17,050 research outputs found
Efficient Asymmetric Co-Tracking using Uncertainty Sampling
Adaptive tracking-by-detection approaches are popular for tracking arbitrary
objects. They treat the tracking problem as a classification task and use
online learning techniques to update the object model. However, these
approaches are heavily invested in the efficiency and effectiveness of their
detectors. Evaluating a massive number of samples for each frame (e.g.,
obtained by a sliding window) forces the detector to trade the accuracy in
favor of speed. Furthermore, misclassification of borderline samples in the
detector introduce accumulating errors in tracking. In this study, we propose a
co-tracking based on the efficient cooperation of two detectors: a rapid
adaptive exemplar-based detector and another more sophisticated but slower
detector with a long-term memory. The sampling labeling and co-learning of the
detectors are conducted by an uncertainty sampling unit, which improves the
speed and accuracy of the system. We also introduce a budgeting mechanism which
prevents the unbounded growth in the number of examples in the first detector
to maintain its rapid response. Experiments demonstrate the efficiency and
effectiveness of the proposed tracker against its baselines and its superior
performance against state-of-the-art trackers on various benchmark videos.Comment: Submitted to IEEE ICSIPA'201
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Healthcare Event and Activity Logging.
The health of patients in the intensive care unit (ICU) can change frequently and inexplicably. Crucial events and activities responsible for these changes often go unnoticed. This paper introduces healthcare event and action logging (HEAL) which automatically and unobtrusively monitors and reports on events and activities that occur in a medical ICU room. HEAL uses a multimodal distributed camera network to monitor and identify ICU activities and estimate sanitation-event qualifiers. At the core is a novel approach to infer person roles based on semantic interactions, a critical requirement in many healthcare settings where individuals' identities must not be identified. The proposed approach for activity representation identifies contextual aspects basis and estimates aspect weights for proper action representation and reconstruction. The flexibility of the proposed algorithms enables the identification of people roles by associating them with inferred interactions and detected activities. A fully working prototype system is developed, tested in a mock ICU room and then deployed in two ICU rooms at a community hospital, thus offering unique capabilities for data gathering and analytics. The proposed method achieves a role identification accuracy of 84% and a backtracking role identification of 79% for obscured roles using interaction and appearance features on real ICU data. Detailed experimental results are provided in the context of four event-sanitation qualifiers: clean, transmission, contamination, and unclean
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