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Faouzi Alaya Cheikh

Faouzi Alaya Cheikh contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

3 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

CT-DegradBench: A Physics-Informed Benchmark for CT Degradation Detection and Severity Estimation

Computed tomography (CT) images are frequently degraded by acquisition artifacts, including noise, blur, streaking, aliasing, and metal artifacts. Yet CT enhancement is still largely evaluated using image quality metrics with limited perceptual and clinical validity, while existing datasets remain focused on isolated restoration tasks, hindering unified benchmarking across diverse degradation types. We present CT-DegradBench, a dataset and benchmark for CT degradation detection and severity estimation under controlled single- and mixed-artifact settings. CT-DegradBench enables systematic evaluation across multiple degradation families and severity levels within a common experimental framework. We further propose SeSpeCT (Semantic-Spectral CT degradation estimation), a framework that combines semantic priors from medical vision-language models with complementary frequency-domain cues for artifact analysis. SeSpeCT constructs a training-free semantic quality axis in the multimodal embedding space using radiology-informed text prompts, without task-specific fine-tuning, and combines it with spectral features that capture degradation-specific frequency patterns. The resulting representation enables joint prediction of artifact type and severity. Experimental results show that SeSpeCT consistently outperforms the evaluated baselines under both single- and mixed-degradation settings. The framework is available at https://github.com/yousranb/CT-DEGRADBENCH.

preprint2020arXiv

Kalman Filter Based Multiple Person Head Tracking

For multi-target tracking, target representation plays a crucial rule in performance. State-of-the-art approaches rely on the deep learning-based visual representation that gives an optimal performance at the cost of high computational complexity. In this paper, we come up with a simple yet effective target representation for human tracking. Our inspiration comes from the fact that the human body goes through severe deformation and inter/intra occlusion over the passage of time. So, instead of tracking the whole body part, a relative rigid organ tracking is selected for tracking the human over an extended period of time. Hence, we followed the tracking-by-detection paradigm and generated the target hypothesis of only the spatial locations of heads in every frame. After the localization of head location, a Kalman filter with a constant velocity motion model is instantiated for each target that follows the temporal evolution of the targets in the scene. For associating the targets in the consecutive frames, combinatorial optimization is used that associates the corresponding targets in a greedy fashion. Qualitative results are evaluated on four challenging video surveillance dataset and promising results has been achieved.

preprint2020arXiv

Towards a Video Quality Assessment based Framework for Enhancement of Laparoscopic Videos

Laparoscopic videos can be affected by different distortions which may impact the performance of surgery and introduce surgical errors. In this work, we propose a framework for automatically detecting and identifying such distortions and their severity using video quality assessment. There are three major contributions presented in this work (i) a proposal for a novel video enhancement framework for laparoscopic surgery; (ii) a publicly available database for quality assessment of laparoscopic videos evaluated by expert as well as non-expert observers and (iii) objective video quality assessment of laparoscopic videos including their correlations with expert and non-expert scores.