scholarly journals Design method of measurement errors of MEMS-IMU in attitude capture clothing

2021 ◽  
Vol 1827 (1) ◽  
pp. 012203
Author(s):  
Zhi Yang ◽  
Zhonghui Zhang ◽  
Dezhi Wang
Sensors ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 19 (22) ◽  
pp. 4880 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jiang ◽  
Li

Fault diagnosability is the basis of fault diagnosis. Fault diagnosability evaluation refers to whether there is enough measurable information in the system to support the rapid and reliable detection of a fault. However, due to unavoidable measurement errors in a system, a quantitative evaluation index of system fault diagnosability is inadequate. In order to overcome the adverse effects of measurement errors, improve the accuracy of the quantitative evaluation of fault diagnosability, and improve the safety level of the system, a method for a permissible area analysis of measurement errors for a quantitative evaluation of fault diagnosability is proposed in this paper. Firstly, in order for the residuals obey normal distribution, a design method of the permissible area of measurement errors based on the Kullback–Leibler divergence (KLD) is given. Secondly, two key problems in calculating the KLD are solved by sparse kernel density estimation and the Monte Carlo method. Finally, the feasibility and validity of the method are analyzed through a case study.


2014 ◽  
Vol 936 ◽  
pp. 1479-1484
Author(s):  
Ji Yun Chen ◽  
Yan Luo ◽  
Dong Huan Liu

The structural physical properties are often uncertain due to manufacture errors, measurement errors and other factors. Consequently, the vibration frequencies and corresponding eigenvectors are also uncertain. Robust design selects suitable design variables so that structural performance is insensitive to the various causes of variation without eliminating possible variations of variables. In practice robust design methods can be classified into probabilistic methods and non-probabilistic methods respectively. A new non-probabilistic robust design method based on the set theoretical convex method is presented in the present paper. The method not only inherits the advantages of existing non-stochastic methods, but also conquers the disadvantages of these methods.


Energies ◽  
2022 ◽  
Vol 15 (2) ◽  
pp. 493
Author(s):  
Zygmunt Szczerba ◽  
Piotr Szczerba ◽  
Kamil Szczerba

The article presents the negative aspects of the influence of static and dynamic acceleration on the accuracy of pressure measurement for a selected type of transmitter. The influence of static accelerations from catalog notes was shown and compared with the tests results for a few selected sensors. The results of research on the influence of dynamic acceleration for various types of its variability for selected converters are presented. Moreover, a method of measurement patented by the authors that uses a complex transducer is shown. The method allows for more accurate measurements on moving objects. The tests were performed based on the proposed method. The obtained results of the influence of acceleration on the classical sensor as well as the construction using the proposed method are shown. The paper presents approximate pressure measurement errors resulting from the influence of acceleration. For example, errors in measuring the speed of an airplane may occur without the proposed method. The last part of the article presents a unique design dedicated to a multi-point pressure measurement system, which uses the presented method of eliminating the influence of accelerations on the pressure measurement.


2019 ◽  
Vol 30 (2) ◽  
pp. 129-145
Author(s):  
Esra Tekel ◽  
Engin Karadag

AbstractThe purpose of this study was to test the effects of school bullying on school mindfulness and school academic performance through a structural equation model. The study was framed around the correlational design method; school bullying was taken as the independent variable and school mindfulness and school academic performance were used as the dependent variables. The study participants consisted of 156 high school teachers working in three of the schools selected from various school districts by means of the maximum variation sampling method. The data were collected via the School Bullying Scale (Tintorer, 2004), the School Mindfulness Scale (Hoy, Gage, & Tarter, 2006), and the average scores on the Higher Education Transition exam for each school. Path analysis was conducted to enable associating measurement errors in both latent and observed variables. Our study findings show that school bullying negatively affects school mindfulness and academic performance and that school mindfulness positively affects academic performance. In addition, the findings reveal that verbal bullying, consisting of behaviours such as harassing phone calls, taking someone’s money or belongings by force, intimidating actions with violent threats, name calling, racist expressions and teasing, swearing, lying to others or insulting them, is more frequently observed than other bullying types.


1997 ◽  
Vol 4 (5-6) ◽  
pp. 327-340 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hans-Jürgen von Martens

A uniform description is given of a method of measurement using a Michelson interferometer for measuring the linear motion quantities acceleration, velocity and displacement, and a diffraction grating interferometer for measuring the circular motion quantities angular acceleration, angular velocity and rotation angle. The paper focusses on an analysis of the dynamic behaviour of an interferometric measurement system based on the counting technique with regard to the measurement errors due to deterministic and stochastic disturbing quantities. The error analysis and description presented are aimed at giving some rules, mathematical expressions and graphical presentations that have proved to be helpful in recognizing the errors in interferometric measurements of motion quantities, optimizing the measurement conditions (e.g., filter settings), obtaining corrections and estimating the uncertainty of measurement.


Author(s):  
W.J. de Ruijter ◽  
Sharma Renu

Established methods for measurement of lattice spacings and angles of crystalline materials include x-ray diffraction, microdiffraction and HREM imaging. Structural information from HREM images is normally obtained off-line with the traveling table microscope or by the optical diffractogram technique. We present a new method for precise measurement of lattice vectors from HREM images using an on-line computer connected to the electron microscope. It has already been established that an image of crystalline material can be represented by a finite number of sinusoids. The amplitude and the phase of these sinusoids are affected by the microscope transfer characteristics, which are strongly influenced by the settings of defocus, astigmatism and beam alignment. However, the frequency of each sinusoid is solely a function of overall magnification and periodicities present in the specimen. After proper calibration of the overall magnification, lattice vectors can be measured unambiguously from HREM images.Measurement of lattice vectors is a statistical parameter estimation problem which is similar to amplitude, phase and frequency estimation of sinusoids in 1-dimensional signals as encountered, for example, in radar, sonar and telecommunications. It is important to properly model the observations, the systematic errors and the non-systematic errors. The observations are modelled as a sum of (2-dimensional) sinusoids. In the present study the components of the frequency vector of the sinusoids are the only parameters of interest. Non-systematic errors in recorded electron images are described as white Gaussian noise. The most important systematic error is geometric distortion. Lattice vectors are measured using a two step procedure. First a coarse search is obtained using a Fast Fourier Transform on an image section of interest. Prior to Fourier transformation the image section is multiplied with a window, which gradually falls off to zero at the edges. The user indicates interactively the periodicities of interest by selecting spots in the digital diffractogram. A fine search for each selected frequency is implemented using a bilinear interpolation, which is dependent on the window function. It is possible to refine the estimation even further using a non-linear least squares estimation. The first two steps provide the proper starting values for the numerical minimization (e.g. Gauss-Newton). This third step increases the precision with 30% to the highest theoretically attainable (Cramer and Rao Lower Bound). In the present studies we use a Gatan 622 TV camera attached to the JEM 4000EX electron microscope. Image analysis is implemented on a Micro VAX II computer equipped with a powerful array processor and real time image processing hardware. The typical precision, as defined by the standard deviation of the distribution of measurement errors, is found to be <0.003Å measured on single crystal silicon and <0.02Å measured on small (10-30Å) specimen areas. These values are ×10 times larger than predicted by theory. Furthermore, the measured precision is observed to be independent on signal-to-noise ratio (determined by the number of averaged TV frames). Obviously, the precision is restricted by geometric distortion mainly caused by the TV camera. For this reason, we are replacing the Gatan 622 TV camera with a modern high-grade CCD-based camera system. Such a system not only has negligible geometric distortion, but also high dynamic range (>10,000) and high resolution (1024x1024 pixels). The geometric distortion of the projector lenses can be measured, and corrected through re-sampling of the digitized image.


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