Revision as of 16:25, 6 March 2012 by Sameh (talk | contribs)

Computer Vision Student Seminars

The Computer Vision Student Seminars at the University of Maryland College Park are a student-run series of talks given by current graduate students for current graduate students.

To receive regular information about the Computer Vision Student Seminars, subscribe to our mailing list or our talks list.

Description

The purpose of these talks is to:

  • Encourage interaction between computer vision students;
  • Provide an opportunity for computer vision students to be aware of and possibly get involved in the research their peers are conducting;
  • Provide an opportunity for computer vision students to receive feedback on their current research;
  • Provide speaking opportunities for computer vision students.

The guidelines for the format are:

  • An hour-long weekly meeting, consisting of one 20-40 minute talk followed by discussion and food.
  • The talks are meant to be casual and discussion is encouraged.
  • Topics may include current research, past research, general topic presentations, paper summaries and critiques, or anything else beneficial to the computer vision graduate student community.


Schedule Spring 2012

All talks take place Thursdays at 4pm in AVW 3450.

Date Speaker Title
February 2 Ching Lik Teo The Telluride Neuromorphic Workshop Experience
February 9 Jonghyun Choi A Complementary Local Feature Descriptor for Face Identification (CCS-POP)
February 16 Sameh Khamis Energy Minimization with Graph Cuts
February 23 Jay Pujara Using Classifier Cascades for Scalable E-Mail Classification
March 1 (ECCV week, no meeting)
March 8 Jie Ni Example-Driven Manifold Priors for Image Deconvolution
March 15 Huimin Guo
March 22 (Spring Break)
March 29 Daozheng Chen
April 5 Jaishanker Pillai
April 12 Jun-Cheng Chen
April 19 Sima Taheri
April 26 Sujal Bista
May 3 Nazre Batool
May 10 Stephen Xi Chen
May 17 (no meeting, final exams)


Talk Abstracts Spring 2012

The Telluride Neuromorphic Workshop Experience

Speaker: Ching Lik Teo -- Date: February 2, 2012

In this talk, I will present what we did as a group at the Telluride Neuromorphic Workshop 2011. I will explain the challenges we faced, modules that we have used, and some results from experiments on activity description we have conducted on the robot.

A Complementary Local Feature Descriptor for Face Identification (CCS-POP)

Speaker: Jonghyun Choi -- Date: February 9, 2012

In many descriptors, spatial intensity transforms are often packed into a histogram or encoded into binary strings to be insensitive to local misalignment and compact. Discriminative information, however, might be lost during the process as a trade-off. To capture the lost pixel-wise local information, we propose a new feature descriptor, Circular Center Symmetric-Pairs of Pixels (CCS-POP). It concatenates the symmetric pixel differences centered at a pixel position along various orientations with various radii; it is a generalized form of Local Binary Patterns, its variants and Pairs-of-Pixels (POP). Combining CCS-POP with existing descriptors achieves better face identification performance on FRGC Ver. 1.0 and FERET datasets compared to state-of-the-art approaches.

Energy Minimization with Graph Cuts

Speaker: Sameh Khamis -- Date: February 16, 2012

In this tutorial we describe how several computer vision problems can be intuitively formulated as Markov Random Fields. Inference in such models can be transformed to an energy minimization problem. Under some conditions, graph cut methods can be used to find the minimum of the energy function and, in turn, the most probable assignment for its variables. In addition, we will briefly cover some of the recent advances in the application of graph cuts to a wider set of energy functions.

Using Classifier Cascades for Scalable E-Mail Classification

Speaker: Jay Pujara -- Date: February 23, 2012

In many real-world scenarios, we must make judgments in the presence of computational constraints. One common computational constraint arises when the features used to make a judgment each have differing acquisition costs, but there is a fixed total budget for a set of judgments. Particularly when there are a large number of classifications that must be made in a real-time, an intelligent strategy for optimizing accuracy versus computational costs is essential. E-mail classification is an area where accurate and timely results require such a trade-off. We identify two scenarios where intelligent feature acquisition can improve classifier performance. In granular classification we seek to classify e-mails with increasingly specific labels structured in a hierarchy, where each level of the hierarchy requires a different trade-off between cost and accuracy. In load-sensitive classification, we classify a set of instances within an arbitrary total budget for acquiring features. Our method, Adaptive Classifier Cascades (ACC), designs a policy to combine a series of base classifiers with increasing computational costs given a desired trade-off between cost and accuracy. Using this method, we learn a relationship between feature costs and label hierarchies, for granular classification and cost budgets, for load-sensitive classification. We evaluate our method on real-world e-mail datasets with realistic estimates of feature acquisition cost, and we demonstrate superior results when compared to baseline classifiers that do not have a granular, cost-sensitive feature acquisition policy.

Example-Driven Manifold Priors for Image Deconvolution

Speaker: Jie Ni -- Date: March 8, 2012

Image restoration methods that exploit prior information about images to be estimated have been extensively studied, typically using the Bayesian framework. In this work, we consider the role of prior knowledge of the object class in the form of a patch manifold to address the deconvolution problem. Specifically, we incorporate unlabeled image data of the object class, say natural images, in the form of a patch-manifold prior for the object class. The manifold prior is implicitly estimated from the given unlabeled data. We show how the patch-manifold prior effectively exploits the available sample class data for regularizing the econvolution problem. Furthermore, we derive a generalized cross-validation (GCV) function to automatically determine the regularization parameter at each iteration without explicitly knowing the noise variance. Extensive experiments show that this method performs better than many competitive image deconvolution methods.


Past Semesters


Current Seminar Series Coordinators

Emails are at umiacs.umd.edu.

Anne Jorstad, jorstad@ (student of Professor David Jacobs)
Sameh Khamis, sameh@ (student of Professor Larry Davis)
Sima Taheri, taheri@ (student of Professor Rama Chellappa)
Ching Lik Teo, cteo@ (student of Professor Yiannis Aloimonos)