523 research outputs found
Present and Future CP Measurements
We review theoretical and experimental results on CP violation summarizing
the discussions in the working group on CP violation at the UK phenomenology
workshop 2000 in Durham.Comment: 104 pages, Latex, to appear in Journal of Physics
The Case against Copyright: A Comparative Institutional Analysis of Intellectual Property Regimes
PetalView: Fine-grained Location and Orientation Extraction of Street-view Images via Cross-view Local Search with Supplementary Materials
Satellite-based street-view information extraction by cross-view matching
refers to a task that extracts the location and orientation information of a
given street-view image query by using one or multiple geo-referenced satellite
images. Recent work has initiated a new research direction to find accurate
information within a local area covered by one satellite image centered at a
location prior (e.g., from GPS). It can be used as a standalone solution or
complementary step following a large-scale search with multiple satellite
candidates. However, these existing works require an accurate initial
orientation (angle) prior (e.g., from IMU) and/or do not efficiently search
through all possible poses. To allow efficient search and to give accurate
prediction regardless of the existence or the accuracy of the angle prior, we
present PetalView extractors with multi-scale search. The PetalView extractors
give semantically meaningful features that are equivalent across two
drastically different views, and the multi-scale search strategy efficiently
inspects the satellite image from coarse to fine granularity to provide
sub-meter and sub-degree precision extraction. Moreover, when an angle prior is
given, we propose a learnable prior angle mixer to utilize this information.
Our method obtains the best performance on the VIGOR dataset and successfully
improves the performance on KITTI dataset test 1 set with the recall within 1
meter (r@1m) for location estimation to 68.88% and recall within 1 degree
(r@1d) 21.10% when no angle prior is available, and with angle prior achieves
stable estimations at r@1m and r@1d above 70% and 21%, up to a 40-degree noise
level.Comment: This paper has been accepted by ACM Multimedia 2023. This version
contains additional supplementary material
Beyond Geo-localization: Fine-grained Orientation of Street-view Images by Cross-view Matching with Satellite Imagery
Street-view imagery provides us with novel experiences to explore different
places remotely. Carefully calibrated street-view images (e.g. Google Street
View) can be used for different downstream tasks, e.g. navigation, map features
extraction. As personal high-quality cameras have become much more affordable
and portable, an enormous amount of crowdsourced street-view images are
uploaded to the internet, but commonly with missing or noisy sensor
information. To prepare this hidden treasure for "ready-to-use" status,
determining missing location information and camera orientation angles are two
equally important tasks. Recent methods have achieved high performance on
geo-localization of street-view images by cross-view matching with a pool of
geo-referenced satellite imagery. However, most of the existing works focus
more on geo-localization than estimating the image orientation. In this work,
we re-state the importance of finding fine-grained orientation for street-view
images, formally define the problem and provide a set of evaluation metrics to
assess the quality of the orientation estimation. We propose two methods to
improve the granularity of the orientation estimation, achieving 82.4% and
72.3% accuracy for images with estimated angle errors below 2 degrees for CVUSA
and CVACT datasets, corresponding to 34.9% and 28.2% absolute improvement
compared to previous works. Integrating fine-grained orientation estimation in
training also improves the performance on geo-localization, giving top 1 recall
95.5%/85.5% and 86.8%/80.4% for orientation known/unknown tests on the two
datasets.Comment: This paper has been accepted by ACM Multimedia 2022. The version
contains additional supplementary material
Student politics, teaching politics, black politics: an interview with Ansel Wong
Ansel Wong is the quiet man of British black politics, rarely in the limelight and never seeking political office. And yet his ‘career’ here – from Black Power firebrand to managing a multimillion budget as head of the Greater London Council’s Ethnic Minority Unit in the 1980s – spells out some of the most important developments in black educational and cultural projects. In this interview, he discusses his identification with Pan-Africanism, his involvement in student politics, his role in the establishment of youth projects and supplementary schools in the late 1960s and 1970s, and his involvement in black radical politics in London in the same period, all of which took place against the background of revolutionary ferment in the Third World and the world of ideas, and were not without their own internal class and ethnic conflicts
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