Design of an Adaptive Support Vector Regressor Controller for a Spherical Tank System

Author(s):  
Kemal Uçak ◽  
Gülay Öke Günel
2011 ◽  
Vol 24 (1) ◽  
pp. 109-120 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jongho Shin ◽  
H. Jin Kim ◽  
Youdan Kim

Entropy ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 21 (2) ◽  
pp. 145 ◽  
Author(s):  
Viet Tra ◽  
Bach-Phi Duong ◽  
Jae-Young Kim ◽  
Muhammad Sohaib ◽  
Jong-Myon Kim

This paper proposes a reliable fault diagnosis model for a spherical storage tank. The proposed method first used a blind source separation (BSS) technique to de-noise the input signals so that the signals acquired from a spherical tank under two types of conditions (i.e., normal and crack conditions) were easily distinguishable. BSS split the signals into different sources that provided information about the noise and useful components of the signals. Therefore, an unimpaired signal could be restored from the useful components. From the de-noised signals, wavelet-based fault features, i.e., the relative energy (REWPN) and entropy (EWPN) of a wavelet packet node, were extracted. Finally, these features were used to train one-against-all multiclass support vector machines (OAA MCSVMs), which classified the instances of normal and faulty states of the tank. The efficiency of the proposed fault diagnosis model was examined by visualizing the de-noised signals obtained from the BSS method and its classification performance. The proposed fault diagnostic model was also compared to existing techniques. Experimental results showed that the proposed method outperformed conventional techniques, yielding average classification accuracies of 97.25% and 98.48% for the two datasets used in this study.


Algorithms ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 12 (7) ◽  
pp. 135
Author(s):  
Cai ◽  
Liu ◽  
Luo ◽  
Du ◽  
Tang

Microcalcification is the most important landmark information for early breast cancer. At present, morphological artificial observation is the main method for clinical diagnosis of such diseases, but it is easy to cause misdiagnosis and missed diagnosis. The present study proposes an algorithm for detecting microcalcification on mammography for early breast cancer. Firstly, the contrast characteristics of mammograms are enhanced by Contourlet transformation and morphology (CTM). Secondly, split the ROI by the improved K-means algorithm. Thirdly, calculate grayscale feature, shape feature, and Histogram of Oriented Gradient (HOG) for the ROI region. The Adaptive support vector machine (ASVM) is used as a tool to classify the rough calcification point and the false calcification point. Under the guidance of a professional doctor, 280 normal images and 120 calcification images were selected for experimentation, of which 210 normal images and 90 images with calcification images were used for training classification. The remaining 100 are used to test the algorithm. It is found that the accuracy of the automatic classification results of the Adaptive support vector machine (ASVM) algorithm reaches 94%, and the experimental results are superior to similar algorithms. The algorithm overcomes various difficulties in microcalcification detection and has great clinical application value.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document