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USTCPCS / CVPR2018 AttentionContext Encoding for Semantic Segmentation MegaDepth: Learning Single-View Depth Prediction from Internet Photos LiteFlowNet: A Lightweight Convolutional Neural Network for Optical Flow Estimation PWC-Net: CNNs for Optical Flow Using Pyramid, Warping, and Cost Volume On the Robustness of Semantic Segmentation Models to Adversarial Attacks SPLATNet: Sparse Lattice Networks for Point Cloud Processing Left-Right Comparative Recurrent Model for Stereo Matching Enhancing the Spatial Resolution of Stereo Images using a Parallax Prior Unsupervised CCA Discovering Point Lights with Intensity Distance Fields CBMV: A Coalesced Bidirectional Matching Volume for Disparity Estimation Learning a Discriminative Feature Network for Semantic Segmentation Revisiting Dilated Convolution: A Simple Approach for Weakly- and Semi- Supervised Semantic Segmentation Unsupervised Deep Generative Adversarial Hashing Network Monocular Relative Depth Perception with Web Stereo Data Supervision Single Image Reflection Separation with Perceptual Losses Zoom and Learn: Generalizing Deep Stereo Matching to Novel Domains EPINET: A Fully-Convolutional Neural Network for Light Field Depth Estimation by Using Epipolar Geometry FoldingNet: Interpretable Unsupervised Learning on 3D Point Clouds Decorrelated Batch Normalization Unsupervised Learning of Depth and Egomotion from Monocular Video Using 3D Geometric Constraints PU-Net: Point Cloud Upsampling Network Real-Time Monocular Depth Estimation using Synthetic Data with Domain Adaptation via Image Style Transfer Tell Me Where To Look: Guided Attention Inference Network Residual Dense Network for Image Super-Resolution Reflection Removal for Large-Scale 3D Point Clouds PlaneNet: Piece-wise Planar Reconstruction from a Single RGB Image Fully Convolutional Adaptation Networks for Semantic Segmentation CRRN: Multi-Scale Guided Concurrent Reflection Removal Network DenseASPP: Densely Connected Networks for Semantic Segmentation SGAN: An Alternative Training of Generative Adversarial Networks Multi-Agent Diverse Generative Adversarial Networks Robust Depth Estimation from Auto Bracketed Images AdaDepth: Unsupervised Content Congruent Adaptation for Depth Estimation DeepMVS: Learning Multi-View Stereopsis GeoNet: Unsupervised Learning of Dense Depth, Optical Flow and Camera Pose GeoNet: Geometric Neural Network for Joint Depth and Surface Normal Estimation Single-Image Depth Estimation Based on Fourier Domain Analysis Single View Stereo Matching Pyramid Stereo Matching Network A Unifying Contrast Maximization Framework for Event Cameras, with Applications to Motion, Depth, and Optical Flow Estimation Image Correction via Deep Reciprocating HDR Transformation Occlusion Aware Unsupervised Learning of Optical Flow PAD-Net: Multi-Tasks Guided Prediciton-and-Distillation Network for Simultaneous Depth Estimation and Scene Parsing Surface Networks Structured Attention Guided Convolutional Neural Fields for Monocular Depth Estimation TextureGAN: Controlling Deep Image Synthesis with Texture Patches Aperture Supervision for Monocular Depth Estimation Two-Stream Convolutional Networks for Dynamic Texture Synthesis Unsupervised Learning of Single View Depth Estimation and Visual Odometry with Deep Feature Reconstruction Left/Right Asymmetric Layer Skippable Networks Learning to See in the Dark
ttvd / Spatial Collision DatastructuresBenchmark of various spatial data structures for collision detection.
facebookresearch / VCMeshConvLearning latent representations of registered meshes is useful for many 3D tasks. Techniques have recently shifted to neural mesh autoencoders. Although they demonstrate higher precision than traditional methods, they remain unable to capture fine-grained deformations. Furthermore, these methods can only be applied to a template-specific surface mesh, and is not applicable to more general meshes, like tetrahedrons and non-manifold meshes. While more general graph convolution methods can be employed, they lack performance in reconstruction precision and require higher memory usage. In this paper, we propose a non-template-specific fully convolutional mesh autoencoder for arbitrary registered mesh data. It is enabled by our novel convolution and (un)pooling operators learned with globally shared weights and locally varying coefficients which can efficiently capture the spatially varying contents presented by irregular mesh connections. Our model outperforms state-of-the-art methods on reconstruction accuracy. In addition, the latent codes of our network are fully localized thanks to the fully convolutional structure, and thus have much higher interpolation capability than many traditional 3D mesh generation models.
MIT-SPARK / Spatial HashMinimal C++ library for spatial data structures based on voxel-block-hashing
treeform / SpacySpatial data structures for Nim.
spatial-image / Multiscale Spatial ImageGenerate a multiscale, chunked, multi-dimensional spatial image data structure that can serialized to OME-NGFF.
spatial-image / Spatial ImageA multi-dimensional spatial image data structure for scientific Python.
Uriopass / Flat SpatialFlat spatial partitionning data structures in Rust
Antymon / QuadtreeEfficient implementation of a QuadTree data structure for spatial querying (e.g. collision detection)
rpav / Spatial Treesspatial-trees is a set of dynamic index data structures for spatially-extended data.
sayantann11 / Clustering Modelsfor MLlustering in Machine Learning Introduction to Clustering It is basically a type of unsupervised learning method . An unsupervised learning method is a method in which we draw references from datasets consisting of input data without labelled responses. Generally, it is used as a process to find meaningful structure, explanatory underlying processes, generative features, and groupings inherent in a set of examples. Clustering is the task of dividing the population or data points into a number of groups such that data points in the same groups are more similar to other data points in the same group and dissimilar to the data points in other groups. It is basically a collection of objects on the basis of similarity and dissimilarity between them. For ex– The data points in the graph below clustered together can be classified into one single group. We can distinguish the clusters, and we can identify that there are 3 clusters in the below picture. It is not necessary for clusters to be a spherical. Such as : DBSCAN: Density-based Spatial Clustering of Applications with Noise These data points are clustered by using the basic concept that the data point lies within the given constraint from the cluster centre. Various distance methods and techniques are used for calculation of the outliers. Why Clustering ? Clustering is very much important as it determines the intrinsic grouping among the unlabeled data present. There are no criteria for a good clustering. It depends on the user, what is the criteria they may use which satisfy their need. For instance, we could be interested in finding representatives for homogeneous groups (data reduction), in finding “natural clusters” and describe their unknown properties (“natural” data types), in finding useful and suitable groupings (“useful” data classes) or in finding unusual data objects (outlier detection). This algorithm must make some assumptions which constitute the similarity of points and each assumption make different and equally valid clusters. Clustering Methods : Density-Based Methods : These methods consider the clusters as the dense region having some similarity and different from the lower dense region of the space. These methods have good accuracy and ability to merge two clusters.Example DBSCAN (Density-Based Spatial Clustering of Applications with Noise) , OPTICS (Ordering Points to Identify Clustering Structure) etc. Hierarchical Based Methods : The clusters formed in this method forms a tree-type structure based on the hierarchy. New clusters are formed using the previously formed one. It is divided into two category Agglomerative (bottom up approach) Divisive (top down approach) examples CURE (Clustering Using Representatives), BIRCH (Balanced Iterative Reducing Clustering and using Hierarchies) etc. Partitioning Methods : These methods partition the objects into k clusters and each partition forms one cluster. This method is used to optimize an objective criterion similarity function such as when the distance is a major parameter example K-means, CLARANS (Clustering Large Applications based upon Randomized Search) etc. Grid-based Methods : In this method the data space is formulated into a finite number of cells that form a grid-like structure. All the clustering operation done on these grids are fast and independent of the number of data objects example STING (Statistical Information Grid), wave cluster, CLIQUE (CLustering In Quest) etc. Clustering Algorithms : K-means clustering algorithm – It is the simplest unsupervised learning algorithm that solves clustering problem.K-means algorithm partition n observations into k clusters where each observation belongs to the cluster with the nearest mean serving as a prototype of the cluster . Applications of Clustering in different fields Marketing : It can be used to characterize & discover customer segments for marketing purposes. Biology : It can be used for classification among different species of plants and animals. Libraries : It is used in clustering different books on the basis of topics and information. Insurance : It is used to acknowledge the customers, their policies and identifying the frauds. City Planning: It is used to make groups of houses and to study their values based on their geographical locations and other factors present. Earthquake studies: By learning the earthquake-affected areas we can determine the dangerous zones. References : Wiki Hierarchical clustering Ijarcs matteucc analyticsvidhya knowm
amay12 / SpatialSearchThis project compares and analyzes the performance of two popular spatial indexing data structures: K-D Trees and Quadtrees for insertion, search and finding the nearest neighbors of points on a 2D plane.
endoli / UnderstoryFoundational spatial and scene data structures for user interfaces and graphics editors.
ddunbar / PDSamplePoisson-disk sampling code as described in "A Spatial Data Structure for Fast Poisson-Disk Sample Generation".
addu390 / Hybrid Spatial IndexHybrid Spatial Data Structure based on Quad Tree, R Tree and KD Tree for insertion, search and finding the nearest neighbours on a 2D plane
io7m-com / JspatialSpatial data structures
Amey-Thakur / QUADTREE VISUALIZERA high-performance interactive simulation visualizing the efficiency of the QuadTree data structure in spatial partitioning and collision detection, built with Next.js and HTML5 Canvas.
snousias / AvatreeThis paper presents AVATREE, a computational modelling framework that generates Anatomically Valid Airway tree conformations and provides capabilities for simulation of broncho-constriction apparent in obstructive pulmonary conditions. Such conformations are obtained from the personalized 3D geometry generated from computed tomography (CT) data through image segmentation. The patient-specific representation of the bronchial tree structure is extended beyond the visible airway generation depth using a knowledge-based technique built from morphometric studies. Additional functionalities of AVATREE include visualization of spatial probability maps for the airway generations projected on the CT imaging data, and visualization of the airway tree based on local structure properties. Furthermore, the proposed toolbox supports the simulation of broncho-constriction apparent in pulmonary diseases, such as chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and asthma. AVATREE is provided as an open-source toolbox in C++ and is supported by a graphical user interface integrating the modelling functionalities. It can be exploited in studies of gas flow, gas mixing, ventilation patterns and particle deposition in the pulmonary system, with the aim to improve clinical decision making.
babaknaimi / ElsaA framework that provides the methods for quantifying entropy-based local indicator of spatial association (ELSA) that can be used for both continuous and categorical data. This package offers other methods to measure local indicators of spatial associations (LISA). Furthermore, global spatial structure can be measured using a variogram-like diagram, called entrogram.
openMetadataInitiative / OpenMINDS SANDSA metadata model capturing Spatial Anchoring of Neuroscience Data Structures, including brain atlas definitions.