61 research outputs found

    Toward Understanding Visual Perception in Machines with Human Psychophysics

    Get PDF
    Over the last several years, Deep Learning algorithms have become more and more powerful. As such, they are being deployed in increasingly many areas including ones that can directly affect human lives. At the same time, regulations like the GDPR or the AI Act are putting the request and need to better understand these artificial algorithms on legal grounds. How do these algorithms come to their decisions? What limits do they have? And what assumptions do they make? This thesis presents three publications that deepen our understanding of deep convolutional neural networks (DNNs) for visual perception of static images. While all of them leverage human psychophysics, they do so in two different ways: either via direct comparison between human and DNN behavioral data or via an evaluation of the helpfulness of an explainability method. Besides insights on DNNs, these works emphasize good practices: For comparison studies, we propose a checklist on how to design, conduct and interpret experiments between different systems. And for explainability methods, our evaluations exemplify that quantitatively testing widely spread intuitions can help put their benefits in a realistic perspective. In the first publication, we test how similar DNNs are to the human visual system, and more specifically its capabilities and information processing. Our experiments reveal that DNNs (1)~can detect closed contours, (2)~perform well on an abstract visual reasoning task and (3)~correctly classify small image crops. On a methodological level, these experiments illustrate that (1)~human bias can influence our interpretation of findings, (2)~distinguishing necessary and sufficient mechanisms can be challenging, and (3)~the degree of aligning experimental conditions between systems can alter the outcome. In the second and third publications, we evaluate how helpful humans find the explainability method feature visualization. The purpose of this tool is to grant insights into the features of a DNN. To measure the general informativeness and causal understanding supported via feature visualizations, we test participants on two different psychophysical tasks. Our data unveil that humans can indeed understand the inner DNN semantics based on this explainability tool. However, other visualizations such as natural data set samples also provide useful, and sometimes even \emph{more} useful, information. On a methodological level, our work illustrates that human evaluations can adjust our expectations toward explainability methods and that different claims have to match the experiment

    Hydrolink 2020/4. Artificial intelligent

    Get PDF
    Topic: Artificial Intelligenc

    Матеріали 4-го семінару молодих вчених з комп'ютерних наук та програмної інженерії (CS&SE@SW 2021), віртуальний захід, м. Кривий Ріг, Україна, 18 грудня 2021 р.

    Get PDF
    Матеріали 4-го семінару молодих вчених з комп'ютерних наук та програмної інженерії (CS&SE@SW 2021), віртуальний захід, м. Кривий Ріг, Україна, 18 грудня 2021 р.Proceedings of the 4th Workshop for Young Scientists in Computer Science & Software Engineering (CS&SE@SW 2021), Virtual Event, Kryvyi Rih, Ukraine, December 18, 2021

    Eight Biennial Report : April 2005 – March 2007

    No full text

    Identification through Finger Bone Structure Biometrics

    Get PDF

    Proceedings of the 2021 Symposium on Information Theory and Signal Processing in the Benelux, May 20-21, TU Eindhoven

    Get PDF

    Finger Vein Verification with a Convolutional Auto-encoder

    Get PDF

    Digital Techniques for Documenting and Preserving Cultural Heritage

    Get PDF
    In this unique collection the authors present a wide range of interdisciplinary methods to study, document, and conserve material cultural heritage. The methods used serve as exemplars of best practice with a wide variety of cultural heritage objects having been recorded, examined, and visualised. The objects range in date, scale, materials, and state of preservation and so pose different research questions and challenges for digitization, conservation, and ontological representation of knowledge. Heritage science and specialist digital technologies are presented in a way approachable to non-scientists, while a separate technical section provides details of methods and techniques, alongside examples of notable applications of spatial and spectral documentation of material cultural heritage, with selected literature and identification of future research. This book is an outcome of interdisciplinary research and debates conducted by the participants of the COST Action TD1201, Colour and Space in Cultural Heritage, 2012–16 and is an Open Access publication available under a CC BY-NC-ND licence.https://scholarworks.wmich.edu/mip_arc_cdh/1000/thumbnail.jp

    Image usefulness of compressed surveillance footage with different scene contents

    Get PDF
    The police use both subjective (i.e. police staff) and automated (e.g. face recognition systems) methods for the completion of visual tasks (e.g person identification). Image quality for police tasks has been defined as the image usefulness, or image suitability of the visual material to satisfy a visual task. It is not necessarily affected by any artefact that may affect the visual image quality (i.e. decrease fidelity), as long as these artefacts do not affect the relevant useful information for the task. The capture of useful information will be affected by the unconstrained conditions commonly encountered by CCTV systems such as variations in illumination and high compression levels. The main aim of this thesis is to investigate aspects of image quality and video compression that may affect the completion of police visual tasks/applications with respect to CCTV imagery. This is accomplished by investigating 3 specific police areas/tasks utilising: 1) the human visual system (HVS) for a face recognition task, 2) automated face recognition systems, and 3) automated human detection systems. These systems (HVS and automated) were assessed with defined scene content properties, and video compression, i.e. H.264/MPEG-4 AVC. The performance of imaging systems/processes (e.g. subjective investigations, performance of compression algorithms) are affected by scene content properties. No other investigation has been identified that takes into consideration scene content properties to the same extend. Results have shown that the HVS is more sensitive to compression effects in comparison to the automated systems. In automated face recognition systems, `mixed lightness' scenes were the most affected and `low lightness' scenes were the least affected by compression. In contrast the HVS for the face recognition task, `low lightness' scenes were the most affected and `medium lightness' scenes the least affected. For the automated human detection systems, `close distance' and `run approach' are some of the most commonly affected scenes. Findings have the potential to broaden the methods used for testing imaging systems for security applications

    Digital Techniques for Documenting and Preserving Cultural Heritage

    Get PDF
    This book presents interdisciplinary approaches to the examination and documentation of material cultural heritage, using non-invasive spatial and spectral optical technologies
    corecore