Studying the impact of sequence clustering on near-duplicate video retrieval: an experimental comparison

2015 ◽  
Vol 4 (4) ◽  
pp. 279-288
Author(s):  
Yandan Wang ◽  
Mohammed Belkhatir
Author(s):  
Giorgos Kordopatis-Zilos ◽  
Symeon Papadopoulos ◽  
Ioannis Patras ◽  
Yiannis Kompatsiaris

Nutrients ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (6) ◽  
pp. 1545 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert Hamlin ◽  
Benjamin Hamlin

This research investigated the performance of the red, octagonal Vienna Convention traffic ‘STOP’ sign as a front of pack (FoP) warning nutritional label. While the Vienna Convention traffic light system is an established FoP label, the potential of the ‘STOP’ sign in the role has not been investigated. The performance of the ‘STOP’ label was compared with that of a single star (low nutritional value) Australasian Health Star Rating (HSR) label using a fractionally replicated Latin square design. The labels were presented on choice diads of cold breakfast cereal packets. The sample of 240 adolescents aged 16–18 was drawn from a secondary school in the South Island of New Zealand. A large and significant main effect was observed at the p < 0.01 level for the difference between the ’STOP’ sign and the control condition (no nutritional FoP label), and at p < 0.05 for the difference between the HSR and the ‘STOP’ label. There was no significant difference between the HSR FoP and the control condition. A significant non-additivity (interaction) (p < 0.01) was also observed via the fractional replication. The results indicate that the Vienna Convention ‘STOP’ sign is worthy of further research with regard to its potential as an FoP nutritional label.


2020 ◽  
Vol 14 (5) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ling Shen ◽  
Richang Hong ◽  
Yanbin Hao

2015 ◽  
Vol 669 ◽  
pp. 179-186 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anton Panda ◽  
Marek Prislupčák ◽  
Jozef Jurko ◽  
Iveta Pandová ◽  
Peter Orendáč

Abrasive water jet technology is among the unconventional ways of machining. In today's modern and progressive era is often used for cutting and machining of various types of materials because of lower costs and environmental impact, as the cutting tool is water, in our case, with the addition of abrasives. Objective of the measurements was to evaluate the impact of vibration on the technological head in abrasive water jet technology in changing the selected technological parameters and the flow rate of technological head. In the given experiment, the used material - steel Hardox 500 with a thickness of 10 mm. The effort was to investigate the effects of changes in the speed rate of technological head (by speeds - 40, 200, 400 mm / min) on the size of the vibration acceleration amplitude and its frequency. Based on the measured values ​​of vibration to the technological head create the database and from it is evaluated the data in selected softwares (LabVIEW, SignalExpress and Microsoft Excel). Findings and conclusions are formulated on the basis of graphical dependencies, envelopes frequency spectra and comparison chart of envelopes.


Author(s):  
Benjamin Wilkosz ◽  
Johannes Schmidt ◽  
Christian Guenther ◽  
Philipp Schwarz ◽  
Peter Jeschke ◽  
...  

The present work is part of the research project at the Institute of Jet Propulsion and Turbomachinery at the RWTH Aachen University in collaboration with GE Aviation. The subject is the numerical and experimental analysis of two blading strategies used in the diffusion system of an aero engine centrifugal compressor. The transonic centrifugal compressor investigated contains a close-coupled impeller and passage diffuser [1], followed by a deswirler system. The deswirler redirects the flow towards the combustion chamber, while decreasing swirl and recovering pressure. It is characterized by a high aerodynamic loading, due to a moderate inlet Mach number of 0.35, in combination with a required flow redirection of 70° in circumferential and 135° in meridional direction. For this purpose, two different blading strategies are investigated, both retaining the same meridional flow path and integral chord length. The first design is a tandem configuration with 30 vanes in the first row and 60 vanes in the second row. In principal, this approach benefits from the small wetted surface, the short and thereby stable boundary layers as well as the positive blade interaction due to the close alignment [2]. The second design contains one row of 75 vanes. The higher solidity is needed to compensate for the longer boundary layers. The two deswirlers investigated are compared to a less compact baseline deswirler [3] with simple prismatic vanes. Experimental and numerical data shows that both new configurations have very similar stage efficiency. The single row design shows a higher static pressure recovery, resulting in a +0.2%-points total-to-static isentropic efficiency increase compared to the tandem design. Detailed flow analysis in the deswirler system shows different characteristics in terms of losses, loss mechanisms and pressure build-up. Due to the required high turning, both designs suffer from flow separation. Nevertheless, the single row design shows its robustness under the impact of 3D flow, whereas the tandem suffers from end-wall induced losses. The results show that the classical mechanisms making a tandem favorable for high flow turning in 2D flow are counteracted by 3D flow mechanisms caused by the spanwise pressure gradient. The low aspect ratio even increases the effect of 3D end-wall mechanisms. These results, combined with a higher manufacturing effort, show that a tandem configuration is not necessarily the superior design for highly 3D flow conditions.


PeerJ ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 6 ◽  
pp. e5871 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert S. Cornman ◽  
James E. McKenna ◽  
Jennifer Fike ◽  
Sara J. Oyler-McCance ◽  
Robin Johnson

Use of environmental DNA (eDNA) to assess distributions of aquatic and semi-aquatic macroorganisms is promising, but sampling schemes may need to be tailored to specific objectives. Given the potentially high variance in aquatic eDNA among replicate grab samples, compositing smaller water volumes collected over a period of time may be more effective for some applications. In this study, we compared eDNA profiles from composite water samples aggregated over three hours with grab water samples. Both sampling patterns were performed with identical autosamplers paired at two different sites in a headwater stream environment, augmented with exogenous fish eDNA from an upstream rearing facility. Samples were filtered through 0.8 μm cellulose nitrate filters and DNA was extracted with a cetyl trimethylammonium bromide procedure. Eukaryotic and bacterial community profiles were derived by amplicon sequencing of 12S ribosomal, 16S ribosomal, and cytochrome oxidase I loci. Operational taxa were assigned to genus with a lowest common ancestor approach for eukaryotes and to family with the RDP Classifier software for prokaryotes. Eukaryotic community profiles were more consistent with composite sampling than grab sampling. Downstream, rarefaction curves suggested faster taxon accumulation for composite samples, and estimated richness was higher for composite samples as a set than for grab samples. Upstream, composite sampling produced lower estimated richness than grab samples, but with overlapping standard errors. Furthermore, a bimodal pattern of richness as a function of sequence counts suggested the impact of clumped particles on upstream samples. Bacterial profiles were insensitive to sample method, consistent with the more even dispersion expected for bacteria compared with eukaryotic eDNA. Overall, samples composited over 3 h performed equal to or better than triplicate grab sampling for quantitative community metrics, despite the higher total sequencing effort provided to grab replicates. On the other hand, taxon-specific detection rates did not differ appreciably and the two methods gave similar estimates of the ratio of the common fish genera Salmo and Coregonus at each site. Unexpectedly, Salmo eDNA dropped out substantially faster than Coregonus eDNA between the two sites regardless of sampling method, suggesting that differential settling affects the estimation of relative abundance. We identified bacterial patterns that were associated with eukaryotic diversity, suggesting potential roles as biomarkers of sample representativeness.


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