307 research outputs found

    Emerging Informatics

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    The book on emerging informatics brings together the new concepts and applications that will help define and outline problem solving methods and features in designing business and human systems. It covers international aspects of information systems design in which many relevant technologies are introduced for the welfare of human and business systems. This initiative can be viewed as an emergent area of informatics that helps better conceptualise and design new world-class solutions. The book provides four flexible sections that accommodate total of fourteen chapters. The section specifies learning contexts in emerging fields. Each chapter presents a clear basis through the problem conception and its applicable technological solutions. I hope this will help further exploration of knowledge in the informatics discipline

    Engineering Education and Research Using MATLAB

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    MATLAB is a software package used primarily in the field of engineering for signal processing, numerical data analysis, modeling, programming, simulation, and computer graphic visualization. In the last few years, it has become widely accepted as an efficient tool, and, therefore, its use has significantly increased in scientific communities and academic institutions. This book consists of 20 chapters presenting research works using MATLAB tools. Chapters include techniques for programming and developing Graphical User Interfaces (GUIs), dynamic systems, electric machines, signal and image processing, power electronics, mixed signal circuits, genetic programming, digital watermarking, control systems, time-series regression modeling, and artificial neural networks

    SciTech News Volume 70, No. 2 (2016)

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    Table of Contents: Columns and Reports From the Editor 3 Division News Science-Technology Division 4 New Members 6 Chemistry Division 7 New Members11 Engineering Division 12 Aerospace Section of the Engineering Division 17 Reviews Sci-Tech Book News Reviews 1

    Robust density modelling using the student's t-distribution for human action recognition

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    The extraction of human features from videos is often inaccurate and prone to outliers. Such outliers can severely affect density modelling when the Gaussian distribution is used as the model since it is highly sensitive to outliers. The Gaussian distribution is also often used as base component of graphical models for recognising human actions in the videos (hidden Markov model and others) and the presence of outliers can significantly affect the recognition accuracy. In contrast, the Student's t-distribution is more robust to outliers and can be exploited to improve the recognition rate in the presence of abnormal data. In this paper, we present an HMM which uses mixtures of t-distributions as observation probabilities and show how experiments over two well-known datasets (Weizmann, MuHAVi) reported a remarkable improvement in classification accuracy. © 2011 IEEE

    Dynamical Systems

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    Complex systems are pervasive in many areas of science integrated in our daily lives. Examples include financial markets, highway transportation networks, telecommunication networks, world and country economies, social networks, immunological systems, living organisms, computational systems and electrical and mechanical structures. Complex systems are often composed of a large number of interconnected and interacting entities, exhibiting much richer global scale dynamics than the properties and behavior of individual entities. Complex systems are studied in many areas of natural sciences, social sciences, engineering and mathematical sciences. This special issue therefore intends to contribute towards the dissemination of the multifaceted concepts in accepted use by the scientific community. We hope readers enjoy this pertinent selection of papers which represents relevant examples of the state of the art in present day research. [...

    Beyond Boundaries: A Comprehensive Survey of Transferable Attacks on AI Systems

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    Artificial Intelligence (AI) systems such as autonomous vehicles, facial recognition, and speech recognition systems are increasingly integrated into our daily lives. However, despite their utility, these AI systems are vulnerable to a wide range of attacks such as adversarial, backdoor, data poisoning, membership inference, model inversion, and model stealing attacks. In particular, numerous attacks are designed to target a particular model or system, yet their effects can spread to additional targets, referred to as transferable attacks. Although considerable efforts have been directed toward developing transferable attacks, a holistic understanding of the advancements in transferable attacks remains elusive. In this paper, we comprehensively explore learning-based attacks from the perspective of transferability, particularly within the context of cyber-physical security. We delve into different domains -- the image, text, graph, audio, and video domains -- to highlight the ubiquitous and pervasive nature of transferable attacks. This paper categorizes and reviews the architecture of existing attacks from various viewpoints: data, process, model, and system. We further examine the implications of transferable attacks in practical scenarios such as autonomous driving, speech recognition, and large language models (LLMs). Additionally, we outline the potential research directions to encourage efforts in exploring the landscape of transferable attacks. This survey offers a holistic understanding of the prevailing transferable attacks and their impacts across different domains

    High Dynamic Range Visual Content Compression

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    This thesis addresses the research questions of High Dynamic Range (HDR) visual contents compression. The HDR representations are intended to represent the actual physical value of the light rather than exposed value. The current HDR compression schemes are the extension of legacy Low Dynamic Range (LDR) compressions, by using Tone-Mapping Operators (TMO) to reduce the dynamic range of the HDR contents. However, introducing TMO increases the overall computational complexity, and it causes the temporal artifacts. Furthermore, these compression schemes fail to compress non-salient region differently than the salient region, when Human Visual System (HVS) perceives them differently. The main contribution of this thesis is to propose a novel Mapping-free visual saliency-guided HDR content compression scheme. Firstly, the relationship of Discrete Wavelet Transform (DWT) lifting steps and TMO are explored. A novel approach to compress HDR image by Joint Photographic Experts Group (JPEG) 2000 codec while backward compatible to LDR is proposed. This approach exploits the reversibility of tone mapping and scalability of DWT. Secondly, the importance of the TMO in the HDR compression is evaluated in this thesis. A mapping-free post HDR image compression based on JPEG and JPEG2000 standard codecs for current HDR image formats is proposed. This approach exploits the structure of HDR formats. It has an equivalent compression performance and the lowest computational complexity compared to the existing HDR lossy compressions (50% lower than the state-of-the-art). Finally, the shortcomings of the current HDR visual saliency models, and HDR visual saliency-guided compression are explored in this thesis. A spatial saliency model for HDR visual content outperform others by 10% for spatial visual prediction task with 70% lower computational complexity is proposed. Furthermore, the experiment suggested more than 90% temporal saliency is predicted by the proposed spatial model. Moreover, the proposed saliency model can be used to guide the HDR compression by applying different quantization factor according to the intensity of predicted saliency map
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