48,958 research outputs found
Learning to Reconstruct People in Clothing from a Single RGB Camera
We present a learning-based model to infer the personalized 3D shape of people from a few frames (1-8) of a monocular video in which the person is moving, in less than 10 seconds with a reconstruction accuracy of 5mm. Our model learns to predict the parameters of a statistical body model and instance displacements that add clothing and hair to the shape. The model achieves fast and accurate predictions based on two key design choices. First, by predicting shape in a canonical T-pose space, the network learns to encode the images of the person into pose-invariant latent codes, where the information is fused. Second, based on the observation that feed-forward predictions are fast but do not always align with the input images, we predict using both, bottom-up and top-down streams (one per view) allowing information to flow in both directions. Learning relies only on synthetic 3D data. Once learned, the model can take a variable number of frames as input, and is able to reconstruct shapes even from a single image with an accuracy of 6mm. Results on 3 different datasets demonstrate the efficacy and accuracy of our approach
Low Power Processor Architectures and Contemporary Techniques for Power Optimization – A Review
The technological evolution has increased the number of transistors for a given die area significantly and increased the switching speed from few MHz to GHz range. Such inversely proportional decline in size and boost in performance consequently demands shrinking of supply voltage and effective power dissipation in chips with millions of transistors. This has triggered substantial amount of research in power reduction techniques into almost every aspect of the chip and particularly the processor cores contained in the chip. This paper presents an overview of techniques for achieving the power efficiency mainly at the processor core level but also visits related domains such as buses and memories. There are various processor parameters and features such as supply voltage, clock frequency, cache and pipelining which can be optimized to reduce the power consumption of the processor. This paper discusses various ways in which these parameters can be optimized. Also, emerging power efficient processor architectures are overviewed and research activities are discussed which should help reader identify how these factors in a processor contribute to power consumption. Some of these concepts have been already established whereas others are still active research areas. © 2009 ACADEMY PUBLISHER
On the Feasibility of Transfer-learning Code Smells using Deep Learning
Context: A substantial amount of work has been done to detect smells in
source code using metrics-based and heuristics-based methods. Machine learning
methods have been recently applied to detect source code smells; however, the
current practices are considered far from mature. Objective: First, explore the
feasibility of applying deep learning models to detect smells without extensive
feature engineering, just by feeding the source code in tokenized form. Second,
investigate the possibility of applying transfer-learning in the context of
deep learning models for smell detection. Method: We use existing metric-based
state-of-the-art methods for detecting three implementation smells and one
design smell in C# code. Using these results as the annotated gold standard, we
train smell detection models on three different deep learning architectures.
These architectures use Convolution Neural Networks (CNNs) of one or two
dimensions, or Recurrent Neural Networks (RNNs) as their principal hidden
layers. For the first objective of our study, we perform training and
evaluation on C# samples, whereas for the second objective, we train the models
from C# code and evaluate the models over Java code samples. We perform the
experiments with various combinations of hyper-parameters for each model.
Results: We find it feasible to detect smells using deep learning methods. Our
comparative experiments find that there is no clearly superior method between
CNN-1D and CNN-2D. We also observe that performance of the deep learning models
is smell-specific. Our transfer-learning experiments show that
transfer-learning is definitely feasible for implementation smells with
performance comparable to that of direct-learning. This work opens up a new
paradigm to detect code smells by transfer-learning especially for the
programming languages where the comprehensive code smell detection tools are
not available
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