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Publications

Publications by Luís Filipe Teixeira

2008

Tomatic breast contour detection in digital photographs

Authors
Cardoso, JS; Teixeira, LF; Cardoso, MJ;

Publication
HEALTHINF 2008: PROCEEDINGS OF THE FIRST INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON HEALTH INFORMATICS, VOL 2

Abstract
Breast cancer conservative treatment (BCCT), due to its proven oncological safety, is considered, when feasible, the gold standard of breast cancer treatment. However, aesthetic results are heterogeneous and difficult to evaluate in a standardized way, due to the lack of reproducibility of the subjective methods usually applied. The objective assessment methods, considered in the past as being less capable of evaluating all aspects of BCCT, are nowadays being preferred to overcome the drawbacks of the subjective evaluation. A recent computer-aided medical system was developed to objectively and automatically evaluate the aesthetic result of BCCT. In this system, the detection of the breast contour on the digital photograph of the patient is a necessary step to extract the features Subsequently used in the evaluation process. In this paper an algorithm based on the shortest path on a graph is proposed to detect automatically the breast contour. The proposed method extends an existing semi-automatic algorithm for the same purpose. A comprehensive comparison with manually-drawn contours reveals the strength of the proposed method.

2008

Automatic system for the recognition of amounts in handwritten cheques

Authors
Coelho, F; Batista, L; Teixeira, LF; Cardoso, JS;

Publication
SIGMAP 2008: PROCEEDINGS OF THE INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON SIGNAL PROCESSING AND MULTIMEDIA APPLICATIONS

Abstract
Until the rise of electronic means for direct debit, bank cheques have been used as the best form of payment, balancing security and ease of use. Its acceptance and generalized use are result of international agreements that define rules for filling and using it. The fast processing of payments and transactions through safer electronic methods has created the need to reduce its usage over the last years. But despite this progressive reduction, bank cheques still are and will continue to be used; therefore, there is the need to optimize processing mechanisms. The existing automatic cheque processing systems are proprietary and not adapted to the Portuguese language, which is crucial for the cheque analysis and recognition. A prototype of an automatic system for the recognition of the amount in Portuguese bank cheques has been implemented and is being used as a test platform for improved intelligent character recognition algorithms.

2007

Object segmentation using background modelling and cascaded change detection

Authors
Teixeira, LF; Cardoso, JS; Corte Real, L;

Publication
Journal of Multimedia

Abstract
The automatic extraction and analysis of visual information is becoming generalised. The first step in this processing chain is usually separating or segmenting the captured visual scene in individual objects. Obtaining a perceptually correct segmentation is however a cumber some task. Moreover, typical applications relying on object segmentation, such as visual surveillance, introduce two additional requirements: (1) it should represent only a small fraction of the total amount of processing time and (2) realtime overall processing. We propose a technique that tackles these problems using a cascade of change detection tests, including noise-induced, illumination variation and structural changes. An objective comparison of common pixelwise modelling methods is first done. A cost-based partition- distance between segmentation masks is introduced and used to evaluate the methods. Both the mixture of Gaussians and the kernel density estimation are used as a base to detect structural changes in the proposed algorithm. Experimental results show that the cascade technique consistently outperforms the base methods, without additional post-processing and without additional processing overheads. © 2007 ACADEMY PUBLISHER.

2007

Cascaded change detection for foreground segmentation

Authors
Teixeira, LF; Corte Real, L;

Publication
2007 IEEE Workshop on Motion and Video Computing, WMVC 2007

Abstract
The extraction of relevant objects (foreground) from a background is an important first step in many applications. We propose a technique that tackles this problem using a cascade of change detection tests, including noise-induced, illumination variation and structural changes. An objective comparison of pixel-wise modelling methods is first presented. Given its best relation performance/complexity, the mixture of Gaussians was chosen to be used in the proposed method to detect structural changes. Experimental results show that the cascade technique consistently outperforms the commonly used mixture of Gaussians, without additional post-processing and without the expense of processing overheads. ©2007 IEEE.

2012

AUTOMATIC DESCRIPTION OF OBJECT APPEARANCES IN A WIDE-AREA SURVEILLANCE SCENARIO

Authors
Teixeira, LF; Carvalho, P; Cardoso, JS; Corte Real, L;

Publication
2012 IEEE INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON IMAGE PROCESSING (ICIP 2012)

Abstract
In this paper we present a complete system for object tracking over multiple uncalibrated cameras with or without overlapping fields of view. We employ an approach based on the bag-of-visterms technique to represent and match tracked objects. The tracks are compared with a global object model based on an ensemble of individual object models. The system can globally recognise objects and minimise common tracking problems such as track drift or split. The output is a timeline representing the objects present in a given multi-camera scene. The methods employed in the system are online and can be optimized to operate in real-time.

2009

Video object matching across multiple independent views using local descriptors and adaptive learning

Authors
Teixeira, LF; Corte Real, L;

Publication
PATTERN RECOGNITION LETTERS

Abstract
Object detection and tracking is an essential preliminary task in event analysis systems (e.g. visual surveillance). Typically objects are extracted and tagged, forming representative tracks of their activity. Tagging is Usually performed by probabilistic data association, however, in systems capturing disjoint areas it is often not possible to establish such associations, as data may have been collected at different times OF in different locations. In this case, appearance matching is a valuable aid. We propose using bag-of-visterms, i.e. an histogram of quantized local feature descriptors, to represent and match tracked objects. This method has proven to be effective for object matching and classification in image retrieval applications, where descriptors can be extracted a priori. An important difference in event analysis systems is that relevant information is typically restricted to the foreground. Descriptors can, therefore, be extracted faster, approaching real-time requirements. Also, unlike image retrieval, objects can change over time and therefore their model needs to be updated Continuously. Incremental or adaptive learning is used to tackle this problem. Using independent tracks of 30 different persons, we show that the bag-of-visterms representation effectively discriminates visual object tracks and that it presents high resilience to incorrect object segmentation. Additionally, this methodology allows the construction of scalable object models that can be used to match tracks across independent views.

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