Fachbereich Informatik
Refine
H-BRS Bibliography
- yes (26)
Document Type
- Master's Thesis (19)
- Bachelor Thesis (5)
- Report (1)
- Study Thesis (1)
Year of publication
Language
- English (26) (remove)
Has Fulltext
- no (26) (remove)
Keywords
- Emergency support system (2)
- Mobile sensors (2)
- Alize (1)
- Automation (1)
- Batch Normalization (1)
- Computer Game (1)
- Distributed Systems (1)
- Human Muscle (1)
- ICP (1)
- Interactive visualization (1)
In order to help journalists investigate inside large audiovisual archives, as maintained by news broadcast agencies, the multimedia data must be indexed by text-based search engies. By automatically creating a transcript through automatic speech recognition (ASR), the spoken word becomes accessible to text search, and queries for keywords are made possible. But stil, important contextual information like the identity of the speaker is not captured. Especially when gathering original footage in the political domain, the identity of the speaker can be the most important query constraint, although this name may not be prominent in the words spoken. It is thus desireable to have this information provided explicitely to the search engine. To provide this information, the archive must be an alyzed by automatic Speaker Identification (SID). While this research topic has seen substantial gains in accuracy and robustness over last years, it has not yet established itself as a helpful, large-scale tool outside the research community. This thesis sets out to establish a workflow to provide automatic speaker identification. Its application is to help journalists searching on speeches given in the German parliament (Bundestag). This is a contribution to the News-Stream 3.0 project, a BMBF funded research project that addresses accessibility of various data sources for journalists.
Semantic Image Segmentation Combining Visible and Near-Infrared Channels with Depth Information
(2015)
Image understanding is a vital task in computer vision that has many applications in areas such as robotics, surveillance and the automobile industry. An important precondition for image understanding is semantic image segmentation, i.e. the correct labeling of every image pixel with its corresponding object name or class. This thesis proposes a machine learning approach for semantic image segmentation that uses images from a multi-modal camera rig. It demonstrates that semantic segmentation can be improved by combining different image types as inputs to a convolutional neural network (CNN), when compared to a single-image approach. In this work a multi-channel near-infrared (NIR) image, an RGB image and a depth map are used. The detection of people is further improved by using a skin image that indicates the presence of human skin in the scene and is computed based on NIR information. It is also shown that segmentation accuracy can be enhanced by using a class voting method based on a superpixel pre-segmentation. Models are trained for 10-class, 3-class and binary classification tasks using an original dataset. Compared to the NIR-only approach, average class accuracy is increased by 7% for 10-class, and by 22% for 3-class classification, reaching a total of 48% and 70% accuracy, respectively. The binary classification task, which focuses on the detection of people, achieves a classification accuracy of 95% and true positive rate of 66%. The report at hand describes the proposed approach and the encountered challenges and shows that a CNN can successfully learn and combine features from multi-modal image sets and use them to predict scene labeling.
Scientists and engineers are using a distributed system Remote Component Environment (RCE) to design and simulate complex systems like airplanes, ships and satellites. During the simulation, RCE executes local and remote code. Remote code is classified as untrusted code. The execution of remote code comprises potential security risks for the host system of RCE. Additionally, RCE provides full access to system resources. The objective of this thesis is to implement a sandbox prototype to reduce the vulnerability of RCE during the execution of remote code.
Data management is a challenge in both scientific and technical environments. Therefore researchers have developed a special interest in this field. Modern approaches (i.e. Subversion, CVS) already offer authoring and versioning in distributed systems. However this might be insufficient in a vast number of scenarios, where not only the data resulting from a process, but also data which describes the process that generated those results is crucial.
In the field of autonomous robotics, sensors have played a major role in defining the scope of technology and to a great extent, limitations of it as well. This cycle of constant updates and hence technological advancement has made given birth to some serious industries which were once inconceivable. Industries like autonomous driving which has a serious impact on safety and security of people, also has an equally harsh implication on the dynamics and economics of the market. With sensors like LiDAR and RADAR delivering 3D measurements as point clouds, there is a necessity to process the raw measurements directly and many research groups are working on the same. A sizable research has gone in solving the task of object detection on 2D images. In this thesis we aim to develop a LiDAR based 3D object detection scheme. We combine the ideas of PointPillars and feature pyramid networks from 2D vision to propose Pillar-FPN. The proposed method directly takes 3D point clouds as input and outputs a 3D bounding box. Our pipeline consists of multiple variations of proposed Pillar-FPN at the feature fusion level that are described in the results section. We have trained our model on the KITTI train dataset and evaluated it on KITTI validation dataset.
Robots integrated into a social environment with humans need the ability to locate persons in their surrounding area. This is also the case for the WelcomeBot which is developed at the Fraunhofer Institute IAIS. In the future, the robot should follow persons in the buildings and guide them to certain areas. Therefore, it needs the capability to detect and track a person in the environment. In this master thesis, an approach for fast and reliable tracking of a person via a mobile robotic platform is presented. Based on the investigation of different methods and sensors, a laser scanner and a camera are selected as the primary two sensors.
This project focuses on object detection in dense volume data. There are several types of dense volume data, namely Computed Tomography (CT) scan, Positron Emission Tomography (PET), Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI). This work focuses on CT scans. CT scans are not limited to the medical domain; they are also used in industries. CT scans are used in airport baggage screening, assembly lines, and the object detection systems in these places should be able to detect objects fast. One of the ways to address the issue of computational complexity and make the object detection systems fast is to use low-resolution images. Low-resolution CT scanning is fast. The entire process of scanning and detection can be made faster by using low-resolution images. Even in the medical domain, to reduce the rad iation dose, the exposure time of the patient should be reduced. The exposure time of patients could be reduced by allowing low-resolution CT scans. Hence it is essential to find out which object detection model has better accuracy as well as speed at low-resolution CT scans. However, the existing approaches did not provide details about how the model would perform when the resolution of CT scans is varied. Hence in this project, the goal is to analyze the impact of varying resolution of CT scans on both the speed and accuracy of the model. Three object detection models, namely RetinaNet, YOLOv3, and YOLOv5, were trained at various resolutions. Among the three models, it was found that YOLOv5 has the best mAP and f1 score at multiple resolutions on the DeepLesion dataset. RetinaNet model h as the least inference time on the DeepLesion dataset. From the experiments, it could be asserted that sacrificing mean average precision (mAP) to improve inference time by reducing resolution is feasible.
This thesis proposes a multi-label classification approach using the Multimodal Transformer (MulT) [80] to perform multi-modal emotion categorization on a dataset of oral histories archived at the Haus der Geschichte (HdG). Prior uni-modal emotion classification experiments conducted on the novel HdG dataset provided less than satisfactory results. They uncovered issues such as class imbalance, ambiguities in emotion perception between annotators, and lack of representative training data to perform transfer learning [28]. Hence, the objectives of this thesis were to achieve better results by performing a multi-modal fusion and resolving the problems arising from class imbalance and annotator-induced bias in emotion perception. A further objective was to assess the quality of the novel HdG dataset and benchmark the results using SOTA techniques. Through a literature survey on the challenges, models, and datasets related to multi-modal emotion recognition, we created a methodology utilizing the MulT along with a multi-label classification approach. This approach produced a considerable improvement in the overall emotion recognition by obtaining an average AUC of 0.74 and Balanced-accuracy of 0.70 on the HdG dataset, which is comparable to state-of-the-art (SOTA) results on other datasets. In this manner, we were also able to benchmark the novel HdG dataset as well as introduce a novel multi-annotator learning approach to understand each annotator’s relative strengths and weaknesses for emotion perception. Our evaluation results highlight the potential benefits of the novel multi-annotator learning approach in improving overall performance by resolving the problems arising from annotator-induced bias and variation in the perception of emotions. Complementing these results, we performed a further qualitative analysis of the HdG annotations with a psychologist to study the ambiguities found in the annotations. We conclude that the ambiguities in annotations may have resulted from a combination of several socio-psychological factors and systemic issues associated with the process of creating these annotations. As these problems are also present in most multi-modal emotion recognition datasets, we conclude that the domain could benefit from a set of annotation guidelines to create standardized datasets.
Today publications are digitally available which enables researchers to search the text and often also the content of tables. On the contrary, images cannot be searched which is not a problem for most fields, but in chemistry most of the information are contained in images, especially structure diagrams. Next to the "normal" chemical structures, which represent exactly one molecule, there also exist generic structures, so called Markush structures. These contain variable parts and additional textual information which enable them to represent several molecules at once. This can vary between just a few and up to thousands or even millions. This ability lead to a spread of Markush structures in patents, because it enables patents to protect entire families of molecules at once. Next to the prevention of an enumeration of all structures it also has the advantage that, if a Markush structure is used in a patent, it is much harder to determine whether a specific structure is protected by it or not. To solve the question about the protection of a structure, it is necessary to search the patents. Appropriate databases for this task already do exist, but are filled manually. An automatic processing does not yet exist. In this project a Markush structure reconstruction prototype is developed which is able to reconstruct bitmaps including Markush structures (meaning a depiction of the structure and a text part describing the generic parts) into a digital format and save them in the newly developed context-free grammar based file format extSMILES. This format is searchable due to its context-free grammar based design. To be able to develop a Markush structure reconstruction prototype, an in depth analysis of the concept of Markush structures and their requirements for a reconstruction process was performed. Thereby it is stated, that the common connection table concept of the existing file formats is not able to store Markush structures. Especially challenging are conditions for most of the formats. Thus, a context-free grammar based file format is developed, which extends the SMILES format. This extSMILES called format assures the searchability of the results by its context-free grammar based concept, and is able to store all information contained in Markush structures. In addition it is generic, extendable and easily understandable. The developed prototype for the Markush structure reconstruction uses extSMILES as output format and is based on the chemical structure recognition tool chemoCR and the Unstructured Information Management Architecture UIMA. For chemoCR modules are developed which enable it to recognize and assemble Markush structures as well as to return the reconstruction result in extSMILES. For UIMA on the other hand, a pipeline is developed, which is able to analyse and translate the input text files to extSMILES. The results of both tools then are combined and presented in chemoCR. An evaluation of the prototype is performed on a representative set of twelve structures of interest and low image quality which contain all typical Markush elements. Trivial structures containing only one R-group are not evaluated. Due to the challenging nature of the images, no Markush structure could be correctly reconstructed. But by regarding the assumption, that R-group definitions which are described by natural language are excluded from the task, and under the condition that the core structure reconstruction is improved, the rate of success can be increased to 58.4%.
The recent explosion of available audio-visual media is the new challenge for information retrieval research. Audio speech recognition systems translate spoken content to the text domain. There is a need for searching and indexing this data which possesses no logical structure. One possible way to structure it on a high level of abstraction is by finding topic boundaries. Two unsupervised topic segmentation methods were evaluated with real-world data in the course of this work. The first one, TSF, models topic shifts as fluctuations in the similarity function of the transcript. The second one, LCSeg, approaches topic changes as places with the least overlapping lexical chains. Only LCSeg performed close to a similar real-world corpus. Other reported results could not be outperformed. Topic analysis based on the repeated word usage models renders topic changes more ambiguous than expected. This issue has more impact on the segmentation quality than the state-of-the-art ASR word error rate. It could be concluded that it is advisable to develop topic segmentation algorithms with real-world data to avoid potential biases to artificial data. Unlike evaluated approaches based on word usage analysis, methods operating with local contexts can be expected to perform better through emulation of semantic dependencies.