7,700 research outputs found
Robust sound event detection in bioacoustic sensor networks
Bioacoustic sensors, sometimes known as autonomous recording units (ARUs),
can record sounds of wildlife over long periods of time in scalable and
minimally invasive ways. Deriving per-species abundance estimates from these
sensors requires detection, classification, and quantification of animal
vocalizations as individual acoustic events. Yet, variability in ambient noise,
both over time and across sensors, hinders the reliability of current automated
systems for sound event detection (SED), such as convolutional neural networks
(CNN) in the time-frequency domain. In this article, we develop, benchmark, and
combine several machine listening techniques to improve the generalizability of
SED models across heterogeneous acoustic environments. As a case study, we
consider the problem of detecting avian flight calls from a ten-hour recording
of nocturnal bird migration, recorded by a network of six ARUs in the presence
of heterogeneous background noise. Starting from a CNN yielding
state-of-the-art accuracy on this task, we introduce two noise adaptation
techniques, respectively integrating short-term (60 milliseconds) and long-term
(30 minutes) context. First, we apply per-channel energy normalization (PCEN)
in the time-frequency domain, which applies short-term automatic gain control
to every subband in the mel-frequency spectrogram. Secondly, we replace the
last dense layer in the network by a context-adaptive neural network (CA-NN)
layer. Combining them yields state-of-the-art results that are unmatched by
artificial data augmentation alone. We release a pre-trained version of our
best performing system under the name of BirdVoxDetect, a ready-to-use detector
of avian flight calls in field recordings.Comment: 32 pages, in English. Submitted to PLOS ONE journal in February 2019;
revised August 2019; published October 201
Radar and RGB-depth sensors for fall detection: a review
This paper reviews recent works in the literature on the use of systems based on radar and RGB-Depth (RGB-D) sensors for fall detection, and discusses outstanding research challenges and trends related to this research field. Systems to detect reliably fall events and promptly alert carers and first responders have gained significant interest in the past few years in order to address the societal issue of an increasing number of elderly people living alone, with the associated risk of them falling and the consequences in terms of health treatments, reduced well-being, and costs. The interest in radar and RGB-D sensors is related to their capability to enable contactless and non-intrusive monitoring, which is an advantage for practical deployment and users’ acceptance and compliance, compared with other sensor technologies, such as video-cameras, or wearables. Furthermore, the possibility of combining and fusing information from The heterogeneous types of sensors is expected to improve the overall performance of practical fall detection systems. Researchers from different fields can benefit from multidisciplinary knowledge and awareness of the latest developments in radar and RGB-D sensors that this paper is discussing
Toward a Robust Sparse Data Representation for Wireless Sensor Networks
Compressive sensing has been successfully used for optimized operations in
wireless sensor networks. However, raw data collected by sensors may be neither
originally sparse nor easily transformed into a sparse data representation.
This paper addresses the problem of transforming source data collected by
sensor nodes into a sparse representation with a few nonzero elements. Our
contributions that address three major issues include: 1) an effective method
that extracts population sparsity of the data, 2) a sparsity ratio guarantee
scheme, and 3) a customized learning algorithm of the sparsifying dictionary.
We introduce an unsupervised neural network to extract an intrinsic sparse
coding of the data. The sparse codes are generated at the activation of the
hidden layer using a sparsity nomination constraint and a shrinking mechanism.
Our analysis using real data samples shows that the proposed method outperforms
conventional sparsity-inducing methods.Comment: 8 page
An IoT Endpoint System-on-Chip for Secure and Energy-Efficient Near-Sensor Analytics
Near-sensor data analytics is a promising direction for IoT endpoints, as it
minimizes energy spent on communication and reduces network load - but it also
poses security concerns, as valuable data is stored or sent over the network at
various stages of the analytics pipeline. Using encryption to protect sensitive
data at the boundary of the on-chip analytics engine is a way to address data
security issues. To cope with the combined workload of analytics and encryption
in a tight power envelope, we propose Fulmine, a System-on-Chip based on a
tightly-coupled multi-core cluster augmented with specialized blocks for
compute-intensive data processing and encryption functions, supporting software
programmability for regular computing tasks. The Fulmine SoC, fabricated in
65nm technology, consumes less than 20mW on average at 0.8V achieving an
efficiency of up to 70pJ/B in encryption, 50pJ/px in convolution, or up to
25MIPS/mW in software. As a strong argument for real-life flexible application
of our platform, we show experimental results for three secure analytics use
cases: secure autonomous aerial surveillance with a state-of-the-art deep CNN
consuming 3.16pJ per equivalent RISC op; local CNN-based face detection with
secured remote recognition in 5.74pJ/op; and seizure detection with encrypted
data collection from EEG within 12.7pJ/op.Comment: 15 pages, 12 figures, accepted for publication to the IEEE
Transactions on Circuits and Systems - I: Regular Paper
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