The Use of a Background Attitude Indicator to Recover from Unusual Attitudes

1992 ◽  
Vol 36 (1) ◽  
pp. 43-47 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kristen K. Liggett ◽  
John M. Rebing ◽  
David C. Hartsock

The purpose of this study was to evaluate various cues on a background display format that depicted attitude information. A combined head-down display format was evaluated where the central rectangular area focused on tactical information and the background border presented attitude information. The attitude information, in essence, framed the tactical display format. A comparison was conducted among variations of the original background attitude indicator (BAI) created by General Dynamics personnel. Three types of cues were investigated: color shading, color patterns, and pitch lines with numbers. These cues were tested individually and in combination with one another. Results showed that in terms of initial input time, the combination of color shading and color patterns performed the best.

1988 ◽  
Vol 62 (01) ◽  
pp. 83-87 ◽  
Author(s):  
Patricia H. Kelley ◽  
Charles T. Swann

The excellent preservation of the molluscan fauna from the Gosport Sand (Eocene) at Little Stave Creek, Alabama, has made it possible to describe the preserved color patterns of 15 species. In this study the functional significance of these color patterns is tested in the context of the current adaptationist controversy. The pigment of the color pattern is thought to be a result of metabolic waste disposal. Therefore, the presence of the pigment is functional, although the patterns formed by the pigment may or may not have been adaptive. In this investigation the criteria proposed by Seilacher (1972) for testing the functionality of color patterns were applied to the Gosport fauna and the results compared with life mode as interpreted from knowledge of extant relatives and functional morphology. Using Seilacher's criteria of little ontogenetic and intraspecific variability, the color patterns appear to have been functional. However, the functional morphology studies indicate an infaunal life mode which would preclude functional color patterns. Particular color patterns are instead interpreted to be the result of historical factors, such as multiple adaptive peaks or random fixation of alleles, or of architectural constraints including possibly pleiotropy or allometry. The low variability of color patterns, which was noted within species and genera, suggests that color patterns may also serve a useful taxonomic purpose.


1998 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Merwin ◽  
Christopher Wickens ◽  
Janelle O'Brien

2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (11) ◽  
pp. 5235
Author(s):  
Nikita Andriyanov

The article is devoted to the study of convolutional neural network inference in the task of image processing under the influence of visual attacks. Attacks of four different types were considered: simple, involving the addition of white Gaussian noise, impulse action on one pixel of an image, and attacks that change brightness values within a rectangular area. MNIST and Kaggle dogs vs. cats datasets were chosen. Recognition characteristics were obtained for the accuracy, depending on the number of images subjected to attacks and the types of attacks used in the training. The study was based on well-known convolutional neural network architectures used in pattern recognition tasks, such as VGG-16 and Inception_v3. The dependencies of the recognition accuracy on the parameters of visual attacks were obtained. Original methods were proposed to prevent visual attacks. Such methods are based on the selection of “incomprehensible” classes for the recognizer, and their subsequent correction based on neural network inference with reduced image sizes. As a result of applying these methods, gains in the accuracy metric by a factor of 1.3 were obtained after iteration by discarding incomprehensible images, and reducing the amount of uncertainty by 4–5% after iteration by applying the integration of the results of image analyses in reduced dimensions.


1995 ◽  
Vol 83 (6) ◽  
pp. 1184-1193 ◽  
Author(s):  
Keerti Gurushanthaiah ◽  
Matthew B. Weinger ◽  
Carl E. Englund

Abstract Background Anesthesiologists use data presented on visual displays to monitor patients' physiologic status. Although studies in nonmedical fields have suggested differential effects on performance among display formats, few studies have examined the effect of display format on anesthesiologist monitoring performance.


2017 ◽  
Vol 40 (7) ◽  
pp. 2408-2415 ◽  
Author(s):  
Liang Liu ◽  
Shengyuan Xu ◽  
Xuejun Xie ◽  
Bing Xiao

Based on stochastic time-delay system stability criterion and a homogeneous domination approach, the output-feedback stabilization problem for a class of more general stochastic upper-triangular systems with state and input time-delays has been solved in this paper. Firstly, the initial system is changed into an equivalent one with a designed scalar by introducing a set of coordinate transformations. After that, by designing an implementable homogeneous reduced-order observer, and tactfully selecting a suitable Lyapunov–Krasoviskii functional and a low gain scale, a delay-independent output-feedback controller is explicitly constructed. Finally, the globally asymptotically stability in probability of the closed-loop system is ensured by rigorous proof. The simulation results demonstrate the efficiency of the proposed design scheme.


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