On-line and real-time processing in radio astronomy

1978 ◽  
Vol 15 (5) ◽  
pp. 347-349 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Schraml
Author(s):  
Norikazu Ikoma ◽  
◽  
Gefan Zhang

Decorations of face such as enlarging eyes, whitening skin, rendering face slim, and so on are commercially successful in amusement arcades especially in Japan for still image and off-line processing. This paper proposes to decorate human face in video on-line and in real-time processing. Face posture estimation using particle filter plays a key role to decorate the face by precisely determining position of the eyes as well as determining regional position of face. Our proposed method conducts two decorations, enlarging eyes and whitening skin, based on the estimation result of face posture. Real-time implementation of the proposed method has been demonstrated for real scenes of indoor situation.


2006 ◽  
pp. 95-100 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elena Biagi ◽  
Marco Calzolai ◽  
Massimiliano Forzieri ◽  
Simona Granchi ◽  
Leonardo Masotti ◽  
...  

2016 ◽  
Vol 44 (5) ◽  
pp. 1025-1040 ◽  
Author(s):  
VINCENZO MOSCATI ◽  
LIKAN ZHAN ◽  
PENG ZHOU

AbstractIn this paper we investigated the real-time processing of epistemic modals in five-year-olds. In a simple reasoning scenario, we monitored children's eye-movements while processing a sentence with modal expressions of different force (might/must). Children were also asked to judge the truth-value of the target sentences at the end of the reasoning task. Consistent with previous findings (Noveck, 2001), we found that children's behavioural responses were much less accurate compared to adults. Their eye-movements, however, revealed that children did not treat the two modal expressions alike. As soon as a modal expression was presented, children and adults showed a similar fixation pattern that varied as a function of the modal expression they heard. It is only at the very end of the sentence that children's fixations diverged from the adult ones. We discuss these findings in relation to the proposal that children narrow down the set of possible outcomes in undetermined reasoning scenarios and endorse only one possibility among several (Acredolo & Horobin, 1987, Ozturk & Papafragou, 2015).


Author(s):  
Daiki Matsumoto ◽  
Ryuji Hirayama ◽  
Naoto Hoshikawa ◽  
Hirotaka Nakayama ◽  
Tomoyoshi Shimobaba ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
David J. Lobina

The study of cognitive phenomena is best approached in an orderly manner. It must begin with an analysis of the function in intension at the heart of any cognitive domain (its knowledge base), then proceed to the manner in which such knowledge is put into use in real-time processing, concluding with a domain’s neural underpinnings, its development in ontogeny, etc. Such an approach to the study of cognition involves the adoption of different levels of explanation/description, as prescribed by David Marr and many others, each level requiring its own methodology and supplying its own data to be accounted for. The study of recursion in cognition is badly in need of a systematic and well-ordered approach, and this chapter lays out the blueprint to be followed in the book by focusing on a strict separation between how this notion applies in linguistic knowledge and how it manifests itself in language processing.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document