Attributed Graph Grammar for floor plan analysis

Author(s):  
Lluis-Pere de las Heras ◽  
Oriol Ramos Terrades ◽  
Josep Llados
2020 ◽  
Vol E103.D (2) ◽  
pp. 398-405
Author(s):  
Naoki KATO ◽  
Toshihiko YAMASAKI ◽  
Kiyoharu AIZAWA ◽  
Takemi OHAMA
Keyword(s):  

2015 ◽  
Vol 769 ◽  
pp. 9-12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sona Medvecka ◽  
Olga Ivankova

This article describes the effect of inclination of columns on the change of stiffness of high-rise buildings with circular floor plan. Analysis was made for the building loaded by forces induced by wind and seismic loads. Various high-rise buildings with columns with different inclinations and buildings with vertical columns were analyzed from the viewpoint of horizontal displacements. The results were compared. The comparison was made with horizontal displacements of the building, where columns were inclined.


Author(s):  
Lluís-Pere de las Heras ◽  
Oriol Ramos Terrades ◽  
Sergi Robles ◽  
Gemma Sánchez
Keyword(s):  

2002 ◽  
Vol 10 (2) ◽  
pp. 113-128 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xuehong Du ◽  
Jianxin Jiao ◽  
Mitchell M. Tseng

Many industries are shifting from mass production to mass customization, which demands quick response to the needs of individual customers with high quality and low costs. The development of product families has received an increasing interest in recent years because, by sharing components across products, a family of products can be derived to cater variety while maintaining the economy of scale. Aiming at the computerization, and eventual automation, of product family design, this paper tackles the formal representation issue surrounding this economically important class of engineering design problem. Breaking free from conventional understanding of product families, which is limited as shared components, the paper defines a product family as a structured system to create variety of products with shared core product technologies. It not only involves the shared base product, but also encompasses customization modules, standard designs, and primary patterns of variety to generate custom designs. The paper introduces graph grammar formalisms to the modeling of such a product family. Based on Programmed Attributed Graph Grammars (PAGG), the graph language is developed to specify the design space of the product family. The process of customizing the base product through manipulating particular modules is modeled by rewriting the starting graph using a series of productions according to the control diagram. Configuration constraints are dealt with by defining application conditions for production rules. Control diagrams are constructed to capture complex relationships among modules and used to control the application sequence of production rules. A case study of power supplies is presented to demonstrate the potential of the graph grammar based modeling approach.


Author(s):  
Kurt Schneider

This paper introduces an approach to modeling software project dynamics using an attributed graph grammar formalism. A project situation is modeled and presented to a "player" who is supposed to act as project manager of a simulated project. Events and internal processes of the simulated project are modeled using a custom-designed formalism that integrates attributed graph grammar concepts with a quantitative simulation mechanism resembling System Dynamics. Both ingredients were pragmatically selected and blended based on (1) their comparative simplicity, (2) their expressive power, and (3) their intuitive appeal for bridging the cognitive gap between real-world software engineering experiences and an executable simulation model. This modeling formalism was applied in the SESAM educational software engineering game. The modeling formalism was supported by a family of graphical SESAM editors. Resulting models could be animated and served as simulated projects in the game runs. SESAM was applied in graduate courses on software project management at the University of Stuttgart. Experiences with the modeling approach are reported. The design history and design rationale that led to using graph grammars as the underlying formalism are described and discussed. The design of the SESAM modeling formalism is presented as an (involuntary) case study in adopting a graph grammar approach.


2021 ◽  
Vol 35 (2) ◽  
pp. 04020066
Author(s):  
Seongyong Kim ◽  
Seula Park ◽  
Hyunjung Kim ◽  
Kiyun Yu

2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (12) ◽  
pp. 828
Author(s):  
Hyunjung Kim ◽  
Seongyong Kim ◽  
Kiyun Yu

Automatic floor plan analysis has gained increased attention in recent research. However, numerous studies related to this area are mainly experiments conducted with a simplified floor plan dataset with low resolution and a small housing scale due to the suitability for a data-driven model. For practical use, it is necessary to focus more on large-scale complex buildings to utilize indoor structures, such as reconstructing multi-use buildings for indoor navigation. This study aimed to build a framework using CNN (Convolution Neural Networks) for analyzing a floor plan with various scales of complex buildings. By dividing a floor plan into a set of normalized patches, the framework enables the proposed CNN model to process varied scale or high-resolution inputs, which is a barrier for existing methods. The model detected building objects per patch and assembled them into one result by multiplying the corresponding translation matrix. Finally, the detected building objects were vectorized, considering their compatibility in 3D modeling. As a result, our framework exhibited similar performance in detection rate (87.77%) and recognition accuracy (85.53%) to that of existing studies, despite the complexity of the data used. Through our study, the practical aspects of automatic floor plan analysis can be expanded.


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