79 research outputs found

    Climbing: A Unified Approach for Global Constraints on Hierarchical Segmentation

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    International audienceThe paper deals with global constraints for hierarchical segmentations. The proposed framework associates, with an input image, a hierarchy of segmentations and an energy, and the subsequent optimization problem. It is the first paper that compiles the different global constraints and unifies them as Climbing energies. The transition from global optimization to local optimization is attained by the h-increasingness property, which allows to compare parent and child partition energies in hierarchies. The laws of composition of such energies are established and examples are given over the Berkeley Dataset for colour and texture segmentation

    On the Usability of Probably Approximately Correct Implication Bases

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    We revisit the notion of probably approximately correct implication bases from the literature and present a first formulation in the language of formal concept analysis, with the goal to investigate whether such bases represent a suitable substitute for exact implication bases in practical use-cases. To this end, we quantitatively examine the behavior of probably approximately correct implication bases on artificial and real-world data sets and compare their precision and recall with respect to their corresponding exact implication bases. Using a small example, we also provide qualitative insight that implications from probably approximately correct bases can still represent meaningful knowledge from a given data set.Comment: 17 pages, 8 figures; typos added, corrected x-label on graph

    On morphological hierarchical representations for image processing and spatial data clustering

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    Hierarchical data representations in the context of classi cation and data clustering were put forward during the fties. Recently, hierarchical image representations have gained renewed interest for segmentation purposes. In this paper, we briefly survey fundamental results on hierarchical clustering and then detail recent paradigms developed for the hierarchical representation of images in the framework of mathematical morphology: constrained connectivity and ultrametric watersheds. Constrained connectivity can be viewed as a way to constrain an initial hierarchy in such a way that a set of desired constraints are satis ed. The framework of ultrametric watersheds provides a generic scheme for computing any hierarchical connected clustering, in particular when such a hierarchy is constrained. The suitability of this framework for solving practical problems is illustrated with applications in remote sensing

    On the equivalence between hierarchical segmentations and ultrametric watersheds

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    We study hierarchical segmentation in the framework of edge-weighted graphs. We define ultrametric watersheds as topological watersheds null on the minima. We prove that there exists a bijection between the set of ultrametric watersheds and the set of hierarchical segmentations. We end this paper by showing how to use the proposed framework in practice in the example of constrained connectivity; in particular it allows to compute such a hierarchy following a classical watershed-based morphological scheme, which provides an efficient algorithm to compute the whole hierarchy.Comment: 19 pages, double-colum

    Towards a Soft Evaluation and Refinement of Tagging in Digital Humanities

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    In this paper we estimate the soundness of tagging in digital repositories within the field of Digital Humanities by studying the (semantic) conceptual structure behind the folksnonomy. The use of association rules associated to this conceptual structure (Stem and Luxenburger basis) allows to faithfully (from a semantic point of view) complete the tagging (or suggest such a completion).Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad TIN2013-41086-PJunta de Andalucía TIC-606

    Constructive links between some morphological hierarchies on edge-weighted graphs

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    International audienceIn edge-weighted graphs, we provide a unified presentation of a family of popular morphological hierarchies such as component trees, quasi flat zones, binary partition trees, and hierarchical watersheds. For any hierarchy of this family, we show if (and how) it can be obtained from any other element of the family. In this sense, the main contribution of this paper is the study of all constructive links between these hierarchies

    Redundancy, Deduction Schemes, and Minimum-Size Bases for Association Rules

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    Association rules are among the most widely employed data analysis methods in the field of Data Mining. An association rule is a form of partial implication between two sets of binary variables. In the most common approach, association rules are parameterized by a lower bound on their confidence, which is the empirical conditional probability of their consequent given the antecedent, and/or by some other parameter bounds such as "support" or deviation from independence. We study here notions of redundancy among association rules from a fundamental perspective. We see each transaction in a dataset as an interpretation (or model) in the propositional logic sense, and consider existing notions of redundancy, that is, of logical entailment, among association rules, of the form "any dataset in which this first rule holds must obey also that second rule, therefore the second is redundant". We discuss several existing alternative definitions of redundancy between association rules and provide new characterizations and relationships among them. We show that the main alternatives we discuss correspond actually to just two variants, which differ in the treatment of full-confidence implications. For each of these two notions of redundancy, we provide a sound and complete deduction calculus, and we show how to construct complete bases (that is, axiomatizations) of absolutely minimum size in terms of the number of rules. We explore finally an approach to redundancy with respect to several association rules, and fully characterize its simplest case of two partial premises.Comment: LMCS accepted pape

    A study of observation scales based on Felzenswalb-Huttenlocher dissimilarity measure for hierarchical segmentation

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    International audienceHierarchical image segmentation provides a region-oriented scale-space, i.e., a set of image segmentations at different detail levels in which the segmentations at finer levels are nested with respect to those at coarser levels. Guimarães et al. proposed a hierarchical graph based image segmentation (HGB) method based on the Felzenszwalb-Huttenlocher dissimilarity. This HGB method computes, for each edge of a graph, the minimum scale in a hierarchy at which two regions linked by this edge should merge according to the dissimilarity. In order to generalize this method, we first propose an algorithm to compute the intervals which contain all the observation scales at which the associated regions should merge. Then, following the current trend in mathematical morphology to study criteria which are not increasing on a hierarchy, we present various strategies to select a significant observation scale in these intervals. We use the BSDS dataset to assess our observation scale selection methods. The experiments show that some of these strategies lead to better segmentation results than the ones obtained with the original HGB method

    Large-scale unit commitment under uncertainty: an updated literature survey

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    The Unit Commitment problem in energy management aims at finding the optimal production schedule of a set of generation units, while meeting various system-wide constraints. It has always been a large-scale, non-convex, difficult problem, especially in view of the fact that, due to operational requirements, it has to be solved in an unreasonably small time for its size. Recently, growing renewable energy shares have strongly increased the level of uncertainty in the system, making the (ideal) Unit Commitment model a large-scale, non-convex and uncertain (stochastic, robust, chance-constrained) program. We provide a survey of the literature on methods for the Uncertain Unit Commitment problem, in all its variants. We start with a review of the main contributions on solution methods for the deterministic versions of the problem, focussing on those based on mathematical programming techniques that are more relevant for the uncertain versions of the problem. We then present and categorize the approaches to the latter, while providing entry points to the relevant literature on optimization under uncertainty. This is an updated version of the paper "Large-scale Unit Commitment under uncertainty: a literature survey" that appeared in 4OR 13(2), 115--171 (2015); this version has over 170 more citations, most of which appeared in the last three years, proving how fast the literature on uncertain Unit Commitment evolves, and therefore the interest in this subject
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