185 research outputs found

    Attention and Sensor Planning in Autonomous Robotic Visual Search

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    This thesis is concerned with the incorporation of saliency in visual search and the development of sensor planning strategies for visual search. The saliency model is a mixture of two schemes that extracts visual clues regarding the structure of the environment and object specific features. The sensor planning methods, namely Greedy Search with Constraint (GSC), Extended Greedy Search (EGS) and Dynamic Look Ahead Search (DLAS) are approximations to the optimal solution for the problem of object search, as extensions to the work of Yiming Ye. Experiments were conducted to evaluate the proposed methods. They show that by using saliency in search a performance improvement up to 75% is attainable in terms of number of actions taken to complete the search. As for the planning strategies, the GSC algorithm achieved the highest detection rate and the best efficiency in terms of cost it incurs to explore every percentage of an environment

    Revealing the Invisible: On the Extraction of Latent Information from Generalized Image Data

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    The desire to reveal the invisible in order to explain the world around us has been a source of impetus for technological and scientific progress throughout human history. Many of the phenomena that directly affect us cannot be sufficiently explained based on the observations using our primary senses alone. Often this is because their originating cause is either too small, too far away, or in other ways obstructed. To put it in other words: it is invisible to us. Without careful observation and experimentation, our models of the world remain inaccurate and research has to be conducted in order to improve our understanding of even the most basic effects. In this thesis, we1 are going to present our solutions to three challenging problems in visual computing, where a surprising amount of information is hidden in generalized image data and cannot easily be extracted by human observation or existing methods. We are able to extract the latent information using non-linear and discrete optimization methods based on physically motivated models and computer graphics methodology, such as ray tracing, real-time transient rendering, and image-based rendering

    Reconhecimento automático de moedas medievais usando visão por computador

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    Dissertação de mestrado em Engenharia InformáticaThe use of computer vision for identification and recognition of coins is well studied and of renowned interest. However the focus of research has consistently been on modern coins and the used algorithms present quite disappointing results when applied to ancient coins. This discrepancy is explained by the nature of ancient coins that are manually minted, having plenty variances, failures, ripples and centuries of degradation which further deform the characteristic patterns, making their identification a hard task even for humans. Another noteworthy factor in almost all similar studies is the controlled environments and uniform illumination of all images of the datasets. Though it makes sense to focus on the more problematic variables, this is an impossible premise to find outside the researchers’ laboratory, therefore a problematic that must be approached. This dissertation focuses on medieval and ancient coin recognition in uncontrolled “real world” images, thus trying to pave way to the use of vast repositories of coin images all over the internet that could be used to make our algorithms more robust. The first part of the dissertation proposes a fast and automatic method to segment ancient coins over complex backgrounds using a Histogram Backprojection approach combined with edge detection methods. Results are compared against an automation of GrabCut algorithm. The proposed method achieves a Good or Acceptable rate on 76% of the images, taking an average of 0.29s per image, against 49% in 19.58s for GrabCut. Although this work is oriented to ancient coin segmentation, the method can also be used in other contexts presenting thin objects with uniform colors. In the second part, several state of the art machine learning algorithms are compared in the search for the most promising approach to classify these challenging coins. The best results are achieved using dense SIFT descriptors organized into Bags of Visual Words, and using Support Vector Machine or Naïve Bayes as machine learning strategies.O uso de visão por computador para identificação e reconhecimento de moedas é bastante estudado e de reconhecido interesse. No entanto o foco da investigação tem sido sistematicamente sobre as moedas modernas e os algoritmos usados apresentam resultados bastante desapontantes quando aplicados a moedas antigas. Esta discrepância é justificada pela natureza das moedas antigas que, sendo cunhadas à mão, apresentam bastantes variações, falhas e séculos de degradação que deformam os padrões característicos, tornando a sua identificação dificil mesmo para o ser humano. Adicionalmente, a quase totalidade dos estudos usa ambientes controlados e iluminação uniformizada entre todas as imagens dos datasets. Embora faça sentido focar-se nas variáveis mais problemáticas, esta é uma premissa impossível de encontrar fora do laboratório do investigador e portanto uma problemática que tem que ser estudada. Esta dissertação foca-se no reconhecimento de moedas medievais e clássicas em imagens não controladas, tentando assim abrir caminho ao uso de vastos repositórios de imagens de moedas disponíveis na internet, que poderiam ser usados para tornar os nossos algoritmos mais robustos. Na primeira parte é proposto um método rápido e automático para segmentar moedas antigas sobre fundos complexos, numa abordagem que envolve Histogram Backprojection combinado com deteção de arestas. Os resultados são comparados com uma automação do algoritmo GrabCut. O método proposto obtém uma classificação de Bom ou Aceitável em 76% das imagens, demorando uma média de 0.29s por imagem, contra 49% em 19,58s do GrabCut. Não obstante o foco em segmentação de moedas antigas, este método pode ser usado noutros contextos que incluam objetos planos de cor uniforme. Na segunda parte, o estado da arte de Machine Learning é testado e comparado em busca da abordagem mais promissora para classificar estas moedas. Os melhores resultados são alcançados usando descritores dense SIFT, organizados em Bags of Visual Words e usando Support Vector Machine ou Naive Bayes como estratégias de machine learning

    Feature-based tracking of multiple people for intelligent video surveillance.

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    Intelligent video surveillance is the process of performing surveillance task automatically by a computer vision system. It involves detecting and tracking people in the video sequence and understanding their behavior. This thesis addresses the problem of detecting and tracking multiple moving people with unknown background. We have proposed a feature-based framework for tracking, which requires feature extraction and feature matching. We have considered color, size, blob bounding box and motion information as features of people. In our feature-based tracking system, we have proposed to use Pearson correlation coefficient for matching feature-vector with temporal templates. The occlusion problem has been solved by histogram backprojection. Our tracking system is fast and free from assumptions about human structure. We have implemented our tracking system using Visual C++ and OpenCV and tested on real-world images and videos. Experimental results suggest that our tracking system achieved good accuracy and can process videos in 10-15 fps.Dept. of Computer Science. Paper copy at Leddy Library: Theses & Major Papers - Basement, West Bldg. / Call Number: Thesis2006 .A42. Source: Masters Abstracts International, Volume: 45-01, page: 0347. Thesis (M.Sc.)--University of Windsor (Canada), 2006

    Particle Filters for Colour-Based Face Tracking Under Varying Illumination

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    Automatic human face tracking is the basis of robotic and active vision systems used for facial feature analysis, automatic surveillance, video conferencing, intelligent transportation, human-computer interaction and many other applications. Superior human face tracking will allow future safety surveillance systems which monitor drowsy drivers, or patients and elderly people at the risk of seizure or sudden falls and will perform with lower risk of failure in unexpected situations. This area has actively been researched in the current literature in an attempt to make automatic face trackers more stable in challenging real-world environments. To detect faces in video sequences, features like colour, texture, intensity, shape or motion is used. Among these feature colour has been the most popular, because of its insensitivity to orientation and size changes and fast process-ability. The challenge of colour-based face trackers, however, has been dealing with the instability of trackers in case of colour changes due to the drastic variation in environmental illumination. Probabilistic tracking and the employment of particle filters as powerful Bayesian stochastic estimators, on the other hand, is increasing in the visual tracking field thanks to their ability to handle multi-modal distributions in cluttered scenes. Traditional particle filters utilize transition prior as importance sampling function, but this can result in poor posterior sampling. The objective of this research is to investigate and propose stable face tracker capable of dealing with challenges like rapid and random motion of head, scale changes when people are moving closer or further from the camera, motion of multiple people with close skin tones in the vicinity of the model person, presence of clutter and occlusion of face. The main focus has been on investigating an efficient method to address the sensitivity of the colour-based trackers in case of gradual or drastic illumination variations. The particle filter is used to overcome the instability of face trackers due to nonlinear and random head motions. To increase the traditional particle filter\u27s sampling efficiency an improved version of the particle filter is introduced that considers the latest measurements. This improved particle filter employs a new colour-based bottom-up approach that leads particles to generate an effective proposal distribution. The colour-based bottom-up approach is a classification technique for fast skin colour segmentation. This method is independent to distribution shape and does not require excessive memory storage or exhaustive prior training. Finally, to address the adaptability of the colour-based face tracker to illumination changes, an original likelihood model is proposed based of spatial rank information that considers both the illumination invariant colour ordering of a face\u27s pixels in an image or video frame and the spatial interaction between them. The original contribution of this work lies in the unique mixture of existing and proposed components to improve colour-base recognition and tracking of faces in complex scenes, especially where drastic illumination changes occur. Experimental results of the final version of the proposed face tracker, which combines the methods developed, are provided in the last chapter of this manuscript

    Occlusion handling in multiple people tracking

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    Object tracking with occlusion handling is a challenging problem in automated video surveillance. Occlusion handling and tracking have always been considered as separate modules. We have proposed an automated video surveillance system, which automatically detects occlusions and perform occlusion handling, while the tracker continues to track resulting separated objects. A new approach based on sub-blobbing is presented for tracking objects accurately and steadily, when the target encounters occlusion in video sequences. We have used a feature-based framework for tracking, which involves feature extraction and feature matching

    Improving nuclear medicine with deep learning and explainability: two real-world use cases in parkinsonian syndrome and safety dosimetry

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    Computer vision in the area of medical imaging has rapidly improved during recent years as a consequence of developments in deep learning and explainability algorithms. In addition, imaging in nuclear medicine is becoming increasingly sophisticated, with the emergence of targeted radiotherapies that enable treatment and imaging on a molecular level (“theranostics”) where radiolabeled targeted molecules are directly injected into the bloodstream. Based on our recent work, we present two use-cases in nuclear medicine as follows: first, the impact of automated organ segmentation required for personalized dosimetry in patients with neuroendocrine tumors and second, purely data-driven identification and verification of brain regions for diagnosis of Parkinson’s disease. Convolutional neural network was used for automated organ segmentation on computed tomography images. The segmented organs were used for calculation of the energy deposited into the organ-at-risk for patients treated with a radiopharmaceutical. Our method resulted in faster and cheaper dosimetry and only differed by 7% from dosimetry performed by two medical physicists. The identification of brain regions, however was analyzed on dopamine-transporter single positron emission tomography images using convolutional neural network and explainability, i.e., layer-wise relevance propagation algorithm. Our findings confirm that the extra-striatal brain regions, i.e., insula, amygdala, ventromedial prefrontal cortex, thalamus, anterior temporal cortex, superior frontal lobe, and pons contribute to the interpretation of images beyond the striatal regions. In current common diagnostic practice, however, only the striatum is the reference region, while extra-striatal regions are neglected. We further demonstrate that deep learning-based diagnosis combined with explainability algorithm can be recommended to support interpretation of this image modality in clinical routine for parkinsonian syndromes, with a total computation time of three seconds which is compatible with busy clinical workflow. Overall, this thesis shows for the first time that deep learning with explainability can achieve results competitive with human performance and generate novel hypotheses, thus paving the way towards improved diagnosis and treatment in nuclear medicine

    The visual object tracking VOT2015 challenge results

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    The Visual Object Tracking challenge 2015, VOT2015, aims at comparing short-term single-object visual trackers that do not apply pre-learned models of object appearance. Results of 62 trackers are presented. The number of tested trackers makes VOT 2015 the largest benchmark on short-term tracking to date. For each participating tracker, a short description is provided in the appendix. Features of the VOT2015 challenge that go beyond its VOT2014 predecessor are: (i) a new VOT2015 dataset twice as large as in VOT2014 with full annotation of targets by rotated bounding boxes and per-frame attribute, (ii) extensions of the VOT2014 evaluation methodology by introduction of a new performance measure. The dataset, the evaluation kit as well as the results are publicly available at the challenge website
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