27 research outputs found

    Some discussions on functionalist housing and its economics in Romania by Lhe late 1950s and early 1960s

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    This paper proposes an analysis of the Romanian architectural practices in the late 1950's and early 1960's by considering the availability of financial resources. I premise that echoes of Moscow's approaches to the built environment overlapped the Bucharest politicians' priorities, whose lack of constancy in economic decision-making exacerbated itself as the urban construction programs advanced. From the Romanian authorities' point of view, therefore, raising the mass housing profitability could save important financial resources for other investments in heavy industry, while maintaining the appearance of a social state. Similarities between Soviet and Romanian modernist building projects suggested a coherent approach to housing throughout the bloc. However, this article will show that functionalist architectural modernism -cheap and fast to erect- also proved beneficial for Gheorghe Gheorghiu-Dej's economic plans, which questions urban construction projects' political agendas and the professional tensions between architects and economists. Therefore, investigating the functionalist architecture opens up several lines of inquiry: to what extent Nikita Khrushchev's housing program was transferred in Romania; the tortuous policies of the Romanian state's leadership in the field of housing as well as how local bureaucratic or professional actors appropriated, interpreted and adjusted such programs; and, the economic costs of the new functionalist approach to urban dwelling. In this way, this article reads the making of functionalist mass housing programs by the late 1950s to assess the Soviets' part in building the Romanian cities. To this end, the article contributes to the recent scholarly literature on multiple modernities

    Texture mapping using surface flattening via multidimensional scaling

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    Texture Mapping on Arbitrary 3D Surfaces

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    Expression-invariant 3D face recognition

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    We present a novel 3D face recognition approach based on geometric invariants introduced by Elad and Kimmel. The key idea of the proposed algorithm is a representation of the facial surface, invariant to isometric deformations, such as those resulting from different expressions and postures of the face. The obtained geometric invariants allow mapping 2D facial texture images into special images that incorporate the 3D geometry of the face. These signature images are then decomposed into their principal components. The result is an efficient and accurate face recognition algorithm that is robust to facial expressions. We demonstrate the results of our method and compare it to existing 2D and 3D face recognition algorithms

    Geometric-Feature-Based Spectral Graph Matching in Pharyngeal Surface Registration

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    Abstract. Fusion between an endoscopic movie and a CT can aid specifying the tumor target volume for radiotherapy. That requires a deformable pharyngeal surface registration between a 3D endoscope reconstruction and a CT segmentation. In this paper, we propose to use local geometric features for deriving a set of initial correspondences between two surfaces, with which an association graph can be constructed for registration by spectral graph matching. We also define a new similarity measurement to provide a meaningful way for computing intersurface affinities in the association graph. Our registration method can deal with large non-rigid anatomical deformation, as well as missing data and topology change. We tested the robustness of our method with synthetic deformations and showed registration results on real data.

    Tyrosinase as an autoantigen in patients with vitiligo

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    Vitiligo is considered an autoimmune disorder due to the generation and presence of autoantibodies directed against melanocyte antigens in the patients' sera. In the present study we point towards a newly defined autoantigen in vitiligo, the enzyme tyrosinase, which participates in the process of melanogenesis. Anti-tyrosinase antibodies were detected in the sera of seven patients with diffuse and 11 patients with localized vitiligo. Employing solid-phase ELISA to mushroom tyrosinase, we found that patients with diffuse vitiligo had significantly higher titres of IgG anti-tyrosinase autoantibodies than patients with localized disease or healthy subjects. These anti-tyrosinase autoantibodies have relatively high functional affinity to tyrosinase and can be recovered from vitiligo patients’ sera by affinity purification. The anti-tyrosinase antibodies do not cross-react with other enzymes recognized as autoantigens in different autoimmune disorders and the autoantibodies do not block the enzymatic activity of tyrosinase, indicating that they are not reacting with the catalytic site of the enzyme. These data point to tyrosinase as an autoantigen in vitiligo and suggest that anti-tyrosinase titres can serve as a marker for disease activity

    Temporal Surface Tracking using Mesh Evolution

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    Abstract. In this paper, we address the problem of surface tracking in multiple camera environments and over time sequences. In order to fully track a surface undergoing significant deformations, we cast the problem as a mesh evolution over time. Such an evolution is driven by 3D displacement fields estimated between meshes recovered independently at different time frames. Geometric and photometric information is used to identify a robust set of matching vertices. This provides a sparse displacement field that is densified over the mesh by Laplacian diffusion. In contrast to existing approaches that evolve meshes, we do not assume a known model or a fixed topology. The contribution is a novel mesh evolution based framework that allows to fully track, over long sequences, an unknown surface encountering deformations, including topological changes. Results on very challenging and publicly available image based 3D mesh sequences demonstrate the ability of our framework to efficiently recover surface motions.
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