by Axel Pinz, Horst Bischof, Walter Kropatsch, Gerald Schweighofer, Yll Haxhimusa, Andreas Opelt, Adrian Ion
Abstract:
The emerging discipline of cognitive vision requires a proper representation of visual information including spatial and temporal relationships, scenes, events, semantics and context. The goal of this review article is to summarize existing representational schemes which might be useful for cognitive vision, and to discuss promising future research directions. We structure the various approaches into appearance-based, spatio-temporal and graph-based representations for cognitive vision. The representation of objects has been covered extensively in computer vision research, both from a reconstruction as well as from a recognition point of view. Cognitive vision, however, will also require new ideas how to represent scenes. We introduce new concepts for scene representations and discuss how these might be efficiently implemented in future cognitive vision systems..
Reference:
Representations for Cognitive Vision: A Review of Appearance-Based, Spatio-Temporal, and Graph-Based Approaches (Axel Pinz, Horst Bischof, Walter Kropatsch, Gerald Schweighofer, Yll Haxhimusa, Andreas Opelt, Adrian Ion), Technical report, PRIP, TU Wien and EMT, TU Graz, 2006.
Bibtex Entry:
@TechReport{TR109,
author = "Axel Pinz and Horst Bischof and Walter Kropatsch and
Gerald Schweighofer and Yll Haxhimusa and Andreas
Opelt and Adrian Ion",
title = "Representations for Cognitive Vision: A Review of
Appearance-Based, Spatio-Temporal, and Graph-Based
Approaches",
institution = "PRIP, TU Wien and EMT, TU Graz",
number = "PRIP-TR-109",
year = "2006",
url = "https://www.prip.tuwien.ac.at/pripfiles/trs/tr109.pdf",
abstract = "The emerging discipline of cognitive vision requires
a proper representation of visual information
including spatial and temporal relationships,
scenes, events, semantics and context. The goal of
this review article is to summarize existing
representational schemes which might be useful for
cognitive vision, and to discuss promising future
research directions. We structure the various
approaches into appearance-based, spatio-temporal
and graph-based representations for cognitive
vision. The representation of objects has been
covered extensively in computer vision research,
both from a reconstruction as well as from a
recognition point of view. Cognitive vision,
however, will also require new ideas how to
represent scenes. We introduce new concepts for
scene representations and discuss how these might be
efficiently implemented in future cognitive vision
systems..",
}