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Multiple Classifier Systems
Fabio Roli
Josef Kittler
Terry Windeatt
其他書名
5th International Workshop, MCS 2004, Cagliari, Italy, June 9-11, 2004, Proceedings
出版
Springer Science & Business Media
, 2004-06
主題
Computers / Artificial Intelligence / General
Computers / Software Development & Engineering / Computer Graphics
Computers / Image Processing
Computers / Computer Science
Computers / Artificial Intelligence / Computer Vision & Pattern Recognition
Computers / Data Science / Data Analytics
Computers / Information Technology
Computers / Machine Theory
Computers / Data Science / Neural Networks
Computers / Optical Data Processing
Computers / Software Development & Engineering / General
Computers / User Interfaces
Computers / Data Science / Machine Learning
Mathematics / Discrete Mathematics
Psychology / Cognitive Psychology & Cognition
ISBN
3540221441
9783540221449
URL
http://books.google.com.hk/books?id=Kn2i5EaPwuoC&hl=&source=gbs_api
EBook
SAMPLE
註釋
The fusion of di?erent information sourcesis a persistent and intriguing issue. It hasbeenaddressedforcenturiesinvariousdisciplines,includingpoliticalscience, probability and statistics, system reliability assessment, computer science, and distributed detection in communications. Early seminal work on fusion was c- ried out by pioneers such as Laplace and von Neumann. More recently, research activities in information fusion have focused on pattern recognition. During the 1990s,classi?erfusionschemes,especiallyattheso-calleddecision-level,emerged under a plethora of di?erent names in various scienti?c communities, including machine learning, neural networks, pattern recognition, and statistics. The d- ferent nomenclatures introduced by these communities re?ected their di?erent perspectives and cultural backgrounds as well as the absence of common forums and the poor dissemination of the most important results. In 1999, the ?rst workshop on multiple classi?er systems was organized with the main goal of creating a common international forum to promote the diss- ination of the results achieved in the diverse communities and the adoption of a common terminology, thus giving the di?erent perspectives and cultural ba- grounds some concrete added value. After ?ve meetings of this workshop, there is strong evidence that signi?cant steps have been made towards this goal. - searchers from these diverse communities successfully participated in the wo- shops, and world experts presented surveys of the state of the art from the perspectives of their communities to aid cross-fertilization.