12 research outputs found

    Recursive partitioning to reduce distortion

    Get PDF
    Adaptive partitioning of a multidimensional feature space plays a fundamental role in the design of data-compression schemes. Most partition-based design methods operate in an iterative fashion, seeking to reduce distortion at each stage of their operation by implementing a linear split of a selected cell. The operation and eventual outcome of such methods is easily described in terms of binary tree-structured vector quantizers. This paper considers a class of simple growing procedures for tree-structured vector quantizers. Of primary interest is the asymptotic distortion of quantizers produced by the unsupervised implementation of the procedures. It is shown that application of the procedures to a convergent sequence of distributions with a suitable limit yields quantizers whose distortion tends to zero. Analogous results are established for tree-structured vector quantizers produced from stationary ergodic training data. The analysis is applicable to procedures employing both axis-parallel and oblique splitting, and a variety of distortion measures. The results of the paper apply directly to unsupervised procedures that may be efficiently implemented on a digital computer

    Classification and Compression of Multi-Resolution Vectors: A Tree Structured Vector Quantizer Approach

    Get PDF
    Tree structured classifiers and quantizers have been used withgood success for problems ranging from successive refinement coding of speechand images to classification of texture, faces and radar returns. Althoughthese methods have worked well in practice there are few results on thetheoretical side. We present several existing algorithms for tree structured clustering using multi-resolution data and develop some results on their convergenceand asymptotic performance. We show that greedy growing algorithms will result in asymptoticdistortion going to zero for the case of quantizers and prove terminationin finite time for constraints on the rate. We derive an online algorithmfor the minimization of distortion. We also show that a multiscale LVQalgorithm for the design of a tree structured classifier converges to anequilibrium point of a related ordinary differential equation.Simulation results and description of several applications are used toillustrate the advantages of this approach

    Estimation for Arbitrary Functionals of Survival

    Get PDF

    Conjoint probabilistic subband modeling

    Get PDF
    Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Program in Media Arts & Sciences, 1997.Includes bibliographical references (leaves 125-133).by Ashok Chhabedia Popat.Ph.D

    Unreliable and resource-constrained decoding

    Get PDF
    Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, 2010.This electronic version was submitted by the student author. The certified thesis is available in the Institute Archives and Special Collections.Cataloged from student submitted PDF version of thesis.Includes bibliographical references (p. 185-213).Traditional information theory and communication theory assume that decoders are noiseless and operate without transient or permanent faults. Decoders are also traditionally assumed to be unconstrained in physical resources like material, memory, and energy. This thesis studies how constraining reliability and resources in the decoder limits the performance of communication systems. Five communication problems are investigated. Broadly speaking these are communication using decoders that are wiring cost-limited, that are memory-limited, that are noisy, that fail catastrophically, and that simultaneously harvest information and energy. For each of these problems, fundamental trade-offs between communication system performance and reliability or resource consumption are established. For decoding repetition codes using consensus decoding circuits, the optimal tradeoff between decoding speed and quadratic wiring cost is defined and established. Designing optimal circuits is shown to be NP-complete, but is carried out for small circuit size. The natural relaxation to the integer circuit design problem is shown to be a reverse convex program. Random circuit topologies are also investigated. Uncoded transmission is investigated when a population of heterogeneous sources must be categorized due to decoder memory constraints. Quantizers that are optimal for mean Bayes risk error, a novel fidelity criterion, are designed. Human decision making in segregated populations is also studied with this framework. The ratio between the costs of false alarms and missed detections is also shown to fundamentally affect the essential nature of discrimination. The effect of noise on iterative message-passing decoders for low-density parity check (LDPC) codes is studied. Concentration of decoding performance around its average is shown to hold. Density evolution equations for noisy decoders are derived. Decoding thresholds degrade smoothly as decoder noise increases, and in certain cases, arbitrarily small final error probability is achievable despite decoder noisiness. Precise information storage capacity results for reliable memory systems constructed from unreliable components are also provided. Limits to communicating over systems that fail at random times are established. Communication with arbitrarily small probability of error is not possible, but schemes that optimize transmission volume communicated at fixed maximum message error probabilities are determined. System state feedback is shown not to improve performance. For optimal communication with decoders that simultaneously harvest information and energy, a coding theorem that establishes the fundamental trade-off between the rates at which energy and reliable information can be transmitted over a single line is proven. The capacity-power function is computed for several channels; it is non-increasing and concave.by Lav R. Varshney.Ph.D

    Risk Bounds for CART Classifiers under a Margin Condition

    Get PDF
    Risk bounds for Classification and Regression Trees (CART, Breiman et. al. 1984) classifiers are obtained under a margin condition in the binary supervised classification framework. These risk bounds are obtained conditionally on the construction of the maximal deep binary tree and permit to prove that the linear penalty used in the CART pruning algorithm is valid under a margin condition. It is also shown that, conditionally on the construction of the maximal tree, the final selection by test sample does not alter dramatically the estimation accuracy of the Bayes classifier. In the two-class classification framework, the risk bounds that are proved, obtained by using penalized model selection, validate the CART algorithm which is used in many data mining applications such as Biology, Medicine or Image Coding

    Fractal image compression and the self-affinity assumption : a stochastic signal modelling perspective

    Get PDF
    Bibliography: p. 208-225.Fractal image compression is a comparatively new technique which has gained considerable attention in the popular technical press, and more recently in the research literature. The most significant advantages claimed are high reconstruction quality at low coding rates, rapid decoding, and "resolution independence" in the sense that an encoded image may be decoded at a higher resolution than the original. While many of the claims published in the popular technical press are clearly extravagant, it appears from the rapidly growing body of published research that fractal image compression is capable of performance comparable with that of other techniques enjoying the benefit of a considerably more robust theoretical foundation. . So called because of the similarities between the form of image representation and a mechanism widely used in generating deterministic fractal images, fractal compression represents an image by the parameters of a set of affine transforms on image blocks under which the image is approximately invariant. Although the conditions imposed on these transforms may be shown to be sufficient to guarantee that an approximation of the original image can be reconstructed, there is no obvious theoretical reason to expect this to represent an efficient representation for image coding purposes. The usual analogy with vector quantisation, in which each image is considered to be represented in terms of code vectors extracted from the image itself is instructive, but transforms the fundamental problem into one of understanding why this construction results in an efficient codebook. The signal property required for such a codebook to be effective, termed "self-affinity", is poorly understood. A stochastic signal model based examination of this property is the primary contribution of this dissertation. The most significant findings (subject to some important restrictions} are that "self-affinity" is not a natural consequence of common statistical assumptions but requires particular conditions which are inadequately characterised by second order statistics, and that "natural" images are only marginally "self-affine", to the extent that fractal image compression is effective, but not more so than comparable standard vector quantisation techniques

    Particle Swarm Optimization

    Get PDF
    Particle swarm optimization (PSO) is a population based stochastic optimization technique influenced by the social behavior of bird flocking or fish schooling.PSO shares many similarities with evolutionary computation techniques such as Genetic Algorithms (GA). The system is initialized with a population of random solutions and searches for optima by updating generations. However, unlike GA, PSO has no evolution operators such as crossover and mutation. In PSO, the potential solutions, called particles, fly through the problem space by following the current optimum particles. This book represents the contributions of the top researchers in this field and will serve as a valuable tool for professionals in this interdisciplinary field

    Fusion of Data from Heterogeneous Sensors with Distributed Fields of View and Situation Evaluation for Advanced Driver Assistance Systems

    Get PDF
    In order to develop a driver assistance system for pedestrian protection, pedestrians in the environment of a truck are detected by radars and a camera and are tracked across distributed fields of view using a Joint Integrated Probabilistic Data Association filter. A robust approach for prediction of the system vehicles trajectory is presented. It serves the computation of a probabilistic collision risk based on reachable sets where different sources of uncertainty are taken into account
    corecore