8,245 research outputs found
Improved methods for object-based coding of plenoptic videos
2005 International Symposium on Intelligent Signal Processing and Communication Systems (ISPACS 2005), Hong Kong, 13-16 December 2005Plenoptic videos (PVs) are a class of dynamic image-based representations, where the videos are taken at regularly spaced locations along a line. To yield the better rendering quality in scenes with large depth variations and support the functionalities at the object level for rendering, an object-based coding scheme is employed for the coding of PVs. Upon this object-based coding framework, the paper studies the improved coding methods for the texture and depth coding to achieve better compression efficiency. Experimental results show that considerable improvements in texture coding performance are obtained for both synthetic and real scenes. The improved depth coding quality is also illustrated. © 2005 IEEE.published_or_final_versio
On object-based compression for a class of dynamic image-based representations
An object-based compression scheme for a class of dynamic image-based representations called "plenoptic videos" (PVs) is studied in this paper. PVs are simplified dynamic light fields in which the videos are taken at regularly spaced locations along a line segment instead of a 2-D plane. To improve the rendering quality in scenes with large depth variations and support the functionalities at the object level for rendering, an object-based compression scheme is employed for the coding of PVs. Besides texture and shape information, the compression of geometry information in the form of depth maps is also supported. The proposed compression scheme exploits both the temporal and spatial redundancy among video object streams in the PV to achieve higher compression efficiency. Experimental results show that considerable improvements in coding performance are obtained for both synthetic and real scenes. Moreover, object-based functionalities such as rendering individual image-based objects are also illustrated. © 2005 IEEE.published_or_final_versio
An optimization model for a battery swapping station in Hong Kong
In this paper, a battery swapping station (BSS) model is proposed as an economic and convenient way to provide energy for the batteries of the electric vehicles (EVs). This method would overcome some drawbacks to the use of electric vehicles like long charging time and insufficient running distance. On the economic concern of a battery swapping station, the station would optimize the availability of the batteries in stock, and at the same time determine the best strategy for recharging the batteries on hand. By optimizing the charging method of the batteries, an optimization model of BSS with the maximum number of batteries in stock has been developed for the bus terminal at the Hong Kong International Airport. The secondary objective would be to minimize a cost on the batteries due to the use of different charging schemes. The genetic algorithm (GA) has been used to implement the optimization model, and simulation results are shown.published_or_final_versio
Object-based coding for plenoptic videos
A new object-based coding system for a class of dynamic image-based representations called plenoptic videos (PVs) is proposed. PVs are simplified dynamic light fields, where the videos are taken at regularly spaced locations along line segments instead of a 2-D plane. In the proposed object-based approach, objects at different depth values are segmented to improve the rendering quality. By encoding PVs at the object level, desirable functionalities such as scalability of contents, error resilience, and interactivity with an individual image-based rendering (IBR) object can be achieved. Besides supporting the coding of texture and binary shape maps for IBR objects with arbitrary shapes, the proposed system also supports the coding of grayscale alpha maps as well as depth maps (geometry information) to respectively facilitate the matting and rendering of the IBR objects. Both temporal and spatial redundancies among the streams in the PV are exploited to improve the coding performance, while avoiding excessive complexity in selective decoding of PVs to support fast rendering speed. Advanced spatial/temporal prediction methods such as global disparity-compensated prediction, as well as direct prediction and its extensions are developed. The bit allocation and rate control scheme employing a new convex optimization-based approach are also introduced. Experimental results show that considerable improvements in coding performance are obtained for both synthetic and real scenes, while supporting the stated object-based functionalities. © 2006 IEEE.published_or_final_versio
Practising hope in an urban landscape: the poetics and politics of Filipino migrant workers in Hong Kong
The thesis is about the Filipino migrant domestic workers in Hong Kong and how they carve an alternative space in Central on their days off. This alternative space speaks of not merely a social space but a material built environment around which the migrants build their new subjectivities and constitute a transnational movement construed through the assertion of their rights as workers, women and human beings under the rubric of universal human rights. I first discuss the spatial practices of the community to adapt to changes in the physical landscape and reveal the nuanced social relationships and contestation of spaces amongst the members of the community. The linear and cyclical repetitions of their Sunday life act to punctuate the everyday repetitive life they have as domestic workers and create and inscribe patterns of usage of space that disrupt the dominant corporate space of Central that has come to represent faceless capital and consumers of spectacles. Through encounters with the representatives of the authorities in protest marches and everyday interactions, I examine the tensions between the dominant abstract space and the marginalised lived space and argue that the negotiations and creative alternative ways of appropriating spaces by the Filipinos illustrate that the domination of abstract space is not absolute. Alternative social relations emerge in the cracks of the abstract space and these alternatives are the beginning of something hopeful –the transnational migrant domestic workers’ movement. Lastly, I argue that the transnational migrant movement in Hong Kong is underpinned by ‘practising hope’ – of one’s encounter with injustice; of the political awakening that the personal is political; of the identification of oneself as part of a collective and a community. The basis of it all is underpinned by the Sunday gatherings they have in Central that substantiate their claim to the ‘right to the city’
An object-based compression system for a class of dynamic image-based representations
S P I E Conference on Visual Communications and Image Processing, Beijing, China, 12-15 July 2005This paper proposes a new object-based compression system for a class of dynamic image-based representations called plenoptic videos (PVs). PVs are simplified dynamic light fields, where the videos are taken at regularly spaced locations along line segments instead of a 2-D plane. The proposed system employs an object-based approach, where objects at different depth values are segmented to improve the rendering quality as in the pop-up light fields. Furthermore, by coding the plenoptic video at the object level, desirable functionalities such as scalability of contents, error resilience, and interactivity with individual IBR objects can be achieved. Besides supporting the coding of the texture and binary shape maps for IBR objects with arbitrary shapes, the proposed system also supports the coding of gray-scale alpha maps as well as geometry information in the form of depth maps to respectively facilitate the matting and rendering of the IBR objects. To improve the coding performance, the proposed compression system exploits both the temporal redundancy and spatial redundancy among the video object streams in the PV by employing disparity-compensated prediction or spatial prediction in its texture, shape and depth coding processes. To demonstrate the principle and effectiveness of the proposed system, a multiple video camera system was built and experimental results show that considerable improvements in coding performance are obtained for both synthetic scene and real scene, while supporting the stated object-based functionalities.published_or_final_versio
Response of dispersed droplets to shock waves in supersonic mixing layers
The response of dispersed droplets to oblique shock waves in the supersonic mixing layer was investigated using the large eddy simulation coupled with the particle Lagrangian tracking model. The generated disturbances based on the most-unstable wave model were imposed to excite the development of supersonic shear layer. The oblique shock wave was numerically introduced in the flow field. Small- and medium-sized droplets remained their preferential distribution in the vortices after crossing the shock wave, while large-sized droplet became more dispersed. The influence of shock waves on the momentum and heat transfers from surrounding gas to droplets was analyzed by tracking droplets’ motion paths. Small-sized droplets responded easily to the shock wave. Compared with the aerodynamic response, the thermal response of droplets was slower, especially under the impaction of the shock wave. The present research conclusions are conductive to analyze the mixing of air and fuel droplets and of important academic value for further understanding the two-phase dynamics in combustors of scramjet
Human ether-Ã -go-go gene potassium channels are regulated by EGFR tyrosine kinase
Human ether á-go-go gene potassium channels (hEAG1 or Kv10.1) are expressed in brain and various human cancers and play a role in neuronal excitement and tumor progression. However, the functional regulation of hEAG channels by signal transduction is not fully understood. The present study was therefore designed to investigate whether hEAG1 channels are regulated by protein tyrosine kinases (PTKs) in HEK 293 cells stably expressing hEAG1 gene using whole-cell patch voltage-clamp, immunoprecipitation, Western blot, and mutagenesis approaches. We found that the selective epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) kinase inhibitor AG556 (10μM), but not the platelet growth factor receptor (PDGFR) kinase inhibitor AG1295 (10μM) or the Src-family inhibitor PP2 (10μM), can inhibit hEAG1 current, and the inhibitory effect can be reversed by the protein tyrosine phosphatase (PTP) inhibitor orthovanadate. Immunoprecipitation and Western blot analysis revealed that tyrosine phosphorylation level of hEAG1 channels was reduced by AG556, and the reduction was significantly countered by orthovanadate. The hEAG1 mutants Y90A, Y344A and Y485A, but not Y376A and Y479A, exhibited reduced response to AG556. Interestingly, the inhibition effect of AG556 was lost in triple mutant hEAG1 channels at Y90, Y344, and Y485 with alanine. These results demonstrate for the first time that hEAG1 channel activity is regulated by EGFR kinase at the tyrosine residues Tyr 90, Try 344, and Try 485. This effect is likely involved in regulating neuronal activity and/or tumor growth. © 2011 Elsevier B.V.postprin
Social contact patterns relevant to the spread of respiratory infectious diseases in Hong Kong.
The spread of many respiratory infections is determined by contact patterns between infectious and susceptible individuals in the population. There are no published data for quantifying social contact patterns relevant to the spread of respiratory infectious diseases in Hong Kong which is a hotspot for emerging infectious diseases due to its high population density and connectivity in the air transportation network. We adopted a commonly used diary-based design to conduct a social contact survey in Hong Kong in 2015/16 using both paper and online questionnaires. Participants using paper questionnaires reported more contacts and longer contact duration than those using online questionnaires. Participants reported 13 person-hours of contact and 8 contacts per day on average, which decreased over age but increased with household size, years of education and income level. Prolonged and frequent contacts, and contacts at home, school and work were more likely to involve physical contacts. Strong age-assortativity was observed in all age groups. We evaluated the characteristics of social contact patterns relevant to the spread of respiratory infectious diseases in Hong Kong. Our findings could help to improve the design of future social contact surveys, parameterize transmission models of respiratory infectious diseases, and inform intervention strategies based on model outputs
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