We develop new deep learning models that solve problems involving complex images from limited training data.
We develop new deep learning models that solve problems involving complex images from limited training data.
Visual Intelligence aims to develop new deep learning models that solve problems involving complex images from limited training data.
The performance of deep learning methods steadily improves with more training data. However, the availability of suitable training data is often limited. Additionally, labelling complex image data requires domain experts and is both costly and time-consuming.
This research challenge is heavily stressed by a majority of our user partners as an immediate need. To succeed in our innovation areas, it is absolutely necessary to research new methodology which learn from limited and complex training data.
Methods which exploit weak, noisy and incompletely labelled data, be it through semi-supervised or semi-supervised approaches, make up a significant portion of our portfolio. Examples include the following:
• A self-supervised approach for content-based image retrieval of CT liver images.
• Explainable marine image analysis methods validated on multiple marine datasets, such as multi-frequency echosounder data and aerial imagery of sea mammals captured by drones.
• A self-supervised method for automatically detecting and classifying microfossils.
• Methods for automatic building change detection in aerial images based on self-supervised learning.
These methods represent time-effective and cost-effective approaches which make deep learning models less reliant on large data samples and labeled data. These improve the models’ efficiency and ability to generalize, making them more applicable in real-world settings.
By authors:
Changkyu Choi, Michael Kampffmeyer, Nils Olav Handegard, Arnt-Børre Salberg, Olav Brautaset, Line Eikvil, Robert Jenssen
Published in:
ICES Journal of Marine Science, Volume 78, Issue 7, October 2021, Pages 2615–2627
on
August 12, 2021
By authors:
Ahcène Boubekki, Michael Kampffmeyer, Ulf Brefeld, Robert Jenssen
Published in:
Machine Learning (2021)
on
June 21, 2021