Abstract-Human action in video sequences can be seen as silhouettes of a moving torso and protruding limbs undergoing articulated motion. We regard human actions as three-dimensional shapes induced by the silhouettes in the space-time volume. We adopt a recent approach [14] for analyzing 2D shapes and generalize it to deal with volumetric space-time action shapes. Our method utilizes properties of the solution to the Poisson equation to extract space-time features such as local space-time saliency, action dynamics, shape structure, and orientation. We show that these features are useful for action recognition, detection, and clustering. The method is fast, does not require video alignment, and is applicable in (but not limited to) many scenarios where the background is known. Moreover, we demonstrate the robustness of our method to partial occlusions, nonrigid deformations, significant changes in scale and viewpoint, high irregularities in the performance of an action, and low-quality video.
Abstract-Human action in video sequences can be seen as silhouettes of a moving torso and protruding limbs undergoing articulated motion. We regard human actions as three-dimensional shapes induced by the silhouettes in the space-time volume. We adopt a recent approach [14] for analyzing 2D shapes and generalize it to deal with volumetric space-time action shapes. Our method utilizes properties of the solution to the Poisson equation to extract space-time features such as local space-time saliency, action dynamics, shape structure, and orientation. We show that these features are useful for action recognition, detection, and clustering. The method is fast, does not require video alignment, and is applicable in (but not limited to) many scenarios where the background is known. Moreover, we demonstrate the robustness of our method to partial occlusions, nonrigid deformations, significant changes in scale and viewpoint, high irregularities in the performance of an action, and low-quality video.
No abstract
Abstract-We present a novel approach that allows us to reliably compute many useful properties of a silhouette. Our approach assigns, for every internal point of the silhouette, a value reflecting the mean time required for a random walk beginning at the point to hit the boundaries. This function can be computed by solving Poisson's equation, with the silhouette contours providing boundary conditions. We show how this function can be used to reliably extract various shape properties including part structure and rough skeleton, local orientation and aspect ratio of different parts, and convex and concave sections of the boundaries. In addition to this, we discuss properties of the solution and show how to efficiently compute this solution using multigrid algorithms. We demonstrate the utility of the extracted properties by using them for shape classification and retrieval.
Abstract-Radical prostatectomy is performed on approximately 40% of men with organ-confined prostate cancer. Pathologic information obtained from the prostatectomy specimen provides important prognostic information and guides recommendations for adjuvant treatment. The current pathology protocol in most centers involves primarily qualitative assessment. In this paper, we describe and evaluate our system for automatic prostate cancer detection and grading on hematoxylin & eosin-stained tissue images. Our approach is intended to address the dual challenges of large data size and the need for high-level tissue information about the locations and grades of tumors. Our system uses two stages of AdaBoost-based classification. The first provides high-level tissue component labeling of a superpixel image partitioning. The second uses the tissue component labeling to provide a classification of cancer versus noncancer, and low-grade versus high-grade cancer. We evaluated our system using 991 sub-images extracted from digital pathology images of 50 whole-mount tissue sections from 15 prostatectomy patients. We measured accuracies of 90% and 85% for the cancer versus noncancer and high-grade versus low-grade classification tasks, respectively. This system represents a first step toward automated cancer quantification on prostate digital histopathology imaging, which could pave the way for more accurately informed postprostatectomy patient care.
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