Pattern theory : The stochastic analysis of real-world signals / David Mumford and Agnès Desolneux.

By: Mumford, David, 1937- [Author]
Contributor(s): Desolneux, Agnès [Author]
Series: Applying mathematicsPublisher: Natick, MA : A K Peters, Ltd. 2010Description: xi, 407 pages, [8] pages of plates : color illustrations ; 24 cmISBN: 9781568815794 (hc : alk. paper)Subject(s): Pattern perception | Pattern recognition systemsDDC classification: 003/.52 LOC classification: Q327 | .M85 2010
Contents:
0. What is pattern theory? -- 1. English text and Markov chains -- 2. Music and piecewise Gaussian models -- 3. Character recognition and syntactic grouping -- 4. Image texture, segmentation and Gibbs models -- 5. Faces and flexible templates -- 6. Natural scenes and their multiscale analysis.
Summary: Pattern Theory, pioneered by Ulf Grenander, is a distinctive approach to the analysis of all forms of real-world signals. At its core is the design of a large variety of probabilistic models whose samples reproduce the look and feel of the real signals, their patterns, and their variability. Bayesian statistical inference then allows you to apply these models in the analysis of new signals. This book treats the mathematical tools, the models themselves, and the computational algorithms for applying statistics to analyze six representative classes of signals of increasing complexity. "Pattern Theory covers six classic attempts at modeling signals from the human and natural world: natural language (written), music, character recognition, texture modeling, face recognition, and natural scenes. These applications, appealing to students and researchers alike, include fourteen "crash courses" giving all the needed basics, exercises, and numerical simulations. Thus, it is a complete pedagogic tool at master or first-year graduate level. I endorse the publication of Pattern Theory, and will actually use it and recommend it to other researchers."--Jean-Michel Morel, CMLA. "This book is fascinating. It develops a statistic approach to finding the patterns in the signals generated by the world. The style is lucid. I'm reminded of Mumford's exposition of Theta functions and Abelian varieties in his Tata lectures. The exposition is thorough. The authors provide the necessary mathematical tools allowing scientists to pursue an exciting subject. I've been running a seminar at MIT entitled ̀New Opportunities for the Interactions of Mathematics and Other Disciplines' because I'm convinced that mathematics will move in surprising new directions. Pattern Theory, a decade's effort, is a prime example."--I.M. Singer, Institute Professor, MIT. "What singles out this outstanding book is an extremely original approach ... The authors are leaders in signal and image processing and this book is based on their innovative research work. The overall organization of the book is marvelous. It is a crescendo. The authors do not have any methodological prejudice. Reading this book is entering David Mumford's office and beginning a friendly and informal scientific discussion with Agnes and David. That is a good approximation to paradise."--Yves Meyer, Membre de l'Institut, Foreign honorary member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences --Book Jacket.
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003.52 M919 2010 (Browse shelf) Available CITU-CL-45156
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Includes bibliographical references and index.

0. What is pattern theory? --
1. English text and Markov chains --
2. Music and piecewise Gaussian models --
3. Character recognition and syntactic grouping --
4. Image texture, segmentation and Gibbs models --
5. Faces and flexible templates --
6. Natural scenes and their multiscale analysis.

Pattern Theory, pioneered by Ulf Grenander, is a distinctive approach to the analysis of all forms of real-world signals. At its core is the design of a large variety of probabilistic models whose samples reproduce the look and feel of the real signals, their patterns, and their variability. Bayesian statistical inference then allows you to apply these models in the analysis of new signals. This book treats the mathematical tools, the models themselves, and the computational algorithms for applying statistics to analyze six representative classes of signals of increasing complexity.
"Pattern Theory covers six classic attempts at modeling signals from the human and natural world: natural language (written), music, character recognition, texture modeling, face recognition, and natural scenes. These applications, appealing to students and researchers alike, include fourteen "crash courses" giving all the needed basics, exercises, and numerical simulations. Thus, it is a complete pedagogic tool at master or first-year graduate level. I endorse the publication of Pattern Theory, and will actually use it and recommend it to other researchers."--Jean-Michel Morel, CMLA.

"This book is fascinating. It develops a statistic approach to finding the patterns in the signals generated by the world. The style is lucid. I'm reminded of Mumford's exposition of Theta functions and Abelian varieties in his Tata lectures. The exposition is thorough. The authors provide the necessary mathematical tools allowing scientists to pursue an exciting subject. I've been running a seminar at MIT entitled ̀New Opportunities for the Interactions of Mathematics and Other Disciplines' because I'm convinced that mathematics will move in surprising new directions. Pattern Theory, a decade's effort, is a prime example."--I.M. Singer, Institute Professor, MIT.

"What singles out this outstanding book is an extremely original approach ... The authors are leaders in signal and image processing and this book is based on their innovative research work. The overall organization of the book is marvelous. It is a crescendo. The authors do not have any methodological prejudice. Reading this book is entering David Mumford's office and beginning a friendly and informal scientific discussion with Agnes and David. That is a good approximation to paradise."--Yves Meyer, Membre de l'Institut, Foreign honorary member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences --Book Jacket.

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