1,192 research outputs found

    Technical approaches for measurement of human errors

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    Human error is a significant contributing factor in a very high proportion of civil transport, general aviation, and rotorcraft accidents. The technical details of a variety of proven approaches for the measurement of human errors in the context of the national airspace system are presented. Unobtrusive measurements suitable for cockpit operations and procedures in part of full mission simulation are emphasized. Procedure, system performance, and human operator centered measurements are discussed as they apply to the manual control, communication, supervisory, and monitoring tasks which are relevant to aviation operations

    Bayesian Approaches to Tracking, Sensor Fusion and Intent Prediction

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    This thesis presents work on the development of model-based Bayesian approaches to object tracking and intent prediction. Successful navigation/positioning applications rely fundamentally on the choice of appropriate dynamic model and the design of effective tracking algorithms capable of maximising the use of the structure of the dynamic system and the information from sensors. While the tracking problem with frequent and accurate position data has been well studied, we push back the frontiers of current technology where an object can undergo fast manoeuvres and position fixes are limited. On the other hand, intent prediction techniques which extract higher level information such as the intended destination of a moving object can be designed, given the ability to perform successful tracking. Such techniques can play important roles in various application areas, including traffic monitoring, intelligent human computer interaction systems and autonomous route planning. In the first part of this thesis Bayesian tracking methods are designed based on a standard fix-rate setting in which the dynamic system is formulated into a Markovian state space form. We show that the combination of an intrinsic coordinate dynamic model and sensors in the object's body frame leads to novel state space models according to which efficient proposal kernels can be designed and implemented by the sequential Monte Carlo (SMC) methods. Also, sequential Markov chain Monte Carlo schemes are considered for the first time to tackle the sequential batch inference problems due to the presence of infrequent position data. Performance evaluation on both synthetic and real-world data shows that the proposed algorithms are superior to simpler particle filters, implying that they can be favourable alternatives to tracking problems with inertial sensors. The modelling assumption that leads to Markovian state space models can be restrictive for real-world systems as it stipulates that the state sequence has to be synchronised with the observations. In the second major part of this thesis we relax this assumption and work with a more natural class of models, termed variable rate models. We generalise the existing variable rate intrinsic model to incorporate acceleration, speed, distance and position data and introduce new variable rate particle filtering methods tailored to the derived model to accommodate multi-sensor multi-rate tracking scenarios. The proposed algorithms can achieve substantial improvements in terms of tracking accuracy and robustness over a bootstrap variable rate particle filter. Moreover, full Bayesian inference schemes for the learning of both the hidden state and system parameters are presented, with numerical results illustrating their effectiveness. The last part of the thesis is about designing efficient intent prediction algorithms within a Bayesian framework. A pseudo-observation based approach to the incorporation of destination knowledge is introduced, making the mathematics of the dynamical model and the observation process consistent with the Markov state process. Based on the new interpretation, two algorithms are proposed to sequentially estimate the probability of all possible endpoints. Whilst the synthetic maritime surveillance data demonstrate that the proposed methods can achieve comparable prediction performance with reduced computational cost in comparison to the existing bridging distribution based methods, the results on an extensive freehand pointing database, which contains 95 three-dimensional pointing trajectories, show that the new algorithms can outperform other state-of-the-art techniques. Some sensitivity tests are also performed, confirming the good robustness of the introduced methods against model mismatches

    Spatial, Spectral, and Perceptual Nonlinear Noise Reduction for Hands-free Microphones in a Car

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    Speech enhancement in an automobile is a challenging problem because interference can come from engine noise, fans, music, wind, road noise, reverberation, echo, and passengers engaging in other conversations. Hands-free microphones make the situation worse because the strength of the desired speech signal reduces with increased distance between the microphone and talker. Automobile safety is improved when the driver can use a hands-free interface to phones and other devices instead of taking his eyes off the road. The demand for high quality hands-free communication in the automobile requires the introduction of more powerful algorithms. This thesis shows that a unique combination of five algorithms can achieve superior speech enhancement for a hands-free system when compared to beamforming or spectral subtraction alone. Several different designs were analyzed and tested before converging on the configuration that achieved the best results. Beamforming, voice activity detection, spectral subtraction, perceptual nonlinear weighting, and talker isolation via pitch tracking all work together in a complementary iterative manner to create a speech enhancement system capable of significantly enhancing real world speech signals. The following conclusions are supported by the simulation results using data recorded in a car and are in strong agreement with theory. Adaptive beamforming, like the Generalized Side-lobe Canceller (GSC), can be effectively used if the filters only adapt during silent data frames because too much of the desired speech is cancelled otherwise. Spectral subtraction removes stationary noise while perceptual weighting prevents the introduction of offensive audible noise artifacts. Talker isolation via pitch tracking can perform better when used after beamforming and spectral subtraction because of the higher accuracy obtained after initial noise removal. Iterating the algorithm once increases the accuracy of the Voice Activity Detection (VAD), which improves the overall performance of the algorithm. Placing the microphone(s) on the ceiling above the head and slightly forward of the desired talker appears to be the best location in an automobile based on the experiments performed in this thesis. Objective speech quality measures show that the algorithm removes a majority of the stationary noise in a hands-free environment of an automobile with relatively minimal speech distortion
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