Title
The visual active memory perspective on integrated recognition systems
Abstract
Object recognition is the ability of a system to relate visual stimuli to its knowledge of the world. Although humans perform this task effortlessly and without thinking about it, a general algorithmic solution has not yet been found. Recently, a shift from devising isolated recognition techniques towards integrated systems could be observed [Y. Aloimonos, Active vision revisited, in: Y. Aloimonos (Ed.), Active Perception, Lawrence Efibaum, 1993, pp. 1-18; H. Christensen, Cognitive (vision) systems, ERCIM News (April, 2003). 17-18]. The visual active memory (VAM) perspective refines this system view towards an interactive computational framework for recognition systems in human everyday environments. VAM is in line with the recently emerged Cognitive Vision paradigm [H. Christensen, Cognitive (vision) systems, ERCIM News (April, 2003). 17-18] which is concerned with vision systems that evaluate, gather and integrate contextual knowledge for visual analysis. It consists of active processes that generate knowledge by means of a tight cooperation of perception, reasoning, learning and prior models. In addition, VAM emphasizes the dynamic representation of gathered knowledge. The memory is assumed to be structured in a hierarchy of successive memory systems that mediate the modularly defined processing components of the recognition system. Recognition and learning take place in the stress field of objects, actions, activities, scene context, and user interaction. In this paper, we exemplify the VAM perspective by means of existing demonstrator systems. Assuming three different perspectives (biological foundation, system engineering, and computer vision), we will show that the VAM concept is central to the cognitive capabilities of the system and that it leads to a more general object recognition framework.
Year
DOI
Venue
2008
10.1016/j.imavis.2005.08.008
Image Vision Comput.
Keywords
Field
DocType
system integration,cognitive vision,y. aloimonos,contextual reasoning,ercim news,h. christensen,architecture,active vision,object recognition,vam perspective,general object recognition framework,isolated recognition technique,visual active memory perspective,vam concept,recognition system,fusion,integrated recognition system,system engineering,visual analysis,vision system,generic algorithm,human performance,computer vision,integrable system
Computer vision,Active vision,Active perception,Computer science,Artificial intelligence,Hierarchy,Cognition,Perception,Visual perception,Cognitive neuroscience of visual object recognition,System integration
Journal
Volume
Issue
ISSN
26
1
Image and Vision Computing
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
4
0.51
19
Authors
7
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Christian Bauckhage11979195.86
S. Wachsmuth240.51
M. Hanheide3654.83
S. Wrede4333.70
Gerhard Sagerer530038.77
G. Heidemann6504.10
Helge Ritter72020415.97