scholarly journals PDNet: Semantic segmentation integrated with a primal-dual network for document binarization

2019 ◽  
Vol 121 ◽  
pp. 52-60 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kalyan Ram Ayyalasomayajula ◽  
Filip Malmberg ◽  
Anders Brun
2018 ◽  
Vol 11 (6) ◽  
pp. 304
Author(s):  
Javier Pinzon-Arenas ◽  
Robinson Jimenez-Moreno ◽  
Ruben Hernandez-Beleno

Author(s):  
Jaya Pratha Sebastiyar ◽  
Martin Sahayaraj Joseph

Distributed joint congestion control and routing optimization has received a significant amount of attention recently. To date, however, most of the existing schemes follow a key idea called the back-pressure algorithm. Despite having many salient features, the first-order sub gradient nature of the back-pressure based schemes results in slow convergence and poor delay performance. To overcome these limitations, the present study was made as first attempt at developing a second-order joint congestion control and routing optimization framework that offers utility-optimality, queue-stability, fast convergence, and low delay.  Contributions in this project are three-fold. The present study propose a new second-order joint congestion control and routing framework based on a primal-dual interior-point approach and established utility-optimality and queue-stability of the proposed second-order method. The results of present study showed that how to implement the proposed second-order method in a distributed fashion.


Impact ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 (2) ◽  
pp. 9-11
Author(s):  
Tomohiro Fukuda

Mixed reality (MR) is rapidly becoming a vital tool, not just in gaming, but also in education, medicine, construction and environmental management. The term refers to systems in which computer-generated content is superimposed over objects in a real-world environment across one or more sensory modalities. Although most of us have heard of the use of MR in computer games, it also has applications in military and aviation training, as well as tourism, healthcare and more. In addition, it has the potential for use in architecture and design, where buildings can be superimposed in existing locations to render 3D generations of plans. However, one major challenge that remains in MR development is the issue of real-time occlusion. This refers to hiding 3D virtual objects behind real articles. Dr Tomohiro Fukuda, who is based at the Division of Sustainable Energy and Environmental Engineering, Graduate School of Engineering at Osaka University in Japan, is an expert in this field. Researchers, led by Dr Tomohiro Fukuda, are tackling the issue of occlusion in MR. They are currently developing a MR system that realises real-time occlusion by harnessing deep learning to achieve an outdoor landscape design simulation using a semantic segmentation technique. This methodology can be used to automatically estimate the visual environment prior to and after construction projects.


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