4,019 research outputs found
Brain image clustering by wavelet energy and CBSSO optimization algorithm
Previously, the diagnosis of brain abnormality was significantly important in the saving of social and hospital resources. Wavelet energy is known as an effective feature detection which has great efficiency in different utilities. This paper suggests a new method based on wavelet energy to automatically classify magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) brain images into two groups (normal and abnormal), utilizing support vector machine (SVM) classification based on chaotic binary shark smell optimization (CBSSO) to optimize the SVM weights.
The results of the suggested CBSSO-based KSVM are compared favorably to several other methods in terms of better sensitivity and authenticity. The proposed CAD system can additionally be utilized to categorize the images with various pathological conditions, types, and illness modes
Automated Visual Fin Identification of Individual Great White Sharks
This paper discusses the automated visual identification of individual great
white sharks from dorsal fin imagery. We propose a computer vision photo ID
system and report recognition results over a database of thousands of
unconstrained fin images. To the best of our knowledge this line of work
establishes the first fully automated contour-based visual ID system in the
field of animal biometrics. The approach put forward appreciates shark fins as
textureless, flexible and partially occluded objects with an individually
characteristic shape. In order to recover animal identities from an image we
first introduce an open contour stroke model, which extends multi-scale region
segmentation to achieve robust fin detection. Secondly, we show that
combinatorial, scale-space selective fingerprinting can successfully encode fin
individuality. We then measure the species-specific distribution of visual
individuality along the fin contour via an embedding into a global `fin space'.
Exploiting this domain, we finally propose a non-linear model for individual
animal recognition and combine all approaches into a fine-grained
multi-instance framework. We provide a system evaluation, compare results to
prior work, and report performance and properties in detail.Comment: 17 pages, 16 figures. To be published in IJCV. Article replaced to
update first author contact details and to correct a Figure reference on page
Blockout: Dynamic Model Selection for Hierarchical Deep Networks
Most deep architectures for image classification--even those that are trained
to classify a large number of diverse categories--learn shared image
representations with a single model. Intuitively, however, categories that are
more similar should share more information than those that are very different.
While hierarchical deep networks address this problem by learning separate
features for subsets of related categories, current implementations require
simplified models using fixed architectures specified via heuristic clustering
methods. Instead, we propose Blockout, a method for regularization and model
selection that simultaneously learns both the model architecture and
parameters. A generalization of Dropout, our approach gives a novel
parametrization of hierarchical architectures that allows for structure
learning via back-propagation. To demonstrate its utility, we evaluate Blockout
on the CIFAR and ImageNet datasets, demonstrating improved classification
accuracy, better regularization performance, faster training, and the clear
emergence of hierarchical network structures
Minimisation of energy consumption variance for multi-process manufacturing lines through genetic algorithm manipulation of production schedule
Typical manufacturing scheduling algorithms do not consider the energy consumption of each job, or its variance, when they generate a production schedule. This can become problematic for manufacturers when local infrastructure has limited energy distribution capabilities. In this paper, a genetic algorithm based schedule modification algorithm is presented. By referencing energy consumption models for each job, adjustments are made to the original schedule so that it produces a minimal variance in the total energy consumption in a multi-process manufacturing production line, all while operating within the constraints of the manufacturing line and individual processes. Empirical results show a significant reduction in energy consumption variance can be achieved on schedules containing multiple concurrent jobs
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