8,117 research outputs found

    TICAL - a web-tool for multivariate image clustering and data topology preserving visualization

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    In life science research bioimaging is often used to study two kinds of features in a sample simultaneously: morphology and co-location of molecular components. While bioimaging technology is rapidly proposing and improving new multidimensional imaging platforms, bioimage informatics has to keep pace in order to develop algorithmic approaches to support biology experts in the complex task of data analysis. One particular problem is the availability and applicability of sophisticated image analysis algorithms via the web so different users can apply the same algorithms to their data (sometimes even to the same data to get the same results) and independently from her/his whereabouts and from the technical features of her/his computer. In this paper we describe TICAL, a visual data mining approach to multivariate microscopy analysis which can be applied fully through the web.We describe the algorithmic approach, the software concept and present results obtained for different example images

    Analyzing big time series data in solar engineering using features and PCA

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    In solar engineering, we encounter big time series data such as the satellite-derived irradiance data and string-level measurements from a utility-scale photovoltaic (PV) system. While storing and hosting big data are certainly possible using today’s data storage technology, it is challenging to effectively and efficiently visualize and analyze the data. We consider a data analytics algorithm to mitigate some of these challenges in this work. The algorithm computes a set of generic and/or application-specific features to characterize the time series, and subsequently uses principal component analysis to project these features onto a two-dimensional space. As each time series can be represented by features, it can be treated as a single data point in the feature space, allowing many operations to become more amenable. Three applications are discussed within the overall framework, namely (1) the PV system type identification, (2) monitoring network design, and (3) anomalous string detection. The proposed framework can be easily translated to many other solar engineer applications
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