281 research outputs found

    Generative adversarial networks review in earthquake-related engineering fields

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    Within seismology, geology, civil and structural engineering, deep learning (DL), especially via generative adversarial networks (GANs), represents an innovative, engaging, and advantageous way to generate reliable synthetic data that represent actual samples' characteristics, providing a handy data augmentation tool. Indeed, in many practical applications, obtaining a significant number of high-quality information is demanding. Data augmentation is generally based on artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning data-driven models. The DL GAN-based data augmentation approach for generating synthetic seismic signals revolutionized the current data augmentation paradigm. This study delivers a critical state-of-art review, explaining recent research into AI-based GAN synthetic generation of ground motion signals or seismic events, and also with a comprehensive insight into seismic-related geophysical studies. This study may be relevant, especially for the earth and planetary science, geology and seismology, oil and gas exploration, and on the other hand for assessing the seismic response of buildings and infrastructures, seismic detection tasks, and general structural and civil engineering applications. Furthermore, highlighting the strengths and limitations of the current studies on adversarial learning applied to seismology may help to guide research efforts in the next future toward the most promising directions

    Conditioning Generative Latent Optimization to solve Imaging Inverse Problems

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    Computed Tomography (CT) is a prominent example of Imaging Inverse Problem (IIP), highlighting the unrivalled performances of data-driven methods in degraded measurements setups like sparse X-ray projections. Although a significant proportion of deep learning approaches benefit from large supervised datasets to directly map experimental measurements to medical scans, they cannot generalize to unknown acquisition setups. In contrast, fully unsupervised techniques, most notably using score-based generative models, have recently demonstrated similar or better performances compared to supervised approaches to solve IIPs while being flexible at test time regarding the imaging setup. However, their use cases are limited by two factors: (a) they need considerable amounts of training data to have good generalization properties and (b) they require a backward operator, like Filtered-Back-Projection in the case of CT, to condition the learned prior distribution of medical scans to experimental measurements. To overcome these issues, we propose an unsupervised conditional approach to the Generative Latent Optimization framework (cGLO), in which the parameters of a decoder network are initialized on an unsupervised dataset. The decoder is then used for reconstruction purposes, by performing Generative Latent Optimization with a loss function directly comparing simulated measurements from proposed reconstructions to experimental measurements. The resulting approach, tested on sparse-view CT using multiple training dataset sizes, demonstrates better reconstruction quality compared to state-of-the-art score-based strategies in most data regimes and shows an increasing performance advantage for smaller training datasets and reduced projection angles. Furthermore, cGLO does not require any backward operator and could expand use cases even to non-linear IIPs.Comment: comments: 20 pages, 9 figures; typos correcte
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