda rara e a eficácia dos mais recentes sistemas de recuperação de
imagem médica pode ser melhorada.
A presente tese propõe soluções e métodos para recuperação de informação
multimodal, no contexto de repositórios de imagem médica. As contribuições
principais são as seguintes: um motor de pesquisa para estudos de imagem
médica com suporte a pesquisas multimodais num arquivo extensível; uma
estrutura para a anotação automática de imagens; e uma avaliação e
proposta de técnicas de representation learning para deteção automática de
conceitos em imagens médicas, exibindo maior potencial do que as técnicas
de extração de features visuais outrora pertinentes em tarefas semelhantes.
Estas contribuições procuram reduzir as dificuldades técnicas e científicas
para o desenvolvimento e adoção de sistemas modernos de recuperação de
imagem médica multimodal, de modo a que estes façam finalmente parte
das ferramentas típicas dos profissionais, professores e investigadores da área
da saúde.Programa Doutoral em Informátic
Convolutional Neural Network on Three Orthogonal Planes for Dynamic Texture Classification
Dynamic Textures (DTs) are sequences of images of moving scenes that exhibit
certain stationarity properties in time such as smoke, vegetation and fire. The
analysis of DT is important for recognition, segmentation, synthesis or
retrieval for a range of applications including surveillance, medical imaging
and remote sensing. Deep learning methods have shown impressive results and are
now the new state of the art for a wide range of computer vision tasks
including image and video recognition and segmentation. In particular,
Convolutional Neural Networks (CNNs) have recently proven to be well suited for
texture analysis with a design similar to a filter bank approach. In this
paper, we develop a new approach to DT analysis based on a CNN method applied
on three orthogonal planes x y , xt and y t . We train CNNs on spatial frames
and temporal slices extracted from the DT sequences and combine their outputs
to obtain a competitive DT classifier. Our results on a wide range of commonly
used DT classification benchmark datasets prove the robustness of our approach.
Significant improvement of the state of the art is shown on the larger
datasets.Comment: 19 pages, 10 figure
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