Preliminary study of underwater object detection using direct-current (DC) resistivity method

Author(s):  
Hyun-Key Jung ◽  
Sung-Ho Cho ◽  
Hyosun Lee ◽  
Hyungrae Lim
2016 ◽  
Vol 54 (11) ◽  
pp. 6833-6842 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sung-Ho Cho ◽  
Hyun-Key Jung ◽  
Hyosun Lee ◽  
Hyoungrea Rim ◽  
Seong Kon Lee

Author(s):  
Hyosun Lee ◽  
Hyun-Key Jung ◽  
Sung-Ho Cho ◽  
Hyoungrea Rim ◽  
Seong Kon Lee

2014 ◽  
Vol 20 (1) ◽  
pp. 180-197 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hyeonwoo Cho ◽  
Jeonghwe Gu ◽  
Hangil Joe ◽  
Akira Asada ◽  
Son-Cheol Yu

Author(s):  
Elgar Kanhere ◽  
Nan Wang ◽  
Ajay Giri Prakash Kottapalli ◽  
Vignesh Subramaniam ◽  
Jianmin Miao ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Adhi Prahara ◽  
Murinto Murinto ◽  
Dewi Pramudi Ismi

The philosophy of human visual attention is scientifically explained in the field of cognitive psychology and neuroscience then computationally modeled in the field of computer science and engineering. Visual attention models have been applied in computer vision systems such as object detection, object recognition, image segmentation, image and video compression, action recognition, visual tracking, and so on. This work studies bottom-up visual attention, namely human fixation prediction and salient object detection models. The preliminary study briefly covers from the biological perspective of visual attention, including visual pathway, the theory of visual attention, to the computational model of bottom-up visual attention that generates saliency map. The study compares some models at each stage and observes whether the stage is inspired by biological architecture, concept, or behavior of human visual attention. From the study, the use of low-level features, center-surround mechanism, sparse representation, and higher-level guidance with intrinsic cues dominate the bottom-up visual attention approaches. The study also highlights the correlation between bottom-up visual attention and curiosity.


2016 ◽  
Vol 35 (8) ◽  
pp. 703-706 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rowan Cockett ◽  
Lindsey J. Heagy ◽  
Douglas W. Oldenburg

We take you on the journey from continuous equations to their discrete matrix representations using the finite-volume method for the direct current (DC) resistivity problem. These techniques are widely applicable across geophysical simulation types and have their parallels in finite element and finite difference. We show derivations visually, as you would on a whiteboard, and have provided an accompanying notebook at http://github.com/seg to explore the numerical results using SimPEG ( Cockett et al., 2015 ).


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