Supervised Detection of Connector Lock Events with Optical Microphone Data

Author(s):  
David Bricher ◽  
Andreas Müller

In manufacturing industry, one of the main targets is to increase automation and ultimately to avoid failures under all circumstances. The plugging and locking of connectors is a class of tasks which is yet hard to be automatized with sufficiently high process stability. Due to the variation of plugging positions and external disturbances, e.g. occlusion due to cables, the quality assessment of plugging processes has emerged as a challenging task for image-based systems. For this reason, the proposed approach analyzes the inherent acoustic connector locking properties in combination with different neural network architectures in order to correctly identify connector locking signals and further to distinguish them from other machining events occurring in assembly plants. For this specific task, highly sensitive optical microphones have been applied for data acquisition. The proposed experiments are carried out under laboratory conditions as well as for the more complex situation in a real manufacturing environment. In this context, the usage of multimodal neural network architectures achieved highest levels in classification performance with accuracy levels close to 90%.

Author(s):  
Jessica Barbosa Diniz ◽  
Filipe R. Cordeiro ◽  
Pericles B. C. Miranda ◽  
Laura A. Tomaz Da Silva

Deep Learning is a research area under the spotlight in recent years due to its successful application to many domains, such as computer vision and image recognition. The most prominent technique derived from Deep Learning is Convolutional Neural Network, which allows the network to automatically learn representations needed for detection or classification tasks. However, Convolutional Neural Networks have some limitations, as designing these networks are not easy to master and require expertise and insight. In this work, we present the use of Genetic Algorithm associated to Grammar-based Genetic Programming to optimize Convolution Neural Network architectures. To evaluate our proposed approach, we adopted CIFAR-10 dataset to validate the evolution of the generated architectures, using the metric of accuracy to evaluate its classification performance in the test dataset. The results demonstrate that our method using Grammar-based Genetic Programming can easily produce optimized CNN architectures that are competitive and achieve high accuracy results.


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