Publications

Explore our research publications: papers, articles, and conference proceedings from AImageLab.

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A system for automatic face obscuration for privacy purposes

Authors: Cucchiara, Rita; Prati, Andrea; Vezzani, Roberto

Published in: PATTERN RECOGNITION LETTERS

This work proposes a method for automatic face obscuration capable of protecting people's identity. Since face detection heavily benefits from … (Read full abstract)

This work proposes a method for automatic face obscuration capable of protecting people's identity. Since face detection heavily benefits from the possibility to exploit tracking, multi-camera people tracking has been integrated with a face detector based on colour clustering and Hough transform. Moreover, the multiple viewpoints provided by multiple cameras are exploited in order to always obtain a good-quality image of the face. The identity of people in different views is kept consistent by means of a geometrical, uncalibrated approach based on homographies. Experimental results show the accuracy of the proposed approach. (c) 2006 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

2006 Articolo su rivista

Advanced video surveillance with pan tilt zoom cameras

Authors: Cucchiara, Rita; Prati, Andrea; Vezzani, Roberto

In this paper an advanced video surveillance system is proposed.Our goal is the detection of the people’s heads toallow their … (Read full abstract)

In this paper an advanced video surveillance system is proposed.Our goal is the detection of the people’s heads toallow their obscuration for privacy issues or to performrecognition tasks. We propose a system based on active PTZ(Pan-Tilt-Zoom) cameras that produce head images havinga large enough size, and can cover an area larger than stillcameras. Since conventional approaches are not suitable toPTZ cameras, the proposed approach is based on the socalleddirection histograms to compute the ego-motion andon frame differencing for detecting moving objects. It exploitspost-processing and active contours to extract preciseshape of moving objects to be fed to a probabilistic algorithmto track moving people in the scene. Person following,instead, is based on simple heuristic rules that movethe camera as soon as the selected person is close to theborder of the field of view. Finally, a color and shape basedhead detection that takes advantage of the people trackingis presented. Experimental results on a live active camerademonstrate the feasibility of real-time person followingand of the consecutive head detection phase.

2006 Relazione in Atti di Convegno

Algorithmic reproduction of asymmetry and border cut-off parameters according to the ABCD rule for dermoscopy

Authors: Pellacani, Giovanni; Grana, Costantino; Seidenari, Stefania

Published in: JOURNAL OF THE EUROPEAN ACADEMY OF DERMATOLOGY AND VENEREOLOGY

Background Semiquantitative algorithms were applied to dermoscopic images to improve the clinical diagnosis for melanoma. Objective The aim of the … (Read full abstract)

Background Semiquantitative algorithms were applied to dermoscopic images to improve the clinical diagnosis for melanoma. Objective The aim of the study was to develop a computerized method for automated quantification of the 'A' (asymmetry) and 'B' (border cut-off) parameters, according to the ABCD rule for dermoscopy, thus reproducing human evaluation. Methods Three hundred and thirty-one melanocytic lesion images, referring to 113 melanomas and 218 melanocytic nevi, acquired by means of a digital videodermatoscope, were considered. Images were evaluated by two experienced observers and by using computer algorithms developed by us. Clinical evaluation of asymmetry was performed by attributing scores to shape asymmetry and asymmetry of pigment distribution and structures, whereas computer evaluation of shape and pigment distribution asymmetries were based on the assessment of differences in area and lightness in the two halves of the image, respectively. Borders were evaluated both by clinicians and by the computer, by attributing a score to each border segment ending abruptly. Differences between nevus and melanoma values were evaluated using the chi-square test, while Cohen's Kappa index for agreement was employed for the evaluation of the concordance between human and computer. Results Pigment distribution asymmetry appears the most striking parameter for melanoma diagnosis both for human and for automated diagnosis. A good concordance between clinicians and computer evaluation was achieved for all asymmetry parameters, and was excellent for border cut-off evaluation. Conclusions These algorithms enable a good reproduction of the 'A' and 'B' parameters of the ABCD rule for dermoscopy, and appear useful for diagnostic and learning purposes.

2006 Articolo su rivista

Articulated Object Recognition: A General Framework and a Case Study

Authors: Cinque, Luigi; Sangineto, Enver; S. L., Tanimoto

2006 Relazione in Atti di Convegno

Asymmetry in dermoscopic melanocytic lesion images: a computer description based on colour distribution

Authors: Seidenari, Stefania; Pellacani, Giovanni; Grana, Costantino

Published in: ACTA DERMATO-VENEREOLOGICA

Digital dermoscopy improves the accuracy of melanoma diagnosis. The aim of this study was to develop and validate software for … (Read full abstract)

Digital dermoscopy improves the accuracy of melanoma diagnosis. The aim of this study was to develop and validate software for assessment of asymmetry in melanocytic lesion images, based on evaluation of colour symmetry, and to compare it with assessment by human observers. An image analysis program enabling numerical assessment of asymmetry in melanocytic lesions, based on the evaluation and comparison of CIE L*a*b* colour components (CIE L*a*b* is the name of a colour space defined by the Commission Internationale de l'Eclairage) inside image colour blocks, was employed on the recorded lesion images. Clinical evaluation of asymmetry in dermoscopic images was performed on the same image set employing a 0-1 scoring system. Asymmetry judgement was expressed by the clinicians for 12.8% of benign naevi, 44.7% of atypical naevi and 64.2% of malignant melanomas, whereas the computer identified as asymmetric 6.3%, 33.3% and 82.2%, respectively. Numerical parameters referring to malignant melanomas were significantly higher, both with respect to benign naevi and atypical naevi. The numerical parameters produced could be effectively employed for computer-aided melanoma diagnosis.

2006 Articolo su rivista

Automated Assessment of Pigment Distribution and Color Areas for Melanoma Diagnosis

Authors: Seidenari, Stefania; Pellacani, Giovanni; Grana, Costantino

In this paper an automated assessment of pigment distribution and color areas for melanoma diagnosis is described. (Read full abstract)

In this paper an automated assessment of pigment distribution and color areas for melanoma diagnosis is described.

2006 Capitolo/Saggio

Bioimaging and Clinical Genomics

Authors: Ficarra, E.; De Micheli, G.; Yoon, S.; Benini, L.; Macii, E.

2006 Relazione in Atti di Convegno

Clinical bioimaging and functional genomics

Authors: Ficarra, Elisa; Yoon, S; Benini, L; Macii, E; De Micheli, G.

2006 Relazione in Atti di Convegno

Comparison of color clustering algorithms for segmentation of dermatological images

Authors: Melli, Rudy Mirko; Grana, Costantino; Cucchiara, Rita

Published in: PROCEEDINGS OF SPIE, THE INTERNATIONAL SOCIETY FOR OPTICAL ENGINEERING

Automatic segmentation of skin lesions in clinical images is a very challenging task; it is necessary for visual analysis of … (Read full abstract)

Automatic segmentation of skin lesions in clinical images is a very challenging task; it is necessary for visual analysis of the edges, shape and colors of the lesions to support the melanoma diagnosis, but, at the same time, it is cumbersome since lesions (both naevi and melanomas) do not have regular shape, uniform color, or univocal structure. Most of the approaches adopt unsupervised color clustering. This works compares the most spread color clustering algorithms, namely median cut, k-means, fuzzy-c means and mean shift applied to a method for automatic border extraction, providing an evaluation of the upper bound in accuracy that can be reached with these approaches. Different tests have been performed to examine the influence of the choice of the parameter settings with respect to the performances of the algorithms. Then a new supervised learning phase is proposed to select the best number of clusters and to segment the lesion automatically. Examples have been carried out in a large database of medical images, manually segmented by dermatologists. From these experiments mean shift was resulted the best technique, in term of sensitivity and specificity. Finally, a qualitative evaluation of the goodness of segmentation has been validated by the human experts too, confirming the results of the quantitative comparison.

2006 Relazione in Atti di Convegno

Computer-aided evaluation of protein expression in pathological tissue images

Authors: Ficarra, Elisa; Macii, Enrico; Benini, L; De Micheli, G.

Published in: PROCEEDINGS IEEE INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM ON COMPUTER-BASED MEDICAL SYSTEMS

2006 Relazione in Atti di Convegno

Page 93 of 106 • Total publications: 1056