2,268 research outputs found
Comparison of Spatial Interpolation Techniques Using Visualization and Quantitative Assessment
Spatial interpolation has been widely and commonly used in many studies to create surface data based on a set of sampled points, such as soil properties, temperature, and precipitation. Currently, there are many commercial Geographic Information System (GIS) or statistics software offering spatial interpolation functions, such as inverse distance weighted (IDW), kriging, spline, and others. To date, there is no “rule of thumb” on the most appropriate spatial interpolation techniques for certain situations, though general suggestions have been published. Many studies rely on quantitative assessment to determine the performance of spatial interpolation techniques. Most quantitative assessment methods provide a numeric index for the overall performance of an interpolated surface. Although it is objective and convenient, there are many facts or trends not captured by quantitative assessments. This study used 2D visualization and 3D visualization to identify trends not evident in quantitative assessment. This study also presented a special case, a closed system in which all interpolated surfaces should sum up to 100%, to demonstrate the interaction between interpolated surfaces that were created separately and independently
Weakly-supervised Caricature Face Parsing through Domain Adaptation
A caricature is an artistic form of a person's picture in which certain
striking characteristics are abstracted or exaggerated in order to create a
humor or sarcasm effect. For numerous caricature related applications such as
attribute recognition and caricature editing, face parsing is an essential
pre-processing step that provides a complete facial structure understanding.
However, current state-of-the-art face parsing methods require large amounts of
labeled data on the pixel-level and such process for caricature is tedious and
labor-intensive. For real photos, there are numerous labeled datasets for face
parsing. Thus, we formulate caricature face parsing as a domain adaptation
problem, where real photos play the role of the source domain, adapting to the
target caricatures. Specifically, we first leverage a spatial transformer based
network to enable shape domain shifts. A feed-forward style transfer network is
then utilized to capture texture-level domain gaps. With these two steps, we
synthesize face caricatures from real photos, and thus we can use parsing
ground truths of the original photos to learn the parsing model. Experimental
results on the synthetic and real caricatures demonstrate the effectiveness of
the proposed domain adaptation algorithm. Code is available at:
https://github.com/ZJULearning/CariFaceParsing .Comment: Accepted in ICIP 2019, code and model are available at
https://github.com/ZJULearning/CariFaceParsin
Estimating Trust Strength For Supporting Effective Recommendation Services
In the age of information explosion, Internet facilitates product searching and collecting much more convenient for users. However, it is time-consuming and exhausting for users to deal with large amounts of product information. In response, various recommendation approaches have been developed to recommend products that match users’ preferences and requirements. In addition to the well-known collaborative filtering recommendation approach, the trust-based recommendation approach is the emerging one. The reason is that most of online communities allow users to express their trust on other users. Based on the analysis of trust relationships, the trust-based recommendation approach finds out and consults the opinions of more reliable users and therefore makes better recommendations. Existing trust-based recommendation techniques consider all trust relationships in a given trust network equally important and give them the same trust strength. However, in a real-world setting, trust relationships may be of various strengths. In response, in this study, we propose a mechanism for trust strength estimation on the basis of the machine learning approach and estimate the trust strength for each existing trust relationship in a given trust network. To overcome the sparsity of the trust network, we also develop a modified trust propagation method to expand the original trust network. Finally, we perform a series of experiments to demonstrate the performance of our trust-based recommendation approach based on the trust strength estimation mechanism. Our empirical evaluation results show that our proposed approach outperforms our benchmark techniques, i.e., the traditional collaborative filtering approach and the original trust-based one
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