Relaxation and its role in vision

It is argued that a visual system, especially one which handles imperfect data, needs a way of selecting the best consistent combination from among the many interrelated, locally plausible hypotheses about how parts or aspects of the visual input may be interpreted. A method is presented in which ea...

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Main Author: Hinton, Geoffrey E.
Other Authors: Longuet-Higgins, Christopher
Published: University of Edinburgh 1977
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Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.482889
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-4828892015-03-20T04:42:10ZRelaxation and its role in visionHinton, Geoffrey E.Longuet-Higgins, Christopher1977It is argued that a visual system, especially one which handles imperfect data, needs a way of selecting the best consistent combination from among the many interrelated, locally plausible hypotheses about how parts or aspects of the visual input may be interpreted. A method is presented in which each hypothesis is given a supposition value between 0 and 1. A parallel relaxation I operator, based on the plausibilities of hypotheses and the logical relations between them, is then used to modify the supposition values, and the process is repeated until the best consistent set of hypotheses have supposition values of approximately 1, and the rest have values of approximately 0. The method is incorporated in a program which can interpret configurations of overlapping rectangles as puppets. For this task it is possible to formulate all the potentially relevant hypotheses before using relaxation to select the best consistent set. For more complex tasks, it is necessary to use relaxation on the locally plausible interpretations to guide the search for locally less obvious ones. Ways of doing this are discussed. Finally, an implemented system is presented which allows the user to specify schemas and inference rules, and uses relaxation to control the building of a network of instances of the schemas, when presented with data about some instances and relations between them621.3994computer scienceUniversity of Edinburghhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.482889http://hdl.handle.net/1842/8121Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 621.3994
computer science
spellingShingle 621.3994
computer science
Hinton, Geoffrey E.
Relaxation and its role in vision
description It is argued that a visual system, especially one which handles imperfect data, needs a way of selecting the best consistent combination from among the many interrelated, locally plausible hypotheses about how parts or aspects of the visual input may be interpreted. A method is presented in which each hypothesis is given a supposition value between 0 and 1. A parallel relaxation I operator, based on the plausibilities of hypotheses and the logical relations between them, is then used to modify the supposition values, and the process is repeated until the best consistent set of hypotheses have supposition values of approximately 1, and the rest have values of approximately 0. The method is incorporated in a program which can interpret configurations of overlapping rectangles as puppets. For this task it is possible to formulate all the potentially relevant hypotheses before using relaxation to select the best consistent set. For more complex tasks, it is necessary to use relaxation on the locally plausible interpretations to guide the search for locally less obvious ones. Ways of doing this are discussed. Finally, an implemented system is presented which allows the user to specify schemas and inference rules, and uses relaxation to control the building of a network of instances of the schemas, when presented with data about some instances and relations between them
author2 Longuet-Higgins, Christopher
author_facet Longuet-Higgins, Christopher
Hinton, Geoffrey E.
author Hinton, Geoffrey E.
author_sort Hinton, Geoffrey E.
title Relaxation and its role in vision
title_short Relaxation and its role in vision
title_full Relaxation and its role in vision
title_fullStr Relaxation and its role in vision
title_full_unstemmed Relaxation and its role in vision
title_sort relaxation and its role in vision
publisher University of Edinburgh
publishDate 1977
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.482889
work_keys_str_mv AT hintongeoffreye relaxationanditsroleinvision
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