Finger tracking for piano playing through contactless sensor system: Signal processing and data training using artificial neural network

Author(s):  
Choo Chee Wee ◽  
Muralindran Mariappan
2016 ◽  
Vol 24 (6) ◽  
pp. 6769 ◽  
Author(s):  
Abul Kalam Azad ◽  
Liang Wang ◽  
Nan Guo ◽  
Hwa-Yaw Tam ◽  
Chao Lu

2019 ◽  
Vol 23 (5) ◽  
pp. 884-897 ◽  
Author(s):  
Seyed Bahram Beheshti Aval ◽  
Vahid Ahmadian ◽  
Mohammad Maldar ◽  
Ehsan Darvishan

This article presents a signal-based seismic structural health monitoring technique for damage detection and evaluating damage severity of a multi-story frame subjected to an earthquake event. As a case study, this article is focused on IASC–ASCE benchmark problem to provide the possibility for side-by-side comparison. First, three signal processing techniques including empirical mode decomposition, Hilbert vibration decomposition, and local mean decomposition, categorized as instantaneous time–frequency methods, have been compared to find a method with the best resolution in extracting frequency responses. Time-varying single degree of freedom and multiple degree of freedom models are used since real vibration signals are nonstationary and nonlinear in nature. Based on the results, empirical mode decomposition has proved to outperform than the others. Second, empirical mode decomposition is used to extract the acceleration response of the sensors. Next, a two-stage artificial neural network is used to classify damage patterns. The first artificial neural network identifies location and severity of damage and the second one calculates the severity of damage for the entire structure. IASC–ASCE benchmark problem is used to validate the proposed procedure. By taking advantage of signal processing and artificial intelligence techniques, damage detection of structures was successfully carried out in three levels including damage occurrence, damage severity, and the location of damage.


Author(s):  
Zhikai Yao ◽  
Yongping Yu ◽  
Jianyong Yao

Internal leakage is a typical fault in the hydraulic systems, which may be caused by seal damage, and result in deteriorated performance of the system. To study this issue, this article carries out an experimental investigation of artificial neural network–based detection method for internal leakage fault. A period of pressure signal at one chamber of the actuator was taken in response to sinusoidal-like inputs for the closed-loop controlled system as a basic signal unit, and totally, 1000 periodic signal units are obtained from the experiments. The above experimental measurements are repetitively implemented with 11 different active exerted internal leakage levels, that is, totally 11,000 basic signal units are obtained. For signal processing, the pressure signal in the operation condition without active exerted leakage is chosen to generate a baseline with suitable pre-proceed, and the relative values of the other basic signal units (D-value between the baseline and other original signals) act as the global samples of the following artificial neural networks, traditional back propagation neural network, deep neural network, convolution neural network and auto-encoder neural network, separately; 8800 samples by random extraction as train samples to train the above neural networks and the other samples different from the train samples act as test samples to examine the detection accuracy of the proposed method. It is shown that the deep neural network with five layers can obtain a best detection accuracy (92.23%) of the above-mentioned neural networks. In addition, the methods based on wavelet transform and Hilbert–Huang transform are also applied, and a comparison of these methods is provided at last. From the comparison, it is shown that the proposed detection method obtains a good result without a need to model the internal leakage or a complicated signal processing.


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