133 research outputs found
ISOLATED INSTRUMENT TRANSCRIPTION USING A DEEP BELIEF NETWORK
ABSTRACT Automatic music transcription is a difficult task that has provoked extensive research on transcription systems that are predominantly general purpose, processing any number or type of instruments sounding simultaneously. This paper presents a polyphonic transcription system that is constrained to processing the output of a single instrument with an upper bound on polyphony. For example, a guitar has six strings and is limited to producing six notes simultaneously. The transcription system consists of a novel pitch estimation algorithm that uses a deep belief network and multi-label learning techniques to generate multiple pitch estimates for each audio analysis frame, such that the polyphony does not exceed that of the instrument. The implemented transcription system is evaluated on a compiled dataset of synthesized guitar recordings. Comparing these results to a prior single-instrument polyphonic transcription system that received exceptional results, this paper demonstrates the effectiveness of deep, multi-label learning for the task of polyphonic transcription
Effects of scan direction and orientation on mechanical properties of laser sintered polyamide-12
In order to understand the impact of layer-wise scanning direction in the Selective Laser Sintering process, test coupons were manufactured for mechanical testing from DuraForm™ Polyamide powder. The effects of laser energy density, varying between 0.003 and 0.024 J/mm2 were examined in test specimens rotated 90º through the Z axis. SLS machines do not always facilitate ‘cross-hatching’ of layers and therefore orientation has a major influence on part quality. When employed, the cross-hatching technique scans successive layers perpendicularly to the previous. Studying how parts perform with scan lines in a common direction, will assist in the understanding of how SLS parts behave in practice. Results showed that physical density, tensile strength and elongation rose with energy density up to 0.012 J/mm². This initial rise was due to a continued improvement in particle fusion with increasing energy density. Above 0.012 J/mm², these properties started to decline at different rates depending on their orientation (scan direction) on the part bed. Specimen’s oriented perpendicularly to the X axis exhibited a greater elongation at the expense of tensile strength, when compared to parallel specimens
Artifact-Based Rendering: Harnessing Natural and Traditional Visual Media for More Expressive and Engaging 3D Visualizations
We introduce Artifact-Based Rendering (ABR), a framework of tools,
algorithms, and processes that makes it possible to produce real, data-driven
3D scientific visualizations with a visual language derived entirely from
colors, lines, textures, and forms created using traditional physical media or
found in nature. A theory and process for ABR is presented to address three
current needs: (i) designing better visualizations by making it possible for
non-programmers to rapidly design and critique many alternative data-to-visual
mappings; (ii) expanding the visual vocabulary used in scientific
visualizations to depict increasingly complex multivariate data; (iii) bringing
a more engaging, natural, and human-relatable handcrafted aesthetic to data
visualization. New tools and algorithms to support ABR include front-end
applets for constructing artifact-based colormaps, optimizing 3D scanned meshes
for use in data visualization, and synthesizing textures from artifacts. These
are complemented by an interactive rendering engine with custom algorithms and
interfaces that demonstrate multiple new visual styles for depicting point,
line, surface, and volume data. A within-the-research-team design study
provides early evidence of the shift in visualization design processes that ABR
is believed to enable when compared to traditional scientific visualization
systems. Qualitative user feedback on applications to climate science and brain
imaging support the utility of ABR for scientific discovery and public
communication.Comment: Published in IEEE VIS 2019, 9 pages of content with 2 pages of
references, 12 figure
Anticipated climate and land-cover changes reveal refuge areas for Borneo's orang-utans
Habitat loss and climate change pose a double jeopardy for many threatened taxa, making the identification of optimal
habitat for the future a conservation priority. Using a case study of the endangered Bornean orang-utan, we identify
environmental refuges by integrating bioclimatic models with projected deforestation and oil-palm agriculture
suitability from the 1950s to 2080s. We coupled a maximum entropy algorithm with information on habitat needs to
predict suitable habitat for the present day and 1950s. We then projected to the 2020s, 2050s and 2080s in models
incorporating only land-cover change, climate change or both processes combined. For future climate, we incorporated
projections from four model and emission scenario combinations. For future land cover, we developed spatial
deforestation predictions from 10 years of satellite data. Refuges were delineated as suitable forested habitats identified
by all models that were also unsuitable for oil palm – a major threat to tropical biodiversity. Our analyses indicate
that in 2010 up to 260 000 km2 of Borneo was suitable habitat within the core orang-utan range; an 18–24%
reduction since the 1950s. Land-cover models predicted further decline of 15–30% by the 2080s. Although habitat
extent under future climate conditions varied among projections, there was majority consensus, particularly in northeastern
and western regions. Across projections habitat loss due to climate change alone averaged 63% by 2080, but
74% when also considering land-cover change. Refuge areas amounted to 2000–42 000 km2 depending on thresholds
used, with 900–17 000 km2 outside the current species range. We demonstrate that efforts to halt deforestation could
mediate some orang-utan habitat loss, but further decline of the most suitable areas is to be expected given projected
changes to climate. Protected refuge areas could therefore become increasingly important for ongoing translocation
efforts. We present an approach to help identify such areas for highly threatened species given environmental
changes expected this century
A global multiproxy database for temperature reconstructions of the Common Era
Reproducible climate reconstructions of the Common Era (1 CE to present) are
key to placing industrial-era warming into the context of natural climatic
variability. Here we present a community-sourced database of temperature-
sensitive proxy records from the PAGES2k initiative. The database gathers 692
records from 648 locations, including all continental regions and major ocean
basins. The records are from trees, ice, sediment, corals, speleothems,
documentary evidence, and other archives. They range in length from 50 to 2000
years, with a median of 547 years, while temporal resolution ranges from
biweekly to centennial. Nearly half of the proxy time series are significantly
correlated with HadCRUT4.2 surface temperature over the period 1850–2014.
Global temperature composites show a remarkable degree of coherence between
high- and low-resolution archives, with broadly similar patterns across
archive types, terrestrial versus marine locations, and screening criteria.
The database is suited to investigations of global and regional temperature
variability over the Common Era, and is shared in the Linked Paleo Data (LiPD)
format, including serializations in Matlab, R and Python
First integrative trend analysis for a great ape species in Borneo
For many threatened species the rate and drivers of population decline are difficult to assess accurately: species’ surveys are typically restricted to small geographic areas, are conducted over short time periods, and employ a wide range of survey protocols. We addressed methodological challenges for assessing change in the abundance of an endangered species. We applied novel methods for integrating field and interview survey data for the critically endangered Bornean orangutan (Pongo pygmaeus), allowing a deeper understanding of the species’ persistence through time. Our analysis revealed that Bornean orangutan populations have declined at a rate of 25% over the last 10 years. Survival rates of the species are lowest in areas with intermediate rainfall, where complex interrelations between soil fertility, agricultural productivity, and human settlement patterns influence persistence. These areas also have highest threats from human-wildlife conflict. Survival rates are further positively associated with forest extent, but are lower in areas where surrounding forest has been recently converted to industrial agriculture. Our study highlights the urgency of determining specific management interventions needed in different locations to counter the trend of decline and its associated drivers
Allocation under dictatorship : research in Stalin’s archives
We survey recent research on the Soviet economy in the state, party, and military
archives of the Stalin era. The archives have provided rich new evidence on the economic
arrangements of a command system under a powerful dictator including
Stalin’s role in the making of the economic system and economic policy, Stalin’s accumulation
objectives and the constraints that limited his power to achieve them, the
limits to administrative allocation, the information flows and incentives that governed
the behavior of economic managers, the scope and significance of corruption and
market-oriented behavior, and the prospects for economic reform
A global fit of the MSSM with GAMBIT
We study the seven-dimensional Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model (MSSM7) with the new GAMBIT software framework, with all parameters defined at the weak scale. Our analysis significantly extends previous weak-scale, phenomenological MSSM fits, by adding more and newer experimental analyses, improving the accuracy and detail of theoretical predictions, including dominant uncertainties from the Standard Model, the Galactic dark matter halo and the quark content of the nucleon, and employing novel and highly-efficient statistical sampling methods to scan the parameter space. We find regions of the MSSM7 that exhibit co-annihilation of neutralinos with charginos, stops and sbottoms, as well as models that undergo resonant annihilation via both light and heavy Higgs funnels. We find high-likelihood models with light charginos, stops and sbottoms that have the potential to be within the future reach of the LHC. Large parts of our preferred parameter regions will also be accessible to the next generation of direct and indirect dark matter searches, making prospects for discovery in the near future rather good
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