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| UGG Shoes
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09-12-2009 09:49 PM ET (US)
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| incidence of sweating in
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08-02-2009 04:21 PM ET (US)
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H1DJIe If you have to do it, you might as well do it right.
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Messages 18-16 deleted by topic administrator 08-03-2009 02:09 AM |
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07-15-2009 05:27 AM ET (US)
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Jh0eL3
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06-24-2009 05:10 AM ET (US)
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Deleted by topic administrator 07-25-2009 02:12 AM
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06-19-2009 10:20 PM ET (US)
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christian louboutin Christian Louboutin web site. Luxury french shoe designer.Shop Christian Louboutin discount designer fashion at christian louboutinsale With the widest range of authentic luxury designer brands - It's Chic-onomics!
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robots
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06-12-2009 07:37 AM ET (US)
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Deleted by topic administrator 07-25-2009 02:12 AM
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| Tom
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10-24-2006 04:52 PM ET (US)
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I noticed that they didn't have any examples or real discussion (that I remember) of multi-object single background segmentation. Is that current work? Does it seem to anybody else like this algorithm couldn't be easily extended to do that? (btw example would be two elephants on a savannah)
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Carolina Galleguillos
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10-24-2006 04:45 PM ET (US)
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They claim that the coarse estimate provides robustness to texture and clutter, but they use for training and testing only images that contain at least one salient, *unoccluded" object that is fully contained in the image.
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| Deborah
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10-24-2006 03:13 PM ET (US)
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Can you explain the intuition of how Fourier coefficients represent a shape? Thank you!
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| Joshua
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10-24-2006 01:59 PM ET (US)
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I am curious as to how similar the probability distributions found from the training data (e.g figures 1& 2) from the Berkely Segmentation Database will be to other training sets of natural images.
I.e. do these distributions work only for this particular dataset or do we have to re-train for every dataset?
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