22 research outputs found

    A Comparative Analysis of Methods for Evaluation of ECG Signal Quality after Compression

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    The assessment of ECG signal quality after compression is an essential part of the compression process. Compression facilitates the signal archiving, speeds up signal transmission, and reduces the energy consumption. Conversely, lossy compression distorts the signals. Therefore, it is necessary to express the compression performance through both compression efficiency and signal quality. This paper provides an overview of objective algorithms for the assessment of both ECG signal quality after compression and compression efficiency. In this area, there is a lack of standardization, and there is no extensive review as such. 40 methods were tested in terms of their suitability for quality assessment. For this purpose, the whole CSE database was used. The tested signals were compressed using an algorithm based on SPIHT with varying efficiency. As a reference, compressed signals were manually assessed by two experts and classified into three quality groups. Owing to the experts’ classification, we determined corresponding ranges of selected quality evaluation methods’ values. The suitability of the methods for quality assessment was evaluated based on five criteria. For the assessment of ECG signal quality after compression, we recommend to use a combination of these methods: PSim SDNN, QS, SNR1, MSE, PRDN1, MAX, STDERR, and WEDD SWT

    Privacy-Protecting Techniques for Behavioral Data: A Survey

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    Our behavior (the way we talk, walk, or think) is unique and can be used as a biometric trait. It also correlates with sensitive attributes like emotions. Hence, techniques to protect individuals privacy against unwanted inferences are required. To consolidate knowledge in this area, we systematically reviewed applicable anonymization techniques. We taxonomize and compare existing solutions regarding privacy goals, conceptual operation, advantages, and limitations. Our analysis shows that some behavioral traits (e.g., voice) have received much attention, while others (e.g., eye-gaze, brainwaves) are mostly neglected. We also find that the evaluation methodology of behavioral anonymization techniques can be further improved

    Distributed Compressed Representation of Correlated Image Sets

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    Vision sensor networks and video cameras find widespread usage in several applications that rely on effective representation of scenes or analysis of 3D information. These systems usually acquire multiple images of the same 3D scene from different viewpoints or at different time instants. Therefore, these images are generally correlated through displacement of scene objects. Efficient compression techniques have to exploit this correlation in order to efficiently communicate the 3D scene information. Instead of joint encoding that requires communication between the cameras, in this thesis we concentrate on distributed representation, where the captured images are encoded independently, but decoded jointly to exploit the correlation between images. One of the most important and challenging tasks relies in estimation of the underlying correlation from the compressed correlated images for effective reconstruction or analysis in the joint decoder. This thesis focuses on developing efficient correlation estimation algorithms and joint representation of multiple correlated images captured by various sensing methodologies, e.g., planar, omnidirectional and compressive sensing (CS) sensors. The geometry of the 2D visual representation and the acquisition complexity vary for each sensor type. Therefore, we need to carefully consider the specific geometric nature of the captured images while developing distributed representation algorithms. In this thesis we propose robust algorithms in different scene analysis and reconstruction scenarios. We first concentrate on the distributed representation of omnidirectional images captured by catadioptric sensors. The omnidirectional images are captured from different viewpoints and encoded independently with a balanced rate distribution among the different cameras. They are mapped on the sphere which captures the plenoptic function in its radial form without Euclidean discrepancies. We propose a transform-based distributed coding algorithm, where the spherical images initially undergo a multi-resolution decomposition. The visual information is then split into two correlated partitions. The encoder transmits one partition after entropy coding, as well as the syndrome bits resulting from the Slepian-Wolf encoding of the other partition. The joint decoder estimates a disparity image to take benefit of the correlation between views and uses the syndrome bits to decode the missing information. Such a strategy proves to be beneficial with respect to the independent processing of images and shows only a small performance loss compared to the joint encoding of different views. The encoding complexity in the previous approach is non-negligible due to the visual information processing based on Slepian-Wolf coding and its associated rate parameter estimation. We therefore discard the Slepian-Wolf encoding and propose a distributed coding solution, where the correlated images are encoded independently using transform-based coding solutions (e.g., SPIHT). The central decoder now builds a correlation model from the compressed images, which is used to jointly decode a pair of images. Experimental results demonstrate that the proposed distributed coding solution improves the rate-distortion performance of the separate coding results for both planar and omnidirectional images. However, this improvement is significant only at medium to high bit rates. We therefore propose a rate allocation scheme that identifies and transmits the necessary visual information from each image to improve the correlation estimation accuracy at low bit rate. Experimental results show that for a given bit budget the proposed encoding scheme permits to compute an accurate correlation estimation comparing to the one obtained with SPIHT, JPEG 2000 or JPEG coding schemes. We show however that the improvement in the correlation estimation comes at the price of penalizing the image reconstruction quality; therefore there exists an interesting trade-off between the accurate correlation estimation and image reconstruction as encoding optimization objectives are different in both cases. Next, we further simplify the encoding complexity by replacing the classical imaging sensors with the simple CS sensors, that directly acquire the compressed images in the form of quantized linear measurements. We now concentrate on the particular problem, where one image is selected as the reference and it is used as a side information for the correlation estimation. We propose a geometry-based model to describe the correlation between the visual information in a pair of images. The joint decoder first captures the most prominent visual features in the reconstructed reference image using geometric functions. Since the images are correlated, these features are likely to be present in the other images too, possibly with geometric transformations. Hence, we propose to estimate the correlation model with a regularized optimization problem that locates these features in the compressed images. The regularization terms enforce smoothness of the transformation field, and consistency between the estimated images and the quantized measurements. Experimental results show that the proposed scheme is able to efficiently estimate the correlation between images for several multi-view and video datasets. The proposed scheme is finally shown to outperform DSC schemes based on unsupervised disparity (or motion) learning, as well as independent coding solutions based on JPEG 2000. We then extend the previous scenario to a symmetric decoding problem, where we are interested to estimate the correlation model directly from the quantized linear measurements without explicitly reconstructing the reference images. We first show that the motion field that represents the main source of correlation between images can be described as a linear operator. We further derive a linear relationship between the correlated measurements in the compressed domain. We then derive a regularized cost function to estimate the correlation model directly in the compressed domain using graph-based optimization algorithms. Experimental results show that the proposed scheme estimates an accurate correlation model among images in both multi-view and video imaging scenarios. We then propose a robust data fidelity term that improves the quality of the correlation estimation when the measurements are quantized. Finally, we show by experiments that the proposed compressed correlation estimation scheme is able to compete the solution of a scheme that estimates a correlation model from the reconstructed images without the complexity of image reconstruction. Finally, we study the benefit of using the correlation information while jointly reconstructing the images from the compressed linear measurements. We consider both the asymmetric and symmetric scenarios described previously. We propose joint reconstruction methodologies based on a constrained optimization problem which is solved using effective proximal splitting methods. The constraints included in our framework enforce the reconstructed images to satisfy both the correlation and the quantized measurements consistency objectives. Experimental results demonstrate that the proposed joint reconstruction scheme improves the quality of the decoded images, when compared to a scheme where the images are handled independently. In this thesis we build efficient distributed scene representation algorithms for the multiple correlated images captured in planar, omnidirectional and CS cameras. The coding rate in our symmetric distributed coding solution stays balanced between the encoders and stays close to the joint encoding solutions. Our novel algorithms lead to effective correlation estimation in different sensing and coding scenarios. In addition, we provide innovative solutions for robust correlation estimation from highly compressed images in simple sensing frameworks. Our CS-based joint reconstruction frameworks effectively exploit the inter-view correlation, that permits to achieve high compression gains compared to state-of-the-art independent and distributed coding solutions

    Models and analysis of vocal emissions for biomedical applications

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    This book of Proceedings collects the papers presented at the 3rd International Workshop on Models and Analysis of Vocal Emissions for Biomedical Applications, MAVEBA 2003, held 10-12 December 2003, Firenze, Italy. The workshop is organised every two years, and aims to stimulate contacts between specialists active in research and industrial developments, in the area of voice analysis for biomedical applications. The scope of the Workshop includes all aspects of voice modelling and analysis, ranging from fundamental research to all kinds of biomedical applications and related established and advanced technologies

    Multi-sensor data fusion in mobile devices for the identification of Activities of Daily Living

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    Following the recent advances in technology and the growing use of mobile devices such as smartphones, several solutions may be developed to improve the quality of life of users in the context of Ambient Assisted Living (AAL). Mobile devices have different available sensors, e.g., accelerometer, gyroscope, magnetometer, microphone and Global Positioning System (GPS) receiver, which allow the acquisition of physical and physiological parameters for the recognition of different Activities of Daily Living (ADL) and the environments in which they are performed. The definition of ADL includes a well-known set of tasks, which include basic selfcare tasks, based on the types of skills that people usually learn in early childhood, including feeding, bathing, dressing, grooming, walking, running, jumping, climbing stairs, sleeping, watching TV, working, listening to music, cooking, eating and others. On the context of AAL, some individuals (henceforth called user or users) need particular assistance, either because the user has some sort of impairment, or because the user is old, or simply because users need/want to monitor their lifestyle. The research and development of systems that provide a particular assistance to people is increasing in many areas of application. In particular, in the future, the recognition of ADL will be an important element for the development of a personal digital life coach, providing assistance to different types of users. To support the recognition of ADL, the surrounding environments should be also recognized to increase the reliability of these systems. The main focus of this Thesis is the research on methods for the fusion and classification of the data acquired by the sensors available in off-the-shelf mobile devices in order to recognize ADL in almost real-time, taking into account the large diversity of the capabilities and characteristics of the mobile devices available in the market. In order to achieve this objective, this Thesis started with the review of the existing methods and technologies to define the architecture and modules of the method for the identification of ADL. With this review and based on the knowledge acquired about the sensors available in off-the-shelf mobile devices, a set of tasks that may be reliably identified was defined as a basis for the remaining research and development to be carried out in this Thesis. This review also identified the main stages for the development of a new method for the identification of the ADL using the sensors available in off-the-shelf mobile devices; these stages are data acquisition, data processing, data cleaning, data imputation, feature extraction, data fusion and artificial intelligence. One of the challenges is related to the different types of data acquired from the different sensors, but other challenges were found, including the presence of environmental noise, the positioning of the mobile device during the daily activities, the limited capabilities of the mobile devices and others. Based on the acquired data, the processing was performed, implementing data cleaning and feature extraction methods, in order to define a new framework for the recognition of ADL. The data imputation methods were not applied, because at this stage of the research their implementation does not have influence in the results of the identification of the ADL and environments, as the features are extracted from a set of data acquired during a defined time interval and there are no missing values during this stage. The joint selection of the set of usable sensors and the identifiable set of tasks will then allow the development of a framework that, considering multi-sensor data fusion technologies and context awareness, in coordination with other information available from the user context, such as his/her agenda and the time of the day, will allow to establish a profile of the tasks that the user performs in a regular activity day. The classification method and the algorithm for the fusion of the features for the recognition of ADL and its environments needs to be deployed in a machine with some computational power, while the mobile device that will use the created framework, can perform the identification of the ADL using a much less computational power. Based on the results reported in the literature, the method chosen for the recognition of the ADL is composed by three variants of Artificial Neural Networks (ANN), including simple Multilayer Perceptron (MLP) networks, Feedforward Neural Networks (FNN) with Backpropagation, and Deep Neural Networks (DNN). Data acquisition can be performed with standard methods. After the acquisition, the data must be processed at the data processing stage, which includes data cleaning and feature extraction methods. The data cleaning method used for motion and magnetic sensors is the low pass filter, in order to reduce the noise acquired; but for the acoustic data, the Fast Fourier Transform (FFT) was applied to extract the different frequencies. When the data is clean, several features are then extracted based on the types of sensors used, including the mean, standard deviation, variance, maximum value, minimum value and median of raw data acquired from the motion and magnetic sensors; the mean, standard deviation, variance and median of the maximum peaks calculated with the raw data acquired from the motion and magnetic sensors; the five greatest distances between the maximum peaks calculated with the raw data acquired from the motion and magnetic sensors; the mean, standard deviation, variance, median and 26 Mel- Frequency Cepstral Coefficients (MFCC) of the frequencies obtained with FFT based on the raw data acquired from the microphone data; and the distance travelled calculated with the data acquired from the GPS receiver. After the extraction of the features, these will be grouped in different datasets for the application of the ANN methods and to discover the method and dataset that reports better results. The classification stage was incrementally developed, starting with the identification of the most common ADL (i.e., walking, running, going upstairs, going downstairs and standing activities) with motion and magnetic sensors. Next, the environments were identified with acoustic data, i.e., bedroom, bar, classroom, gym, kitchen, living room, hall, street and library. After the environments are recognized, and based on the different sets of sensors commonly available in the mobile devices, the data acquired from the motion and magnetic sensors were combined with the recognized environment in order to differentiate some activities without motion, i.e., sleeping and watching TV. The number of recognized activities in this stage was increased with the use of the distance travelled, extracted from the GPS receiver data, allowing also to recognize the driving activity. After the implementation of the three classification methods with different numbers of iterations, datasets and remaining configurations in a machine with high processing capabilities, the reported results proved that the best method for the recognition of the most common ADL and activities without motion is the DNN method, but the best method for the recognition of environments is the FNN method with Backpropagation. Depending on the number of sensors used, this implementation reports a mean accuracy between 85.89% and 89.51% for the recognition of the most common ADL, equals to 86.50% for the recognition of environments, and equals to 100% for the recognition of activities without motion, reporting an overall accuracy between 85.89% and 92.00%. The last stage of this research work was the implementation of the structured framework for the mobile devices, verifying that the FNN method requires a high processing power for the recognition of environments and the results reported with the mobile application are lower than the results reported with the machine with high processing capabilities used. Thus, the DNN method was also implemented for the recognition of the environments with the mobile devices. Finally, the results reported with the mobile devices show an accuracy between 86.39% and 89.15% for the recognition of the most common ADL, equal to 45.68% for the recognition of environments, and equal to 100% for the recognition of activities without motion, reporting an overall accuracy between 58.02% and 89.15%. Compared with the literature, the results returned by the implemented framework show only a residual improvement. However, the results reported in this research work comprehend the identification of more ADL than the ones described in other studies. The improvement in the recognition of ADL based on the mean of the accuracies is equal to 2.93%, but the maximum number of ADL and environments previously recognized was 13, while the number of ADL and environments recognized with the framework resulting from this research is 16. In conclusion, the framework developed has a mean improvement of 2.93% in the accuracy of the recognition for a larger number of ADL and environments than previously reported. In the future, the achievements reported by this PhD research may be considered as a start point of the development of a personal digital life coach, but the number of ADL and environments recognized by the framework should be increased and the experiments should be performed with different types of devices (i.e., smartphones and smartwatches), and the data imputation and other machine learning methods should be explored in order to attempt to increase the reliability of the framework for the recognition of ADL and its environments.Após os recentes avanços tecnológicos e o crescente uso dos dispositivos móveis, como por exemplo os smartphones, várias soluções podem ser desenvolvidas para melhorar a qualidade de vida dos utilizadores no contexto de Ambientes de Vida Assistida (AVA) ou Ambient Assisted Living (AAL). Os dispositivos móveis integram vários sensores, tais como acelerómetro, giroscópio, magnetómetro, microfone e recetor de Sistema de Posicionamento Global (GPS), que permitem a aquisição de vários parâmetros físicos e fisiológicos para o reconhecimento de diferentes Atividades da Vida Diária (AVD) e os seus ambientes. A definição de AVD inclui um conjunto bem conhecido de tarefas que são tarefas básicas de autocuidado, baseadas nos tipos de habilidades que as pessoas geralmente aprendem na infância. Essas tarefas incluem alimentar-se, tomar banho, vestir-se, fazer os cuidados pessoais, caminhar, correr, pular, subir escadas, dormir, ver televisão, trabalhar, ouvir música, cozinhar, comer, entre outras. No contexto de AVA, alguns indivíduos (comumente chamados de utilizadores) precisam de assistência particular, seja porque o utilizador tem algum tipo de deficiência, seja porque é idoso, ou simplesmente porque o utilizador precisa/quer monitorizar e treinar o seu estilo de vida. A investigação e desenvolvimento de sistemas que fornecem algum tipo de assistência particular está em crescente em muitas áreas de aplicação. Em particular, no futuro, o reconhecimento das AVD é uma parte importante para o desenvolvimento de um assistente pessoal digital, fornecendo uma assistência pessoal de baixo custo aos diferentes tipos de pessoas. pessoas. Para ajudar no reconhecimento das AVD, os ambientes em que estas se desenrolam devem ser reconhecidos para aumentar a fiabilidade destes sistemas. O foco principal desta Tese é o desenvolvimento de métodos para a fusão e classificação dos dados adquiridos a partir dos sensores disponíveis nos dispositivos móveis, para o reconhecimento quase em tempo real das AVD, tendo em consideração a grande diversidade das características dos dispositivos móveis disponíveis no mercado. Para atingir este objetivo, esta Tese iniciou-se com a revisão dos métodos e tecnologias existentes para definir a arquitetura e os módulos do novo método de identificação das AVD. Com esta revisão da literatura e com base no conhecimento adquirido sobre os sensores disponíveis nos dispositivos móveis disponíveis no mercado, um conjunto de tarefas que podem ser identificadas foi definido para as pesquisas e desenvolvimentos desta Tese. Esta revisão também identifica os principais conceitos para o desenvolvimento do novo método de identificação das AVD, utilizando os sensores, são eles: aquisição de dados, processamento de dados, correção de dados, imputação de dados, extração de características, fusão de dados e extração de resultados recorrendo a métodos de inteligência artificial. Um dos desafios está relacionado aos diferentes tipos de dados adquiridos pelos diferentes sensores, mas outros desafios foram encontrados, sendo os mais relevantes o ruído ambiental, o posicionamento do dispositivo durante a realização das atividades diárias, as capacidades limitadas dos dispositivos móveis. As diferentes características das pessoas podem igualmente influenciar a criação dos métodos, escolhendo pessoas com diferentes estilos de vida e características físicas para a aquisição e identificação dos dados adquiridos a partir de sensores. Com base nos dados adquiridos, realizou-se o processamento dos dados, implementando-se métodos de correção dos dados e a extração de características, para iniciar a criação do novo método para o reconhecimento das AVD. Os métodos de imputação de dados foram excluídos da implementação, pois não iriam influenciar os resultados da identificação das AVD e dos ambientes, na medida em que são utilizadas as características extraídas de um conjunto de dados adquiridos durante um intervalo de tempo definido. A seleção dos sensores utilizáveis, bem como das AVD identificáveis, permitirá o desenvolvimento de um método que, considerando o uso de tecnologias para a fusão de dados adquiridos com múltiplos sensores em coordenação com outras informações relativas ao contexto do utilizador, tais como a agenda do utilizador, permitindo estabelecer um perfil de tarefas que o utilizador realiza diariamente. Com base nos resultados obtidos na literatura, o método escolhido para o reconhecimento das AVD são as diferentes variantes das Redes Neuronais Artificiais (RNA), incluindo Multilayer Perceptron (MLP), Feedforward Neural Networks (FNN) with Backpropagation and Deep Neural Networks (DNN). No final, após a criação dos métodos para cada fase do método para o reconhecimento das AVD e ambientes, a implementação sequencial dos diferentes métodos foi realizada num dispositivo móvel para testes adicionais. Após a definição da estrutura do método para o reconhecimento de AVD e ambientes usando dispositivos móveis, verificou-se que a aquisição de dados pode ser realizada com os métodos comuns. Após a aquisição de dados, os mesmos devem ser processados no módulo de processamento de dados, que inclui os métodos de correção de dados e de extração de características. O método de correção de dados utilizado para sensores de movimento e magnéticos é o filtro passa-baixo de modo a reduzir o ruído, mas para os dados acústicos, a Transformada Rápida de Fourier (FFT) foi aplicada para extrair as diferentes frequências. Após a correção dos dados, as diferentes características foram extraídas com base nos tipos de sensores usados, sendo a média, desvio padrão, variância, valor máximo, valor mínimo e mediana de dados adquiridos pelos sensores magnéticos e de movimento, a média, desvio padrão, variância e mediana dos picos máximos calculados com base nos dados adquiridos pelos sensores magnéticos e de movimento, as cinco maiores distâncias entre os picos máximos calculados com os dados adquiridos dos sensores de movimento e magnéticos, a média, desvio padrão, variância e 26 Mel-Frequency Cepstral Coefficients (MFCC) das frequências obtidas com FFT com base nos dados obtidos a partir do microfone, e a distância calculada com os dados adquiridos pelo recetor de GPS. Após a extração das características, as mesmas são agrupadas em diferentes conjuntos de dados para a aplicação dos métodos de RNA de modo a descobrir o método e o conjunto de características que reporta melhores resultados. O módulo de classificação de dados foi incrementalmente desenvolvido, começando com a identificação das AVD comuns com sensores magnéticos e de movimento, i.e., andar, correr, subir escadas, descer escadas e parado. Em seguida, os ambientes são identificados com dados de sensores acústicos, i.e., quarto, bar, sala de aula, ginásio, cozinha, sala de estar, hall, rua e biblioteca. Com base nos ambientes reconhecidos e os restantes sensores disponíveis nos dispositivos móveis, os dados adquiridos dos sensores magnéticos e de movimento foram combinados com o ambiente reconhecido para diferenciar algumas atividades sem movimento (i.e., dormir e ver televisão), onde o número de atividades reconhecidas nesta fase aumenta com a fusão da distância percorrida, extraída a partir dos dados do recetor GPS, permitindo também reconhecer a atividade de conduzir. Após a implementação dos três métodos de classificação com diferentes números de iterações, conjuntos de dados e configurações numa máquina com alta capacidade de processamento, os resultados relatados provaram que o melhor método para o reconhecimento das atividades comuns de AVD e atividades sem movimento é o método DNN, mas o melhor método para o reconhecimento de ambientes é o método FNN with Backpropagation. Dependendo do número de sensores utilizados, esta implementação reporta uma exatidão média entre 85,89% e 89,51% para o reconhecimento das AVD comuns, igual a 86,50% para o reconhecimento de ambientes, e igual a 100% para o reconhecimento de atividades sem movimento, reportando uma exatidão global entre 85,89% e 92,00%. A última etapa desta Tese foi a implementação do método nos dispositivos móveis, verificando que o método FNN requer um alto poder de processamento para o reconhecimento de ambientes e os resultados reportados com estes dispositivos são inferiores aos resultados reportados com a máquina com alta capacidade de processamento utilizada no desenvolvimento do método. Assim, o método DNN foi igualmente implementado para o reconhecimento dos ambientes com os dispositivos móveis. Finalmente, os resultados relatados com os dispositivos móveis reportam uma exatidão entre 86,39% e 89,15% para o reconhecimento das AVD comuns, igual a 45,68% para o reconhecimento de ambientes, e igual a 100% para o reconhecimento de atividades sem movimento, reportando uma exatidão geral entre 58,02% e 89,15%. Com base nos resultados relatados na literatura, os resultados do método desenvolvido mostram uma melhoria residual, mas os resultados desta Tese identificam mais AVD que os demais estudos disponíveis na literatura. A melhoria no reconhecimento das AVD com base na média das exatidões é igual a 2,93%, mas o número máximo de AVD e ambientes reconhecidos pelos estudos disponíveis na literatura é 13, enquanto o número de AVD e ambientes reconhecidos com o método implementado é 16. Assim, o método desenvolvido tem uma melhoria de 2,93% na exatidão do reconhecimento num maior número de AVD e ambientes. Como trabalho futuro, os resultados reportados nesta Tese podem ser considerados um ponto de partida para o desenvolvimento de um assistente digital pessoal, mas o número de ADL e ambientes reconhecidos pelo método deve ser aumentado e as experiências devem ser repetidas com diferentes tipos de dispositivos móveis (i.e., smartphones e smartwatches), e os métodos de imputação e outros métodos de classificação de dados devem ser explorados de modo a tentar aumentar a confiabilidade do método para o reconhecimento das AVD e ambientes

    Audiovisual processing for sports-video summarisation technology

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    In this thesis a novel audiovisual feature-based scheme is proposed for the automatic summarization of sports-video content The scope of operability of the scheme is designed to encompass the wide variety o f sports genres that come under the description ‘field-sports’. Given the assumption that, in terms of conveying the narrative of a field-sports-video, score-update events constitute the most significant moments, it is proposed that their detection should thus yield a favourable summarisation solution. To this end, a generic methodology is proposed for the automatic identification of score-update events in field-sports-video content. The scheme is based on the development of robust extractors for a set of critical features, which are shown to reliably indicate their locations. The evidence gathered by the feature extractors is combined and analysed using a Support Vector Machine (SVM), which performs the event detection process. An SVM is chosen on the basis that its underlying technology represents an implementation of the latest generation of machine learning algorithms, based on the recent advances in statistical learning. Effectively, an SVM offers a solution to optimising the classification performance of a decision hypothesis, inferred from a given set of training data. Via a learning phase that utilizes a 90-hour field-sports-video trainmg-corpus, the SVM infers a score-update event model by observing patterns in the extracted feature evidence. Using a similar but distinct 90-hour evaluation corpus, the effectiveness of this model is then tested genencally across multiple genres of fieldsports- video including soccer, rugby, field hockey, hurling, and Gaelic football. The results suggest that in terms o f the summarization task, both high event retrieval and content rejection statistics are achievable

    Biometrics

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    Biometrics uses methods for unique recognition of humans based upon one or more intrinsic physical or behavioral traits. In computer science, particularly, biometrics is used as a form of identity access management and access control. It is also used to identify individuals in groups that are under surveillance. The book consists of 13 chapters, each focusing on a certain aspect of the problem. The book chapters are divided into three sections: physical biometrics, behavioral biometrics and medical biometrics. The key objective of the book is to provide comprehensive reference and text on human authentication and people identity verification from both physiological, behavioural and other points of view. It aims to publish new insights into current innovations in computer systems and technology for biometrics development and its applications. The book was reviewed by the editor Dr. Jucheng Yang, and many of the guest editors, such as Dr. Girija Chetty, Dr. Norman Poh, Dr. Loris Nanni, Dr. Jianjiang Feng, Dr. Dongsun Park, Dr. Sook Yoon and so on, who also made a significant contribution to the book

    Mobile Health Technologies

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    Mobile Health Technologies, also known as mHealth technologies, have emerged, amongst healthcare providers, as the ultimate Technologies-of-Choice for the 21st century in delivering not only transformative change in healthcare delivery, but also critical health information to different communities of practice in integrated healthcare information systems. mHealth technologies nurture seamless platforms and pragmatic tools for managing pertinent health information across the continuum of different healthcare providers. mHealth technologies commonly utilize mobile medical devices, monitoring and wireless devices, and/or telemedicine in healthcare delivery and health research. Today, mHealth technologies provide opportunities to record and monitor conditions of patients with chronic diseases such as asthma, Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Diseases (COPD) and diabetes mellitus. The intent of this book is to enlighten readers about the theories and applications of mHealth technologies in the healthcare domain

    Models and analysis of vocal emissions for biomedical applications

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    This book of Proceedings collects the papers presented at the 4th International Workshop on Models and Analysis of Vocal Emissions for Biomedical Applications, MAVEBA 2005, held 29-31 October 2005, Firenze, Italy. The workshop is organised every two years, and aims to stimulate contacts between specialists active in research and industrial developments, in the area of voice analysis for biomedical applications. The scope of the Workshop includes all aspects of voice modelling and analysis, ranging from fundamental research to all kinds of biomedical applications and related established and advanced technologies

    Separability between signal and noise components using the distribution of scaled Hankel matrix eigenvalues with application in biomedical signals.

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    Biomedical signals are records from human and animal bodies. These records are considered as nonlinear time series, which hold important information about the physiological activities of organisms, and embrace many subjects of interest. However, biomedical signals are often corrupted by artifacts and noise, which require separation or signal extraction before any statistical evaluation. Another challenge in analysing biomedical signals is that their data is often non-stationary, particularly when there is an abnormal event observed within the signal, such as epileptic seizure, and can also present chaotic behaviour. The literature suggests that distinguishing chaos from noise continues to remain a highly contentious issue in the modern age, as it has been historically. This is because chaos and noise share common properties, which in turn make them indistinguishable. We seek to provide a viable solution to this problem by presenting a novel approach for the separability between signal and noise components and the differentiation of noise from chaos. Several methods have been used for the analysis of and discrimination between different categories of biomedical signals, but many of these are based on restrictive assumptions of the normality, stationarity and linearity of the observed data. Therefore, an improved technique which is robust in its analysis of non-stationary time series is of paramount importance in accurate diagnosis of human diseases. The SSA (Singular Spectrum Analysis) technique does not depend on these assumptions, which could be very helpful for analysing and modelling biomedical data. Therefore, the main aim of the thesis is to provide a novel approach for developing the SSA technique, and then apply it to the analysis of biomedical signals. SSA is a reliable technique for separating an arbitrary signal from a noisy time series (signal+noise). It is based upon two main selections: window length, L; and the number of eigenvalues, r. These values play an important role in the reconstruction and forecasting stages. However, the main issue in extracting signals using the SSA procedure lies in identifying the optimal values of L and r required for signal reconstruction. The aim of this thesis is to develop theoretical and methodological aspects of the SSA technique, to present a novel approach to distinguishing between deterministic and stochastic processes, and to present an algorithm for identifying the eigenvalues corresponding to the noise component, and thereby choosing the optimal value of r relating to the desired signal for separability between signal and noise. The algorithm used is considered as an enhanced version of the SSA method, which decomposes a noisy signal into the sum of a signal and noise. Although the main focus of this thesis is on the selection of the optimal value of r, we also provide some results and recommendations to the choice of L for separability. Several criteria are introduced which characterise this separability. The proposed approach is based on the distribution of the eigenvalues of a scaled Hankel matrix, and on dynamical systems, embedding theorem, matrix algebra and statistical theory. The research demonstrates that the proposed approach can be considered as an alternative and promising technique for choosing the optimal values of r and L in SSA, especially for biomedical signals and genetic time series. For the theoretical development of the approach, we present new theoretical results on the eigenvalues of a scaled Hankel matrix, provide some properties of the eigenvalues, and show the effect of the window length and the rank of the Hankel matrix on the eigenvalues. The new theoretical results are examined using simulated and real time series. Furthermore, the effect of window length on the distribution of the largest and smallest eigenvalues of the scaled Hankel matrix is also considered for the white noise process. The results indicate that the distribution of the largest eigenvalue for the white noise process has a positive skewed distribution for different series lengths and different values of window length, whereas the distribution of the smallest eigenvalue has a different pattern with L; the distribution changes from left to right when L increases. These results, together with other results obtained by the different criteria introduced and used in this research, are very promising for the identification of the signal subspace. For the practical aspect and empirical results, various biomedical signals and genetics time series are used. First, to achieve the objectives of the thesis, a comprehensive study has been made on the distribution, pattern; and behaviour of scaled Furthermore, the normal distribution with different parameters is considered and the effect of scale and shape parameters are evaluated. The correlation between eigenvalues is also assessed, using parametric and non-parametric association criteria. In addition, the distribution of eigenvalues for synthetic time series generated from some well known low dimensional chaotic systems are analysed in-depth. The results yield several important properties with broad application, enabling the distinction between chaos and noise in time series analysis. At this stage, the main result of the simulation study is that the findings related to the series generated from normal distribution with mean zero (white noise process) are totally different from those obtained for other series considered in this research, which makes a novel contribution to the area of signal processing and noise reduction. Second, the proposed approach and its criteria are applied to a number of simulated and real data with different levels of noise and structures. Our results are compared with those obtained by common and well known criteria in order to evaluate, enhance and confirm the accuracy of the approach and its criteria. The results indicate that the proposed approach has the potential to split the eigenvalues into two groups; the first corresponding to the signal and the second to the noise component. In addition, based on the results, the optimal value of L that one needs for the reconstruction of a noise free signal from a noisy series should be the median of the series length. The results confirm that the performance of the proposed approach can improve the quality of the reconstruction step for signal extraction. Finally, the thesis seeks to explore the applicability of the proposed approach for discriminating between normal and epileptic seizure electroencephalography (EEG) signals, and filtering the signal segments to make them free from noise. Various criteria based on the largest eigenvalue are also presented and used as features to distinguish between normal and epileptic EEG segments. These features can be considered as useful information to classify brain signals. In addition, the approach is applied to the removal of nonspecific noise from Drosophila segmentation genes. Our findings indicate that when extracting signal from different genes, for optimised signal and noise separation, a different number of eigenvalues need to be chosen for each gene
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