scholarly journals Digital image processing to detect subtle motion in stony coral

2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Shuaifeng Li ◽  
Liza M. Roger ◽  
Lokender Kumar ◽  
Nastassja A. Lewinski ◽  
Judith Klein-Seetharaman ◽  
...  

AbstractCoral reef ecosystems support significant biological activities and harbor huge diversity, but they are facing a severe crisis driven by anthropogenic activities and climate change. An important behavioral trait of the coral holobiont is coral motion, which may play an essential role in feeding, competition, reproduction, and thus survival and fitness. Therefore, characterizing coral behavior through motion analysis will aid our understanding of basic biological and physical coral functions. However, tissue motion in the stony scleractinian corals that contribute most to coral reef construction are subtle and may be imperceptible to both the human eye and commonly used imaging techniques. Here we propose and apply a systematic approach to quantify and visualize subtle coral motion across a series of light and dark cycles in the scleractinian coral Montipora capricornis. We use digital image correlation and optical flow techniques to quantify and characterize minute coral motions under different light conditions. In addition, as a visualization tool, motion magnification algorithm magnifies coral motions in different frequencies, which explicitly displays the distinctive dynamic modes of coral movement. Specifically, our assessment of displacement, strain, optical flow, and mode shape quantify coral motion under different light conditions, and they all show that M. capricornis exhibits more active motions at night compared to day. Our approach provides an unprecedented insight into micro-scale coral movement and behavior through macro-scale digital imaging, thus offering a useful empirical toolset for the coral research community.

2012 ◽  
Vol 468-471 ◽  
pp. 1887-1890 ◽  
Author(s):  
Min Shen ◽  
Hai Tao Yuan ◽  
Dong Chao Liang ◽  
Yang Liu

The random spruce short fiber reinforced polypropylene composites is a type of thermoplastic bio-composites. It is considered as homogeneous, isotropic in macro-scale of its specimen, in fiber scale about 500μm, the composite material appears heterogeneity, anisotropy due to the influence of microstructures of random short fibers. The heterogeneous deformations near the crack tip of the compact tension (CT) specimen which made from spruce/PP composites were measured by means of the digital image correlation method (DICM) with high resolutions digital image. The crack tip fields of heterogeneous displacement and strain for spruce/PP composites with fiber volume content 49% were obtained. The effects of random fiber microstructures on macroscopic deformations were discussed.


2021 ◽  
pp. 1-14
Author(s):  
Adam J. Smith ◽  
Hannah L. Maxwell ◽  
Hadi Mirmohammad ◽  
Owen Kingstedt ◽  
Ryan B. Berke

Abstract Macro-scale ductility is not an intrinsic material property but is dependent on the overall geometry of the specimen. To account for variety in specimen geometries, multiple ductility scaling laws have been developed which scale ductility between different specimen sizes. Traditionally, these ductility laws rely on testing multiple different specimens of varying sizes to obtain material parameters, often done by varying gauge lengths. With the use of Digital Image Correlation (DIC), this work presents a technique where multiple different gauge lengths are extracted from a single specimen to obtain ductility scaling parameters from a single experiment. This technique provides orders of magnitude more data from each specimen than previous techniques. This variable extensometer method is then validated by testing multiple different geometries and select scaling laws are then compared.


2010 ◽  
Vol 24-25 ◽  
pp. 141-146 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y.H. Tai ◽  
M. Zanganeh ◽  
D. Asquith ◽  
J.R. Yates

Optical techniques for displacement measurements have become more common in recent years. The current preferred technique is digital image correlation (DIC) which works very well but has limitations for measuring diametral contractions in cylindrical specimens using a standard 3D system. To overcome the limitations of using either a diametral clip gauge or standard 3D DIC, a method has been developed for measuring diametral contractions simultaneously in two directions using a standard 3D DIC system in conjunction with an edge detection algorithm. Results have shown the method to work well.


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