38 research outputs found

    Boosting adaptive linear weak classifiers for online learning and tracking

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    Online boosting methods have recently been used successfully for tracking, background subtraction etc. Conventional online boosting algorithms emphasize on interchanging new weak classifiers/features to adapt with the change over time. We are proposing a new online boosting algorithm where the form of the weak classifiers themselves are modified to cope with scene changes. Instead of replacement, the parameters of the weak classifiers are altered in accordance with the new data subset presented to the online boosting process at each time step. Thus we may avoid altogether the issue of how many weak classifiers to be replaced to capture the change in the data or which efficient search algorithm to use for a fast retrieval of weak classifiers. A computationally efficient method has been used in this paper for the adaptation of linear weak classifiers. The proposed algorithm has been implemented to be used both as an online learning and a tracking method. We show quantitative and qualitative results on both UCI datasets and several video sequences to demonstrate improved performance of our algorithm. 1

    Machine learning of hierarchical clustering to segment 2D and 3D images

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    We aim to improve segmentation through the use of machine learning tools during region agglomeration. We propose an active learning approach for performing hierarchical agglomerative segmentation from superpixels. Our method combines multiple features at all scales of the agglomerative process, works for data with an arbitrary number of dimensions, and scales to very large datasets. We advocate the use of variation of information to measure segmentation accuracy, particularly in 3D electron microscopy (EM) images of neural tissue, and using this metric demonstrate an improvement over competing algorithms in EM and natural images.Comment: 15 pages, 8 figure

    Annotating Synapses in Large EM Datasets

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    Reconstructing neuronal circuits at the level of synapses is a central problem in neuroscience and becoming a focus of the emerging field of connectomics. To date, electron microscopy (EM) is the most proven technique for identifying and quantifying synaptic connections. As advances in EM make acquiring larger datasets possible, subsequent manual synapse identification ({\em i.e.}, proofreading) for deciphering a connectome becomes a major time bottleneck. Here we introduce a large-scale, high-throughput, and semi-automated methodology to efficiently identify synapses. We successfully applied our methodology to the Drosophila medulla optic lobe, annotating many more synapses than previous connectome efforts. Our approaches are extensible and will make the often complicated process of synapse identification accessible to a wider-community of potential proofreaders
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