4,279 research outputs found
A tension approach to controlling the shape of cubic spline surfaces on FVS triangulations
We propose a parametric tensioned version of the FVS macro-element to control the shape of the composite surface and remove artificial oscillations, bumps and other undesired behaviour. In particular, this approach is applied to C1 cubic spline surfaces over a four-directional mesh produced by two-stage scattered data fitting methods
Anatomical curve identification
Methods for capturing images in three dimensions are now widely available, with stereo-photogrammetry and laser scanning being two common approaches. In anatomical studies, a number of landmarks are usually identified manually from each of these images and these form the basis of subsequent statistical analysis. However, landmarks express only a very small proportion of the information available from the images. Anatomically defined curves have the advantage of providing a much richer expression of shape. This is explored in the context of identifying the boundary of breasts from an image of the female torso and the boundary of the lips from a facial image. The curves of interest are characterised by ridges or valleys. Key issues in estimation are the ability to navigate across the anatomical surface in three-dimensions, the ability to recognise the relevant boundary and the need to assess the evidence for the presence of the surface feature of interest. The first issue is addressed by the use of principal curves, as an extension of principal components, the second by suitable assessment of curvature and the third by change-point detection. P-spline smoothing is used as an integral part of the methods but adaptations are made to the specific anatomical features of interest. After estimation of the boundary curves, the intermediate surfaces of the anatomical feature of interest can be characterised by surface interpolation. This allows shape variation to be explored using standard methods such as principal components. These tools are applied to a collection of images of women where one breast has been reconstructed after mastectomy and where interest lies in shape differences between the reconstructed and unreconstructed breasts. They are also applied to a collection of lip images where possible differences in shape between males and females are of interest
Boosting Functional Response Models for Location, Scale and Shape with an Application to Bacterial Competition
We extend Generalized Additive Models for Location, Scale, and Shape (GAMLSS)
to regression with functional response. This allows us to simultaneously model
point-wise mean curves, variances and other distributional parameters of the
response in dependence of various scalar and functional covariate effects. In
addition, the scope of distributions is extended beyond exponential families.
The model is fitted via gradient boosting, which offers inherent model
selection and is shown to be suitable for both complex model structures and
highly auto-correlated response curves. This enables us to analyze bacterial
growth in \textit{Escherichia coli} in a complex interaction scenario,
fruitfully extending usual growth models.Comment: bootstrap confidence interval type uncertainty bounds added; minor
changes in formulation
Peaks detection and alignment for mass spectrometry data
The goal of this paper is to review existing methods for protein mass spectrometry data analysis, and to present a new methodology for automatic extraction of significant peaks (biomarkers). For the pre-processing step required for data from MALDI-TOF or SELDI- TOF spectra, we use a purely nonparametric approach that combines stationary invariant wavelet transform for noise removal and penalized spline quantile regression for baseline correction. We further present a multi-scale spectra alignment technique that is based on identification of statistically significant peaks from a set of spectra. This method allows one to find common peaks in a set of spectra that can subsequently be mapped to individual proteins. This may serve as useful biomarkers in medical applications, or as individual features for further multidimensional statistical analysis. MALDI-TOF spectra obtained from serum samples are used throughout the paper to illustrate the methodology
Fast B-spline Curve Fitting by L-BFGS
We propose a novel method for fitting planar B-spline curves to unorganized
data points. In traditional methods, optimization of control points and foot
points are performed in two very time-consuming steps in each iteration: 1)
control points are updated by setting up and solving a linear system of
equations; and 2) foot points are computed by projecting each data point onto a
B-spline curve. Our method uses the L-BFGS optimization method to optimize
control points and foot points simultaneously and therefore it does not need to
perform either matrix computation or foot point projection in every iteration.
As a result, our method is much faster than existing methods
Function estimation with locally adaptive dynamic models
We present a nonparametric Bayesian method for fitting unsmooth and highly oscillating functions, which is based on a locally adaptive hierarchical extension of standard dynamic or state space models. The main idea is to introduce locally varying variances in the state equations and to add a further smoothness prior for this variance function. Estimation is fully Bayesian and carried out by recent MCMC techniques. The whole approach can be understood as an alternative to other nonparametric function estimators, such as local or penalized regression with variable bandwidth or smoothing parameter selection. Performance is illustrated with simulated data, including unsmooth examples constructed for wavelet shrinkage, and by an application to sales data. Although the approach is developed for classical Gaussian nonparametric regression, it can be extended to more complex regression problems
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