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Ngai-Man Cheung

Researcher at Singapore University of Technology and Design

Publications -  201
Citations -  5115

Ngai-Man Cheung is an academic researcher from Singapore University of Technology and Design. The author has contributed to research in topics: Distributed source coding & Encoder. The author has an hindex of 35, co-authored 189 publications receiving 3995 citations. Previous affiliations of Ngai-Man Cheung include Trường ĐH Nguyễn Tất Thành & National University of Singapore.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Mobile Visual Search

TL;DR: Mobile phones have evolved into powerful image and video processing devices equipped with high-resolution cameras, color displays, and hardware-accelerated graphics, which enables a new class of applications that use the camera phone to initiate search queries about objects in visual proximity to the user.
Journal ArticleDOI

Global Evolution of Research in Artificial Intelligence in Health and Medicine: A Bibliometric Study

TL;DR: A first and comprehensive picture of the global efforts directed towards this increasingly important and prolific field of research is offered and the development of global and national protocols and regulations on the justification and adaptation of medical AI products are suggested.
Book ChapterDOI

Learning to Hash with Binary Deep Neural Network

TL;DR: This work proposes deep network models and learning algorithms for unsupervised and supervised binary hashing that incorporate independence and balance properties in the direct and strict forms in the learning and includes similarity preserving property in the objective function.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

The stanford mobile visual search data set

TL;DR: The proposed Stanford Mobile Visual Search data set contains camera-phone images of products, CDs, books, outdoor landmarks, business cards, text documents, museum paintings and video clips, and query data collected from heterogeneous low and high-end camera phones.
Journal ArticleDOI

Interactive Streaming of Stored Multiview Video Using Redundant Frame Structures

TL;DR: This work proposes a redundant representation of I-, P-, and “merge” frames, where each original picture can be encoded into multiple versions, appropriately trading off expected transmission rate with storage, to facilitate view switching.