919 research outputs found

    Spatiotemporal Saliency Detection: State of Art

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    Saliency detection has become a very prominent subject for research in recent time. Many techniques has been defined for the saliency detection.In this paper number of techniques has been explained that include the saliency detection from the year 2000 to 2015, almost every technique has been included.all the methods are explained briefly including their advantages and disadvantages. Comparison between various techniques has been done. With the help of table which includes authors name,paper name,year,techniques,algorithms and challenges. A comparison between levels of acceptance rates and accuracy levels are made

    Recent Advances in Signal Processing

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    The signal processing task is a very critical issue in the majority of new technological inventions and challenges in a variety of applications in both science and engineering fields. Classical signal processing techniques have largely worked with mathematical models that are linear, local, stationary, and Gaussian. They have always favored closed-form tractability over real-world accuracy. These constraints were imposed by the lack of powerful computing tools. During the last few decades, signal processing theories, developments, and applications have matured rapidly and now include tools from many areas of mathematics, computer science, physics, and engineering. This book is targeted primarily toward both students and researchers who want to be exposed to a wide variety of signal processing techniques and algorithms. It includes 27 chapters that can be categorized into five different areas depending on the application at hand. These five categories are ordered to address image processing, speech processing, communication systems, time-series analysis, and educational packages respectively. The book has the advantage of providing a collection of applications that are completely independent and self-contained; thus, the interested reader can choose any chapter and skip to another without losing continuity

    A computational model of visual attention.

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    Visual attention is a process by which the Human Visual System (HVS) selects most important information from a scene. Visual attention models are computational or mathematical models developed to predict this information. The performance of the state-of-the-art visual attention models is limited in terms of prediction accuracy and computational complexity. In spite of significant amount of active research in this area, modelling visual attention is still an open research challenge. This thesis proposes a novel computational model of visual attention that achieves higher prediction accuracy with low computational complexity. A new bottom-up visual attention model based on in-focus regions is proposed. To develop the model, an image dataset is created by capturing images with in-focus and out-of-focus regions. The Discrete Cosine Transform (DCT) spectrum of these images is investigated qualitatively and quantitatively to discover the key frequency coefficients that correspond to the in-focus regions. The model detects these key coefficients by formulating a novel relation between the in-focus and out-of-focus regions in the frequency domain. These frequency coefficients are used to detect the salient in-focus regions. The simulation results show that this attention model achieves good prediction accuracy with low complexity. The prediction accuracy of the proposed in-focus visual attention model is further improved by incorporating sensitivity of the HVS towards the image centre and the human faces. Moreover, the computational complexity is further reduced by using Integer Cosine Transform (ICT). The model is parameter tuned using the hill climbing approach to optimise the accuracy. The performance has been analysed qualitatively and quantitatively using two large image datasets with eye tracking fixation ground truth. The results show that the model achieves higher prediction accuracy with a lower computational complexity compared to the state-of-the-art visual attention models. The proposed model is useful in predicting human fixations in computationally constrained environments. Mainly it is useful in applications such as perceptual video coding, image quality assessment, object recognition and image segmentation

    A biologically plausible system for detecting saliency in video

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    Neuroscientists and cognitive scientists credit the dorsal and ventral pathways for the capability of detecting both still salient and motion salient objects. In this work, a framework is developed to explore potential models of still and motion saliency and is an extension of the original VENUS system. The early visual pathway is modeled by using Independent Component Analysis to learn a set of Gabor-like receptive fields similar to those found in the mammalian visual pathway. These spatial receptive fields form a set of 2D basis feature matrices, which are used to decompose complex visual stimuli into their spatial components. A still saliency map is formed by combining the outputs of convoluting the learned spatial receptive fields with the input stimuli. The dorsal pathway is primarily focused on motion-based information. In this framework, the model uses simple motion segmentation and tracking algorithms to create a statistical model of the motion and color-related information in video streams. A key feature of the human visual system is the ability to detect novelty. This framework uses a set of Gaussian distributions to model color and motion. When a unique event is detected, Gaussian distributions are created and the event is declared novel. The next time a similar event is detected the framework is able to determine that the event is not novel based on the previously created distributions. A forgetting term is also included that allows events that have not been detected for a long period of time to be forgotten

    Image analysis using visual saliency with applications in hazmat sign detection and recognition

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    Visual saliency is the perceptual process that makes attractive objects stand out from their surroundings in the low-level human visual system. Visual saliency has been modeled as a preprocessing step of the human visual system for selecting the important visual information from a scene. We investigate bottom-up visual saliency using spectral analysis approaches. We present separate and composite model families that generalize existing frequency domain visual saliency models. We propose several frequency domain visual saliency models to generate saliency maps using new spectrum processing methods and an entropy-based saliency map selection approach. A group of saliency map candidates are then obtained by inverse transform. A final saliency map is selected among the candidates by minimizing the entropy of the saliency map candidates. The proposed models based on the separate and composite model families are also extended to various color spaces. We develop an evaluation tool for benchmarking visual saliency models. Experimental results show that the proposed models are more accurate and efficient than most state-of-the-art visual saliency models in predicting eye fixation.^ We use the above visual saliency models to detect the location of hazardous material (hazmat) signs in complex scenes. We develop a hazmat sign location detection and content recognition system using visual saliency. Saliency maps are employed to extract salient regions that are likely to contain hazmat sign candidates and then use a Fourier descriptor based contour matching method to locate the border of hazmat signs in these regions. This visual saliency based approach is able to increase the accuracy of sign location detection, reduce the number of false positive objects, and speed up the overall image analysis process. We also propose a color recognition method to interpret the color inside the detected hazmat sign. Experimental results show that our proposed hazmat sign location detection method is capable of detecting and recognizing projective distorted, blurred, and shaded hazmat signs at various distances.^ In other work we investigate error concealment for scalable video coding (SVC). When video compressed with SVC is transmitted over loss-prone networks, the decompressed video can suffer severe visual degradation across multiple frames. In order to enhance the visual quality, we propose an inter-layer error concealment method using motion vector averaging and slice interleaving to deal with burst packet losses and error propagation. Experimental results show that the proposed error concealment methods outperform two existing methods

    Fast and Efficient Foveated Video Compression Schemes for H.264/AVC Platform

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    Some fast and efficient foveated video compression schemes for H.264/AVC platform are presented in this dissertation. The exponential growth in networking technologies and widespread use of video content based multimedia information over internet for mass communication applications like social networking, e-commerce and education have promoted the development of video coding to a great extent. Recently, foveated imaging based image or video compression schemes are in high demand, as they not only match with the perception of human visual system (HVS), but also yield higher compression ratio. The important or salient regions are compressed with higher visual quality while the non-salient regions are compressed with higher compression ratio. From amongst the foveated video compression developments during the last few years, it is observed that saliency detection based foveated schemes are the keen areas of intense research. Keeping this in mind, we propose two multi-scale saliency detection schemes. (1) Multi-scale phase spectrum based saliency detection (FTPBSD); (2) Sign-DCT multi-scale pseudo-phase spectrum based saliency detection (SDCTPBSD). In FTPBSD scheme, a saliency map is determined using phase spectrum of a given image/video with unity magnitude spectrum. On the other hand, the proposed SDCTPBSD method uses sign information of discrete cosine transform (DCT) also known as sign-DCT (SDCT). It resembles the response of receptive field neurons of HVS. A bottom-up spatio-temporal saliency map is obtained by linear weighted sum of spatial saliency map and temporal saliency map. Based on these saliency detection techniques, foveated video compression (FVC) schemes (FVC-FTPBSD and FVC-SDCTPBSD) are developed to improve the compression performance further.Moreover, the 2D-discrete cosine transform (2D-DCT) is widely used in various video coding standards for block based transformation of spatial data. However, for directional featured blocks, 2D-DCT offers sub-optimal performance and may not able to efficiently represent video data with fewer coefficients that deteriorates compression ratio. Various directional transform schemes are proposed in literature for efficiently encoding such directional featured blocks. However, it is observed that these directional transform schemes suffer from many issues like ‘mean weighting defect’, use of a large number of DCTs and a number of scanning patterns. We propose a directional transform scheme based on direction-adaptive fixed length discrete cosine transform (DAFL-DCT) for intra-, and inter-frame to achieve higher coding efficiency in case of directional featured blocks.Furthermore, the proposed DAFL-DCT has the following two encoding modes. (1) Direction-adaptive fixed length ― high efficiency (DAFL-HE) mode for higher compression performance; (2) Direction-adaptive fixed length ― low complexity (DAFL-LC) mode for low complexity with a fair compression ratio. On the other hand, motion estimation (ME) exploits temporal correlation between video frames and yields significant improvement in compression ratio while sustaining high visual quality in video coding. Block-matching motion estimation (BMME) is the most popular approach due to its simplicity and efficiency. However, the real-world video sequences may contain slow, medium and/or fast motion activities. Further, a single search pattern does not prove efficient in finding best matched block for all motion types. In addition, it is observed that most of the BMME schemes are based on uni-modal error surface. Nevertheless, real-world video sequences may exhibit a large number of local minima available within a search window and thus possess multi-modal error surface (MES). Hence, the following two uni-modal error surface based and multi-modal error surface based motion estimation schemes are developed. (1) Direction-adaptive motion estimation (DAME) scheme; (2) Pattern-based modified particle swarm optimization motion estimation (PMPSO-ME) scheme. Subsequently, various fast and efficient foveated video compression schemes are developed with combination of these schemes to improve the video coding performance further while maintaining high visual quality to salient regions. All schemes are incorporated into the H.264/AVC video coding platform. Various experiments have been carried out on H.264/AVC joint model reference software (version JM 18.6). Computing various benchmark metrics, the proposed schemes are compared with other existing competitive schemes in terms of rate-distortion curves, Bjontegaard metrics (BD-PSNR, BD-SSIM and BD-bitrate), encoding time, number of search points and subjective evaluation to derive an overall conclusion

    Digital Image Processing

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    This book presents several recent advances that are related or fall under the umbrella of 'digital image processing', with the purpose of providing an insight into the possibilities offered by digital image processing algorithms in various fields. The presented mathematical algorithms are accompanied by graphical representations and illustrative examples for an enhanced readability. The chapters are written in a manner that allows even a reader with basic experience and knowledge in the digital image processing field to properly understand the presented algorithms. Concurrently, the structure of the information in this book is such that fellow scientists will be able to use it to push the development of the presented subjects even further
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