CVJul 19, 2023
Two Approaches to Supervised Image SegmentationAlexandre Benatti, Luciano da F. Costa
Though performed almost effortlessly by humans, segmenting 2D gray-scale or color images into respective regions of interest (e.g.~background, objects, or portions of objects) constitutes one of the greatest challenges in science and technology as a consequence of several effects including dimensionality reduction(3D to 2D), noise, reflections, shades, and occlusions, among many other possibilities. While a large number of interesting related approaches have been suggested along the last decades, it was mainly thanks to the recent development of deep learning that more effective and general solutions have been obtained, currently constituting the basic comparison reference for this type of operation. Also developed recently, a multiset-based methodology has been described that is capable of encouraging image segmentation performance combining spatial accuracy, stability, and robustness while requiring little computational resources (hardware and/or training and recognition time). The interesting features of the multiset neurons methodology mostly follow from the enhanced selectivity and sensitivity, as well as good robustness to data perturbations and outliers, allowed by the coincidence similarity index on which the multiset approach to supervised image segmentation is founded. After describing the deep learning and multiset neurons approaches, the present work develops comparison experiments between them which are primarily aimed at illustrating their respective main interesting features when applied to the adopted specific type of data and parameter configurations. While the deep learning approach confirmed its potential for performing image segmentation, the alternative multiset methodology allowed for enhanced accuracy while requiring little computational resources.
LGSep 17, 2024
Normalization in Proportional Feature SpacesAlexandre Benatti, Luciano da F. Costa
The subject of features normalization plays an important central role in data representation, characterization, visualization, analysis, comparison, classification, and modeling, as it can substantially influence and be influenced by all of these activities and respective aspects. The selection of an appropriate normalization method needs to take into account the type and characteristics of the involved features, the methods to be used subsequently for the just mentioned data processing, as well as the specific questions being considered. After briefly considering how normalization constitutes one of the many interrelated parts typically involved in data analysis and modeling, the present work addressed the important issue of feature normalization from the perspective of uniform and proportional (right skewed) features and comparison operations. More general right skewed features are also considered in an approximated manner. Several concepts, properties, and results are described and discussed, including the description of a duality relationship between uniform and proportional feature spaces and respective comparisons, specifying conditions for consistency between comparisons in each of the two domains. Two normalization possibilities based on non-centralized dispersion of features are also presented, and also described is a modified version of the Jaccard similarity index which incorporates intrinsically normalization. Preliminary experiments are presented in order to illustrate the developed concepts and methods.
LGSep 2, 2024
Supervised Pattern Recognition Involving Skewed Feature DensitiesAlexandre Benatti, Luciano da F. Costa
Pattern recognition constitutes a particularly important task underlying a great deal of scientific and technologica activities. At the same time, pattern recognition involves several challenges, including the choice of features to represent the data elements, as well as possible respective transformations. In the present work, the classification potential of the Euclidean distance and a dissimilarity index based on the coincidence similarity index are compared by using the k-neighbors supervised classification method respectively to features resulting from several types of transformations of one- and two-dimensional symmetric densities. Given two groups characterized by respective densities without or with overlap, different types of respective transformations are obtained and employed to quantitatively evaluate the performance of k-neighbors methodologies based on the Euclidean distance an coincidence similarity index. More specifically, the accuracy of classifying the intersection point between the densities of two adjacent groups is taken into account for the comparison. Several interesting results are described and discussed, including the enhanced potential of the dissimilarity index for classifying datasets with right skewed feature densities, as well as the identification that the sharpness of the comparison between data elements can be independent of the respective supervised classification performance.