47 research outputs found
Monte Carlo Method with Heuristic Adjustment for Irregularly Shaped Food Product Volume Measurement
Volume measurement plays an important role in the production and processing of food products. Various methods have been
proposed to measure the volume of food products with irregular shapes based on 3D reconstruction. However, 3D reconstruction
comes with a high-priced computational cost. Furthermore, some of the volume measurement methods based on 3D reconstruction
have a low accuracy. Another method for measuring volume of objects uses Monte Carlo method. Monte Carlo method performs
volume measurements using random points. Monte Carlo method only requires information regarding whether random points
fall inside or outside an object and does not require a 3D reconstruction. This paper proposes volume measurement using a
computer vision system for irregularly shaped food products without 3D reconstruction based on Monte Carlo method with
heuristic adjustment. Five images of food product were captured using five cameras and processed to produce binary images.
Monte Carlo integration with heuristic adjustment was performed to measure the volume based on the information extracted from
binary images. The experimental results show that the proposed method provided high accuracy and precision compared to the
water displacement method. In addition, the proposed method is more accurate and faster than the space carving method
Designing a secure ubiquitous mammography consultation system
This thesis attempts to design and develop a prototype for mammography image
consultation that can work securely within a ubiquitous environment. Mammogram images
differ largely from other type of images and it requires special and dedicated techniques to
identify the required regions of interest. Thus in Chapter 2 we started to explore the
affectivity of the various traditional techniques based on convolution operators (e.g. Sobol,
Pretwitt, Canny) for mammography edge detection. The second part of chapter 2 tries to
enhance the results obtained via the traditional techniques by hybriding some of them. The
hybriding technique is called in our thesis as Pipelined Operators. In this direction we
proposed four pipeline operators, which contribute to the edge enhancement as well as
abnormalities rendering through the introduction of an additional coloring mechanism.
Although the visualization pipelines represent in our view an advancement on the
traditional techniques applied to mammograms, such pipelines expose healthcare users to
further usage complexities. For this purpose we extended our research work in chapter 2 to
find a better single technique that can work smoothly within the healthcare system. In this
direction, we developed in the third part of chapter 2 a novel technique for finding edges
based on analyzing the dynamic and fuzzy nature of edges in mammograms. We called our
developed method as "Dynamic Fuzzy Classifier or the DFC"
Symmetry-Adapted Machine Learning for Information Security
Symmetry-adapted machine learning has shown encouraging ability to mitigate the security risks in information and communication technology (ICT) systems. It is a subset of artificial intelligence (AI) that relies on the principles of processing future events by learning past events or historical data. The autonomous nature of symmetry-adapted machine learning supports effective data processing and analysis for security detection in ICT systems without the interference of human authorities. Many industries are developing machine-learning-adapted solutions to support security for smart hardware, distributed computing, and the cloud. In our Special Issue book, we focus on the deployment of symmetry-adapted machine learning for information security in various application areas. This security approach can support effective methods to handle the dynamic nature of security attacks by extraction and analysis of data to identify hidden patterns of data. The main topics of this Issue include malware classification, an intrusion detection system, image watermarking, color image watermarking, battlefield target aggregation behavior recognition model, IP camera, Internet of Things (IoT) security, service function chain, indoor positioning system, and crypto-analysis
Dagstuhl News January - December 1999
"Dagstuhl News" is a publication edited especially for the members of the Foundation "Informatikzentrum Schloss Dagstuhl" to thank them for their support. The News give a summary of the scientific work being done in Dagstuhl. Each Dagstuhl Seminar is presented by a small abstract describing the contents and scientific highlights of the seminar as well as the perspectives or challenges of the research topic
Human-Centric Machine Vision
Recently, the algorithms for the processing of the visual information have greatly evolved, providing efficient and effective solutions to cope with the variability and the complexity of real-world environments. These achievements yield to the development of Machine Vision systems that overcome the typical industrial applications, where the environments are controlled and the tasks are very specific, towards the use of innovative solutions to face with everyday needs of people. The Human-Centric Machine Vision can help to solve the problems raised by the needs of our society, e.g. security and safety, health care, medical imaging, and human machine interface. In such applications it is necessary to handle changing, unpredictable and complex situations, and to take care of the presence of humans
Cyber Security and Critical Infrastructures
This book contains the manuscripts that were accepted for publication in the MDPI Special Topic "Cyber Security and Critical Infrastructure" after a rigorous peer-review process. Authors from academia, government and industry contributed their innovative solutions, consistent with the interdisciplinary nature of cybersecurity. The book contains 16 articles: an editorial explaining current challenges, innovative solutions, real-world experiences including critical infrastructure, 15 original papers that present state-of-the-art innovative solutions to attacks on critical systems, and a review of cloud, edge computing, and fog's security and privacy issues
Automated framework for robust content-based verification of print-scan degraded text documents
Fraudulent documents frequently cause severe financial damages and impose security breaches to civil and government organizations. The rapid advances in technology and the widespread availability of personal computers has not reduced the use of printed documents. While digital documents can be verified by many robust and secure methods such as digital signatures and digital watermarks, verification of printed documents still relies on manual inspection of embedded physical security mechanisms.The objective of this thesis is to propose an efficient automated framework for robust content-based verification of printed documents. The principal issue is to achieve robustness with respect to the degradations and increased levels of noise that occur from multiple cycles of printing and scanning. It is shown that classic OCR systems fail under such conditions, moreover OCR systems typically rely heavily on the use of high level linguistic structures to improve recognition rates. However inferring knowledge about the contents of the document image from a-priori statistics is contrary to the nature of document verification. Instead a system is proposed that utilizes specific knowledge of the document to perform highly accurate content verification based on a Print-Scan degradation model and character shape recognition. Such specific knowledge of the document is a reasonable choice for the verification domain since the document contents are already known in order to verify them.The system analyses digital multi font PDF documents to generate a descriptive summary of the document, referred to as \Document Description Map" (DDM). The DDM is later used for verifying the content of printed and scanned copies of the original documents. The system utilizes 2-D Discrete Cosine Transform based features and an adaptive hierarchical classifier trained with synthetic data generated by a Print-Scan degradation model. The system is tested with varying degrees of Print-Scan Channel corruption on a variety of documents with corruption produced by repetitive printing and scanning of the test documents. Results show the approach achieves excellent accuracy and robustness despite the high level of noise
Emerging Informatics
The book on emerging informatics brings together the new concepts and applications that will help define and outline problem solving methods and features in designing business and human systems. It covers international aspects of information systems design in which many relevant technologies are introduced for the welfare of human and business systems. This initiative can be viewed as an emergent area of informatics that helps better conceptualise and design new world-class solutions. The book provides four flexible sections that accommodate total of fourteen chapters. The section specifies learning contexts in emerging fields. Each chapter presents a clear basis through the problem conception and its applicable technological solutions. I hope this will help further exploration of knowledge in the informatics discipline