80 research outputs found

    Fuzzy techniques for noise removal in image sequences and interval-valued fuzzy mathematical morphology

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    Image sequences play an important role in today's world. They provide us a lot of information. Videos are for example used for traffic observations, surveillance systems, autonomous navigation and so on. Due to bad acquisition, transmission or recording, the sequences are however usually corrupted by noise, which hampers the functioning of many image processing techniques. A preprocessing module to filter the images often becomes necessary. After an introduction to fuzzy set theory and image processing, in the first main part of the thesis, several fuzzy logic based video filters are proposed: one filter for grayscale video sequences corrupted by additive Gaussian noise and two color extensions of it and two grayscale filters and one color filter for sequences affected by the random valued impulse noise type. In the second main part of the thesis, interval-valued fuzzy mathematical morphology is studied. Mathematical morphology is a theory intended for the analysis of spatial structures that has found application in e.g. edge detection, object recognition, pattern recognition, image segmentation, image magnification… In the thesis, an overview is given of the evolution from binary mathematical morphology over the different grayscale morphology theories to interval-valued fuzzy mathematical morphology and the interval-valued image model. Additionally, the basic properties of the interval-valued fuzzy morphological operators are investigated. Next, also the decomposition of the interval-valued fuzzy morphological operators is investigated. We investigate the relationship between the cut of the result of such operator applied on an interval-valued image and structuring element and the result of the corresponding binary operator applied on the cut of the image and structuring element. These results are first of all interesting because they provide a link between interval-valued fuzzy mathematical morphology and binary mathematical morphology, but such conversion into binary operators also reduces the computation. Finally, also the reverse problem is tackled, i.e., the construction of interval-valued morphological operators from the binary ones. Using the results from a more general study in which the construction of an interval-valued fuzzy set from a nested family of crisp sets is constructed, increasing binary operators (e.g. the binary dilation) are extended to interval-valued fuzzy operators

    Queues with dedicated servers and global first-come-first-served scheduling

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    Influence of relative traffic distribution in nodes with blocking: an analytical model

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    In nodes where the arriving packets are stored in one common buffer, packets with a given destination may have to wait for the transmission of packets with other destinations, even when the corresponding output channel is free. Although this so-called blocking effect has attracted considerable attention in literature, the influence of the relative distribution of the traffic according to destination has been largely overlooked. We therefore develop and analyze an appropriate discrete-time queueing model for a node whereby all arriving packets are accommodated in one common buffer and with two output channels that lead to distinct destinations. We study the stability of and the number of packets in the node. We then compare these results with those obtained for an analogous node with individual buffers for the distinct output channels. We demonstrate that the relative distribution of the traffic according to destination can have a major impact on the blocking effect and hence on the overall performance of the node

    Interval-valued and intuitionistic fuzzy mathematical morphologies as special cases of L-fuzzy mathematical morphology

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    Mathematical morphology (MM) offers a wide range of tools for image processing and computer vision. MM was originally conceived for the processing of binary images and later extended to gray-scale morphology. Extensions of classical binary morphology to gray-scale morphology include approaches based on fuzzy set theory that give rise to fuzzy mathematical morphology (FMM). From a mathematical point of view, FMM relies on the fact that the class of all fuzzy sets over a certain universe forms a complete lattice. Recall that complete lattices provide for the most general framework in which MM can be conducted. The concept of L-fuzzy set generalizes not only the concept of fuzzy set but also the concepts of interval-valued fuzzy set and Atanassov’s intuitionistic fuzzy set. In addition, the class of L-fuzzy sets forms a complete lattice whenever the underlying set L constitutes a complete lattice. Based on these observations, we develop a general approach towards L-fuzzy mathematical morphology in this paper. Our focus is in particular on the construction of connectives for interval-valued and intuitionistic fuzzy mathematical morphologies that arise as special, isomorphic cases of L-fuzzy MM. As an application of these ideas, we generate a combination of some well-known medical image reconstruction techniques in terms of interval-valued fuzzy image processing

    A two-class queueing model with class clustering and global FCFS service discipline

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    This paper considers a continuous-time queueing model with two types (classes) of customers each having their own dedicated server with exponential service times. The system adopts a "global FCFS" service discipline, i.e., all arriving customers are accommodated in one single FCFS queue, regardless of their types. "Class clustering" ,i.e., customers of any given type may (or may not) have a tendency to "arrive back-to-back", is a concept that we believe is often neglected in literature, but as it is clear that customers of different types hinder each other more as they tend to arrive in the system more clustered according to class in our system, the major aim of this paper is to estimate the impact of the degree of class clustering in our system. The motivation of our work are systems where this kind of blocking is encountered, such as input-queueing network switches or road splits

    Effect of global FCFS and relative load distribution in two-class queues with dedicated servers

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    In this paper, we investigate multi-class multi-server queueing systems with global FCFS policy, i.e., where customers requiring different types of service— provided by distinct servers— are accommodated in one common FCFS queue. In such scenarios, customers of one class (i.e., requiring a given type of service) may be hindered by customers of other classes. The purpose of this paper is twofold: to gain (qualitative and quantitative) insight into the impact of (i) the global FCFS policy and (ii) the relative distribution of the load amongst the customer classes, on the system performance. We therefore develop and analyze an appropriate discrete-time queueing model with general independent arrivals, two (independent) customer classes and two class-specific servers.We study the stability of the system and derive the system-content distribution at random slot boundaries; we also obtain mean values of the system content and the customer delay, both globally and for each class individually. We then extensively compare these results with those obtained for an analogous system without global FCFS policy (i.e., with individual queues for the two servers). We demonstrate that global FCFS, as well as the relative distribution of the load over the two customer classes, may have a major impact on the system performance
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