Nowadays, machine learning is playing a dominant role in most challenging computer vision problems. This paper advocates an extreme evolution of this interplay, where visual agents continuously process videos and interact with humans, just like children, exploiting life–long learning computational schemes. This opens the challenge of en plein air visual agents, whose behavior is progressively monitored and evaluated by novel mechanisms, where dynamic man-machine interaction plays a fundamental role. Going beyond classic benchmarks, we argue that appropriate crowd-sourcing schemes are suitable for performance evaluation of visual agents operating in this framework. We provide a proof of concept of this novel view, by showing methods and concrete solutions for en plein air visual agents. Crowdsourcing evaluation is reported, along with a life–long experiment on “The Aristocats” cartoon. We expect that the proposed radically new framework will stimulate related approaches and solutions.
En plein air visual agents / LIPPI, MARCO. - ELETTRONICO. - 9280:(2015), pp. 697-709. (Intervento presentato al convegno 18th International Conference on Image Analysis and Processing, ICIAP 2015 tenutosi a ita nel 2015) [10.1007/978-3-319-23234-8_64].
En plein air visual agents
LIPPI, MARCO
2015
Abstract
Nowadays, machine learning is playing a dominant role in most challenging computer vision problems. This paper advocates an extreme evolution of this interplay, where visual agents continuously process videos and interact with humans, just like children, exploiting life–long learning computational schemes. This opens the challenge of en plein air visual agents, whose behavior is progressively monitored and evaluated by novel mechanisms, where dynamic man-machine interaction plays a fundamental role. Going beyond classic benchmarks, we argue that appropriate crowd-sourcing schemes are suitable for performance evaluation of visual agents operating in this framework. We provide a proof of concept of this novel view, by showing methods and concrete solutions for en plein air visual agents. Crowdsourcing evaluation is reported, along with a life–long experiment on “The Aristocats” cartoon. We expect that the proposed radically new framework will stimulate related approaches and solutions.I documenti in FLORE sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.