Spatio–temporal Segmentation Using Laserscanner and Video Sequences

Author(s):  
Nico Kaempchen ◽  
Markus Zocholl ◽  
Klaus C. J. Dietmayer
2001 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cristina Urdiales ◽  
Antonio J. Bandera ◽  
Juan A. Rodriguez ◽  
Francisco Sandoval

Author(s):  
Guoliang Luo ◽  
Zhigang Deng ◽  
Xin Zhao ◽  
Xiaogang Jin ◽  
Wei Zeng ◽  
...  

2014 ◽  
Vol 34 (1) ◽  
pp. 1 ◽  
Author(s):  
Guillaume Noyel ◽  
Jesus Angulo ◽  
Dominique Jeulin ◽  
Daniel Balvay ◽  
Charles-André Cuenod

We propose a new computer aided detection framework for tumours acquired on DCE-MRI (Dynamic Contrast Enhanced Magnetic Resonance Imaging) series on small animals. To perform this approach, we consider DCE-MRI series as multivariate images. A full multivariate segmentation method based on dimensionality reduction, noise filtering, supervised classification and stochastic watershed is explained and tested on several data sets. The two main key-points introduced in this paper are noise reduction preserving contours and spatio temporal segmentation by stochastic watershed. Noise reduction is performed in a special way to select factorial axes of Factor Correspondence Analysis in order to preserves contours. Then a spatio-temporal approach based on stochastic watershed is used to segment tumours. The results obtained are in accordance with the diagnosis of the medical doctors.


2018 ◽  
pp. 2083-2101
Author(s):  
Masaki Takahashi ◽  
Masahide Naemura ◽  
Mahito Fujii ◽  
James J. Little

A feature-representation method for recognizing actions in sports videos on the basis of the relationship between human actions and camera motions is proposed. The method involves the following steps: First, keypoint trajectories are extracted as motion features in spatio-temporal sub-regions called “spatio-temporal multiscale bags” (STMBs). Global representations and local representations from one sub-region in the STMBs are then combined to create a “glocal pairwise representation” (GPR). The GPR considers the co-occurrence of camera motions and human actions. Finally, two-stage SVM classifiers are trained with STMB-based GPRs, and specified human actions in video sequences are identified. An experimental evaluation of the recognition accuracy of the proposed method (by using the public OSUPEL basketball video dataset and broadcast videos) demonstrated that the method can robustly detect specific human actions in both public and broadcast basketball video sequences.


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