Unsupervised GAN-CIRCLE for high-resolution reconstruction of bone microstructure from low-resolution CT scans

Author(s):  
Indranil Guha ◽  
Syed Ahmed Nadeem ◽  
Xiaoliu Zhang ◽  
Steven M. Levy ◽  
James C. Torner ◽  
...  
2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 ◽  
pp. 1-14
Author(s):  
Jiansheng Peng ◽  
Kui Fu ◽  
Qingjin Wei ◽  
Yong Qin ◽  
Qiwen He

As a representative technology of artificial intelligence, 3D reconstruction based on deep learning can be integrated into the edge computing framework to form an intelligent edge and then realize the intelligent processing of the edge. Recently, high-resolution representation of 3D objects using multiview decomposition (MVD) architecture is a fast reconstruction method for generating objects with realistic details from a single RGB image. The results of high-resolution 3D object reconstruction are related to two aspects. On the one hand, a low-resolution reconstruction network represents a good 3D object from a single RGB image. On the other hand, a high-resolution reconstruction network maximizes fine low-resolution 3D objects. To improve these two aspects and further enhance the high-resolution reconstruction capabilities of the 3D object generation network, we study and improve the low-resolution 3D generation network and the depth map superresolution network. Eventually, we get an improved multiview decomposition (IMVD) network. First, we use a 2D image encoder with multifeature fusion (MFF) to enhance the feature extraction capability of the model. Second, a 3D decoder using an effective subpixel convolutional neural network (3D ESPCN) improves the decoding speed in the decoding stage. Moreover, we design a multiresidual dense block (MRDB) to optimize the depth map superresolution network, which allows the model to capture more object details and reduce the model parameters by approximately 25% when the number of network layers is doubled. The experimental results show that the proposed IMVD is better than the original MVD in the 3D object superresolution experiment and the high-resolution 3D reconstruction experiment of a single image.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ahmad Alhourani ◽  
Zaid Aljuboori ◽  
Candice Nguyen ◽  
Heegok Yeo ◽  
Brian Williams ◽  
...  

Electronics ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (9) ◽  
pp. 1013
Author(s):  
Sayan Maity ◽  
Mohamed Abdel-Mottaleb ◽  
Shihab S. Asfour

Biometric identification using surveillance video has attracted the attention of many researchers as it can be applicable not only for robust identification but also personalized activity monitoring. In this paper, we present a novel multimodal recognition system that extracts frontal gait and low-resolution face images from frontal walking surveillance video clips to perform efficient biometric recognition. The proposed study addresses two important issues in surveillance video that did not receive appropriate attention in the past. First, it consolidates the model-free and model-based gait feature extraction approaches to perform robust gait recognition only using the frontal view. Second, it uses a low-resolution face recognition approach which can be trained and tested using low-resolution face information. This eliminates the need for obtaining high-resolution face images to create the gallery, which is required in the majority of low-resolution face recognition techniques. Moreover, the classification accuracy on high-resolution face images is considerably higher. Previous studies on frontal gait recognition incorporate assumptions to approximate the average gait cycle. However, we quantify the gait cycle precisely for each subject using only the frontal gait information. The approaches available in the literature use the high resolution images obtained in a controlled environment to train the recognition system. However, in our proposed system we train the recognition algorithm using the low-resolution face images captured in the unconstrained environment. The proposed system has two components, one is responsible for performing frontal gait recognition and one is responsible for low-resolution face recognition. Later, score level fusion is performed to fuse the results of the frontal gait recognition and the low-resolution face recognition. Experiments conducted on the Face and Ocular Challenge Series (FOCS) dataset resulted in a 93.5% Rank-1 for frontal gait recognition and 82.92% Rank-1 for low-resolution face recognition, respectively. The score level multimodal fusion resulted in 95.9% Rank-1 recognition, which demonstrates the superiority and robustness of the proposed approach.


CHEST Journal ◽  
1995 ◽  
Vol 107 (1) ◽  
pp. 113-115 ◽  
Author(s):  
Brigitte A.H.A. Van der Bruggen-Bogaarts ◽  
Johan J. Broerse ◽  
Jan-Willem J. Lammers ◽  
Paul F.G.M. Van Waes ◽  
Jacob Geleijns

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