35,897 research outputs found
On-the-fly Data Assessment for High Throughput X-ray Diffraction Measurement
Investment in brighter sources and larger and faster detectors has
accelerated the speed of data acquisition at national user facilities. The
accelerated data acquisition offers many opportunities for discovery of new
materials, but it also presents a daunting challenge. The rate of data
acquisition far exceeds the current speed of data quality assessment, resulting
in less than optimal data and data coverage, which in extreme cases forces
recollection of data. Herein, we show how this challenge can be addressed
through development of an approach that makes routine data assessment automatic
and instantaneous. Through extracting and visualizing customized attributes in
real time, data quality and coverage, as well as other scientifically relevant
information contained in large datasets is highlighted. Deployment of such an
approach not only improves the quality of data but also helps optimize usage of
expensive characterization resources by prioritizing measurements of highest
scientific impact. We anticipate our approach to become a starting point for a
sophisticated decision-tree that optimizes data quality and maximizes
scientific content in real time through automation. With these efforts to
integrate more automation in data collection and analysis, we can truly take
advantage of the accelerating speed of data acquisition
Comparison of forest attributes derived from two terrestrial lidar systems.
Abstract
Terrestrial lidar (TLS) is an emerging technology for deriving forest attributes, including conventional inventory and canopy characterizations. However, little is known about the influence of scanner specifications on derived forest parameters. We compared two TLS systems at two sites in British Columbia. Common scanning benchmarks and identical algorithms were used to obtain estimates of tree diameter, position, and canopy characteristics. Visualization of range images and point clouds showed clear differences, even though both scanners were relatively high-resolution instruments. These translated into quantifiable differences in impulse penetration, characterization of stems and crowns far from the scan location, and gap fraction. Differences between scanners in estimates of effective plant area index were greater than differences between sites. Both scanners provided a detailed digital model of forest structure, and gross structural characterizations (including crown dimensions and position) were relatively robust; but comparison of canopy density metrics may require consideration of scanner attributes
Fuzzy rule-based system applied to risk estimation of cardiovascular patients
Cardiovascular decision support is one area of increasing research interest. On-going collaborations between clinicians and computer scientists are looking at the application of knowledge discovery in databases to the area of patient diagnosis, based on clinical records. A fuzzy rule-based system for risk estimation of cardiovascular patients is proposed. It uses a group of fuzzy rules as a knowledge representation about data pertaining to cardiovascular patients. Several algorithms for the discovery of an easily readable and understandable group of fuzzy rules are formalized and analysed. The accuracy of risk estimation and the interpretability of fuzzy rules are discussed. Our study shows, in comparison to other algorithms used in knowledge discovery, that classifcation with a group of fuzzy rules is a useful technique for risk estimation of cardiovascular patients. © 2013 Old City Publishing, Inc
Data mining as a tool for environmental scientists
Over recent years a huge library of data mining algorithms has been developed to tackle a variety of problems in fields such as medical imaging and network traffic analysis. Many of these techniques are far more flexible than more classical modelling approaches and could be usefully applied to data-rich environmental problems. Certain techniques such as Artificial Neural Networks, Clustering, Case-Based Reasoning and more recently Bayesian Decision Networks have found application in environmental modelling while other methods, for example classification and association rule extraction, have not yet been taken up on any wide scale. We propose that these and other data mining techniques could be usefully applied to difficult problems in the field. This paper introduces several data mining concepts and briefly discusses their application to environmental modelling, where data may be sparse, incomplete, or heterogenous
- …