Multi-scale Graph-guided Convolutional Network with Node Attention for Intelligent Health State Diagnosis of a 3-PRR Planar Parallel Manipulator

Author(s):  
Bo Zhao ◽  
Xianmin Zhang ◽  
Zhenhui Zhan ◽  
Qiqiang Wu ◽  
Haodong Zhang
Author(s):  
Andrés Ruiz-Tagle Palazuelos ◽  
Enrique López Droguett

Sensing technologies have been used to gather massive amounts of data to improve system reliability analysis with the use of deep learning. Their use has been mainly focused on specific components or for the whole system, resulting in a drawback when dealing with complex systems as the interactions among components are not explicitly taken into account. Here, we propose a system-level prognostics and health management framework based on geometrical deep learning where a system, its components with their interactions, and sensor data are represented as a graph. This enables reliability analysis at different hierarchical levels by means of (1) a system-level module for system health diagnosis and prognosis based on embeddings of the system’s learned features from a graph convolutional network; (2) a component-level module based on a deep graph convolutional network for health state diagnosis for the system’s components; (3) a component interactions module based on a graph convolutional network autoencoder that allows for the identification of interactions among components when the system is in a degraded state. The framework is exemplified via a case study involving a chlorine dioxide generation system, in which it is shown that integrating both components’ interactions and sensor data in the form of a graph improves health state diagnosis capabilities.


2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (7) ◽  
pp. 488
Author(s):  
Peng Li ◽  
Dezheng Zhang ◽  
Aziguli Wulamu ◽  
Xin Liu ◽  
Peng Chen

A deep understanding of our visual world is more than an isolated perception on a series of objects, and the relationships between them also contain rich semantic information. Especially for those satellite remote sensing images, the span is so large that the various objects are always of different sizes and complex spatial compositions. Therefore, the recognition of semantic relations is conducive to strengthen the understanding of remote sensing scenes. In this paper, we propose a novel multi-scale semantic fusion network (MSFN). In this framework, dilated convolution is introduced into a graph convolutional network (GCN) based on an attentional mechanism to fuse and refine multi-scale semantic context, which is crucial to strengthen the cognitive ability of our model Besides, based on the mapping between visual features and semantic embeddings, we design a sparse relationship extraction module to remove meaningless connections among entities and improve the efficiency of scene graph generation. Meanwhile, to further promote the research of scene understanding in remote sensing field, this paper also proposes a remote sensing scene graph dataset (RSSGD). We carry out extensive experiments and the results show that our model significantly outperforms previous methods on scene graph generation. In addition, RSSGD effectively bridges the huge semantic gap between low-level perception and high-level cognition of remote sensing images.


Author(s):  
Xiaoyong Wu ◽  
Yujin Wang ◽  
Zhaowei Xiang ◽  
Ran Yan ◽  
Rulong Tan ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (12) ◽  
pp. 2425
Author(s):  
Yiheng Cai ◽  
Dan Liu ◽  
Jin Xie ◽  
Jingxian Yang ◽  
Xiangbin Cui ◽  
...  

Analyzing the surface and bedrock locations in radar imagery enables the computation of ice sheet thickness, which is important for the study of ice sheets, their volume and how they may contribute to global climate change. However, the traditional handcrafted methods cannot quickly provide quantitative, objective and reliable extraction of information from radargrams. Most traditional handcrafted methods, designed to detect ice-surface and ice-bed layers from ice sheet radargrams, require complex human involvement and are difficult to apply to large datasets, while deep learning methods can obtain better results in a generalized way. In this study, an end-to-end multi-scale attention network (MsANet) is proposed to realize the estimation and reconstruction of layers in sequences of ice sheet radar tomographic images. First, we use an improved 3D convolutional network, C3D-M, whose first full connection layer is replaced by a convolution unit to better maintain the spatial relativity of ice layer features, as the backbone. Then, an adjustable multi-scale module uses different scale filters to learn scale information to enhance the feature extraction capabilities of the network. Finally, an attention module extended to 3D space removes a redundant bottleneck unit to better fuse and refine ice layer features. Radar sequential images collected by the Center of Remote Sensing of Ice Sheets in 2014 are used as training and testing data. Compared with state-of-the-art deep learning methods, the MsANet shows a 10% reduction (2.14 pixels) on the measurement of average mean absolute column-wise error for detecting the ice-surface and ice-bottom layers, runs faster and uses approximately 12 million fewer parameters.


Electronics ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (3) ◽  
pp. 319
Author(s):  
Yi Wang ◽  
Xiao Song ◽  
Guanghong Gong ◽  
Ni Li

Due to the rapid development of deep learning and artificial intelligence techniques, denoising via neural networks has drawn great attention due to their flexibility and excellent performances. However, for most convolutional network denoising methods, the convolution kernel is only one layer deep, and features of distinct scales are neglected. Moreover, in the convolution operation, all channels are treated equally; the relationships of channels are not considered. In this paper, we propose a multi-scale feature extraction-based normalized attention neural network (MFENANN) for image denoising. In MFENANN, we define a multi-scale feature extraction block to extract and combine features at distinct scales of the noisy image. In addition, we propose a normalized attention network (NAN) to learn the relationships between channels, which smooths the optimization landscape and speeds up the convergence process for training an attention model. Moreover, we introduce the NAN to convolutional network denoising, in which each channel gets gain; channels can play different roles in the subsequent convolution. To testify the effectiveness of the proposed MFENANN, we used both grayscale and color image sets whose noise levels ranged from 0 to 75 to do the experiments. The experimental results show that compared with some state-of-the-art denoising methods, the restored images of MFENANN have larger peak signal-to-noise ratios (PSNR) and structural similarity index measure (SSIM) values and get better overall appearance.


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