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Tim Landgraf

Researcher at Free University of Berlin

Publications -  72
Citations -  1410

Tim Landgraf is an academic researcher from Free University of Berlin. The author has contributed to research in topics: Computer science & Honey bee. The author has an hindex of 19, co-authored 60 publications receiving 957 citations. Previous affiliations of Tim Landgraf include Technical University of Berlin.

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Journal ArticleDOI

RenderGAN: Generating Realistic Labeled Data.

TL;DR: In this paper, a novel framework called RenderGAN is proposed to generate large amounts of realistic, labeled images by combining a 3D model and the Generative Adversarial Network framework.
Posted Content

Restricting the Flow: Information Bottlenecks for Attribution

TL;DR: By adding noise to intermediate feature maps to restrict the flow of information and can quantify how much information image regions provide, the method’s information-theoretic foundation provides an absolute frame of reference for attribution values (bits) and a guarantee that regions scored close to zero are not required for the network's decision.
Journal ArticleDOI

RoboFish: increased acceptance of interactive robotic fish with realistic eyes and natural motion patterns by live Trinidadian guppies

TL;DR: This contribution describes recent advances with regard to the acceptance of the biomimetic RoboFish by live Trinidadian guppies (Poecilia reticulata), and provides a detailed technical description of the RoboFish system and shows the effect of different appearance, motion patterns and interaction modes on theaccept of the artificial fish replica.
Proceedings Article

When Explanations Lie: Why Many Modified BP Attributions Fail

TL;DR: The paper provides a framework to assess the faithfulness of new and existing modified BP methods theoretically and empirically, and measures how information of later layers is ignored by using the new metric, cosine similarity convergence (CSC).
Journal ArticleDOI

Sleep deprivation affects extinction but not acquisition memory in honeybees

TL;DR: It is found that the bees sleep more during the dark phase of the day compared with the light phase, and retention for extinction learning was significantly reduced, indicating that consolidation of extinction memory but not acquisition memory was affected by sleep deprivation.