Examinando por Autor "Hoyos, Alejandro"
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Ítem Statistical tuning of Adaptive-Weight Depth Map Algorithm(Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2011) Hoyos, Alejandro; Congote, John; Barandiaran, Iñigo; Acosta, Diego; Ruíz, Óscar; Universidad EAFIT. Departamento de Ingeniería Mecánica; Laboratorio CAD/CAM/CAEIn depth map generation, the settings of the algorithm parameters to yield an accurate disparity estimation are usually chosen empirically or based on unplanned experiments -- A systematic statistical approach including classical and exploratory data analyses on over 14000 images to measure the relative influence of the parameters allows their tuning based on the number of bad pixels -- Our approach is systematic in the sense that the heuristics used for parameter tuning are supported by formal statistical methods -- The implemented methodology improves the performance of dense depth map algorithms -- As a result of the statistical based tuning, the algorithm improves from 16.78% to 14.48% bad pixels rising 7 spots as per the Middlebury Stereo Evaluation Ranking Table -- The performance is measured based on the distance of the algorithm results vs. the Ground Truth by Middlebury -- Future work aims to achieve the tuning by using signicantly smaller data sets on fractional factorial and surface-response designs of experimentsÍtem Statistical tuning of adaptive-weight depth map algorithm(SPRINGER, 2011-01-01) Hoyos, Alejandro; Congote, John; Barandiaran, Inigo; Acosta, Diego; Ruiz, Oscar; Universidad EAFIT. Departamento de Ingeniería de Procesos; Desarrollo y Diseño de ProcesosIn depth map generation, the settings of the algorithm parameters to yield an accurate disparity estimation are usually chosen empirically or based on unplanned experiments. A systematic statistical approach including classical and exploratory data analyses on over 14000 images to measure the relative influence of the parameters allows their tuning based on the number of bad-pixels. Our approach is systematic in the sense that the heuristics used for parameter tuning are supported by formal statistical methods. The implemented methodology improves the performance of dense depth map algorithms. As a result of the statistical based tuning, the algorithm improves from 16.78% to 14.48% bad-pixels rising 7 spots as per the Middlebury Stereo Evaluation Ranking Table. The performance is measured based on the distance of the algorithm results vs. the Ground Truth by Middlebury. Future work aims to achieve the tuning by using significantly smaller data sets on fractional factorial and surface-response designs of experiments. © 2011 Springer-Verlag.Ítem Tuning of Adaptive Weight Depth Map Generation Algorithms Exploratory Data Analysis and Design of Computer Experiments (DOCE)(Springer Verlag, 2013-09) Acosta, Diego; Congote, John; Barandiaran, Iñigo; Ruíz, Óscar; Hoyos, Alejandro; Graña, Manuel; Universidad EAFIT. Departamento de Ingeniería Mecánica; Laboratorio CAD/CAM/CAEIn depth map generation algorithms, parameters settings to yield an accurate disparity map estimation are usually chosen empirically or based on un planned experiments -- Algorithms' performance is measured based on the distance of the algorithm results vs. the Ground Truth by Middlebury's standards -- This work shows a systematic statistical approach including exploratory data analyses on over 14000 images and designs of experiments using 31 depth maps to measure the relative inf uence of the parameters and to fine-tune them based on the number of bad pixels -- The implemented methodology improves the performance of adaptive weight based dense depth map algorithms -- As a result, the algorithm improves from 16.78% to 14.48% bad pixels using a classical exploratory data analysis of over 14000 existing images, while using designs of computer experiments with 31 runs yielded an even better performance by lowering bad pixels from 16.78% to 13%Ítem Tuning of adaptive weight depth map generation algorithms: Exploratory data analysis and design of computer experiments (DOCE)(SPRINGER, 2013-09-01) Acosta, Diego; Barandiaran, Inigo; Congote, John; Ruiz, Oscar; Hoyos, Alejandro; Grana, Manuel; Universidad EAFIT. Departamento de Ingeniería de Procesos; Desarrollo y Diseño de ProcesosIn depth map generation algorithms, parameters settings to yield an accurate disparity map estimation are usually chosen empirically or based on unplanned experiments. Algorithms' performance is measured based on the distance of the algorithm results vs. the Ground Truth by Middlebury's standards. This work shows a systematic statistical approach including exploratory data analyses on over 14000 images and designs of experiments using 31 depth maps to measure the relative influence of the parameters and to fine-tune them based on the number of bad pixels. The implemented methodology improves the performance of adaptive weight based dense depth map algorithms. As a result, the algorithm improves from 16.78 to 14.48 % bad pixels using a classical exploratory data analysis of over 14000 existing images, while using designs of computer experiments with 31 runs yielded an even better performance by lowering bad pixels from 16.78 to 13 %. © 2012 Springer Science+Business Media, LLC.Ítem Tuning of adaptive weight depth map generation algorithms: Exploratory data analysis and design of computer experiments (DOCE)(SPRINGER, 2013-09-01) Acosta, Diego; Barandiaran, Inigo; Congote, John; Ruiz, Oscar; Hoyos, Alejandro; Grana, Manuel; Universidad EAFIT. Departamento de Ingeniería Mecánica; Laboratorio CAD/CAM/CAEIn depth map generation algorithms, parameters settings to yield an accurate disparity map estimation are usually chosen empirically or based on unplanned experiments. Algorithms' performance is measured based on the distance of the algorithm results vs. the Ground Truth by Middlebury's standards. This work shows a systematic statistical approach including exploratory data analyses on over 14000 images and designs of experiments using 31 depth maps to measure the relative influence of the parameters and to fine-tune them based on the number of bad pixels. The implemented methodology improves the performance of adaptive weight based dense depth map algorithms. As a result, the algorithm improves from 16.78 to 14.48 % bad pixels using a classical exploratory data analysis of over 14000 existing images, while using designs of computer experiments with 31 runs yielded an even better performance by lowering bad pixels from 16.78 to 13 %. © 2012 Springer Science+Business Media, LLC.