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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Určování podobnosti objektů na základě obrazové informace / Determination of Objects Similarity Based on Image Information

Rajnoha, Martin January 2021 (has links)
Monitoring of public areas and their automatic real-time processing became increasingly significant due to the changing security situation in the world. However, the problem is an analysis of low-quality records, where even the state-of-the-art methods fail in some cases. This work investigates an important area of image similarity – biometric identification based on face image. The work deals primarily with the face super-resolution from a sequence of low-resolution images and it compares this approach to the single-frame methods, that are still considered as the most accurate. A new dataset was created for this purpose, which is directly designed for the multi-frame face super-resolution methods from the low-resolution input sequence, and it is of comparable size with the leading world datasets. The results were evaluated by both a survey of human perception and defined objective metrics. A hypothesis that multi-frame methods achieve better results than single-frame methods was proved by a comparison of both methods. Architectures, source code and the dataset were released. That caused a creation of the basis for future research in this field.
2

Building high-quality datasets for abstractive text summarization : A filtering‐based method applied on Swedish news articles

Monsen, Julius January 2021 (has links)
With an increasing amount of information on the internet, automatic text summarization could potentially make content more readily available for a larger variety of people. Training and evaluating text summarization models require datasets of sufficient size and quality. Today, most such datasets are in English, and for minor languages such as Swedish, it is not easy to obtain corresponding datasets with handwritten summaries. This thesis proposes methods for compiling high-quality datasets suitable for abstractive summarization from a large amount of noisy data through characterization and filtering. The data used consists of Swedish news articles and their preambles which are here used as summaries. Different filtering techniques are applied, yielding five different datasets. Furthermore, summarization models are implemented by warm-starting an encoder-decoder model with BERT checkpoints and fine-tuning it on the different datasets. The fine-tuned models are evaluated with ROUGE metrics and BERTScore. All models achieve significantly better results when evaluated on filtered test data than when evaluated on unfiltered test data. Moreover, models trained on the most filtered dataset with the smallest size achieves the best results on the filtered test data. The trade-off between dataset size and quality and other methodological implications of the data characterization, the filtering and the model implementation are discussed, leading to suggestions for future research.

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