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Applied Graph Theory in Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition [electronic resource] / edited by Abraham Kandel, Horst Bunke, Mark Last.

Por: Colaborador(es): Tipo de material: TextoTextoSeries Studies in Computational Intelligence ; 52 | Studies in Computational Intelligence ; 52Editor: Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2007Descripción: X, 266 p. online resourceTipo de contenido:
  • text
Tipo de medio:
  • computer
Tipo de soporte:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9783540680208
Trabajos contenidos:
  • SpringerLink (Online service)
Tema(s): Formatos físicos adicionales: Sin títuloClasificación CDD:
  • 519 23
Clasificación LoC:
  • TA329-348
  • TA640-643
Recursos en línea:
Contenidos:
Springer eBooksResumen: This book will serve as a foundation for a variety of useful applications of graph theory to computer vision, pattern recognition, and related areas. It covers a representative set of novel graph-theoretic methods for complex computer vision and pattern recognition tasks. The first part of the book presents the application of graph theory to low-level processing of digital images such as a new method for partitioning a given image into a hierarchy of homogeneous areas using graph pyramids, or a study of the relationship between graph theory and digital topology. Part II presents graph-theoretic learning algorithms for high-level computer vision and pattern recognition applications, including a survey of graph based methodologies for pattern recognition and computer vision, a presentation of a series of computationally efficient algorithms for testing graph isomorphism and related graph matching tasks in pattern recognition and a new graph distance measure to be used for solving graph matching problems. Finally, Part III provides detailed descriptions of several applications of graph-based methods to real-world pattern recognition tasks. It includes a critical review of the main graph-based and structural methods for fingerprint classification, a new method to visualize time series of graphs, and potential applications in computer network monitoring and abnormal event detection.
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Applied Graph Theory for Low Level Image Processing and Segmentation -- Multiresolution Image Segmentations in Graph Pyramids -- A Graphical Model Framework for Image Segmentation -- Digital Topologies on Graphs -- Graph Similarity, Matching, and Learning for High Level Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition -- How and Why Pattern Recognition and Computer Vision Applications Use Graphs -- Efficient Algorithms on Trees and Graphs with Unique Node Labels -- A Generic Graph Distance Measure Based on Multivalent Matchings -- Learning from Supervised Graphs -- Special Applications -- Graph-Based and Structural Methods for Fingerprint Classification -- Graph Sequence Visualisation and its Application to Computer Network Monitoring and Abnormal Event Detection -- Clustering of Web Documents Using Graph Representations.

This book will serve as a foundation for a variety of useful applications of graph theory to computer vision, pattern recognition, and related areas. It covers a representative set of novel graph-theoretic methods for complex computer vision and pattern recognition tasks. The first part of the book presents the application of graph theory to low-level processing of digital images such as a new method for partitioning a given image into a hierarchy of homogeneous areas using graph pyramids, or a study of the relationship between graph theory and digital topology. Part II presents graph-theoretic learning algorithms for high-level computer vision and pattern recognition applications, including a survey of graph based methodologies for pattern recognition and computer vision, a presentation of a series of computationally efficient algorithms for testing graph isomorphism and related graph matching tasks in pattern recognition and a new graph distance measure to be used for solving graph matching problems. Finally, Part III provides detailed descriptions of several applications of graph-based methods to real-world pattern recognition tasks. It includes a critical review of the main graph-based and structural methods for fingerprint classification, a new method to visualize time series of graphs, and potential applications in computer network monitoring and abnormal event detection.

ZDB-2-ENG

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