Extending Egocentric Vision into Vehicles: Malaysian Dash-Cam Dataset

Author(s):  
Mahamat Moussa ◽  
Chern Hong Lim ◽  
KokSheik Wong
Keyword(s):  
2021 ◽  
pp. 260-274
Author(s):  
Lyudmila F. Shirokova ◽  

Rudolf Sloboda is one of the brightest and most distinctive writers of the generation of the Slovak “sixties”. He was born and lived most of his life in the village of Devinska Nova Ves near Bratislava with a predominantly Croatian population. Sloboda is the author of dozens of works, including novels, stories, short stories, essays, poems, plays, film scripts. In his work, he was based on the original “egocentric” vision of reality and the confessional-monologue type of narration. The themes of his largely autobiographical prose and drama were complex, often painful relationships between people, crisis states of the personality — everything he faced in his own life. The main space of Sloboda’s books is his native village, with its constants and inevitable transformation. The novels of the writer, first of all — “The Narcissus” (1965), “The Reason” (1982) and “The Blood” (1991), reflect the most important stages in the life and mental wavering of the author and his hero: the early youth marked by entering into an unknown social environment and his first erotic experiences; the maturity with family problems and setbacks, psychological crisis; approaching the old age with the extinction of feelings and desires, that lead to inner emptiness. The universal sound of “private” statements about the existential problems of a person, the artistic persuasiveness, originality and recognizability of his style — all this makes the works of Rudolf Sloboda a part of the Gold Reserve of the modern Slovak literature.


Author(s):  
Mariella Dimiccoli ◽  
Cathal Gurrin ◽  
David Crandall ◽  
Xavier Giró-i-Nieto ◽  
Petia Radeva

Sensors ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 16 (1) ◽  
pp. 72 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thi-Hoa-Cuc Nguyen ◽  
Jean-Christophe Nebel ◽  
Francisco Florez-Revuelta

Author(s):  
Jingzhe Zhang ◽  
Lishuo Zhuang ◽  
Yang Wang ◽  
Yameng Zhou ◽  
Yan Meng ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

Sensors ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 16 (2) ◽  
pp. 237 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stefano Alletto ◽  
Davide Abati ◽  
Giuseppe Serra ◽  
Rita Cucchiara
Keyword(s):  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Adrián Núñez-Marcos ◽  
Gorka Azkune ◽  
Ignacio Arganda-Carreras

Author(s):  
Dima Damen ◽  
Hazel Doughty ◽  
Giovanni Maria Farinella ◽  
Antonino Furnari ◽  
Evangelos Kazakos ◽  
...  

AbstractThis paper introduces the pipeline to extend the largest dataset in egocentric vision, EPIC-KITCHENS. The effort culminates in EPIC-KITCHENS-100, a collection of 100 hours, 20M frames, 90K actions in 700 variable-length videos, capturing long-term unscripted activities in 45 environments, using head-mounted cameras. Compared to its previous version (Damen in Scaling egocentric vision: ECCV, 2018), EPIC-KITCHENS-100 has been annotated using a novel pipeline that allows denser (54% more actions per minute) and more complete annotations of fine-grained actions (+128% more action segments). This collection enables new challenges such as action detection and evaluating the “test of time”—i.e. whether models trained on data collected in 2018 can generalise to new footage collected two years later. The dataset is aligned with 6 challenges: action recognition (full and weak supervision), action detection, action anticipation, cross-modal retrieval (from captions), as well as unsupervised domain adaptation for action recognition. For each challenge, we define the task, provide baselines and evaluation metrics.


Author(s):  
Dima Damen ◽  
Hazel Doughty ◽  
Giovanni Maria Farinella ◽  
Sanja Fidler ◽  
Antonino Furnari ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Sho Ooi ◽  
◽  
Tsuyoshi Ikegaya ◽  
Mutsuo Sano ◽  
Hajime Tabuchi ◽  
...  

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