71,497 research outputs found
Determining the accuracy in image supervised classification problems
A large number of accuracy measures for crisp supervised classification have been developed in supervised image classification literature. Overall accuracy, Kappa index, Kappa location, Kappa histo and user accuracy are some well-known examples. In this work, we will extend and analyze some of these measures in a fuzzy framework to be able to measure the goodness of a given classifier in a supervised fuzzy classification system with fuzzy reference data. In addition with this, the measures here defined also take into account the preferences of the decision maker in order to differentiate some errors that must not be considered equal in the classification process
Overview: Computer vision and machine learning for microstructural characterization and analysis
The characterization and analysis of microstructure is the foundation of
microstructural science, connecting the materials structure to its composition,
process history, and properties. Microstructural quantification traditionally
involves a human deciding a priori what to measure and then devising a
purpose-built method for doing so. However, recent advances in data science,
including computer vision (CV) and machine learning (ML) offer new approaches
to extracting information from microstructural images. This overview surveys CV
approaches to numerically encode the visual information contained in a
microstructural image, which then provides input to supervised or unsupervised
ML algorithms that find associations and trends in the high-dimensional image
representation. CV/ML systems for microstructural characterization and analysis
span the taxonomy of image analysis tasks, including image classification,
semantic segmentation, object detection, and instance segmentation. These tools
enable new approaches to microstructural analysis, including the development of
new, rich visual metrics and the discovery of
processing-microstructure-property relationships.Comment: submitted to Materials and Metallurgical Transactions
A partially unsupervised cascade classifier for the analysis of multitemporal remote-sensing images
A partially unsupervised approach to the classification of multitemporal remote-sensing images is presented. Such an approach allows the automatic classification of a remote-sensing image for which training data are not available, drawing on the information derived from an image acquired in the same area at a previous time. In particular, the proposed technique is based on a cascade classifier approach and on a specific formulation of the expectation-maximization (EM) algorithm used for the unsupervised estimation of the statistical parameters of the image to be classified. The results of experiments carried out on a multitemporal data set confirm the validity of the proposed approach
Fine-Grained Object Recognition and Zero-Shot Learning in Remote Sensing Imagery
Fine-grained object recognition that aims to identify the type of an object
among a large number of subcategories is an emerging application with the
increasing resolution that exposes new details in image data. Traditional fully
supervised algorithms fail to handle this problem where there is low
between-class variance and high within-class variance for the classes of
interest with small sample sizes. We study an even more extreme scenario named
zero-shot learning (ZSL) in which no training example exists for some of the
classes. ZSL aims to build a recognition model for new unseen categories by
relating them to seen classes that were previously learned. We establish this
relation by learning a compatibility function between image features extracted
via a convolutional neural network and auxiliary information that describes the
semantics of the classes of interest by using training samples from the seen
classes. Then, we show how knowledge transfer can be performed for the unseen
classes by maximizing this function during inference. We introduce a new data
set that contains 40 different types of street trees in 1-ft spatial resolution
aerial data, and evaluate the performance of this model with manually annotated
attributes, a natural language model, and a scientific taxonomy as auxiliary
information. The experiments show that the proposed model achieves 14.3%
recognition accuracy for the classes with no training examples, which is
significantly better than a random guess accuracy of 6.3% for 16 test classes,
and three other ZSL algorithms.Comment: G. Sumbul, R. G. Cinbis, S. Aksoy, "Fine-Grained Object Recognition
and Zero-Shot Learning in Remote Sensing Imagery", IEEE Transactions on
Geoscience and Remote Sensing (TGRS), in press, 201
Machine learning methods for histopathological image analysis
Abundant accumulation of digital histopathological images has led to the
increased demand for their analysis, such as computer-aided diagnosis using
machine learning techniques. However, digital pathological images and related
tasks have some issues to be considered. In this mini-review, we introduce the
application of digital pathological image analysis using machine learning
algorithms, address some problems specific to such analysis, and propose
possible solutions.Comment: 23 pages, 4 figure
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