Parallel image processing algorithms for coincidence Doppler broadening spectra

Author(s):  
M. Ng ◽  
King Fung Ho ◽  
V. Cheng ◽  
C. Beling ◽  
Chat Ming Woo
2011 ◽  
Vol 110-116 ◽  
pp. 5057-5062
Author(s):  
Aadithya Ravi ◽  
Easwara E.A. Moorthy ◽  
D. Vidya ◽  
G.Mahesh Kumar

Specific hardware solutions are always faster than programmable architectures. But dedicated architectures have the inherent disadvantage of inflexibility. Changes in the algorithm or extensions of the application are handled easily by programmable architectures. The approach discussed here involves a hardware-software co-design to optimize on performance and programmability. The architecture houses two SHARC processors to aid in parallelizing the image processing algorithms, and a reconfigurable FPGA which may be configured on the fly to execute any of the real-time algorithms as desired. The functional memory would consist of pre-designs (FPGA based) of certain objects, each of which could be used to configure an FPGA to perform a particular function.


Author(s):  
VIRGINIE MARION-POTY ◽  
SERGE MIGUET

This paper discusses several data allocation strategies used for the parallel implementation of basic imaging operators. It shows that depending on the operator (sequential or parallel, with regular or irregular execution time), the image data must be partitioned in very different manners: The square sub-domains are best adapted for minimizing the communication volume, but rectangles can perform better when we take into account the time for constructing messages. Block allocations are well adapted for inherently parallel operators since they minimize interprocessor interactions, but in the case of recursive operators, they lead to nearly sequential executions. In this framework, we show the usefulness of block-cyclic allocations. Finally, we illustrate the fact that allocating the same amount of image data to each processor can lead to severe load imbalance in the case of some operators with data-dependant execution times.


Author(s):  
César D. Fermin ◽  
Dale Martin

Otoconia of higher vertebrates are interesting biological crystals that display the diffraction patterns of perfect crystals (e.g., calcite for birds and mammal) when intact, but fail to produce a regular crystallographic pattern when fixed. Image processing of the fixed crystal matrix, which resembles the organic templates of teeth and bone, failed to clarify a paradox of biomineralization described by Mann. Recently, we suggested that inner ear otoconia crystals contain growth plates that run in different directions, and that the arrangement of the plates may contribute to the turning angles seen at the hexagonal faces of the crystals.Using image processing algorithms described earlier, and Fourier Transform function (2FFT) of BioScan Optimas®, we evaluated the patterns in the packing of the otoconia fibrils of newly hatched chicks (Gallus domesticus) inner ears. Animals were fixed in situ by perfusion of 1% phosphotungstic acid (PTA) at room temperature through the left ventricle, after intraperitoneal Nembutal (35mg/Kg) deep anesthesia. Negatives were made with a Hitachi H-7100 TEM at 50K-400K magnifications. The negatives were then placed on a light box, where images were filtered and transferred to a 35 mm camera as described.


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