7 research outputs found

    The future of camera networks: staying smart in a chaotic world

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    Camera networks become smart when they can interpret video data on board, in order to carry out tasks as a collective, such as target tracking and (re-)identi cation of objects of interest. Unlike today’s deployments, which are mainly restricted to lab settings and highly controlled high-value applications, future smart camera networks will be messy and unpredictable. They will operate on a vast scale, drawing on mobile resources connected in networks structured in complex and changing ways. They will comprise heterogeneous and decentralised aggregations of visual sensors, which will come together in temporary alliances, in unforeseen and rapidly unfolding scenarios. The potential to include and harness citizen-contributed mobile streaming, body-worn video, and robot- mounted cameras, alongside more traditional xed or PTZ cameras, and supported by other non-visual sensors, leads to a number of di cult and important challenges. In this position paper, we discuss a variety of potential uses for such complex smart camera networks, and some of the challenges that arise when staying smart in the presence of such complexity. We present a general discussion on the challenges of heterogeneity, coordination, self-recon gurability, mobility, and collaboration in camera networks

    Genetic and evolutionary analysis of diversification and reproductive isolation in yeast

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    In this thesis, I examine the mechanisms of evolution at different levels, from evolutionary conflict between selfish genes within a single individual (Chapter 1), through social evolution acting within a species (Chapter 2), to genetic divergence and incompatibility between closely related species (Chapters 3 & 4). The thesis therefore investigates how tiny genetic differences occurring in individuals accumulate and produce discontinuous groups

    Target Field of View Prediction Using Artificial Pheromones for People Reidentification

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    People reidentification is a fundamental task in automated video surveillance based on computer vision. Reidentification happens when a person seen in a field of view is the same that has been observed in other fields of view. A person who has disappeared from one field of view can appear in any other within a camera network. Instead of looking for the person in all neighboring fields of view, for an intelligent video surveillance system, it is more practical to predict which of the neighboring camera views the person could appear. This prediction can become achieved by learning the paths the person usually follows in the camera network. The ant colony optimization technique has properties that can get exploited for this purpose; precisely, the accumulation and evaporation of artificial pheromones are used to learn the paths. After the learning process, the proposed method can make predictions every time that the person leaves a field of view. Such prediction is evaluated to obtain feedback and further tune the learning process. The path followed by the person becomes obtained by tracking their face image within and between fields of view using correlation filters as descriptors. The results obtained from an extensive experiment show that the field of view that the person selects to visit can be successfully predicted using artificial pheromones, and thus, reduce the resources that require reidentification

    Everything Flows

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    This collection of essays explores the metaphysical thesis that the living world is not ontologically made up of substantial particles or things, as has often been assumed, but is rather constituted by processes. The biological domain is organized as an interdependent hierarchy of processes, which are stabilized and actively maintained at different timescales. Even entities that intuitively appear to be paradigms of things, such as organisms, are actually better understood as processes. Unlike previous attempts to articulate processual views of biology, which have tended to use Alfred North Whitehead’s panpsychist metaphysics as a foundation, this book takes a naturalistic approach to metaphysics. It submits that the main motivations for replacing an ontology of substances with one of processes are to be looked for in the empirical findings of science. Biology provides compelling reasons for thinking that the living realm is fundamentally dynamic and that the existence of things is always conditional on the existence of processes. The phenomenon of life cries out for theories that prioritize processes over things, and it suggests that the central explanandum of biology is not change but rather stability—or, more precisely, stability attained through constant change. This multicontributor volume brings together philosophers of science and metaphysicians interested in exploring the consequences of a processual philosophy of biology. The contributors draw on an extremely wide range of biological case studies and employ a process perspective to cast new light on a number of traditional philosophical problems such as identity, persistence, and individuality

    Mathematical model of interactions immune system with Micobacterium tuberculosis

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    Tuberculosis (TB) remains a public health problem in the world, because of the increasing prevalence and treatment outcomes are less satisfactory. About 3 million people die each year and an estimated one third of the world's population infected with Mycobacterium Tuberculosis (M.tb) is latent. This is apparently related to incomplete understanding of the immune system in infection M.tb. When this has been known that immune responses that play a role in controlling the development of M.tb is Macrophages, T Lymphocytes and Cytokines as mediators. However, how the interaction between the two populations and a variety of cytokines in suppressing the growth of Mycobacterium tuberculosis germ is still unclear. To be able to better understand the dynamics of infection with M tuberculosis host immune response is required of a model.One interesting study on the interaction of the immune system with M.tb mulalui mathematical model approach. Mathematical model is a good tool in understanding the dynamic behavior of a system. With the mediation of mathematical models are expected to know what variables are most responsible for suppressing the growth of Mycobacterium tuberculosis germ that can be a more appropriate approach to treatment and prevention target is to develop a vaccine. This research aims to create dynamic models of interaction between macrophages (Macrophages resting, macrophages activated and macrophages infected), T lymphocytes (CD4 + T cells and T cells CD8 +) and cytokine (IL-2, IL-4, IL-10,IL-12,IFN-dan TNF-) on TB infection in the lung. To see the changes in each variable used parameter values derived from experimental literature. With the understanding that the variable most responsible for defense against Mycobacterium tuberculosis germs, it can be used as the basis for the development of a vaccine or drug delivery targeted so hopefully will improve the management of patients with tuberculosis. Mathematical models used in building Ordinary Differential Equations (ODE) in the form of differential equation systems Non-linear first order, the equation contains the functions used in biological systems such as the Hill function, Monod function, Menten- Kinetic Function. To validate the system used 4th order Runge Kutta method with the help of software in making the program Matlab or Maple to view the behavior and the quantity of cells of each population

    Action and experience

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    The project examines the relationship between perception and action, and is divided into two parts. The first establishes a detailed philosophical critique of recent sensorimotor or enactive approaches to perception, targeting in particular the work of Alva Noë. In the second part I defend what may be called an 'action-space' account, according to which conscious experience is constituted by an agent's representing his surroundings in such a way as to enable a certain suite of actions. The enactive approach, I argue, misconstrues the relationship between perception and action and fails in its aim to provide an explanation of consciousness. It faces difficulties, too, when it comes to illusion, hallucination and non-visual perception. The action-space model, by contrast, drawing upon work by Andy Clark, Daniel Dennett and Philip Pettit, has the resources to provide a reductive, functionalist account of phenomenal consciousness; an account that locates consciousness where we want it - in the service of fluid world-engagement by embodied, active perceivers. Thus the perception/action interface is taken to be less direct than on the sensorimotor interpretation, but is nonetheless deep and important. The approach I endorse, furthermore, is consistent with and informed by empirical results from the cognitive sciences, including work on embodied, situated cognition and dual-streams analyses of visual processing

    Criticism in the absence of criticism

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    English abstract: Criticism is defined as the examination and judgment about someone or something. This definition includes, at first, an analytical task -with a particular methodology related to it- and, at second, a synthetic activity, translated into a value judgment on what is previously analyzed. Criticism can be done in different ways and depths: from the basic critical thinking -essentially descriptive- to the most truthful one –the poetic criticism-, that transcends pure description or analysis and refers itself to the internal coherence of the object. Any criticism that seeks to reduce the distance to the truth will address both to the intrinsic object relationships -or own laws- and to the extrinsic ones. Furthermore, an objective criticism provides a knowledge of the object regardless of the observer or frame of reference. This provides an effective method and a guaranteed way to approach to the knowledge of the object. Does this mean that without a regular critical method no criticism is undertaken? The proposal of this paper is to explain how a critical thought can be undertaken in the absence of criticism, in which there is no explicit value judgment. Taking the hypothesis that there is criticism in the absence of criticism, an architectural work –either being a building, a writing on architecture, etc.- that implies a tacit criticism could work on two levels: as a practical result –built, literary, etc.- and as a critical thought. The hypothesis proposes that such duality, criticism and practice, may come together in a single work. Although not in any. The existence of criticism in the absence of criticism will depend on the nature of the object and, with no doubt, on the speaker and receiver. At first glance, the guarantees provided by this criticism in the absence of criticism seem less tan through the orthodox one, in which the subject is the weakest part of the chain. However, the absence of explicit value judgment can lead to a series of stimuli –coherency, aesthetic, recreational or other- that, in certain contexts, do more viable the approach to the knowledge than through the conventional method. Spanish abstract: La crítica se define como el examen y juicio acerca de alguien o algo. Esta definición comprende, por un lado, una tarea analítica -con una determinada metodología asociada- y, por otro, una actividad sintética, traducida en un juicio de valor acerca de lo previamente analizado. La crítica puede hacerse de distinta forma y con distinto grado de profundidad: desde la más básica –fundamentalmente, la crítica descriptiva- hasta la más veraz -la crítica poética-, que trasciende la descripción o el análi sis puro y se refiere a la coherencia interna del objeto de estudio. Toda crítica que pretenda reducir la distancia de aproximación a la verdad se ocupará tanto de las relaciones intrínsecas o leyes propias del objeto como de las eelaciones extrínsecas al mismo. Por otro lado, una crítica objetiva facilita el conocimiento del objeto de estudio independientemente del observador o del marco de referencia, lo que la convierte en un método eficaz y con garantías para la aproximación al conocimiento del objeto. Pero ¿significa esto que sin crítica ortodoxa no puede existir crítica?. La propuesta de esta comunicación es dilucidar hasta qué punto puede emprenderse una crítica en ausencia de crítica, es decir, una crítica en la que no sea explícito el juicio de valor. Tomando como hipótesis el hecho de que exista crítica en ausencia de crítica, una obra arquitectónica –ya sea un edificio construido, un escrito sobre arquitectura, etc.- que implique una crítica tácita podría funcionar a dos niveles: como producto práctico -edificado, literario, etc.- y como reflexión crítica. La hipótesis planteada propone que tal dualidad, la crítica y la práctica, pueda confluir en una misma obra. Aunque no en cualquiera. La existencia de crítica en ausencia de crítica dependerá de la naturaleza de la obra y, sin lugar a dudas, del emisor y el receptor del mensaje crítico. A primera vista, las garantías que ofrece la crítica en ausencia de crítica parecen menores que mediante la crítica ortodoxa, para la que el sujeto es la parte más débil de la cadena. Sin embargo, la ausencia de juicio de valor explícito puede comportar una serie de estímulos – de coherencia, estéticos, lúdicos, prácticos o de otra índole- que, en determinados contextos, hagan más viable y clara la comprensión de la obra que a través del método convencional
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