scholarly journals Fast Grain Mapping with Sub-Nanometer Resolution Using 4D-STEM with Grain Classification by Principal Component Analysis and Non-Negative Matrix Factorization

2021 ◽  
pp. 1-10
Author(s):  
Frances I. Allen ◽  
Thomas C. Pekin ◽  
Arun Persaud ◽  
Steven J. Rozeveld ◽  
Gregory F. Meyers ◽  
...  

Abstract

Author(s):  
Della Gressinda Wahana ◽  
Bambang Hidayat ◽  
Suci Aulia ◽  
Sugondo Hadiyoso

Face detection and face recognition are among the most important research topics in computer vision, as many applications use faces as objects of biometric technology. One of the main issues in applying face recognition is recording the attendance of active participants in a room. The challenge is that recognition through video with multiple object conditions in one frame may be difficult to perform. The Principal Component Analysis method is commonly used in face detection. Principal Component Analysis still has shortcomings: the accuracy decreases when it is applied to large datasets and performs slowly in real-time applications. Therefore, this study simulates a face recognition system installed in a room based on video recordings using Non-negative Matrix Factorization suppressed carrier and Local Non-negative Matrix Factorization methods. Data acquisition is obtained by capturing video in classrooms with a resolution of 640 x 480 pixels in RGB, .avi format, video frame rate of 30 fps, and video duration of ±10 seconds. The proposed system can perform face recognition in which the average accuracy value of the Local Non-negative Matrix Factorization method is 71.61% with a computation time of 152,634 seconds. By contrast, the average accuracy value of the Non-negative Matrix Factorization suppressed carrier method is 86.76% with a computation time of 467,785 seconds. The proposed system is expected to be used for simultaneously finding and identifying faces in real time.


2017 ◽  
Vol 117 (1) ◽  
pp. 290-302 ◽  
Author(s):  
Navid Lambert-Shirzad ◽  
H. F. Machiel Van der Loos

Human motor behavior is highly goal directed, requiring the central nervous system to coordinate different aspects of motion generation to achieve the motion goals. The concept of motor synergies provides an approach to quantify the covariation of joint motions and of muscle activations, i.e., elemental variables, during a task. To analyze goal-directed movements, factorization methods can be used to reduce the high dimensionality of these variables while accounting for much of the variance in large data sets. Three factorization methods considered in this paper are principal component analysis (PCA), nonnegative matrix factorization (NNMF), and independent component analysis (ICA). Bilateral human reaching data sets are used to compare the methods, and advantages of each are presented and discussed. PCA and NNMF had a comparable performance on both EMG and joint motion data and both outperformed ICA. However, NNMF's nonnegativity condition for activation of basis vectors is a useful attribute in identifying physiologically meaningful synergies, making it a more appealing method for future studies. A simulated data set is introduced to clarify the approaches and interpretation of the synergy structures returned by the three factorization methods.NEW & NOTEWORTHY Literature on comparing factorization methods in identifying motor synergies using numerically generated, simulation, and muscle activation data from animal studies already exists. We present an empirical evaluation of the performance of three of these methods on muscle activation and joint angles data from human reaching motion: principal component analysis, nonnegative matrix factorization, and independent component analysis. Using numerical simulation, we also studied the meaning and differences in the synergy structures returned by each method. The results can be used to unify approaches in identifying and interpreting motor synergies.


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