43,778 research outputs found
Ensemble Joint Sparse Low Rank Matrix Decomposition for Thermography Diagnosis System
Composite is widely used in the aircraft industry and it is essential for manufacturers to monitor its health and quality. The most commonly found defects of composite are debonds and delamination. Different inner defects with complex irregular shape is difficult to be diagnosed by using conventional thermal imaging methods. In this paper, an ensemble joint sparse low rank matrix decomposition (EJSLRMD) algorithm is proposed by applying the optical pulse thermography (OPT) diagnosis system. The proposed algorithm jointly models the low rank and sparse pattern by using concatenated feature space. In particular, the weak defects information can be separated from strong noise and the resolution contrast of the defects has significantly been improved. Ensemble iterative sparse modelling are conducted to further enhance the weak information as well as reducing the computational cost. In order to show the robustness and efficacy of the model, experiments are conducted to detect the inner debond on multiple carbon fiber reinforced polymer (CFRP) composites. A comparative analysis is presented with general OPT algorithms. Not withstand above, the proposed model has been evaluated on synthetic data and compared with other low rank and sparse matrix decomposition algorithms
A Framework for Symmetric Part Detection in Cluttered Scenes
The role of symmetry in computer vision has waxed and waned in importance
during the evolution of the field from its earliest days. At first figuring
prominently in support of bottom-up indexing, it fell out of favor as shape
gave way to appearance and recognition gave way to detection. With a strong
prior in the form of a target object, the role of the weaker priors offered by
perceptual grouping was greatly diminished. However, as the field returns to
the problem of recognition from a large database, the bottom-up recovery of the
parts that make up the objects in a cluttered scene is critical for their
recognition. The medial axis community has long exploited the ubiquitous
regularity of symmetry as a basis for the decomposition of a closed contour
into medial parts. However, today's recognition systems are faced with
cluttered scenes, and the assumption that a closed contour exists, i.e. that
figure-ground segmentation has been solved, renders much of the medial axis
community's work inapplicable. In this article, we review a computational
framework, previously reported in Lee et al. (2013), Levinshtein et al. (2009,
2013), that bridges the representation power of the medial axis and the need to
recover and group an object's parts in a cluttered scene. Our framework is
rooted in the idea that a maximally inscribed disc, the building block of a
medial axis, can be modeled as a compact superpixel in the image. We evaluate
the method on images of cluttered scenes.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figure
Vessel tractography using an intensity based tensor model with branch detection
In this paper, we present a tubular structure seg- mentation method that utilizes a second order tensor constructed from directional intensity measurements, which is inspired from diffusion tensor image (DTI) modeling. The constructed anisotropic tensor which is fit inside a vessel drives the segmen- tation analogously to a tractography approach in DTI. Our model is initialized at a single seed point and is capable of capturing whole vessel trees by an automatic branch detection algorithm developed in the same framework. The centerline of the vessel as well as its thickness is extracted. Performance results within the Rotterdam Coronary Artery Algorithm Evaluation framework are provided for comparison with existing techniques. 96.4% average overlap with ground truth delineated by experts is obtained in addition to other measures reported in the paper. Moreover, we demonstrate further quantitative results over synthetic vascular datasets, and we provide quantitative experiments for branch detection on patient Computed Tomography Angiography (CTA) volumes, as well as qualitative evaluations on the same CTA datasets, from visual scores by a cardiologist expert
A Computational Model of the Short-Cut Rule for 2D Shape Decomposition
We propose a new 2D shape decomposition method based on the short-cut rule.
The short-cut rule originates from cognition research, and states that the
human visual system prefers to partition an object into parts using the
shortest possible cuts. We propose and implement a computational model for the
short-cut rule and apply it to the problem of shape decomposition. The model we
proposed generates a set of cut hypotheses passing through the points on the
silhouette which represent the negative minima of curvature. We then show that
most part-cut hypotheses can be eliminated by analysis of local properties of
each. Finally, the remaining hypotheses are evaluated in ascending length
order, which guarantees that of any pair of conflicting cuts only the shortest
will be accepted. We demonstrate that, compared with state-of-the-art shape
decomposition methods, the proposed approach achieves decomposition results
which better correspond to human intuition as revealed in psychological
experiments.Comment: 11 page
Hierarchical bounding structures for efficient virial computations: Towards a realistic molecular description of cholesterics
We detail the application of bounding volume hierarchies to accelerate
second-virial evaluations for arbitrary complex particles interacting through
hard and soft finite-range potentials. This procedure, based on the
construction of neighbour lists through the combined use of recursive
atom-decomposition techniques and binary overlap search schemes, is shown to
scale sub-logarithmically with particle resolution in the case of molecular
systems with high aspect ratios. Its implementation within an efficient
numerical and theoretical framework based on classical density functional
theory enables us to investigate the cholesteric self-assembly of a wide range
of experimentally-relevant particle models. We illustrate the method through
the determination of the cholesteric behaviour of hard, structurally-resolved
twisted cuboids, and report quantitative evidence of the long-predicted phase
handedness inversion with increasing particle thread angles near the
phenomenological threshold value of . Our results further highlight
the complex relationship between microscopic structure and helical twisting
power in such model systems, which may be attributed to subtle geometric
variations of their chiral excluded-volume manifold
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