The Infona portal uses cookies, i.e. strings of text saved by a browser on the user's device. The portal can access those files and use them to remember the user's data, such as their chosen settings (screen view, interface language, etc.), or their login data. By using the Infona portal the user accepts automatic saving and using this information for portal operation purposes. More information on the subject can be found in the Privacy Policy and Terms of Service. By closing this window the user confirms that they have read the information on cookie usage, and they accept the privacy policy and the way cookies are used by the portal. You can change the cookie settings in your browser.
Reliable object discovery in realistic indoor scenes is a necessity for many computer vision and service robot applications. In these scenes, semantic segmentation methods have made huge advances in recent years. Such methods can provide useful prior information for object discovery by removing false positives and by delineating object boundaries. We propose a novel method that combines bottom-up...
In this paper, we show that the seminal, biologically-inspired saliency model by Itti et al. [21] is still competitive with current state-of-the-art methods for salient object segmentation if some important adaptions are made. We show which changes are necessary to achieve high performance, with special emphasis on the scale-space: we introduce a twin pyramid for computing Difference-of-Gaussians,...
We present a novel method based on saliency and segmentation to generate generic object candidates from RGB-D data. Our method uses saliency as a cue to roughly estimate the location and extent of the objects present in the scene. Salient regions are used to glue together the segments obtained from over-segmenting the scene by either color or depth segmentation algorithms, or by a combination of both...
In this paper, we propose a novel approach for generating generic object candidates for object discovery and recognition in continuous monocular video. Such candidates have recently become a popular alternative to exhaustive window-based search as basis for classification. Contrary to previous approaches, we address the candidate generation problem at the level of entire video sequences instead of...
Set the date range to filter the displayed results. You can set a starting date, ending date or both. You can enter the dates manually or choose them from the calendar.