52 research outputs found

    Tracking System with Re-identification Using a RGB String Kernel

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    International audiencePeople re-identification consists to identify a person which comes back in a scene where it has been previously detected. This key problem in visual surveillance applications may concern single or multi camera systems. Features encoding each person should be rich enough to provide an efficient re-identification while being sufficiently robust to remain significant through the different phenomena which may alter the appearance of a person in a video. We propose in this paper a method which encodes people's appearance through a string of salient points. The similarity between two such strings is encoded by a kernel. This last kernel is combined with a tracking algorithm in order to associate a set of strings to each person and to measure similarities between persons entering into the scene and persons who left it

    Effect of Pulsed or Continuous Delivery of Salt on Sensory Perception Over Short Time Intervals

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    Salt in the human diet is a major risk factor for hypertension and many countries have set targets to reduce salt consumption. Technological solutions are being sought to lower the salt content of processed foods without altering their taste. In this study, the approach was to deliver salt solutions in pulses of different concentrations to determine whether a pulsed delivery profile affected sensory perception of salt. Nine different salt profiles were delivered by a Dynataste device and a trained panel assessed their saltiness using time–intensity and single-score sensory techniques. The profile duration (15 s) was designed to match eating conditions and the effects of intensity and duration of the pulses on sensory perception were investigated. Sensory results from the profiles delivered in either water or in a bouillon base were not statistically different. Maximum perceived salt intensities and the area under the time– intensity curves correlated well with the overall perceived saltiness intensity despite the stimulus being delivered as several pulses. The overall saltiness scores for profiles delivering the same overall amount of sodium were statistically not different from one another suggesting that, in this system, pulsed delivery did not enhance salt perception but the overall amount of salt delivered in each profile did affect sensory perception

    Characteristic Physicochemical of Oil Extract from Moringa oleifera and the Kinetics of Degradation of the Oil during Heating

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    Abstract: The aim of the study was to investigate the physicochemical properties and the kinetics of degradation of Moringa oleifera seed oil during heating. The seed is a good source of oil (40%). The physical properties of the oil extracts showed the state to be liquid at room temperature and indicated that the oil had refractive index, 1.4680; the peroxide value, 1.67 (meq O 2 /kg oil); free fatty acid, 2.10%; iodine value, 66.2%; saponification value, 167; unsaponifiable matter content, 0.87% and viscosity, 47.24 (mPa.s at 25°C). Gas liquid chromatography technique has been developed for identification and quantitative determination of total unsaturated and saturated fatty acids shows that the crude oil had 79.57 and 20.42% respectively. Differential Scanning Calorimetry (DSC) indicates the presence of three components in oil extracted. The first peak at low melting point appears at -31.10°C (∆H f = -5.36 J/g), the second peak appears to -7.03°C (∆H f = +49.56 J/g) and the last peak appears to +6.30°C (∆H f = +0.55 J/g). The degradation kinetic of the oil was also investigated. The thermal oxidation of the double bonds of the oil showed a first-order thermal oxidation kinetic and the Arrhenius plot yielded a straight line with a slope equivalent to activation energy of 1.593 KJ/mol. There is the possibility of considering the seed as feed supplement and its oil for industrial application

    Online change detection in exponential families with unknown parameters

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    International audienceThis paper studies online change detection in exponential families when both the parameters before and after change are unknown. We follow a standard statistical approach to sequential change detection with generalized likelihood ratio test statistics. We interpret these statistics within the framework of information geometry, hence providing a unified view of change detection for many common statistical models and corresponding distance functions. Using results from convex duality, we also derive an efficient scheme to compute the exact statistics sequentially, which allows their use in online settings where they are usually approximated for the sake of tractability. This is applied to real-world datasets of various natures, including onset detection in audio signals

    Antioxidant properties of polyphenols incorporated in casein/sodiumcaseinate films

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    Radical-scavenging activity (RSA) of sodium caseinate (NaCAS) films with 0e30% added casein and antioxidants was measured. Tannic acid and catechin were added to the films as model antioxidants. RSA was measured using 2,2-diphenyl-1-picrylhydrazyl and 2,20-azino-bis(3-ethylbenzothiazoline-6-sulfonic acid); the two methods gave similar results for RSA measurement. Film casein content most influenced initial RSA, while increasing casein level resulted in an apparent decrease of RSA due to quenching. During storage, a good stability of RSA was observed. The surface antioxidant activity is of primary interest for food contact materials; a decrease in film surface RSA occurred during the first 20 days of storage, followed by an increase in surface RSA during the remainder of the 90-day storage period, especially at high relative humidity. This phenomenon was due to plasticizing of NaCAS, with possible network alteration over long storage time
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