47 research outputs found

    Understanding human-centric images : from geometry to fashion

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    Understanding humans from photographs has always been a fundamental goal of computer vision. Early works focused on simple tasks such as detecting the location of individuals by means of bounding boxes. As the field progressed, harder and more higher level tasks have been undertaken. For example, from human detection came the 2D and 3D human pose estimation in which the task consisted of identifying the location in the image or space of all different body parts, e.g., head, torso, knees, arms, etc. Human attributes also became a great source of interest as they allow recognizing individuals and other properties such as gender or age. Later, the attention turned to the recognition of the action being performed. This, in general, relies on the previous works on pose estimation and attribute classification. Currently, even higher level tasks are being conducted such as predicting the motivations of human behavior or identifying the fashionability of an individual from a photograph. In this thesis we have developed a hierarchy of tools that cover all these range of problems, from low level feature point descriptors to high level fashion-aware conditional random fields models, all with the objective of understanding humans from monocular, RGB images. In order to build these high level models it is paramount to have a battery of robust and reliable low and mid level cues. Along these lines, we have proposed two low-level keypoint descriptors: one based on the theory of the heat diffusion on images, and the other that uses a convolutional neural network to learn discriminative image patch representations. We also introduce distinct low-level generative models for representing human pose: in particular we present a discrete model based on a directed acyclic graph and a continuous model that consists of poses clustered on a Riemannian manifold. As mid level cues we propose two 3D human pose estimation algorithms: one that estimates the 3D pose given a noisy 2D estimation, and an approach that simultaneously estimates both the 2D and 3D pose. Finally, we formulate higher level models built upon low and mid level cues for human understanding. Concretely, we focus on two different tasks in the context of fashion: semantic segmentation of clothing, and predicting the fashionability from images with metadata to ultimately provide fashion advice to the user. In summary, to robustly extract knowledge from images with the presence of humans it is necessary to build high level models that integrate low and mid level cues. In general, using and understanding strong features is critical for obtaining reliable performance. The main contribution of this thesis is in proposing a variety of low, mid and high level algorithms for human-centric images that can be integrated into higher level models for comprehending humans from photographs, as well as tackling novel fashion-oriented problems.Siempre ha sido una meta fundamental de la visión por computador la comprensión de los seres humanos. Los primeros trabajos se fijaron en objetivos sencillos tales como la detección en imágenes de la posición de los individuos. A medida que la investigación progresó se emprendieron tareas mucho más complejas. Por ejemplo, a partir de la detección de los humanos se pasó a la estimación en dos y tres dimensiones de su postura por lo que la tarea consistía en identificar la localización en la imagen o el espacio de las diferentes partes del cuerpo, por ejemplo cabeza, torso, rodillas, brazos, etc...También los atributos humanos se convirtieron en una gran fuente de interés ya que permiten el reconocimiento de los individuos y de sus propiedades como el género o la edad. Más tarde, la atención se centró en el reconocimiento de la acción realizada. Todos estos trabajos reposan en las investigaciones previas sobre la estimación de las posturas y la clasificación de los atributos. En la actualidad, se llevan a cabo investigaciones de un nivel aún superior sobre cuestiones tales como la predicción de las motivaciones del comportamiento humano o la identificación del tallaje de un individuo a partir de una fotografía. En esta tesis desarrollamos una jerarquía de herramientas que cubre toda esta gama de problemas, desde descriptores de rasgos de bajo nivel a modelos probabilísticos de campos condicionales de alto nivel reconocedores de la moda, todos ellos con el objetivo de mejorar la comprensión de los humanos a partir de imágenes RGB monoculares. Para construir estos modelos de alto nivel es decisivo disponer de una batería de datos robustos y fiables de nivel bajo y medio. En este sentido, proponemos dos descriptores novedosos de bajo nivel: uno se basa en la teoría de la difusión de calor en las imágenes y otro utiliza una red neural convolucional para aprender representaciones discriminativas de trozos de imagen. También introducimos diferentes modelos de bajo nivel generativos para representar la postura humana: en particular presentamos un modelo discreto basado en un gráfico acíclico dirigido y un modelo continuo que consiste en agrupaciones de posturas en una variedad de Riemann. Como señales de nivel medio proponemos dos algoritmos estimadores de la postura humana: uno que estima la postura en tres dimensiones a partir de una estimación imprecisa en el plano de la imagen y otro que estima simultáneamente la postura en dos y tres dimensiones. Finalmente construimos modelos de alto nivel a partir de señales de nivel bajo y medio para la comprensión de la persona a partir de imágenes. En concreto, nos centramos en dos diferentes tareas en el ámbito de la moda: la segmentación semántica del vestido y la predicción del buen ajuste de la prenda a partir de imágenes con meta-datos con la finalidad de aconsejar al usuario sobre moda. En resumen, para extraer conocimiento a partir de imágenes con presencia de seres humanos es preciso construir modelos de alto nivel que integren señales de nivel medio y bajo. En general, el punto crítico para obtener resultados fiables es el empleo y la comprensión de rasgos fuertes. La aportación fundamental de esta tesis es la propuesta de una variedad de algoritmos de nivel bajo, medio y alto para el tratamiento de imágenes centradas en seres humanos que pueden integrarse en modelos de alto nivel, para mejor comprensión de los seres humanos a partir de fotografías, así como abordar problemas planteados por el buen ajuste de las prendas

    Metric representations for shape analysis and synthesis

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    2D and 3D geometric shapes are ubiquitous in computer graphics, computer animation, and computer-aided design and manufacturing. Two of the fundamental research challenges that underline these applications are the analysis and synthesis of shapes, with the former aiming to extract semantically meaningful knowledge of shapes and the latter focusing on generating plausible-looking shapes based on user inputs. Traditionally, shape analysis and synthesis are based on representations such as meshes, parameterisations, and Laplacians, which lead to mostly hand-crafted computation rules that are either suboptimal or treat related tasks separately. In this work, we propose to represent a 2D/3D shape as a square symmetric matrix that correlates every pair of geometric points on the shape, which allows us to formulate shape analysis and synthesis problems as principled optimisation problems that can be globally optimised. To demonstrate the usefulness of our new metric representation for shape analysis, we first address 3D mesh saliency detection by representing a shape as a pairwise feature distance matrix, whose principal eigenvector is experimentally shown to outperform the traditional saliency detection rules for capturing ground truth saliency annotations. Following this work, we then unify saliency detection and nonrigid shape matching via a jointly learned metric representation, which is shown to improve the accuracy of both tasks on the existing saliency detection and shape matching benchmarks. To also demonstrate the usefulness of our metric representation for shape synthesis, we address 2D facial shape beautification in images by representing a facial shape as the orthogonal projection matrix onto 2D facial landmarks, which is shown to improve the attractiveness of both frontal-neutral and non-frontal-non-neutral faces in the user studies. Finally, we show that adversarially learning the distributions of human shapes and poses in a hidden space produces higher quality human samples than in the geometry space. Together, these results show that our metric representation benefits both the analysis and synthesis of shapes, with the potential of unifying more diverse tasks such as part segmentation and labelling in the future work

    Irish Machine Vision and Image Processing Conference Proceedings 2017

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    Learning to understand the world in 3D

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    3D Computer vision is a research topic gathering even increasing attention thanks to the more and more widespread availability of off-the-shelf depth sensors and large-scale 3D datasets. The main purpose of 3D computer vision is to understand the geometry of the objects in order to interact with them. Recently, the success of deep neural networks for processing images has fostered a data driven approach to solve 3D vision problems. Inspired by the potential of this field, in this thesis we will address two main problems: (a) how to leverage machine/deep learning techniques to build a robust and effective pipeline to establish correspondences between surfaces, and (b) how to obtain a reliable 3D reconstruction of an object using RGB images sparsely acquired from different point of views by means of deep neural networks. At the heart of many 3D computer vision applications lies surface matching, an effective paradigm aimed at finding correspondences between points belonging to different shapes. To this end, it is essential to first identify the characteristic points of an object and then create an adequate representation of them. We will refer to these two steps as keypoint detection and keypoint description, respectively. As a first contribution (a) of this Ph.D thesis, we will propose data driven solutions to tackle the problems of keypoint detection and description. As a further interesting direction of research, we investigate the problem of 3D object reconstruction from RGB data only (b). If in the past this application has been addressed by SLAM and Structure from motion (SfM) techniques, this radically changed in recent years thanks to the dawn of deep learning. Following this trend, we will introduce a novel approach that combines traditional computer vision techniques with deep learning to perform a view point variant 3D object reconstruction from non-overlapping RGB views

    Facial Expression Analysis under Partial Occlusion: A Survey

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    Automatic machine-based Facial Expression Analysis (FEA) has made substantial progress in the past few decades driven by its importance for applications in psychology, security, health, entertainment and human computer interaction. The vast majority of completed FEA studies are based on non-occluded faces collected in a controlled laboratory environment. Automatic expression recognition tolerant to partial occlusion remains less understood, particularly in real-world scenarios. In recent years, efforts investigating techniques to handle partial occlusion for FEA have seen an increase. The context is right for a comprehensive perspective of these developments and the state of the art from this perspective. This survey provides such a comprehensive review of recent advances in dataset creation, algorithm development, and investigations of the effects of occlusion critical for robust performance in FEA systems. It outlines existing challenges in overcoming partial occlusion and discusses possible opportunities in advancing the technology. To the best of our knowledge, it is the first FEA survey dedicated to occlusion and aimed at promoting better informed and benchmarked future work.Comment: Authors pre-print of the article accepted for publication in ACM Computing Surveys (accepted on 02-Nov-2017

    Inferring Geodesic Cerebrovascular Graphs: Image Processing, Topological Alignment and Biomarkers Extraction

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    A vectorial representation of the vascular network that embodies quantitative features - location, direction, scale, and bifurcations - has many potential neuro-vascular applications. Patient-specific models support computer-assisted surgical procedures in neurovascular interventions, while analyses on multiple subjects are essential for group-level studies on which clinical prediction and therapeutic inference ultimately depend. This first motivated the development of a variety of methods to segment the cerebrovascular system. Nonetheless, a number of limitations, ranging from data-driven inhomogeneities, the anatomical intra- and inter-subject variability, the lack of exhaustive ground-truth, the need for operator-dependent processing pipelines, and the highly non-linear vascular domain, still make the automatic inference of the cerebrovascular topology an open problem. In this thesis, brain vessels’ topology is inferred by focusing on their connectedness. With a novel framework, the brain vasculature is recovered from 3D angiographies by solving a connectivity-optimised anisotropic level-set over a voxel-wise tensor field representing the orientation of the underlying vasculature. Assuming vessels joining by minimal paths, a connectivity paradigm is formulated to automatically determine the vascular topology as an over-connected geodesic graph. Ultimately, deep-brain vascular structures are extracted with geodesic minimum spanning trees. The inferred topologies are then aligned with similar ones for labelling and propagating information over a non-linear vectorial domain, where the branching pattern of a set of vessels transcends a subject-specific quantized grid. Using a multi-source embedding of a vascular graph, the pairwise registration of topologies is performed with the state-of-the-art graph matching techniques employed in computer vision. Functional biomarkers are determined over the neurovascular graphs with two complementary approaches. Efficient approximations of blood flow and pressure drop account for autoregulation and compensation mechanisms in the whole network in presence of perturbations, using lumped-parameters analog-equivalents from clinical angiographies. Also, a localised NURBS-based parametrisation of bifurcations is introduced to model fluid-solid interactions by means of hemodynamic simulations using an isogeometric analysis framework, where both geometry and solution profile at the interface share the same homogeneous domain. Experimental results on synthetic and clinical angiographies validated the proposed formulations. Perspectives and future works are discussed for the group-wise alignment of cerebrovascular topologies over a population, towards defining cerebrovascular atlases, and for further topological optimisation strategies and risk prediction models for therapeutic inference. Most of the algorithms presented in this work are available as part of the open-source package VTrails

    Dimensionality reduction and sparse representations in computer vision

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    The proliferation of camera equipped devices, such as netbooks, smartphones and game stations, has led to a significant increase in the production of visual content. This visual information could be used for understanding the environment and offering a natural interface between the users and their surroundings. However, the massive amounts of data and the high computational cost associated with them, encumbers the transfer of sophisticated vision algorithms to real life systems, especially ones that exhibit resource limitations such as restrictions in available memory, processing power and bandwidth. One approach for tackling these issues is to generate compact and descriptive representations of image data by exploiting inherent redundancies. We propose the investigation of dimensionality reduction and sparse representations in order to accomplish this task. In dimensionality reduction, the aim is to reduce the dimensions of the space where image data reside in order to allow resource constrained systems to handle them and, ideally, provide a more insightful description. This goal is achieved by exploiting the inherent redundancies that many classes of images, such as faces under different illumination conditions and objects from different viewpoints, exhibit. We explore the description of natural images by low dimensional non-linear models called image manifolds and investigate the performance of computer vision tasks such as recognition and classification using these low dimensional models. In addition to dimensionality reduction, we study a novel approach in representing images as a sparse linear combination of dictionary examples. We investigate how sparse image representations can be used for a variety of tasks including low level image modeling and higher level semantic information extraction. Using tools from dimensionality reduction and sparse representation, we propose the application of these methods in three hierarchical image layers, namely low-level features, mid-level structures and high-level attributes. Low level features are image descriptors that can be extracted directly from the raw image pixels and include pixel intensities, histograms, and gradients. In the first part of this work, we explore how various techniques in dimensionality reduction, ranging from traditional image compression to the recently proposed Random Projections method, affect the performance of computer vision algorithms such as face detection and face recognition. In addition, we discuss a method that is able to increase the spatial resolution of a single image, without using any training examples, according to the sparse representations framework. In the second part, we explore mid-level structures, including image manifolds and sparse models, produced by abstracting information from low-level features and offer compact modeling of high dimensional data. We propose novel techniques for generating more descriptive image representations and investigate their application in face recognition and object tracking. In the third part of this work, we propose the investigation of a novel framework for representing the semantic contents of images. This framework employs high level semantic attributes that aim to bridge the gap between the visual information of an image and its textual description by utilizing low level features and mid level structures. This innovative paradigm offers revolutionary possibilities including recognizing the category of an object from purely textual information without providing any explicit visual example
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