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Snakes and Spiders
Barcelona, Spain September 03-September 08
DOI Bookmark: http://doi.ieeecomputersociety.org/10.1109/ICPR.2000.1000815th International Conference on Patt ...
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Brendan McCane, University of Otago
Intensity information is a strong cue for segmentation but on its own cannot be used to distinguish between accidental and non-accidental alignments in a scene, thus resulting in incorrect segmentations. However, motion information can be used to distinguish between accidental and non-accidental alignments. In this paper, an integrated method using both intensity and motion information for the segmentation and tracking of objects in a sequence is presented. The method is based on an extension to active contours (snakes) called spiders.
Citation:
Brendan McCane, "Snakes and Spiders," icpr, vol. 1, pp.1652, 15th International Conference on Pattern Recognition (ICPR'00) - Volume 1, 2000
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