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Author |
Patricia Marquez;Debora Gil;Aura Hernandez-Sabate |
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Title |
A Complete Confidence Framework for Optical Flow |
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Conference Article |
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2012 |
Publication |
12th European Conference on Computer Vision – Workshops and Demonstrations |
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7584 |
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2 |
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124-133 |
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Optical flow, confidence measures, sparsification plots, error prediction plots |
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Medial representations are powerful tools for describing and parameterizing the volumetric shape of anatomical structures. Existing methods show excellent results when applied to 2D objects, but their quality drops across dimensions. This paper contributes to the computation of medial manifolds in two aspects. First, we provide a standard scheme for the computation of medial manifolds that avoid degenerated medial axis segments; second, we introduce an energy based method which performs independently of the dimension. We evaluate quantitatively the performance of our method with respect to existing approaches, by applying them to synthetic shapes of known medial geometry. Finally, we show results on shape representation of multiple abdominal organs, exploring the use of medial manifolds for the representation of multi-organ relations. |
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Springer-Verlag |
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Florence, Italy, October 7-13, 2012 |
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Andrea Fusiello, Vittorio Murino ,Rita Cucchiara |
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978-3-642-33867-0 |
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ECCVW |
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IAM;ADAS; |
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IAM @ iam @ MGH2012b |
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1991 |
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Author |
Partha Pratim Roy; Josep Llados; Umapada Pal |
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Title |
A Complete System for Detection and Recognition of Text in Graphical Documents using Background Information |
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Conference Article |
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2009 |
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5th International Conference on Computer Vision Theory and Applications |
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Lisboa, Portugal |
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978-989-8111-69-2 |
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VISAPP |
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DAG |
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DAG @ dag @ RLP2009 |
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1238 |
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Author |
Albin Soutif; Antonio Carta; Andrea Cossu; Julio Hurtado; Hamed Hemati; Vincenzo Lomonaco; Joost Van de Weijer |
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Title |
A Comprehensive Empirical Evaluation on Online Continual Learning |
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Conference Article |
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2023 |
Publication |
Visual Continual Learning (ICCV-W) |
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Online continual learning aims to get closer to a live learning experience by learning directly on a stream of data with temporally shifting distribution and by storing a minimum amount of data from that stream. In this empirical evaluation, we evaluate various methods from the literature that tackle online continual learning. More specifically, we focus on the class-incremental setting in the context of image classification, where the learner must learn new classes incrementally from a stream of data. We compare these methods on the Split-CIFAR100 and Split-TinyImagenet benchmarks, and measure their average accuracy, forgetting, stability, and quality of the representations, to evaluate various aspects of the algorithm at the end but also during the whole training period. We find that most methods suffer from stability and underfitting issues. However, the learned representations are comparable to i.i.d. training under the same computational budget. No clear winner emerges from the results and basic experience replay, when properly tuned and implemented, is a very strong baseline. We release our modular and extensible codebase at this https URL based on the avalanche framework to reproduce our results and encourage future research. |
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Paris; France; October 2023 |
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ICCVW |
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LAMP |
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Admin @ si @ SCC2023 |
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3938 |
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Author |
Frederic Sampedro; Sergio Escalera; Anna Domenech; Ignasi Carrio |
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Title |
A computational framework for cancer response assessment based on oncological PET-CT scans |
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Journal Article |
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Year |
2014 |
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Computers in Biology and Medicine |
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CBM |
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55 |
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92–99 |
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Computer aided diagnosis; Nuclear medicine; Machine learning; Image processing; Quantitative analysis |
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In this work we present a comprehensive computational framework to help in the clinical assessment of cancer response from a pair of time consecutive oncological PET-CT scans. In this scenario, the design and implementation of a supervised machine learning system to predict and quantify cancer progression or response conditions by introducing a novel feature set that models the underlying clinical context is described. Performance results in 100 clinical cases (corresponding to 200 whole body PET-CT scans) in comparing expert-based visual analysis and classifier decision making show up to 70% accuracy within a completely automatic pipeline and 90% accuracy when providing the system with expert-guided PET tumor segmentation masks. |
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HuPBA;MILAB |
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no |
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Admin @ si @ SED2014 |
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2606 |
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Author |
M. Oliver; G. Haro; Mariella Dimiccoli; B. Mazin; C. Ballester |
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Title |
A Computational Model for Amodal Completion |
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Journal Article |
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Year |
2016 |
Publication |
Journal of Mathematical Imaging and Vision |
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JMIV |
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56 |
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3 |
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511–534 |
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Keywords |
Perception; visual completion; disocclusion; Bayesian model;relatability; Euler elastica |
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This paper presents a computational model to recover the most likely interpretation
of the 3D scene structure from a planar image, where some objects may occlude others. The estimated scene interpretation is obtained by integrating some global and local cues and provides both the complete disoccluded objects that form the scene and their ordering according to depth.
Our method first computes several distal scenes which are compatible with the proximal planar image. To compute these different hypothesized scenes, we propose a perceptually inspired object disocclusion method, which works by minimizing the Euler's elastica as well as by incorporating the relatability of partially occluded contours and the convexity of the disoccluded objects. Then, to estimate the preferred scene we rely on a Bayesian model and define probabilities taking into account the global complexity of the objects in the hypothesized scenes as well as the effort of bringing these objects in their relative position in the planar image, which is also measured by an Euler's elastica-based quantity. The model is illustrated with numerical experiments on, both, synthetic and real images showing the ability of our model to reconstruct the occluded objects and the preferred perceptual order among them. We also present results on images of the Berkeley dataset with provided figure-ground ground-truth labeling. |
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MILAB; 601.235 |
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Admin @ si @ OHD2016b |
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2745 |
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Author |
Maria Oliver; Gloria Haro; Mariella Dimiccoli; Baptiste Mazin; Coloma Ballester |
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Title |
A computational model of amodal completion |
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Conference Article |
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Year |
2016 |
Publication |
SIAM Conference on Imaging Science |
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This paper presents a computational model to recover the most likely interpretation of the 3D scene structure from a planar image, where some objects may occlude others. The estimated scene interpretation is obtained by integrating some global and local cues and provides both the complete disoccluded objects that form the scene and their ordering according to depth. Our method first computes several distal scenes which are compatible with the proximal planar image. To compute these different hypothesized scenes, we propose a perceptually inspired object disocclusion method, which works by minimizing the Euler's elastica as well as by incorporating the relatability of partially occluded contours and the convexity of the disoccluded objects. Then, to estimate the preferred scene we rely on a Bayesian model and define probabilities taking into account the global complexity of the objects in the hypothesized scenes as well as the effort of bringing these objects in their relative position in the planar image, which is also measured by an Euler's elastica-based quantity. The model is illustrated with numerical experiments on, both, synthetic and real images showing the ability of our model to reconstruct the occluded objects and the preferred perceptual order among them. We also present results on images of the Berkeley dataset with provided figure-ground ground-truth labeling. |
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Albuquerque; New Mexico; USA; May 2016 |
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IS |
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MILAB; 601.235 |
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Admin @ si @OHD2016a |
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2788 |
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Author |
Antonio Clavelli |
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A computational model of eye guidance, searching for text in real scene images |
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2014 |
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PhD Thesis, Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona-CVC |
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Searching for text objects in real scene images is an open problem and a very active computer vision research area. A large number of methods have been proposed tackling the text search as extension of the ones from the document analysis field or inspired by general purpose object detection methods. However the general problem of object search in real scene images remains an extremely challenging problem due to the huge variability in object appearance. This thesis builds on top of the most recent findings in the visual attention literature presenting a novel computational model of eye guidance aiming to better describe text object search in real scene images.
First are presented the relevant state-of-the-art results from the visual attention literature regarding eye movements and visual search. Relevant models of attention are discussed and integrated with recent observations on the role of top-down constraints and the emerging need for a layered model of attention in which saliency is not the only factor guiding attention. Visual attention is then explained by the interaction of several modulating factors, such as objects, value, plans and saliency. Then we introduce our probabilistic formulation of attention deployment in real scene. The model is based on the rationale that oculomotor control depends on two interacting but distinct processes: an attentional process that assigns value to the sources of information and motor process that flexibly links information with action.
In such framework, the choice of where to look next is task-dependent and oriented to classes of objects embedded within pictures of complex scenes. The dependence on task is taken into account by exploiting the value and the reward of gazing at certain image patches or proto-objects that provide a sparse representation of the scene objects.
In the experimental section the model is tested in laboratory condition, comparing model simulations with data from eye tracking experiments. The comparison is qualitative in terms of observable scan paths and quantitative in terms of statistical similarity of gaze shift amplitude. Experiments are performed using eye tracking data from both a publicly available dataset of face and text and from newly performed eye-tracking experiments on a dataset of street view pictures containing text. The last part of this thesis is dedicated to study the extent to which the proposed model can account for human eye movements in a low constrained setting. We used a mobile eye tracking device and an ad-hoc developed methodology to compare model simulated eye data with the human eye data from mobile eye tracking recordings. Such setting allow to test the model in an incomplete visual information condition, reproducing a close to real-life search task. |
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Ph.D. thesis |
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Ediciones Graficas Rey |
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Dimosthenis Karatzas;Giuseppe Boccignone;Josep Llados |
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978-84-940902-6-4 |
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DAG; 600.077 |
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Admin @ si @ Cla2014 |
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2571 |
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Author |
Mohamed Ali Souibgui; Y.Kessentini; Alicia Fornes |
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A conditional GAN based approach for distorted camera captured documents recovery |
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Conference Article |
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2020 |
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4th Mediterranean Conference on Pattern Recognition and Artificial Intelligence |
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Virtual; December 2020 |
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MedPRAI |
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DAG; 600.121 |
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Admin @ si @ SKF2020 |
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3450 |
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Author |
R. Bertrand; Oriol Ramos Terrades; P. Gomez-Kramer; P. Franco; Jean-Marc Ogier |
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Title |
A Conditional Random Field model for font forgery detection |
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Conference Article |
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2015 |
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13th International Conference on Document Analysis and Recognition ICDAR2015 |
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576 - 580 |
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Nowadays, document forgery is becoming a real issue. A large amount of documents that contain critical information as payment slips, invoices or contracts, are constantly subject to fraudster manipulation because of the lack of security regarding this kind of document. Previously, a system to detect fraudulent documents based on its intrinsic features has been presented. It was especially designed to retrieve copy-move forgery and imperfection due to fraudster manipulation. However, when a set of characters is not present in the original document, copy-move forgery is not feasible. Hence, the fraudster will use a text toolbox to add or modify information in the document by imitating the font or he will cut and paste characters from another document where the font properties are similar. This often results in font type errors. Thus, a clue to detect document forgery consists of finding characters, words or sentences in a document with font properties different from their surroundings. To this end, we present in this paper an automatic forgery detection method based on document font features. Using the Conditional Random Field a measurement of probability that a character belongs to a specific font is made by comparing the character font features to a knowledge database. Then, the character is classified as a genuine or a fake one by comparing its probability to belong to a certain font type with those of the neighboring characters. |
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Nancy; France; August 2015 |
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ICDAR |
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DAG; 600.077 |
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Admin @ si @ BRG2015 |
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2725 |
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Author |
Patricia Marquez |
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Title |
A Confidence Framework for the Assessment of Optical Flow Performance |
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2015 |
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PhD Thesis, Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona-CVC |
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Optical Flow (OF) is the input of a wide range of decision support systems such as car driver assistance, UAV guiding or medical diagnose. In these real situations, the absence of ground truth forces to assess OF quality using quantities computed from either sequences or the computed optical flow itself. These quantities are generally known as Confidence Measures, CM. Even if we have a proper confidence measure we still need a way to evaluate its ability to discard pixels with an OF prone to have a large error. Current approaches only provide a descriptive evaluation of the CM performance but such approaches are not capable to fairly compare different confidence measures and optical flow algorithms. Thus, it is of prime importance to define a framework and a general road map for the evaluation of optical flow performance.
This thesis provides a framework able to decide which pairs “ optical flow – confidence measure” (OF-CM) are best suited for optical flow error bounding given a confidence level determined by a decision support system. To design this framework we cover the following points:
Descriptive scores. As a first step, we summarize and analyze the sources of inaccuracies in the output of optical flow algorithms. Second, we present several descriptive plots that visually assess CM capabilities for OF error bounding. In addition to the descriptive plots, given a plot representing OF-CM capabilities to bound the error, we provide a numeric score that categorizes the plot according to its decreasing profile, that is, a score assessing CM performance.
Statistical framework. We provide a comparison framework that assesses the best suited OF-CM pair for error bounding that uses a two stage cascade process. First of all we assess the predictive value of the confidence measures by means of a descriptive plot. Then, for a sample of descriptive plots computed over training frames, we obtain a generic curve that will be used for sequences with no ground truth. As a second step, we evaluate the obtained general curve and its capabilities to really reflect the predictive value of a confidence measure using the variability across train frames by means of ANOVA.
The presented framework has shown its potential in the application on clinical decision support systems. In particular, we have analyzed the impact of the different image artifacts such as noise and decay to the output of optical flow in a cardiac diagnose system and we have improved the navigation inside the bronchial tree on bronchoscopy. |
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July 2015 |
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Ph.D. thesis |
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Ediciones Graficas Rey |
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Debora Gil;Aura Hernandez |
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978-84-943427-2-1 |
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IAM; 600.075 |
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Admin @ si @ Mar2015 |
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2687 |
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