1,054 research outputs found

    Generative Models for Novelty Detection Applications in abnormal event and situational changedetection from data series

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    Novelty detection is a process for distinguishing the observations that differ in some respect from the observations that the model is trained on. Novelty detection is one of the fundamental requirements of a good classification or identification system since sometimes the test data contains observations that were not known at the training time. In other words, the novelty class is often is not presented during the training phase or not well defined. In light of the above, one-class classifiers and generative methods can efficiently model such problems. However, due to the unavailability of data from the novelty class, training an end-to-end model is a challenging task itself. Therefore, detecting the Novel classes in unsupervised and semi-supervised settings is a crucial step in such tasks. In this thesis, we propose several methods to model the novelty detection problem in unsupervised and semi-supervised fashion. The proposed frameworks applied to different related applications of anomaly and outlier detection tasks. The results show the superior of our proposed methods in compare to the baselines and state-of-the-art methods

    Chapter From the Lab to the Real World: Affect Recognition Using Multiple Cues and Modalities

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    Interdisciplinary concept of dissipative soliton is unfolded in connection with ultrafast fibre lasers. The different mode-locking techniques as well as experimental realizations of dissipative soliton fibre lasers are surveyed briefly with an emphasis on their energy scalability. Basic topics of the dissipative soliton theory are elucidated in connection with concepts of energy scalability and stability. It is shown that the parametric space of dissipative soliton has reduced dimension and comparatively simple structure that simplifies the analysis and optimization of ultrafast fibre lasers. The main destabilization scenarios are described and the limits of energy scalability are connected with impact of optical turbulence and stimulated Raman scattering. The fast and slow dynamics of vector dissipative solitons are exposed

    Computer vision methods for unconstrained gesture recognition in the context of sign language annotation

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    Cette thèse porte sur l'étude des méthodes de vision par ordinateur pour la reconnaissance de gestes naturels dans le contexte de l'annotation de la Langue des Signes. La langue des signes (LS) est une langue gestuelle développée par les sourds pour communiquer. Un énoncé en LS consiste en une séquence de signes réalisés par les mains, accompagnés d'expressions du visage et de mouvements du haut du corps, permettant de transmettre des informations en parallèles dans le discours. Même si les signes sont définis dans des dictionnaires, on trouve une très grande variabilité liée au contexte lors de leur réalisation. De plus, les signes sont souvent séparés par des mouvements de co-articulation. Cette extrême variabilité et l'effet de co-articulation représentent un problème important dans les recherches en traitement automatique de la LS. Il est donc nécessaire d'avoir de nombreuses vidéos annotées en LS, si l'on veut étudier cette langue et utiliser des méthodes d'apprentissage automatique. Les annotations de vidéo en LS sont réalisées manuellement par des linguistes ou experts en LS, ce qui est source d'erreur, non reproductible et extrêmement chronophage. De plus, la qualité des annotations dépend des connaissances en LS de l'annotateur. L'association de l'expertise de l'annotateur aux traitements automatiques facilite cette tâche et représente un gain de temps et de robustesse. Le but de nos recherches est d'étudier des méthodes de traitement d'images afin d'assister l'annotation des corpus vidéo: suivi des composantes corporelles, segmentation des mains, segmentation temporelle, reconnaissance de gloses. Au cours de cette thèse nous avons étudié un ensemble de méthodes permettant de réaliser l'annotation en glose. Dans un premier temps, nous cherchons à détecter les limites de début et fin de signe. Cette méthode d'annotation nécessite plusieurs traitements de bas niveau afin de segmenter les signes et d'extraire les caractéristiques de mouvement et de forme de la main. D'abord nous proposons une méthode de suivi des composantes corporelles robuste aux occultations basée sur le filtrage particulaire. Ensuite, un algorithme de segmentation des mains est développé afin d'extraire la région des mains même quand elles se trouvent devant le visage. Puis, les caractéristiques de mouvement sont utilisées pour réaliser une première segmentation temporelle des signes qui est par la suite améliorée grâce à l'utilisation de caractéristiques de forme. En effet celles-ci permettent de supprimer les limites de segmentation détectées en milieu des signes. Une fois les signes segmentés, on procède à l'extraction de caractéristiques visuelles pour leur reconnaissance en termes de gloses à l'aide de modèles phonologiques. Nous avons évalué nos algorithmes à l'aide de corpus internationaux, afin de montrer leur avantages et limitations. L'évaluation montre la robustesse de nos méthodes par rapport à la dynamique et le grand nombre d'occultations entre les différents membres. L'annotation résultante est indépendante de l'annotateur et représente un gain de robustese important.This PhD thesis concerns the study of computer vision methods for the automatic recognition of unconstrained gestures in the context of sign language annotation. Sign Language (SL) is a visual-gestural language developed by deaf communities. Continuous SL consists on a sequence of signs performed one after another involving manual and non-manual features conveying simultaneous information. Even though standard signs are defined in dictionaries, we find a huge variability caused by the context-dependency of signs. In addition signs are often linked by movement epenthesis which consists on the meaningless gesture between signs. The huge variability and the co-articulation effect represent a challenging problem during automatic SL processing. It is necessary to have numerous annotated video corpus in order to train statistical machine translators and study this language. Generally the annotation of SL video corpus is manually performed by linguists or computer scientists experienced in SL. However manual annotation is error-prone, unreproducible and time consuming. In addition de quality of the results depends on the SL annotators knowledge. Associating annotator knowledge to image processing techniques facilitates the annotation task increasing robustness and speeding up the required time. The goal of this research concerns on the study and development of image processing technique in order to assist the annotation of SL video corpus: body tracking, hand segmentation, temporal segmentation, gloss recognition. Along this PhD thesis we address the problem of gloss annotation of SL video corpus. First of all we intend to detect the limits corresponding to the beginning and end of a sign. This annotation method requires several low level approaches for performing temporal segmentation and for extracting motion and hand shape features. First we propose a particle filter based approach for robustly tracking hand and face robust to occlusions. Then a segmentation method for extracting hand when it is in front of the face has been developed. Motion is used for segmenting signs and later hand shape is used to improve the results. Indeed hand shape allows to delete limits detected in the middle of a sign. Once signs have been segmented we proceed to the gloss recognition using lexical description of signs. We have evaluated our algorithms using international corpus, in order to show their advantages and limitations. The evaluation has shown the robustness of the proposed methods with respect to high dynamics and numerous occlusions between body parts. Resulting annotation is independent on the annotator and represents a gain on annotation consistency

    RECOGNITION OF FACES FROM SINGLE AND MULTI-VIEW VIDEOS

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    Face recognition has been an active research field for decades. In recent years, with videos playing an increasingly important role in our everyday life, video-based face recognition has begun to attract considerable research interest. This leads to a wide range of potential application areas, including TV/movies search and parsing, video surveillance, access control etc. Preliminary research results in this field have suggested that by exploiting the abundant spatial-temporal information contained in videos, we can greatly improve the accuracy and robustness of a visual recognition system. On the other hand, as this research area is still in its infancy, developing an end-to-end face processing pipeline that can robustly detect, track and recognize faces remains a challenging task. The goal of this dissertation is to study some of the related problems under different settings. We address the video-based face association problem, in which one attempts to extract face tracks of multiple subjects while maintaining label consistency. Traditional tracking algorithms have difficulty in handling this task, especially when challenging nuisance factors like motion blur, low resolution or significant camera motions are present. We demonstrate that contextual features, in addition to face appearance itself, play an important role in this case. We propose principled methods to combine multiple features using Conditional Random Fields and Max-Margin Markov networks to infer labels for the detected faces. Different from many existing approaches, our algorithms work in online mode and hence have a wider range of applications. We address issues such as parameter learning, inference and handling false positves/negatives that arise in the proposed approach. Finally, we evaluate our approach on several public databases. We next propose a novel video-based face recognition framework. We address the problem from two different aspects: To handle pose variations, we learn a Structural-SVM based detector which can simultaneously localize the face fiducial points and estimate the face pose. By adopting a different optimization criterion from existing algorithms, we are able to improve localization accuracy. To model other face variations, we use intra-personal/extra-personal dictionaries. The intra-personal/extra-personal modeling of human faces has been shown to work successfully in the Bayesian face recognition framework. It has additional advantages in scalability and generalization, which are of critical importance to real-world applications. Combining intra-personal/extra-personal models with dictionary learning enables us to achieve state-of-arts performance on unconstrained video data, even when the training data come from a different database. Finally, we present an approach for video-based face recognition using camera networks. The focus is on handling pose variations by applying the strength of the multi-view camera network. However, rather than taking the typical approach of modeling these variations, which eventually requires explicit knowledge about pose parameters, we rely on a pose-robust feature that eliminates the needs for pose estimation. The pose-robust feature is developed using the Spherical Harmonic (SH) representation theory. It is extracted using the surface texture map of a spherical model which approximates the subject's head. Feature vectors extracted from a video are modeled as an ensemble of instances of a probability distribution in the Reduced Kernel Hilbert Space (RKHS). The ensemble similarity measure in RKHS improves both robustness and accuracy of the recognition system. The proposed approach outperforms traditional algorithms on a multi-view video database collected using a camera network

    Comprehensive review of vision-based fall detection systems

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    Vision-based fall detection systems have experienced fast development over the last years. To determine the course of its evolution and help new researchers, the main audience of this paper, a comprehensive revision of all published articles in the main scientific databases regarding this area during the last five years has been made. After a selection process, detailed in the Materials and Methods Section, eighty-one systems were thoroughly reviewed. Their characterization and classification techniques were analyzed and categorized. Their performance data were also studied, and comparisons were made to determine which classifying methods best work in this field. The evolution of artificial vision technology, very positively influenced by the incorporation of artificial neural networks, has allowed fall characterization to become more resistant to noise resultant from illumination phenomena or occlusion. The classification has also taken advantage of these networks, and the field starts using robots to make these systems mobile. However, datasets used to train them lack real-world data, raising doubts about their performances facing real elderly falls. In addition, there is no evidence of strong connections between the elderly and the communities of researchers

    Video foreground extraction for mobile camera platforms

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    Foreground object detection is a fundamental task in computer vision with many applications in areas such as object tracking, event identification, and behavior analysis. Most conventional foreground object detection methods work only in a stable illumination environments using fixed cameras. In real-world applications, however, it is often the case that the algorithm needs to operate under the following challenging conditions: drastic lighting changes, object shape complexity, moving cameras, low frame capture rates, and low resolution images. This thesis presents four novel approaches for foreground object detection on real-world datasets using cameras deployed on moving vehicles.The first problem addresses passenger detection and tracking tasks for public transport buses investigating the problem of changing illumination conditions and low frame capture rates. Our approach integrates a stable SIFT (Scale Invariant Feature Transform) background seat modelling method with a human shape model into a weighted Bayesian framework to detect passengers. To deal with the problem of tracking multiple targets, we employ the Reversible Jump Monte Carlo Markov Chain tracking algorithm. Using the SVM classifier, the appearance transformation models capture changes in the appearance of the foreground objects across two consecutives frames under low frame rate conditions. In the second problem, we present a system for pedestrian detection involving scenes captured by a mobile bus surveillance system. It integrates scene localization, foreground-background separation, and pedestrian detection modules into a unified detection framework. The scene localization module performs a two stage clustering of the video data.In the first stage, SIFT Homography is applied to cluster frames in terms of their structural similarity, and the second stage further clusters these aligned frames according to consistency in illumination. This produces clusters of images that are differential in viewpoint and lighting. A kernel density estimation (KDE) technique for colour and gradient is then used to construct background models for each image cluster, which is further used to detect candidate foreground pixels. Finally, using a hierarchical template matching approach, pedestrians can be detected.In addition to the second problem, we present three direct pedestrian detection methods that extend the HOG (Histogram of Oriented Gradient) techniques (Dalal and Triggs, 2005) and provide a comparative evaluation of these approaches. The three approaches include: a) a new histogram feature, that is formed by the weighted sum of both the gradient magnitude and the filter responses from a set of elongated Gaussian filters (Leung and Malik, 2001) corresponding to the quantised orientation, which we refer to as the Histogram of Oriented Gradient Banks (HOGB) approach; b) the codebook based HOG feature with branch-and-bound (efficient subwindow search) algorithm (Lampert et al., 2008) and; c) the codebook based HOGB approach.In the third problem, a unified framework that combines 3D and 2D background modelling is proposed to detect scene changes using a camera mounted on a moving vehicle. The 3D scene is first reconstructed from a set of videos taken at different times. The 3D background modelling identifies inconsistent scene structures as foreground objects. For the 2D approach, foreground objects are detected using the spatio-temporal MRF algorithm. Finally, the 3D and 2D results are combined using morphological operations.The significance of these research is that it provides basic frameworks for automatic large-scale mobile surveillance applications and facilitates many higher-level applications such as object tracking and behaviour analysis

    Proceedings of the 2009 Joint Workshop of Fraunhofer IOSB and Institute for Anthropomatics, Vision and Fusion Laboratory

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    The joint workshop of the Fraunhofer Institute of Optronics, System Technologies and Image Exploitation IOSB, Karlsruhe, and the Vision and Fusion Laboratory (Institute for Anthropomatics, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT)), is organized annually since 2005 with the aim to report on the latest research and development findings of the doctoral students of both institutions. This book provides a collection of 16 technical reports on the research results presented on the 2009 workshop

    Sparse representation frameworks for inference problems in visual sensor networks

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    Visual sensor networks (VSNs) form a new research area that merges computer vision and sensor networks. VSNs consist of small visual sensor nodes called camera nodes, which integrate an image sensor, an embedded processor, and a wireless transceiver. Having multiple cameras in a wireless network poses unique and challenging problems that do not exist either in computer vision or in sensor networks. Due to the resource constraints of the camera nodes, such as battery power and bandwidth, it is crucial to perform data processing and collaboration efficiently. This thesis presents a number of sparse-representation based methods to be used in the context of surveillance tasks in VSNs. Performing surveillance tasks, such as tracking, recognition, etc., in a communication-constrained VSN environment is extremely challenging. Compressed sensing is a technique for acquiring and reconstructing a signal from small amount of measurements utilizing the prior knowledge that the signal has a sparse representation in a proper space. The ability of sparse representation tools to reconstruct signals from small amount of observations fits well with the limitations in VSNs for processing, communication, and collaboration. Hence, this thesis presents novel sparsity-driven methods that can be used in action recognition and human tracking applications in VSNs. A sparsity-driven action recognition method is proposed by casting the classification problem as an optimization problem. We solve the optimization problem by enforcing sparsity through Å‚1 regularization and perform action recognition. We have demonstrated the superiority of our method when observations are low-resolution, occluded, and noisy. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first action recognition method that uses sparse representation. In addition, we have proposed an adaptation of this method for VSN resource constraints. We have also performed an analysis of the role of sparsity in classi cation for two different action recognition problems. We have proposed a feature compression framework for human tracking applications in visual sensor networks. In this framework, we perform decentralized tracking: each camera extracts useful features from the images it has observed and sends them to a fusion node which collects the multi-view image features and performs tracking. In tracking, extracting features usually results a likelihood function. To reduce communication in the network, we compress the likelihoods by first splitting them into blocks, and then transforming each block to a proper domain and taking only the most significant coefficients in this representation. To the best of our knowledge, compression of features computed in the context of tracking in a VSN has not been proposed in previous works. We have applied our method for indoor and outdoor tracking scenarios. Experimental results show that our approach can save up to 99.6% of the bandwidth compared to centralized approaches that compress raw images to decrease the communication. We have also shown that our approach outperforms existing decentralized approaches. Furthermore, we have extended this tracking framework and proposed a sparsitydriven approach for human tracking in VSNs. We have designed special overcomplete dictionaries that exploit the specific known geometry of the measurement scenario and used these dictionaries for sparse representation of likelihoods. By obtaining dictionaries that match the structure of the likelihood functions, we can represent likelihoods with few coefficients, and thereby decrease the communication in the network. This is the first method in the literature that uses sparse representation to compress likelihood functions and applies this idea for VSNs. We have tested our approach for indoor and outdoor tracking scenarios and demonstrated that our approach can achieve bandwidth reduction better than our feature compression framework. We have also presented that our approach outperforms existing decentralized and distributed approaches
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