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Tenth IEEE International Conference on Computer Vision (ICCV'05) Volume 1
Detecting Irregularities in Images and in Video
Beijing, China
October 17-October 20
ISBN: 0-7695-2334-X
| ASCII Text | x | ||
| Oren Boiman, Michal Irani, "Detecting Irregularities in Images and in Video," Computer Vision, IEEE International Conference on, vol. 1, pp. 462-469, Tenth IEEE International Conference on Computer Vision (ICCV'05) Volume 1, 2005. | |||
| BibTex | x | ||
| @article{ 10.1109/ICCV.2005.70, author = {Oren Boiman and Michal Irani}, title = {Detecting Irregularities in Images and in Video}, journal ={Computer Vision, IEEE International Conference on}, volume = {1}, year = {2005}, issn = {1550-5499}, pages = {462-469}, doi = {http://doi.ieeecomputersociety.org/10.1109/ICCV.2005.70}, publisher = {IEEE Computer Society}, address = {Los Alamitos, CA, USA}, } | |||
| RefWorks Procite/RefMan/Endnote | x | ||
| TY - CONF JO - Computer Vision, IEEE International Conference on TI - Detecting Irregularities in Images and in Video SN - 1550-5499 SP462 EP469 A1 - Oren Boiman, A1 - Michal Irani, PY - 2005 KW - null VL - 1 JA - Computer Vision, IEEE International Conference on ER - | |||
DOI Bookmark: http://doi.ieeecomputersociety.org/10.1109/ICCV.2005.70
We address the problem of detecting irregularities in visual data, e.g., detecting suspicious behaviors in video sequences, or identifying salient patterns in images. The term "irregular" depends on the context in which the "regular" or "valid" are defined. Yet, it is not realistic to expect explicit definition of all possible valid configurations for a given context. We pose the problem of determining the validity of visual data as a process of constructing a puzzle: We try to compose a new observed image region or a new video segment ("the query") using chunks of data ("pieces of puzzle") extracted from previous visual examples ("the database"). Regions in the observed data which can be composed using large contiguous chunks of data from the database are considered very likely, whereas regions in the observed data which cannot be composed from the database (or can be composed, but only using small fragmented pieces) are regarded as unlikely/suspicious. The problem is posed as an inference process in a probabilistic graphical model. We show applications of this approach to identifying saliency in images and video, and for suspicious behavior recognition.
Citation:
Oren Boiman, Michal Irani, "Detecting Irregularities in Images and in Video," iccv, vol. 1, pp.462-469, Tenth IEEE International Conference on Computer Vision (ICCV'05) Volume 1, 2005
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