scholarly journals Computer-based data acquisition and processing in a technical investigation department

Author(s):  
N. J. Durley-Boot ◽  
J. R. Maguire
Author(s):  
M. Peter

Documentation of the “as-built” state of building interiors has gained a lot of interest in the recent years. Various data acquisition methods exist, e.g. the extraction from photographed evacuation plans using image processing or, most prominently, indoor mobile laser scanning. Due to clutter or data gaps as well as errors during data acquisition and processing, automatic reconstruction of CAD/BIM-like models from these data sources is not a trivial task. Thus it is often tried to support reconstruction by general rules for the perpendicularity and parallelism which are predominant in man-made structures. Indoor environments of large, public buildings, however, often also follow higher-level rules like symmetry and repetition of e.g. room sizes and corridor widths. In the context of reconstruction of city city elements (e.g. street networks) or building elements (e.g. fac¸ade layouts), formal grammars have been put to use. In this paper, we describe the use of Lindenmayer systems - which originally have been developed for the computer-based modelling of plant growth - to model and reproduce the layout of indoor environments in 2D.


2011 ◽  
Vol 271-273 ◽  
pp. 849-852
Author(s):  
Qian Zhao Lei

In order to better adapt to the modern physics experiments under intelligent conditions, we examined a number of modern physics experiment the intelligent way from data acquisition and processing and concluded: Data collection can be attributed to two ways, one way is by means of computer device (such as sound card) to receive data, another way to install the data acquisition card (or frame grabber), moreover to install device driver in the computer; Modern experimental data processing is the main purpose of the intelligentization, with special software, fast data processing, and giving visual results. The results contribute to a better use of computer-based modern physics experiments.


1990 ◽  
Vol 51 (C2) ◽  
pp. C2-939-C2-942 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. DINER ◽  
A. WEILL ◽  
J. Y. COAIL ◽  
J. M. COUDEVILLE

2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Yanfei Yang ◽  
Mingzhu Xu ◽  
Aimin Liang ◽  
Yan Yin ◽  
Xin Ma ◽  
...  

AbstractIn this study, a wearable multichannel human magnetocardiogram (MCG) system based on a spin exchange relaxation-free regime (SERF) magnetometer array is developed. The MCG system consists of a magnetically shielded device, a wearable SERF magnetometer array, and a computer for data acquisition and processing. Multichannel MCG signals from a healthy human are successfully recorded simultaneously. Independent component analysis (ICA) and empirical mode decomposition (EMD) are used to denoise MCG data. MCG imaging is realized to visualize the magnetic and current distribution around the heart. The validity of the MCG signals detected by the system is verified by electrocardiogram (ECG) signals obtained at the same position, and similar features and intervals of cardiac signal waveform appear on both MCG and ECG. Experiments show that our wearable MCG system is reliable for detecting MCG signals and can provide cardiac electromagnetic activity imaging.


1989 ◽  
Vol 24 (9) ◽  
pp. 66-71
Author(s):  
Z. Defu ◽  
Y. Peigen ◽  
S. Zhongxiu

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