20,313 research outputs found
A deep learning framework for quality assessment and restoration in video endoscopy
Endoscopy is a routine imaging technique used for both diagnosis and
minimally invasive surgical treatment. Artifacts such as motion blur, bubbles,
specular reflections, floating objects and pixel saturation impede the visual
interpretation and the automated analysis of endoscopy videos. Given the
widespread use of endoscopy in different clinical applications, we contend that
the robust and reliable identification of such artifacts and the automated
restoration of corrupted video frames is a fundamental medical imaging problem.
Existing state-of-the-art methods only deal with the detection and restoration
of selected artifacts. However, typically endoscopy videos contain numerous
artifacts which motivates to establish a comprehensive solution.
We propose a fully automatic framework that can: 1) detect and classify six
different primary artifacts, 2) provide a quality score for each frame and 3)
restore mildly corrupted frames. To detect different artifacts our framework
exploits fast multi-scale, single stage convolutional neural network detector.
We introduce a quality metric to assess frame quality and predict image
restoration success. Generative adversarial networks with carefully chosen
regularization are finally used to restore corrupted frames.
Our detector yields the highest mean average precision (mAP at 5% threshold)
of 49.0 and the lowest computational time of 88 ms allowing for accurate
real-time processing. Our restoration models for blind deblurring, saturation
correction and inpainting demonstrate significant improvements over previous
methods. On a set of 10 test videos we show that our approach preserves an
average of 68.7% which is 25% more frames than that retained from the raw
videos.Comment: 14 page
StackInsights: Cognitive Learning for Hybrid Cloud Readiness
Hybrid cloud is an integrated cloud computing environment utilizing a mix of
public cloud, private cloud, and on-premise traditional IT infrastructures.
Workload awareness, defined as a detailed full range understanding of each
individual workload, is essential in implementing the hybrid cloud. While it is
critical to perform an accurate analysis to determine which workloads are
appropriate for on-premise deployment versus which workloads can be migrated to
a cloud off-premise, the assessment is mainly performed by rule or policy based
approaches. In this paper, we introduce StackInsights, a novel cognitive system
to automatically analyze and predict the cloud readiness of workloads for an
enterprise. Our system harnesses the critical metrics across the entire stack:
1) infrastructure metrics, 2) data relevance metrics, and 3) application
taxonomy, to identify workloads that have characteristics of a) low sensitivity
with respect to business security, criticality and compliance, and b) low
response time requirements and access patterns. Since the capture of the data
relevance metrics involves an intrusive and in-depth scanning of the content of
storage objects, a machine learning model is applied to perform the business
relevance classification by learning from the meta level metrics harnessed
across stack. In contrast to traditional methods, StackInsights significantly
reduces the total time for hybrid cloud readiness assessment by orders of
magnitude
Off-line vs. On-line Evaluation of Recommender Systems in Small E-commerce
In this paper, we present our work towards comparing on-line and off-line
evaluation metrics in the context of small e-commerce recommender systems.
Recommending on small e-commerce enterprises is rather challenging due to the
lower volume of interactions and low user loyalty, rarely extending beyond a
single session. On the other hand, we usually have to deal with lower volumes
of objects, which are easier to discover by users through various
browsing/searching GUIs.
The main goal of this paper is to determine applicability of off-line
evaluation metrics in learning true usability of recommender systems (evaluated
on-line in A/B testing). In total 800 variants of recommending algorithms were
evaluated off-line w.r.t. 18 metrics covering rating-based, ranking-based,
novelty and diversity evaluation. The off-line results were afterwards compared
with on-line evaluation of 12 selected recommender variants and based on the
results, we tried to learn and utilize an off-line to on-line results
prediction model.
Off-line results shown a great variance in performance w.r.t. different
metrics with the Pareto front covering 68\% of the approaches. Furthermore, we
observed that on-line results are considerably affected by the novelty of
users. On-line metrics correlates positively with ranking-based metrics (AUC,
MRR, nDCG) for novice users, while too high values of diversity and novelty had
a negative impact on the on-line results for them. For users with more visited
items, however, the diversity became more important, while ranking-based
metrics relevance gradually decrease.Comment: Submitted to ACM Hypertext 2020 Conferenc
Exploiting Deep Features for Remote Sensing Image Retrieval: A Systematic Investigation
Remote sensing (RS) image retrieval is of great significant for geological
information mining. Over the past two decades, a large amount of research on
this task has been carried out, which mainly focuses on the following three
core issues: feature extraction, similarity metric and relevance feedback. Due
to the complexity and multiformity of ground objects in high-resolution remote
sensing (HRRS) images, there is still room for improvement in the current
retrieval approaches. In this paper, we analyze the three core issues of RS
image retrieval and provide a comprehensive review on existing methods.
Furthermore, for the goal to advance the state-of-the-art in HRRS image
retrieval, we focus on the feature extraction issue and delve how to use
powerful deep representations to address this task. We conduct systematic
investigation on evaluating correlative factors that may affect the performance
of deep features. By optimizing each factor, we acquire remarkable retrieval
results on publicly available HRRS datasets. Finally, we explain the
experimental phenomenon in detail and draw conclusions according to our
analysis. Our work can serve as a guiding role for the research of
content-based RS image retrieval
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