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Object (computer science)

About: Object (computer science) is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 106024 publications have been published within this topic receiving 1360115 citations. The topic is also known as: obj & Rq.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a precise definition of the 3D object recognition problem is proposed, and basic concepts associated with this problem are discussed, and a review of relevant literature is provided.
Abstract: A general-purpose computer vision system must be capable of recognizing three-dimensional (3-D) objects. This paper proposes a precise definition of the 3-D object recognition problem, discusses basic concepts associated with this problem, and reviews the relevant literature. Because range images (or depth maps) are often used as sensor input instead of intensity images, techniques for obtaining, processing, and characterizing range data are also surveyed.

1,146 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
17 Oct 2005
TL;DR: This work treats object categories as topics, so that an image containing instances of several categories is modeled as a mixture of topics, and develops a model developed in the statistical text literature: probabilistic latent semantic analysis (pLSA).
Abstract: We seek to discover the object categories depicted in a set of unlabelled images. We achieve this using a model developed in the statistical text literature: probabilistic latent semantic analysis (pLSA). In text analysis, this is used to discover topics in a corpus using the bag-of-words document representation. Here we treat object categories as topics, so that an image containing instances of several categories is modeled as a mixture of topics. The model is applied to images by using a visual analogue of a word, formed by vector quantizing SIFT-like region descriptors. The topic discovery approach successfully translates to the visual domain: for a small set of objects, we show that both the object categories and their approximate spatial layout are found without supervision. Performance of this unsupervised method is compared to the supervised approach of Fergus et al. (2003) on a set of unseen images containing only one object per image. We also extend the bag-of-words vocabulary to include 'doublets' which encode spatially local co-occurring regions. It is demonstrated that this extended vocabulary gives a cleaner image segmentation. Finally, the classification and segmentation methods are applied to a set of images containing multiple objects per image. These results demonstrate that we can successfully build object class models from an unsupervised analysis of images.

1,129 citations

01 Jul 2006
TL;DR: This memo provides information for the Internet community on JSON, a lightweight, text-based, language-independent data interchange format derived from the ECMAScript Programming Language Standard.
Abstract: JavaScript Object Notation (JSON) is a lightweight, text-based, language-independent data interchange format. It was derived from the ECMAScript Programming Language Standard. JSON defines a small set of formatting rules for the portable representation of structured data. This memo provides information for the Internet community.

1,119 citations

Proceedings Article
06 Dec 2010
TL;DR: This work focuses on the practically-attractive case when the training images are annotated with dots, and introduces a new loss function, which is well-suited for visual object counting tasks and at the same time can be computed efficiently via a maximum subarray algorithm.
Abstract: We propose a new supervised learning framework for visual object counting tasks, such as estimating the number of cells in a microscopic image or the number of humans in surveillance video frames. We focus on the practically-attractive case when the training images are annotated with dots (one dot per object). Our goal is to accurately estimate the count. However, we evade the hard task of learning to detect and localize individual object instances. Instead, we cast the problem as that of estimating an image density whose integral over any image region gives the count of objects within that region. Learning to infer such density can be formulated as a minimization of a regularized risk quadratic cost function. We introduce a new loss function, which is well-suited for such learning, and at the same time can be computed efficiently via a maximum subarray algorithm. The learning can then be posed as a convex quadratic program solvable with cutting-plane optimization. The proposed framework is very flexible as it can accept any domain-specific visual features. Once trained, our system provides accurate object counts and requires a very small time overhead over the feature extraction step, making it a good candidate for applications involving real-time processing or dealing with huge amount of visual data.

1,098 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A novel method for detecting and localizing objects of a visual category in cluttered real-world scenes that is applicable to a range of different object categories, including both rigid and articulated objects and able to achieve competitive object detection performance from training sets that are between one and two orders of magnitude smaller than those used in comparable systems.
Abstract: This paper presents a novel method for detecting and localizing objects of a visual category in cluttered real-world scenes. Our approach considers object categorization and figure-ground segmentation as two interleaved processes that closely collaborate towards a common goal. As shown in our work, the tight coupling between those two processes allows them to benefit from each other and improve the combined performance. The core part of our approach is a highly flexible learned representation for object shape that can combine the information observed on different training examples in a probabilistic extension of the Generalized Hough Transform. The resulting approach can detect categorical objects in novel images and automatically infer a probabilistic segmentation from the recognition result. This segmentation is then in turn used to again improve recognition by allowing the system to focus its efforts on object pixels and to discard misleading influences from the background. Moreover, the information from where in the image a hypothesis draws its support is employed in an MDL based hypothesis verification stage to resolve ambiguities between overlapping hypotheses and factor out the effects of partial occlusion. An extensive evaluation on several large data sets shows that the proposed system is applicable to a range of different object categories, including both rigid and articulated objects. In addition, its flexible representation allows it to achieve competitive object detection performance already from training sets that are between one and two orders of magnitude smaller than those used in comparable systems.

1,084 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
202238
20213,087
20205,900
20196,540
20185,940
20175,046