scholarly journals High Quality - Low Computational Cost Technique for Automated Principal Object Segmentation Applied in Solar and Medical Imaging

2016 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. 23 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sofyan M. A. Hayajneh ◽  
AbdulRahman Rashad ◽  
Omar A. Saraereh ◽  
Obaida Al hazaimeh

The objective of this paper is to introduce a fully computerized, simple and low-computational cost technique that can be used in the preprocessing stages of digital images. This technique is specially designed to detect the principal (largest) closed shape object that embody the useful information in certain image types and neglect and avoid other noisy objects and artifacts. The detection process starts by calculating certain statistics of the image to estimate the amount of bit-plane slicing required to exclude the non-informative and noisy background. A simple closing morphological operation is then applied and followed by circular filter applied only on the outer coarse edge to finalize the detection process.  The proposed technique takes its importance from the huge explosion of images that need accurate processing in real time speedy manner. The proposed technique is implemented using MATLAB and tested on many solar and medical images; it was shown by the quantitative evaluation that the proposed technique can handle real-life (e.g. solar, medical fundus) images and shows very good potential even under noisy and artifacts conditions. Compared to the publicly available datasets, 97% and 99% of similarity detection is achieved in medical and solar images, respectively. Although it is well-know, the morphological bit-plane slicing technique is hoped to be used in the preprocessing stages of different applications to ease the subsequent image processing stages especially in real time applications where the proposed technique showed dramatic (~100 times) saving in processing time.

Symmetry ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (4) ◽  
pp. 645
Author(s):  
Muhammad Farooq ◽  
Sehrish Sarfraz ◽  
Christophe Chesneau ◽  
Mahmood Ul Hassan ◽  
Muhammad Ali Raza ◽  
...  

Expectiles have gained considerable attention in recent years due to wide applications in many areas. In this study, the k-nearest neighbours approach, together with the asymmetric least squares loss function, called ex-kNN, is proposed for computing expectiles. Firstly, the effect of various distance measures on ex-kNN in terms of test error and computational time is evaluated. It is found that Canberra, Lorentzian, and Soergel distance measures lead to minimum test error, whereas Euclidean, Canberra, and Average of (L1,L∞) lead to a low computational cost. Secondly, the performance of ex-kNN is compared with existing packages er-boost and ex-svm for computing expectiles that are based on nine real life examples. Depending on the nature of data, the ex-kNN showed two to 10 times better performance than er-boost and comparable performance with ex-svm regarding test error. Computationally, the ex-kNN is found two to five times faster than ex-svm and much faster than er-boost, particularly, in the case of high dimensional data.


VLSI Design ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 2008 ◽  
pp. 1-12 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. El Hassani ◽  
S. Jehan-Besson ◽  
L. Brun ◽  
M. Revenu ◽  
M. Duranton ◽  
...  

We propose a time-consistent video segmentation algorithm designed for real-time implementation. Our algorithm is based on a region merging process that combines both spatial and motion information. The spatial segmentation takes benefit of an adaptive decision rule and a specific order of merging. Our method has proven to be efficient for the segmentation of natural images with few parameters to be set. Temporal consistency of the segmentation is ensured by incorporating motion information through the use of an improved change-detection mask. This mask is designed using both illumination differences between frames and region segmentation of the previous frame. By considering both pixel and region levels, we obtain a particularly efficient algorithm at a low computational cost, allowing its implementation in real-time on the TriMedia processor for CIF image sequences.


2019 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 5
Author(s):  
Jian Mi ◽  
Yasutake Takahashi

Real-time imitation enables a humanoid robot to mirror the behavior of humans, being important for applications of human–robot interaction. For imitation, the corresponding joint angles of the humanoid robot should be estimated. Generally, a humanoid robot comprises dozens of joints that construct a high-dimensional exploration space for estimating the joint angles. Although a particle filter can estimate the robot state and provides a solution for estimating joint angles, the computational cost becomes prohibitive given the high dimension of the exploration space. Furthermore, a particle filter can only estimate the joint angles accurately using a motion model. To realize accurate joint angle estimation at low computational cost, Gaussian process dynamical models (GPDMs) can be adopted. Specifically, a compact state space can be constructed through the GPDM learning of high-dimensional time-series motion data to obtain a suitable motion model. We propose a GPDM-based particle filter using a compact state space from the learned motion models to realize efficient estimation of joint angles for robot imitation. Simulations and real experiments demonstrate that the proposed method efficiently estimates humanoid robot joint angles at low computational cost, enabling real-time imitation.


Author(s):  
Mehdi Zareian Jahromi ◽  
Shahram Montaser Kouhsari

AbstractThis paper proposes a hybrid method based on corrected kinetic energy to determine the critical clearing time. The proposed method structure has been implemented utilizing network preserving model to take details of power systems into consideration. To implement proposed method, the initial critical point is estimated using new concept of equal area criterion. Critical corrected kinetic energy is obtained using method which determines the amount of severity of generator contribution in a fault scenario. Due to the latter, the behavior of AVR and governor are taken into account. From initial and corrected kinetic energy of generators and consequently system, high precision critical clearing time is calculated. In order to validate the proposed method, some comprehensive case studies have been conducted on the IEEE9-bus, IEEE39-bus and IEEE68-bus test systems. Some comprehensiveness in considering the details, simplicity in implementation and low computational cost are the outstanding features of the proposed approach. Also, simulation results approve that the proposed approach can be used in real-time application without loss of any detail in transient stability assessment.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Matteo Dora ◽  
David holcman

Objective: Electroencephalography (EEG) has become very common in clinical practice due to its relatively low cost, ease of installation, non-invasiveness, and good temporal resolution. Portable EEG devices are increasingly popular in clinical monitoring applications such as sleep scoring or anesthesia monitoring. In these situations, for reasons of speed and simplicity only few electrodes are used and contamination of the EEG signal by artifacts is inevitable. Visual inspection and manual removal of artifacts is often not possible, especially in real-time applications. Our goal is to develop a flexible technique to remove EEG artifacts in these contexts with minimal supervision. Methods: We propose here a new wavelet-based method which allows to remove artifacts from single-channel EEGs. The method is based on a datadriven renormalization of the wavelet components and is capable of adaptively attenuate artifacts of different nature. We benchmark our method against alternative artifact removal techniques. Results: We assessed the performance of the proposed method on publicly available datasets comprising ocular, muscular, and movement artifacts. The proposed method shows superior performances on different kinds of artifacts and signal-to-noise levels. Finally, we present an application of our method to the monitoring of general anesthesia. Conclusions: We show that our method can successfully attenuate various types of artifacts in single-channel EEG. Significance: Thanks to its data-driven approach and low computational cost, the proposed method provides a valuable tool to remove artifacts in real-time EEG applications with few electrodes, such as monitoring in special care units.


2009 ◽  
Vol 14 (2) ◽  
pp. 109-119 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ulrich W. Ebner-Priemer ◽  
Timothy J. Trull

Convergent experimental data, autobiographical studies, and investigations on daily life have all demonstrated that gathering information retrospectively is a highly dubious methodology. Retrospection is subject to multiple systematic distortions (i.e., affective valence effect, mood congruent memory effect, duration neglect; peak end rule) as it is based on (often biased) storage and recollection of memories of the original experience or the behavior that are of interest. The method of choice to circumvent these biases is the use of electronic diaries to collect self-reported symptoms, behaviors, or physiological processes in real time. Different terms have been used for this kind of methodology: ambulatory assessment, ecological momentary assessment, experience sampling method, and real-time data capture. Even though the terms differ, they have in common the use of computer-assisted methodology to assess self-reported symptoms, behaviors, or physiological processes, while the participant undergoes normal daily activities. In this review we discuss the main features and advantages of ambulatory assessment regarding clinical psychology and psychiatry: (a) the use of realtime assessment to circumvent biased recollection, (b) assessment in real life to enhance generalizability, (c) repeated assessment to investigate within person processes, (d) multimodal assessment, including psychological, physiological and behavioral data, (e) the opportunity to assess and investigate context-specific relationships, and (f) the possibility of giving feedback in real time. Using prototypic examples from the literature of clinical psychology and psychiatry, we demonstrate that ambulatory assessment can answer specific research questions better than laboratory or questionnaire studies.


2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 (14) ◽  
pp. 378-1-378-7
Author(s):  
Tyler Nuanes ◽  
Matt Elsey ◽  
Radek Grzeszczuk ◽  
John Paul Shen

We present a high-quality sky segmentation model for depth refinement and investigate residual architecture performance to inform optimally shrinking the network. We describe a model that runs in near real-time on mobile device, present a new, highquality dataset, and detail a unique weighing to trade off false positives and false negatives in binary classifiers. We show how the optimizations improve bokeh rendering by correcting stereo depth misprediction in sky regions. We detail techniques used to preserve edges, reject false positives, and ensure generalization to the diversity of sky scenes. Finally, we present a compact model and compare performance of four popular residual architectures (ShuffleNet, MobileNetV2, Resnet-101, and Resnet-34-like) at constant computational cost.


Biomimetics ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 1 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michelle Gutiérrez-Muñoz ◽  
Astryd González-Salazar ◽  
Marvin Coto-Jiménez

Speech signals are degraded in real-life environments, as a product of background noise or other factors. The processing of such signals for voice recognition and voice analysis systems presents important challenges. One of the conditions that make adverse quality difficult to handle in those systems is reverberation, produced by sound wave reflections that travel from the source to the microphone in multiple directions. To enhance signals in such adverse conditions, several deep learning-based methods have been proposed and proven to be effective. Recently, recurrent neural networks, especially those with long short-term memory (LSTM), have presented surprising results in tasks related to time-dependent processing of signals, such as speech. One of the most challenging aspects of LSTM networks is the high computational cost of the training procedure, which has limited extended experimentation in several cases. In this work, we present a proposal to evaluate the hybrid models of neural networks to learn different reverberation conditions without any previous information. The results show that some combinations of LSTM and perceptron layers produce good results in comparison to those from pure LSTM networks, given a fixed number of layers. The evaluation was made based on quality measurements of the signal’s spectrum, the training time of the networks, and statistical validation of results. In total, 120 artificial neural networks of eight different types were trained and compared. The results help to affirm the fact that hybrid networks represent an important solution for speech signal enhancement, given that reduction in training time is on the order of 30%, in processes that can normally take several days or weeks, depending on the amount of data. The results also present advantages in efficiency, but without a significant drop in quality.


Sensors ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (2) ◽  
pp. 405
Author(s):  
Marcos Lupión ◽  
Javier Medina-Quero ◽  
Juan F. Sanjuan ◽  
Pilar M. Ortigosa

Activity Recognition (AR) is an active research topic focused on detecting human actions and behaviours in smart environments. In this work, we present the on-line activity recognition platform DOLARS (Distributed On-line Activity Recognition System) where data from heterogeneous sensors are evaluated in real time, including binary, wearable and location sensors. Different descriptors and metrics from the heterogeneous sensor data are integrated in a common feature vector whose extraction is developed by a sliding window approach under real-time conditions. DOLARS provides a distributed architecture where: (i) stages for processing data in AR are deployed in distributed nodes, (ii) temporal cache modules compute metrics which aggregate sensor data for computing feature vectors in an efficient way; (iii) publish-subscribe models are integrated both to spread data from sensors and orchestrate the nodes (communication and replication) for computing AR and (iv) machine learning algorithms are used to classify and recognize the activities. A successful case study of daily activities recognition developed in the Smart Lab of The University of Almería (UAL) is presented in this paper. Results present an encouraging performance in recognition of sequences of activities and show the need for distributed architectures to achieve real time recognition.


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