Low Cost Defect Detection Using a Deep Convolutional Neural Network

Author(s):  
Tulbure Andrei-Alexandru ◽  
Dulf Eva Henrietta
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel Sauter ◽  
Cem Atik ◽  
Christian Schenk ◽  
Ricardo Buettner ◽  
Hermann Baumgartl

2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 ◽  
pp. 1-12
Author(s):  
Rong Zou ◽  
Yu Zhang ◽  
Junlan Gu ◽  
Jin Chen

Detecting distance between surfaces of transparent materials with large area and thickness has always been a difficult problem in the field of industry. In this paper, a method based on low-cost TOF continuous-wave modulation and deep convolutional neural network technology is proposed. The distance detection between transparent material surfaces is converted to the problem of solving the intersection of the optical path and the transparent material’s front and rear surfaces. On this basis, the Gray code encoding and decoding operations are combined to achieve distance detection between surfaces. The problem of holes and detail loss of depth maps generated by low-resolution TOF depth sensors have been also effectively solved. The entire system is simple and can achieve thickness detection on the full surface area. Besides, it can detect large transparent materials with a thickness of over 30 mm, which far exceeds the existing optical thickness detection system for transparent materials.


2022 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ruihao Li ◽  
Chunlian Fu ◽  
Wei Yi ◽  
Xiaodong Yi

The low-cost Inertial Measurement Unit (IMU) can provide orientation information and is widely used in our daily life. However, IMUs with bad calibration will provide inaccurate angular velocity and lead to rapid drift of integral orientation in a short time. In this paper, we present the Calib-Net which can achieve the accurate calibration of low-cost IMU via a simple deep convolutional neural network. Following a carefully designed mathematical calibration model, Calib-Net can output compensation components for gyroscope measurements dynamically. Dilation convolution is adopted in Calib-Net for spatio-temporal feature extraction of IMU measurements. We evaluate our proposed system on public datasets quantitively and qualitatively. The experimental results demonstrate that our Calib-Net achieves better calibration performance than other methods, what is more, and the estimated orientation with our Calib-Net is even comparable with the results from visual inertial odometry (VIO) systems.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 ◽  
pp. 1-16
Author(s):  
Mingyu Gao ◽  
Peng Song ◽  
Fei Wang ◽  
Junyan Liu ◽  
Andreas Mandelis ◽  
...  

Wood defects are quickly identified from an optical image based on deep learning methodology, which effectively improves wood utilization. Traditional neural network techniques have not yet been employed for wood defect detection due to long training time, low recognition accuracy, and nonautomatical extraction of defect image features. In this work, a model (so-called ReSENet-18) for wood knot defect detection that combined deep learning and transfer learning is proposed. The “squeeze-and-excitation” (SE) module is firstly embedded into the “residual basic block” structure for a “SE-Basic-Block” module construction. This model has the advantages of the features that are extracted in the channel dimension, and it is fused in multiscale with original features. Instantaneously, the fully connected layer is replaced with a global average pooling; consequently, the model parameters could be reduced effectively. The experimental results show that the accuracy has reached 99.02%, meanwhile the training time is also reduced. It shows that the proposed deep convolutional neural network based on ReSENet-18 combined with transfer learning can improve the accuracy of defect recognition and has a potential application in the detection of wood knot defects.


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