| Debra Burhans, Rajiv Chopra, and Rohini Srihari. Domain specific understanding of spatial expressions. In Proceeding of the IJCAI-95 Workshop on Representation and Processing of Spatial Expressions, Montreal, August 1995. |
....of the domain allows us to make simplifying assumptions for spatial reasoning. The assumptions concern spatial representations of objects, frames of reference, scale and rotation invariance. Spatial reasoning in this domain involves verification of predicates corresponding to spatial relations. [Burhans et al. 1995] Constraint Satisfaction as a Control Paradigm In the previous chapter, we have already described how we employ constraint satisfaction as the basis for collateral based vision. In PICTION, each variable v i corresponds to an object or person hypothesis, i.e. object or person predicted to be ....
Debra Burhans, Rajiv Chopra, and Rohini Srihari. Domain specific understanding of spatial expressions. In Proceeding of the IJCAI-95 Workshop on Representation and Processing of Spatial Expressions, Montreal, August 1995.
....I have published several papers is the representation and understanding of spatial language, that is, the language we use to describe spatial configurations of objects, their features, and their relationships to one another. I spent my first four years of graduate school focused on these problems [11,12,13]. The following is a list of some important components of a broad theory of spatial language I have developed: Description of a set of spatial language terms that act like a closed class. These terms have been hand tagged in WordNet, enabling the use of WordNet as a lexicon for a spatial ....
D. T. Burhans, R. Chopra, R. K. Srihari, "Domain Specific Understanding of Spatial Expressions", Proceedings of IJCAI-95 Workshop on The Representation and Processing of Spatial Expressions, Montreal, Canada, 1995.
....of the domain allows us to make simplifying assumptions for spatial reasoning. The assumptions concern spatial representations of objects, frames of reference, scale and rotation invariance. Spatial reasoning in this domain involves verification of predicates corresponding to spatial relations. Burhans et al. 1995 ] 3.2 Constraint Satisfaction as a Control Paradigm A static constraint satisfaction problem (V; D;C;R) involves a set of n variables, V = fv 1 ; v 2 ; vn g, each with an associated domain D i of possible values. The search space consists of the Cartesian product of the variables ....
Debra Burhans, Rajiv Chopra, and Rohini Srihari. Domain specific understanding of spatial expressions. In Proceeding of the IJCAI-95 Workshop on Representation and Processing of Spatial Expressions, Montreal, August 1995.
....of the domain allows us to make simplifying assumptions for spatial reasoning. The assumptions concern spatial representations of objects, frames of reference, scale and rotation invariance. Spatial reasoning in this domain involves verification of predicates corresponding to spatial relations. [Burhans et al. 1995] Constraint Satisfaction as a Control Paradigm In the previous chapter, we have already described how we employ constraint satisfaction as the basis for collateral based vision. In PICTION, each variable v i corresponds to an object or person hypothesis, i.e. object or person predicted to be in ....
Debra Burhans, Rajiv Chopra, and Rohini Srihari. Domain specific understanding of spatial expressions. In Proceeding of the IJCAI-95 Workshop on Representation and Processing of Spatial Expressions, Montreal, August 1995.
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Burhans, Debra T., Rajiv Chopra, and Rohini K. Srihari, 1996. Domain Specific Understanding of Spatial Expressions. In Representation and Processing of Spatial Expressions, eds. P. Olivier and K. Gapp, Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, 1996.
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