9,385 research outputs found
A Comparison of Video and Accelerometer Based Approaches Applied to Performance Monitoring in Swimming.
The aim of this paper is to present a comparison of video- and sensor based studies of swimming performance. The video-based approach is reviewed and contrasted to the newer sensor-based technology, specifically accelerometers based upon Micro-Electro-Mechanical Systems (MEMS) technology. Results from previously published swim performance studies using both the video and sensor technologies are summarised and evaluated against the conventional theory that upper arm
movements are of primary interest when quantifying free-style technique. The authors conclude that multiple sensor-based measurements of swimmers’ acceleration profiles have the potential to offer significant advances in coaching technique over the traditional video based approach
Analyzing image-text relations for semantic media adaptation and personalization
Progress in semantic media adaptation and personalisation requires that we know more about how different media types, such as texts and images, work together in multimedia communication. To this end, we present our ongoing investigation into image-text relations. Our idea is that the ways in which the meanings of images and texts relate in multimodal documents, such as web pages, can be classified on the basis of low-level media features and that this classification should be an early processing step in systems targeting semantic multimedia analysis. In this paper we present the first empirical evidence that humans can predict something about the main theme of a text from an accompanying image, and that this prediction can be emulated by a machine via analysis of low- level image features. We close by discussing how these findings could impact on applications for news adaptation and personalisation, and how they may generalise to other kinds of multimodal documents and to applications for semantic media retrieval, browsing, adaptation and creation
Automated annotation of landmark images using community contributed datasets and web resources
A novel solution to the challenge of automatic image annotation is described. Given an image with GPS data of its location of capture, our system returns a semantically-rich annotation comprising tags which both identify the landmark in the image, and provide an interesting fact about it, e.g. "A view of the Eiffel Tower, which was built in 1889 for an international exhibition in Paris". This exploits visual and textual web mining in combination with content-based image
analysis and natural language processing. In the first stage, an input image is matched to a set of community contributed images (with keyword tags) on the basis of its GPS information and image classification techniques. The depicted landmark is inferred from the keyword tags for the matched set. The system then takes advantage of the information written about landmarks available on the web at large to extract a fact about the landmark in the image. We report component evaluation results from an implementation of our solution on a mobile device. Image localisation and matching oers 93.6% classication accuracy; the selection of appropriate tags for use in annotation performs well (F1M of
0.59), and it subsequently automatically identies a correct toponym for use in captioning and fact extraction in 69.0% of the tested cases; finally the fact extraction returns an interesting caption in 78% of cases
Community environment, cognitive impairment and dementia in later life: results from the Cognitive Function and Ageing Study
Background: Few studies have investigated the impact of the community environment, as distinct from area deprivation, on cognition in later life. This study explores cross-sectional associations between cognitive impairment and dementia and environmental features at the community level in older people. Method: The postcodes of the 2424 participants in the year-10 interview of the Cognitive Function and Ageing Study in England were mapped into small area level geographical units (Lower-layer Super Output Areas) and linked to environmental data in government statistics. Multilevel logistic regression was conducted to investigate associations between cognitive impairment (defined as MMSE3 in GMS-AGECAT) and community level measurements including area deprivation, natural environment, land use mix and crime. Sensitivity analyses tested the impact of people moving residence within the last two years. Results: Higher levels of area deprivation and crime were not significantly associated with cognitive impairment and dementia after accounting for individual level factors. Living in areas with high land use mix was significantly associated with a nearly 60% reduced odds of dementia (OR: 0.4; 95% CI: 0.2, 0.8) after adjusting for individual level factors and area deprivation, but there was no linear trend for cognitive impairment. Increased odds of dementia (OR: 2.2, 95% CI: 1.2, 4.2) and cognitive impairment (OR: 1.4, 95% CI: 1.0, 2.0) were found in the highest quartile of natural environment availability. Findings were robust to exclusion of the recently relocated. Conclusion: Features of land use have complex associations with cognitive impairment and dementia. Further investigations should focus on environmental influences on cognition to inform health and social policies
St. Louis Currents: The Fifth Edition
Includes a history of African American entertainment in St. Louis Metro East and a history of Homer G. Phillips Hospital, among the current socio-economic issues facing St. Louis metropolitan area, Missouri and Illinois
Demand and Capacity Modeling for Advanced Air Mobility
Advanced Air Mobility encompasses emerging aviation technologies that
transport people and cargo between local, regional, or urban locations that are
currently underserved by aviation and other transportation modalities. The
disruptive nature of these technologies has pushed industry, academia, and
governments to devote significant investments to understand their impact on
airspace risk, operational procedures, and passengers. A flexible framework was
designed to assess the operational viability of these technologies and the
sensitivity to a variety of assumptions. This framework is used to simulate air
taxi traffic within New York City by replacing a portion of the city's taxi
requests with trips taken with electric vertical takeoff and landing vehicles
and evaluate the sensitivity of passenger trip time to a variety of system wide
assumptions. In particular, the paper focuses on the impact of the passenger
capacity, landing site vehicle capacity, and fleet size. The operation density
is then compared with the current air traffic to assess operation constraints
that will challenge the network UAM operations
On electrical correlates of Physarum polycephalum spatial activity: Can we see Physarum Machine in the dark?
Plasmodium of Physarum polycephalum is a single cell visible by unaided eye,
which spans sources of nutrients with its protoplasmic network. In a very
simple experimental setup we recorded electric potential of the propagating
plasmodium. We discovered a complex interplay of short range oscillatory
behaviour combined with long range, low frequency oscillations which serve to
communicate information between different parts of the plasmodium. The
plasmodium's response to changing environmental conditions forms basis patterns
of electric activity, which are unique indicators of the following events:
plasmodium occupies a site, plasmodium functions normally, plasmodium becomes
`agitated' due to drying substrate, plasmodium departs a site, and plasmodium
forms sclerotium. Using a collective particle approximation of Physarum
polycephalum we found matching correlates of electrical potential in
computational simulations by measuring local population flux at the node
positions, generating trains of high and low frequency oscillatory behaviour.
Motifs present in these measurements matched the response `grammar' of the
plasmodium when encountering new nodes, simulated consumption of nutrients,
exposure to simulated hazardous illumination and sclerotium formation. The
distributed computation of the particle collective was able to calculate
beneficial network structures and sclerotium position by shifting the active
growth zone of the simulated plasmodium. The results show future promise for
the non-invasive study of the complex dynamical behaviour within --- and health
status of --- living systems
Initial test results on bolometers for the Planck high frequency instrument
We summarize the fabrication, flight qualification, and dark performance of bolometers completed at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory for the High Frequency Instrument (HFI) of the joint ESA/NASA Herschel/Planck mission to be launched in 2009. The HFI is a multicolor focal plane which consists of 52 bolometers operated at 100 mK. Each bolometer is mounted to a feedhorn-filter assembly which defines one of six frequency bands centered between 100-857 GHz. Four detectors in each of five bands from 143-857 GHz are coupled to both linear polarizations and thus measure the total intensity. In addition, eight detectors in each of four bands (100, 143, 217, and 353 GHz) couple only to a single linear polarization and thus provide measurements of the Stokes parameters, Q and U, as well as the total intensity. The measured noise equivalent power (NEP) of all detectors is at or below the background limit for the telescope and time constants are a few ms, short enough to resolve point sources as the 5 to 9 arc min beams move across the sky at 1 rpm
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