2,985 research outputs found
Signals and Images in Sea Technologies
Life below water is the 14th Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) envisaged by the United Nations and is aimed at conserving and sustainably using the oceans, seas, and marine resources for sustainable development. It is not difficult to argue that signals and image technologies may play an essential role in achieving the foreseen targets linked to SDG 14. Besides increasing the general knowledge of ocean health by means of data analysis, methodologies based on signal and image processing can be helpful in environmental monitoring, in protecting and restoring ecosystems, in finding new sensor technologies for green routing and eco-friendly ships, in providing tools for implementing best practices for sustainable fishing, as well as in defining frameworks and intelligent systems for enforcing sea law and making the sea a safer and more secure place. Imaging is also a key element for the exploration of the underwater world for various scopes, ranging from the predictive maintenance of sub-sea pipelines and other infrastructure projects, to the discovery, documentation, and protection of sunken cultural heritage. The scope of this Special Issue encompasses investigations into techniques and ICT approaches and, in particular, the study and application of signal- and image-based methods and, in turn, exploration of the advantages of their application in the previously mentioned areas
Galaxy Image Deconvolution for Weak Gravitational Lensing with Physics-informed Deep Learning
Removing optical and atmospheric blur from galaxy images significantly
improves galaxy shape measurements for weak gravitational lensing and galaxy
evolution studies. This ill-posed linear inverse problem is usually solved with
deconvolution algorithms enhanced by regularisation priors or deep learning. We
introduce a so-called "physics-based deep learning" approach to the Point
Spread Function (PSF) deconvolution problem in galaxy surveys. We apply
algorithm unrolling and the Plug-and-Play technique to the Alternating
Direction Method of Multipliers (ADMM) with a Poisson noise model and use a
neural network to learn appropriate priors from simulated galaxy images. We
characterise the time-performance trade-off of several methods for galaxies of
differing brightness levels, showing an improvement of 26% (SNR=20)/48%
(SNR=100) compared to standard methods and 14% (SNR=20) compared to modern
methods
Smart Distributed Generation System Event Classification using Recurrent Neural Network-based Long Short-term Memory
High penetration of distributed generation (DG) sources into a decentralized power system causes several disturbances, making the monitoring and operation control of the system complicated. Moreover, because of being passive, modern DG systems are unable to detect and inform about these disturbances related to power quality in an intelligent approach. This paper proposed an intelligent and novel technique, capable of making real-time decisions on the occurrence of different DG events such as islanding, capacitor switching, unsymmetrical faults, load switching, and loss of parallel feeder and distinguishing these events from the normal mode of operation. This event classification technique was designed to diagnose the distinctive pattern of the time-domain signal representing a measured electrical parameter, like the voltage, at DG point of common coupling (PCC) during such events. Then different power system events were classified into their root causes using long short-term memory (LSTM), which is a deep learning algorithm for time sequence to label classification. A total of 1100 events showcasing islanding, faults, and other DG events were generated based on the model of a smart distributed generation system using a MATLAB/Simulink environment. Classifier performance was calculated using 5-fold cross-validation. The genetic algorithm (GA) was used to determine the optimum value of classification hyper-parameters and the best combination of features. The simulation results indicated that the events were classified with high precision and specificity with ten cycles of occurrences while achieving a 99.17% validation accuracy. The performance of the proposed classification technique does not degrade with the presence of noise in test data, multiple DG sources in the model, and inclusion of motor starting event in training samples
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A Robust and Artifact Resistant Algorithm of Ultrawideband Imaging System for Breast Cancer Detection.
Goal: Ultrawideband radar imaging is regarded as one of the most promising alternatives for breast cancer detection. A range of algorithms reported in literature show satisfactory tumor detection capabilities. However, most of algorithms suffer significant deterioration or even fail when the early-stage artifact, including incident signals and skin-fat interface reflections, cannot be perfectly removed from received signals. Furthermore, fibro-glandular tissue poses another challenge for tumor detection, due to the small dielectric contrast between glandular and cancerous tissues. Methods: This paper introduces a novel Robust and Artifact Resistant (RAR) algorithm, in which a neighborhood pairwise correlation-based weighting is designed to overcome the adverse effects from both artifact and glandular tissues. In RAR, backscattered signals are time-shifted, summed, and weighted by the maximum combination of the neighboring pairwise correlation coefficients between shifted signals, forming the intensity of each point within an imaging area. Results: The effectiveness was investigated using 3-D anatomically and dielectrically accurate finite-difference-time-domain numerical breast models. The use of neighborhood pairwise correlation provided robustness against artifact, and enabled the detection of multiple scatterers. RAR is compared with four well-known algorithms: delay-and-sum, delay-multiply-and-sum, modified-weighted-delay-and-sum, and filtered-delay-and-sum. Conclusion: It has shown that RAR exhibits improved identification capability, robust artifact resistance, and high detectability over its counterparts in most scenarios considered, while maintaining computational efficiency. Simulated tumors in both homogeneous and heterogonous, from mildly to moderately dense breast phantoms, combining an entropy-based artifact removal algorithm, were successfully identified and localized. Significance: These results show the strong potential of RAR for breast cancer screening
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