1,719 research outputs found

    A new perspective of building industrialization to promote rapid development of China’s construction

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    In recent years, with the rapid development of China's social economy, the development of building industrialization is progressing and become the most important trend in construction industry. However, the current China's construction industry is facing a lot of problem. These problems had seriously affected the further development of the construction industry. Therefore, the relevant departments must study in-depth on the building industrialization-related issues in order to promote a new perspective and rapid development of China's construction in all level

    Saliency difference based objective evaluation method for a superimposed screen of the HUD with various background

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    The head-up display (HUD) is an emerging device which can project information on a transparent screen. The HUD has been used in airplanes and vehicles, and it is usually placed in front of the operator's view. In the case of the vehicle, the driver can see not only various information on the HUD but also the backgrounds (driving environment) through the HUD. However, the projected information on the HUD may interfere with the colors in the background because the HUD is transparent. For example, a red message on the HUD will be less noticeable when there is an overlap between it and the red brake light from the front vehicle. As the first step to solve this issue, how to evaluate the mutual interference between the information on the HUD and backgrounds is important. Therefore, this paper proposes a method to evaluate the mutual interference based on saliency. It can be evaluated by comparing the HUD part cut from a saliency map of a measured image with the HUD image.Comment: 10 pages, 5 fighres, 1 table, accepted by IFAC-HMS 201

    What Is the Gaze Behavior of Pedestrians in Interactions with an Automated Vehicle When They Do Not Understand Its Intentions?

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    Interactions between pedestrians and automated vehicles (AVs) will increase significantly with the popularity of AV. However, pedestrians often have not enough trust on the AVs , particularly when they are confused about an AV's intention in a interaction. This study seeks to evaluate if pedestrians clearly understand the driving intentions of AVs in interactions and presents experimental research on the relationship between gaze behaviors of pedestrians and their understanding of the intentions of the AV. The hypothesis investigated in this study was that the less the pedestrian understands the driving intentions of the AV, the longer the duration of their gazing behavior will be. A pedestrian--vehicle interaction experiment was designed to verify the proposed hypothesis. A robotic wheelchair was used as the manual driving vehicle (MV) and AV for interacting with pedestrians while pedestrians' gaze data and their subjective evaluation of the driving intentions were recorded. The experimental results supported our hypothesis as there was a negative correlation between the pedestrians' gaze duration on the AV and their understanding of the driving intentions of the AV. Moreover, the gaze duration of most of the pedestrians on the MV was shorter than that on an AV. Therefore, we conclude with two recommendations to designers of external human-machine interfaces (eHMI): (1) when a pedestrian is engaged in an interaction with an AV, the driving intentions of the AV should be provided; (2) if the pedestrian still gazes at the AV after the AV displays its driving intentions, the AV should provide clearer information about its driving intentions.Comment: 10 pages, 10 figure

    On domination number of 4-regular graphs

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    summary:Let GG be a simple graph. A subset S⊆VS \subseteq V is a dominating set of GG, if for any vertex v∈V −Sv \in V~- S there exists a vertex u∈Su \in S such that uv∈E(G)uv \in E (G). The domination number, denoted by γ(G)\gamma (G), is the minimum cardinality of a dominating set. In this paper we prove that if GG is a 4-regular graph with order nn, then γ(G)≤411n\gamma (G) \le \frac{4}{11}n

    Fracture simulation using a nonlocal particle model

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    Extensive researches have been done to simulate crack initialization, propagation, branching, and coalesce from different engineering disciplines. Various numerical methods have been developed, which can be generally grouped into two categories: the continuum-based methods and the discontinuous approaches. For cracking problems, the classical finite element method (FEM) uses mesh matching and remeshing techniques which is computationally very expensive. The cohesive elements does not require very dense mesh near the crack tip region, but usually requires the crack path as a priori knowledge for the computational efficiency. eXtended FEM (XFEM) treats the discontinuity via level sets method and enrich the crack tip elements with analytical solution for the stress or displacement from linear elastic fracture mechanics. Arbitrary crack branching and coalesce is still challenging in the XFEM framework. The discontinuous approaches, such as lattice spring models and peridynamics, can handle fracture problems very efficiently. No additional criteria are needed as the crack growth is a natural outcome of the system evolution. As the elongation of the connecting bonds exceeds the critical value, it breaks and the crack propagates automatically. However, there are some other issues with the discontinuous approaches, such as restriction on effective Poisson’s ratio and crack path preference. A Volume-Compensated Particle Method (VCPM) was proposed by Chen et al. to solve these issues within the discontinuous framework. In the VCPM, both pairwise and nonlocal potentials are used to describe interactions among particles. One unique issue in the regular lattice particle method is the directional preference of the crack propagating path due to the regular lattice topology. The objective of this study is to investigate a general formulation using the VCPM concept to eliminate/reduce the crack path preference in the fracture simulation

    Transport or Store? Synthesizing Flow-based Microfluidic Biochips using Distributed Channel Storage

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    Flow-based microfluidic biochips have attracted much atten- tion in the EDA community due to their miniaturized size and execution efficiency. Previous research, however, still follows the traditional computing model with a dedicated storage unit, which actually becomes a bottleneck of the performance of bio- chips. In this paper, we propose the first architectural synthe- sis framework considering distributed storage constructed tem- porarily from transportation channels to cache fluid samples. Since distributed storage can be accessed more efficiently than a dedicated storage unit and channels can switch between the roles of transportation and storage easily, biochips with this dis- tributed computing architecture can achieve a higher execution efficiency even with fewer resources. Experimental results con- firm that the execution efficiency of a bioassay can be improved by up to 28% while the number of valves in the biochip can be reduced effectively.Comment: ACM/IEEE Design Automation Conference (DAC), June 201
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