scholarly journals LINKING INTERACTIVE OPTIMIZATION FOR URBAN PLANNING WITH A SEMANTIC 3D CITY MODEL

Author(s):  
N. Schüler ◽  
G. Agugiaro ◽  
S. Cajot ◽  
F. Maréchal

<p><strong>Abstract.</strong> The cities in which we live are constantly evolving. The active management of this evolution is referred to as urban planning. The according development process could go in many directions resulting in a large number of potential future scenarios of a city. The planning support system URB<sup>io</sup> adopts interactive optimization to assist urban planners in generating and exploring those various scenarios. As a computer-based system it needs to be able to efficiently handle all underlying data of this exploration process, which includes both methodology-specific and context-specific information. This article describes the work carried out to link URB<sup>io</sup> with a semantic city model. Therefore, two key requirements were identified and implemented: (a) the extension of the CityGML data model to cope with many scenarios by the proposition of the Scenario Application Domain Extension (ADE) and (b) the definition of a data model for interactive optimization. Classes and features of the developed data models are motivated, depicted and explained. Their usability is demonstrated by walking through a typical workflow of URB<sup>io</sup> and laying out the induced data flows. The article is concluded with stating further potential applications of both the Scenario ADE and the data model for interactive optimization.</p>

Author(s):  
H. Eriksson ◽  
L. Harrie ◽  
J. M. Paasch

<p><strong>Abstract.</strong> The need for digital building information is increasing, both in the form of 3D city models (as geodata) and of more detailed building information models (BIM). BIM models are mainly used in the architecture, engineering and construction industry, but have recently become interesting also for municipalities. The overall aim of this paper is to study one way of dividing a building, namely the division of a building into building parts in both 3D city models and in BIM models. The study starts by an inventory of how building parts are defined in 3D city model standards (CityGML, the INSPIRE building specification and a Swedish national specification for buildings) and in BIM models (Industry Foundation Classes, IFC). The definition of building parts in these specifications are compared and evaluated. The paper also describes potential applications for the use of building parts, on what grounds a building could be divided into building parts, advantages and disadvantages of having building parts and what consequences it can have on the usage of the building information. One finding is that building parts is defined similar, but not identical in the studied geodata specifications and there are no requirements, only recommendations on how buildings should be divided into building parts. This can complicate the modelling, exchange and reuse of building information, and in a longer perspective, it would be desirable to have recommendations of how to define and use building parts in for example a national context.</p>


Author(s):  
Sergio Canuto ◽  
Marcos André Gonçalves ◽  
Thierson Couto Rosa

The definition of a set of informative features capable of representing and discriminating documents is paramount for the task of automatically classifying documents. In this doctoral dissertation, we present the most comprehensive study so far on the role of meta-features (high-level features built from lower-level ones) as an alternative for representing documents. We start by proposing new sets of (meta-)features that exploit distance measures in the original (bag-of-words) feature space to summarize potentially complex relationships between documents. We then (i) analyze the discriminative power of such meta-features with novel multi-objective feature selection strategies; (ii) provide new GPU implementations to reduce computational time; (iii) enrich distance relationships with labeled or context-specific information; (iv) adapt the proposed meta-features for tasks as hard as sentiment analysis. Our experimental results show that our meta-features can achieve remarkable classification results by distance exploitation, being the state-of-the-art in many situations and scenarios.


2015 ◽  
Vol 2015 ◽  
pp. 1-9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Julio Ramírez-Pacheco ◽  
Homero Toral-Cruz ◽  
Luis Rizo-Domínguez ◽  
Joaquin Cortez-Gonzalez

This paper defines the generalized wavelet Fisher information of parameterq. This information measure is obtained by generalizing the time-domain definition of Fisher’s information of Furuichi to the wavelet domain and allows to quantify smoothness and correlation, among other signals characteristics. Closed-form expressions of generalized wavelet Fisher information for1/fαsignals are determined and a detailed discussion of their properties, characteristics and their relationship with waveletq-Fisher information are given. Information planes of1/fsignals Fisher information are obtained and, based on these, potential applications are highlighted. Finally, generalized wavelet Fisher information is applied to the problem of detecting and locating weak structural breaks in stationary1/fsignals, particularly for fractional Gaussian noise series. It is shown that by using a joint Fisher/F-Statistic procedure, significant improvements in time and accuracy are achieved in comparison with the sole application of theF-statistic.


2008 ◽  
Vol 17 (6) ◽  
pp. 737-748 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amir H. Behzadan ◽  
Zeeshan Aziz ◽  
Chimay J. Anumba ◽  
Vineet R. Kamat

1999 ◽  
Vol 123 (4) ◽  
pp. 535-541 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. Saggere ◽  
S. Kota

Compliant four-bar mechanisms treated in previous works consisted of at least one rigid moving link, and such mechanisms synthesized for motion generation tasks have always comprised a rigid coupler link, bearing with the conventional definition of motion generation for rigid-link mechanisms. This paper introduces a new task called compliant-segment motion generation where the coupler is a flexible segment and requires a prescribed shape change along with a rigid-body motion. The paper presents a systematic procedure for synthesis of single-loop compliant mechanisms with no moving rigid-links for compliant-segment motion generation task. Such compliant mechanisms have potential applications in adaptive structures. The synthesis method presented involves an atypical inverse elastica problem that is not reported in the literature. This inverse problem is solved by extending the loop-closure equation used in the synthesis of rigid-links to the flexible segments, and then combining it with elastic equilibrium equation in an optimization scheme. The method is illustrated by a numerical example.


Author(s):  
Ranko Vujosevic ◽  
Andrew Kusiak

Abstract The data base requirements for concurrent design systems are discussed. An object-oriented data base, which allows for definition of complex objects, specification of relationships between objects, and modular expandability without affecting the existing information is defined. The data base is developed based on the object-oriented data model implemented in Smalltalk-80. An assumption-based truth maintenance system for maintaining the dependency relationships between design and manufacturing information is described.


Author(s):  
Liliana Maria Favre

Systems and applications aligned with new paradigms such as cloud computing and internet of the things are becoming more complex and interconnected, expanding the areas in which they are susceptible to attacks. Their security can be addressed by using model-driven engineering (MDE). In this context, specific IoT or cloud computing metamodels emerged to support the systematic development of software. In general, they are specified through semiformal metamodels in MOF style. This article shows the theoretical foundations of a method for automatically constructing secure metamodels in the context of realizations of MDE such as MDA. The formal metamodeling language Nereus and systems of transformation rules to bridge the gap between formal specifications and MOF are described. The main contribution of this article is the definition of a system of transformation rules called NEREUStoMOF for transforming automatically formal metamodeling specifications in Nereus to semiformal-MOF metamodels annotated in OCL.


2018 ◽  
Vol 145 ◽  
pp. 59-66 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stuart K. Watson ◽  
Simon W. Townsend ◽  
Friederike Range

Author(s):  
Iulia-Adina Lehene

This paper is the second part of a work that aims to rethink the concept of beauty as close as possible to its essence and in a way that integrates the science of aesthetics with the field of construction. Within other theoretical and practical works, this study may be further used to physically reflect the definition of beauty in areas such as architecture, civil engineering or urban planning and support professionals in designing and building beautiful objects and constructions. However, it has to be added that the assumption that there must be a particular original aspect related to beauty that leads a human-made object to success, needs to be further identified. The approach to the concept of beauty is through a general philosophical perspective and partially through the areas mentioned above.The second part of the study includes the synthesised guidance provided by Monroe Beardsley through the theories on beauty from the nineteenth century until today. In addition, it comprises the scheme of concepts that characterised the beautiful in this time, including the lines that guided its study, previous ideas that support our later views on presented theory, and a brief exposition of Maslow's theory of human motivation followed by our theory on beauty and the conclusions.


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