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Conference Papers Year : 1999

Minimum Description Length and the Inference of Scene Structure from Images

Peter Sturm

Abstract

Model selection is a central task in computer vision. The minimum description length (MDL) method links model selection to data compression: the best model is the one which yields the largest compression of the data. The general theoretical framework for compression is Kolmogorov complexity. MDL differs from Bayesian model selection (BMS) in that it is biased against complex probability density functions. MDL is applied to a model selection problem in computer vision. The following models are considered: background, collineation, affine fundamental and fundamental models. The experiments show that the collineation model is a good choice even for sets of image correspondences for which the 'true' model is a fundamental matrix.

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Dates and versions

inria-00525678 , version 1 (30-05-2011)

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Steve Maybank, Peter Sturm. Minimum Description Length and the Inference of Scene Structure from Images. IEE Colloquium on Applications of Statistics to Pattern Recognition, Apr 1999, Birmingham, United Kingdom. ⟨10.1049/ic:19990366⟩. ⟨inria-00525678⟩
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