7,492 research outputs found
MobilitApp: Analysing mobility data of citizens in the metropolitan area of Barcelona
MobilitApp is a platform designed to provide smart mobility services in urban
areas. It is designed to help citizens and transport authorities alike.
Citizens will be able to access the MobilitApp mobile application and decide
their optimal transportation strategy by visualising their usual routes, their
carbon footprint, receiving tips, analytics and general mobility information,
such as traffic and incident alerts. Transport authorities and service
providers will be able to access information about the mobility pattern of
citizens to o er their best services, improve costs and planning. The
MobilitApp client runs on Android devices and records synchronously, while
running in the background, periodic location updates from its users. The
information obtained is processed and analysed to understand the mobility
patterns of our users in the city of Barcelona, Spain
Morphological feature extraction for statistical learning with applications to solar image data
Abstract: Many areas of science are generating large volumes of digital image data. In order to take full advantage of the high-resolution and high-cadence images modern technology is producing, methods to automatically process and analyze large batches of such images are needed. This involves reducing complex images to simple representations such as binary sketches or numerical summaries that capture embedded scientific information. Using techniques derived from mathematical morphology, we demonstrate how to reduce solar images into simple ‘sketch ’ representations and numerical summaries that can be used for statistical learning. We demonstrate our general techniques on two specific examples: classifying sunspot groups and recognizing coronal loop structures. Our methodology reproduces manual classifications at an overall rate of 90 % on a set of 119 magnetogram and white light images of sunspot groups. We also show that our methodology is competitive with other automated algorithms at producing coronal loop tracings and demonstrate robustness through noise simulations. 2013 Wile
Identifying Mislabeled Training Data
This paper presents a new approach to identifying and eliminating mislabeled
training instances for supervised learning. The goal of this approach is to
improve classification accuracies produced by learning algorithms by improving
the quality of the training data. Our approach uses a set of learning
algorithms to create classifiers that serve as noise filters for the training
data. We evaluate single algorithm, majority vote and consensus filters on five
datasets that are prone to labeling errors. Our experiments illustrate that
filtering significantly improves classification accuracy for noise levels up to
30 percent. An analytical and empirical evaluation of the precision of our
approach shows that consensus filters are conservative at throwing away good
data at the expense of retaining bad data and that majority filters are better
at detecting bad data at the expense of throwing away good data. This suggests
that for situations in which there is a paucity of data, consensus filters are
preferable, whereas majority vote filters are preferable for situations with an
abundance of data
A Neural Model for Self Organizing Feature Detectors and Classifiers in a Network Hierarchy
Many models of early cortical processing have shown how local learning rules can produce efficient, sparse-distributed codes in which nodes have responses that are statistically independent and low probability. However, it is not known how to develop a useful hierarchical representation, containing sparse-distributed codes at each level of the hierarchy, that incorporates predictive feedback from the environment. We take a step in that direction by proposing a biologically plausible neural network model that develops receptive fields, and learns to make class predictions, with or without the help of environmental feedback. The model is a new type of predictive adaptive resonance theory network called Receptive Field ARTMAP, or RAM. RAM self organizes internal category nodes that are tuned to activity distributions in topographic input maps. Each receptive field is composed of multiple weight fields that are adapted via local, on-line learning, to form smooth receptive ftelds that reflect; the statistics of the activity distributions in the input maps. When RAM generates incorrect predictions, its vigilance is raised, amplifying subtractive inhibition and sharpening receptive fields until the error is corrected. Evaluation on several classification benchmarks shows that RAM outperforms a related (but neurally implausible) model called Gaussian ARTMAP, as well as several standard neural network and statistical classifters. A topographic version of RAM is proposed, which is capable of self organizing hierarchical representations. Topographic RAM is a model for receptive field development at any level of the cortical hierarchy, and provides explanations for a variety of perceptual learning data.Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency and Office of Naval Research (N00014-95-1-0409
Neural networks in geophysical applications
Neural networks are increasingly popular in geophysics.
Because they are universal approximators, these
tools can approximate any continuous function with an
arbitrary precision. Hence, they may yield important
contributions to finding solutions to a variety of geophysical applications.
However, knowledge of many methods and techniques
recently developed to increase the performance
and to facilitate the use of neural networks does not seem
to be widespread in the geophysical community. Therefore,
the power of these tools has not yet been explored to
their full extent. In this paper, techniques are described
for faster training, better overall performance, i.e., generalization,and the automatic estimation of network size
and architecture
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