scholarly journals Iris Pattern Recognition of the Kingfisher Bird using Discrete Wavelet Transform and Feature Extraction from Histogram Orientation Gradient

2016 ◽  
Vol 9 (42) ◽  
Author(s):  
Parthasarathi De ◽  
Dibyendu Ghoshal
Mathematics ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (24) ◽  
pp. 3215
Author(s):  
Mohammed Balubaid ◽  
Mohammad Amir Sattari ◽  
Osman Taylan ◽  
Ahmed A. Bakhsh ◽  
Ehsan Nazemi

This paper presents a methodology to monitor the liquid petroleum products which pass through transmission pipes. A simulation setup consisting of an X-ray tube, a detector, and a pipe was established using a Monte Carlo n-particle X-version transport code to investigate a two-by-two mixture of four different petroleum products, namely, ethylene glycol, crude oil, gasoline, and gasoil, in deferent volumetric ratios. After collecting the signals of each simulation, discrete wavelet transform (DWT) was applied as the feature extraction system. Then, the statistical feature, named the standard deviation, was calculated from the approximation of the fifth level, and the details of the second to fifth level provide appropriate inputs for neural network training. Three multilayer perceptron neural networks were utilized to predict the volume ratio of three types of petroleum products, and the volume ratio of the fourth product could easily be obtained from the results of the three presented networks. Finally, a root mean square error of less than 1.77 was obtained in predicting the volume ratio, which was much more accurate than in previous research. This high accuracy was due to the use of DWT for feature extraction.


2020 ◽  
Vol 16 (3) ◽  
pp. 155014772091100 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ahmad al-Qerem ◽  
Faten Kharbat ◽  
Shadi Nashwan ◽  
Staish Ashraf ◽  
khairi blaou

Wavelet family and differential evolution are proposed for categorization of epilepsy cases based on electroencephalogram (EEG) signals. Discrete wavelet transform is widely used in feature extraction step because it efficiently works in this field, as confirmed by the results of previous studies. The feature selection step is used to minimize dimensionality by excluding irrelevant features. This step is conducted using differential evolution. This article presents an efficient model for EEG classification by considering feature extraction and selection. Seven different types of common wavelets were tested in our research work. These are Discrete Meyer (dmey), Reverse biorthogonal (rbio), Biorthogonal (bior), Daubechies (db), Symlets (sym), Coiflets (coif), and Haar (Haar). Several kinds of discrete wavelet transform are used to produce a wide variety of features. Afterwards, we use differential evolution to choose appropriate features that will achieve the best performance of signal classification. For classification step, we have used Bonn databases to build the classifiers and test their performance. The results prove the effectiveness of the proposed model.


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