IET Computer Vision
Volume 7, Issue 3, June 2013
Volumes & issues:
Volume 7, Issue 3
June 2013
Locally discriminative stable model for visual tracking with clustering and principle component analysis
- Author(s): Canlong Zhang ; Zhongliang Jing ; Yanping Tang ; Bo Jin ; Gang Xiao
- Source: IET Computer Vision, Volume 7, Issue 3, p. 151 –162
- DOI: 10.1049/iet-cvi.2012.0180
- Type: Article
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The challenge of visual tracking mainly comes from intrinsic appearance variations of the target and extrinsic environment changes around the target in a long duration, so the tracker that can simultaneously tolerate these variabilities is largely expected. In this study, the authors propose a new tracking approach based on discriminative stable regions (DSRs). The DSRs are obtained based on the criterion of maximal local entropy and spatial discrimination, which enables the tracker to handle well distractors and appearance variations. The collaborative tracking incorporated hierarchical clustering can tolerate motion noise and occlusions. In addition, as an efficient tool, the principle component analysis is used to discover the potential affine relation between DSR and the target, which timely adapts to the shape deformation of the target. Extensive experiments show that the proposed method achieves superior performance in many challenging target tracking tasks.
Mutual information-based binarisation of multiple images of an object: an application in medical imaging
- Author(s): Yaniv Gal ; Andrew Mehnert ; Stephen Rose ; Stuart Crozier
- Source: IET Computer Vision, Volume 7, Issue 3, p. 163 –169
- DOI: 10.1049/iet-cvi.2012.0135
- Type: Article
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A new method for image thresholding of two or more images that are acquired in different modalities or acquisition protocols is proposed. The method is based on measures from information theory and has no underlying free parameters nor does it require training or calibration. The method is based on finding an optimal set of global thresholds, one for each image, by maximising the mutual information above the thresholds while minimising the mutual information below the thresholds. Although some assumptions on the nature of images are made, no assumptions are made by the method on the intensity distributions or on the shape of the image histograms. The effectiveness of the method is demonstrated both on synthetic images and medical images from clinical practice. It is then compared against three other thresholding methods
Shape and appearance priors for level set-based left ventricle segmentation
- Author(s): Ronghua Yang ; Majid Mirmehdi ; Xianghua Xie ; David Hall
- Source: IET Computer Vision, Volume 7, Issue 3, p. 170 –183
- DOI: 10.1049/iet-cvi.2012.0081
- Type: Article
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The authors propose a novel spatiotemporal constraint based on shape and appearance and combine it with a level-set deformable model for left ventricle (LV) segmentation in four-dimensional gated cardiac SPECT, particularly in the presence of perfusion defects. The model incorporates appearance and shape information into a ‘soft-to-hard’ probabilistic constraint, and utilises spatiotemporal regularisation via a maximum a posteriori framework. This constraint force allows more flexibility than the rigid forces of shape constraint-only schemes, as well as other state of the art joint shape and appearance constraints. The combined model can hypothesise defective LV borders based on prior knowledge. The authors present comparative results to illustrate the improvement gain. A brief defect detection example is finally presented as an application of the proposed method.
Efficient algorithms for detection of face, eye and eye state
- Author(s): Hashem Kalbkhani ; Mahrokh G. Shayesteh ; Seyyed Mohsen Mousavi
- Source: IET Computer Vision, Volume 7, Issue 3, p. 184 –200
- DOI: 10.1049/iet-cvi.2011.0091
- Type: Article
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Eye state analysis (open or closed) is an important step in fatigue detection. In this study, an efficient algorithm for eye state detection is proposed. At first, a new face detection method is presented for noisy images that finds the face area in the input image well. Then, novel algorithms for detection of eye region and eye state are introduced. The performance of the proposed method is evaluated on four different databases namely FERET, Aberdeen, IMM and CVL which contain more than 5700 images with different descents, positions, light conditions and glasses. The results show that the new method achieves more accuracy rate than the previously presented algorithms, while it does not need training data and is also computationally efficient.
Non-linear dimensionality reduction using fuzzy lattices
- Author(s): Rajiv Kapoor and Rashmi Gupta
- Source: IET Computer Vision, Volume 7, Issue 3, p. 201 –208
- DOI: 10.1049/iet-cvi.2012.0097
- Type: Article
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The proposed method is based on extraction of non-linearity from the nearest neighbourhood elements of image. To detect non-linearity, relation between the nearest neighbourhood elements of the image, have been expressed in terms of Gaussian membership functions. All the elements of the image are connected with the nearest neighbourhood elements with some membership degree of the Gaussian functions. It results in the formation of number of fuzzy lattices. The lattices have been expressed in the form of Schrödinger equation, to find the kinetic energy (KE) used, corresponding to change occurring in the facial activity of a person. Finally, the KE embedded in three dimension space is used to distinguish non-linear changes during occurrence of various facial activities. Experimental results show that proposed method is effective in recognition of facial expression as it focuses on extracting the non-linear features corresponding to contours of maximum energy which are appearing because of different expressions.
Assessment of stereo camera calibration techniques for a portable mobile mapping system
- Author(s): Michael Brogan ; Simon McLoughlin ; Catherine Deegan
- Source: IET Computer Vision, Volume 7, Issue 3, p. 209 –217
- DOI: 10.1049/iet-cvi.2012.0085
- Type: Article
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Mobile mapping systems that detect and geo-reference road markings almost always consist of a stereo camera system integrated with a global positioning system/inertial navigation system. The data acquired by this navigational system allows features detected in the stereo images to be assigned global co-ordinates. An essential step in this process is the calibration of the cameras, as it relates the pose of the two cameras to each other and a world co-ordinate system. In Europe, road markings must be evaluated from a 35 m range, so the cameras are required to have a wide field of view. Traditional calibration methods supposedly require a calibration object that would fill most of the calibration images. This large field of view would require a calibration object of substantial size that would be impractical for the purposes of this portable system. This study explores the theory of camera calibration and then details two camera calibration techniques (using portable 3D and 2D calibration objects). The accuracy of these methods is then evaluated using a ground-truth experiment.
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