Publication | Closed Access
A shock grammar for recognition
160
Citations
19
References
1996
Year
Unknown Venue
Shock GrammarEngineeringGeometryStatistical Shape AnalysisShape AnalysisApplied LinguisticsNatural Language ProcessingSyntaxImage AnalysisData SciencePattern RecognitionComputational LinguisticsShock PatternsGrammarComputational GeometryComputational AnatomyShape RepresentationMachine TranslationGeometric ModelingMachine VisionGrammatical FormalismGrammar InductionMedical Image ComputingHierarchical GraphDeformation ReconstructionShock GroupsComputer VisionNatural SciencesUnification GrammarShape ModelingLinguistics
We confront the theoretical and practical difficulties of computing a representation for two-dimensional shape, based on shocks or singularities that arise as the shape's boundary is deformed. First, we develop subpixel local detectors for finding and classifying shocks. Second, to show that shock patterns are not arbitrary but obey the rules of a grammar, and in addition satisfy specific topological and geometric constraints. Shock hypotheses that violate the grammar or are topologically or geometrically invalid are pruned to enforce global consistency. Survivors are organized into a hierarchical graph of shock groups computed in the reaction-diffusion space, where diffusion plays a role of regularization to determine the significance of each shock group. The shock groups can be functionally related to the object's parts, protrusions and bends, and the representation is suited to recognition: several examples illustrate its stability with rotations, scale changes, occlusion and movement of parts, even at very low resolutions.
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