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Visual Analysis of Behaviour : From Pixels to Semantics / by Shaogang Gong, Tao Xiang.

Por: Colaborador(es): Tipo de material: TextoTextoEditor: London : Springer London : Imprint: Springer, 2011Descripción: xIx, 356 páginas 131 ilustraciones, 101 ilustraciones en color. recurso en líneaTipo de contenido:
  • texto
Tipo de medio:
  • computadora
Tipo de portador:
  • recurso en línea
ISBN:
  • 9780857296702
Formatos físicos adicionales: Edición impresa:: Sin títuloClasificación LoC:
  • T385
Recursos en línea:
Contenidos:
Part I: Introduction -- About Behaviour -- Behaviour in Context -- Towards Modelling Behaviour -- Part II: Single-Object Behaviour -- Understanding Facial Expression -- Modelling Gesture -- Action Recognition -- Part III: Group Behaviour -- Supervised Learning of Group Activity -- Unsupervised Behaviour Profiling -- Hierarchical Behaviour Discovery -- Learning Behavioural Context -- Modelling Rare and Subtle Behaviours -- Man in the Loop -- Part IV: Distributed Behaviour -- Multi-Camera Behaviour Correlation -- Person Re-Identification -- Connecting the Dots -- Epilogue.
Resumen: Demand continues to grow worldwide, from both government and commerce, for technologies capable of automatically selecting and identifying object and human behaviour. This accessible text/reference presents a comprehensive and unified treatment of visual analysis of behaviour from computational-modelling and algorithm-design perspectives. The book provides in-depth discussion on computer vision and statistical machine learning techniques, in addition to reviewing a broad range of behaviour modelling problems. A mathematical background is not required to understand the content, although readers will benefit from modest knowledge of vectors and matrices, eigenvectors and eigenvalues, linear algebra, optimisation, multivariate analysis, probability, statistics and calculus. Topics and features: Provides a thorough introduction to the study and modelling of behaviour, and a concluding epilogue Covers learning-group activity models, unsupervised behaviour profiling, hierarchical behaviour discovery, learning behavioural context, modelling rare behaviours, and “man-in-the-loop” active learning of behaviours Examines multi-camera behaviour correlation, person re-identification, and “connecting-the-dots” for global abnormal behaviour detection Discusses Bayesian information criterion, static Bayesian graph models, “bag-of-words” representation, canonical correlation analysis, dynamic Bayesian networks, Gaussian mixtures, and Gibbs sampling Investigates hidden conditional random fields, hidden Markov models, human silhouette shapes, latent Dirichlet allocation, local binary patterns, locality preserving projection, and Markov processes Explores probabilistic graphical models, probabilistic topic models, space-time interest points, spectral clustering, and support vector machines Includes a helpful list of acronyms A valuable resource for both researchers in computer vision and machine learning, and for developers of commercial applications, the book can also serve as a useful reference for postgraduate students of computer science and behavioural science. Furthermore, policymakers and commercial managers will find this an informed guide on intelligent video analytics systems. Dr. Shaogang Gong is a Professor of Visual Computation in the School of Electronic Engineering and Computer Science at Queen Mary University of London, UK. Dr. Tao Xiang is a Lecturer at the same institution.
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Springer eBooks

Part I: Introduction -- About Behaviour -- Behaviour in Context -- Towards Modelling Behaviour -- Part II: Single-Object Behaviour -- Understanding Facial Expression -- Modelling Gesture -- Action Recognition -- Part III: Group Behaviour -- Supervised Learning of Group Activity -- Unsupervised Behaviour Profiling -- Hierarchical Behaviour Discovery -- Learning Behavioural Context -- Modelling Rare and Subtle Behaviours -- Man in the Loop -- Part IV: Distributed Behaviour -- Multi-Camera Behaviour Correlation -- Person Re-Identification -- Connecting the Dots -- Epilogue.

Demand continues to grow worldwide, from both government and commerce, for technologies capable of automatically selecting and identifying object and human behaviour. This accessible text/reference presents a comprehensive and unified treatment of visual analysis of behaviour from computational-modelling and algorithm-design perspectives. The book provides in-depth discussion on computer vision and statistical machine learning techniques, in addition to reviewing a broad range of behaviour modelling problems. A mathematical background is not required to understand the content, although readers will benefit from modest knowledge of vectors and matrices, eigenvectors and eigenvalues, linear algebra, optimisation, multivariate analysis, probability, statistics and calculus. Topics and features: Provides a thorough introduction to the study and modelling of behaviour, and a concluding epilogue Covers learning-group activity models, unsupervised behaviour profiling, hierarchical behaviour discovery, learning behavioural context, modelling rare behaviours, and “man-in-the-loop” active learning of behaviours Examines multi-camera behaviour correlation, person re-identification, and “connecting-the-dots” for global abnormal behaviour detection Discusses Bayesian information criterion, static Bayesian graph models, “bag-of-words” representation, canonical correlation analysis, dynamic Bayesian networks, Gaussian mixtures, and Gibbs sampling Investigates hidden conditional random fields, hidden Markov models, human silhouette shapes, latent Dirichlet allocation, local binary patterns, locality preserving projection, and Markov processes Explores probabilistic graphical models, probabilistic topic models, space-time interest points, spectral clustering, and support vector machines Includes a helpful list of acronyms A valuable resource for both researchers in computer vision and machine learning, and for developers of commercial applications, the book can also serve as a useful reference for postgraduate students of computer science and behavioural science. Furthermore, policymakers and commercial managers will find this an informed guide on intelligent video analytics systems. Dr. Shaogang Gong is a Professor of Visual Computation in the School of Electronic Engineering and Computer Science at Queen Mary University of London, UK. Dr. Tao Xiang is a Lecturer at the same institution.

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