511 research outputs found
Reconstructing conductivities with boundary corrected D-bar method
The aim of electrical impedance tomography is to form an image of the
conductivity distribution inside an unknown body using electric boundary
measurements. The computation of the image from measurement data is a
non-linear ill-posed inverse problem and calls for a special regularized
algorithm. One such algorithm, the so-called D-bar method, is improved in this
work by introducing new computational steps that remove the so far necessary
requirement that the conductivity should be constant near the boundary. The
numerical experiments presented suggest two conclusions. First, for most
conductivities arising in medical imaging, it seems the previous approach of
using a best possible constant near the boundary is sufficient. Second, for
conductivities that have high contrast features at the boundary, the new
approach produces reconstructions with smaller quantitative error and with
better visual quality
Positive-energy D-bar method for acoustic tomography: a computational study
A new computational method for reconstructing a potential from the
Dirichlet-to-Neumann map at positive energy is developed. The method is based
on D-bar techniques and it works in absence of exceptional points -- in
particular, if the potential is small enough compared to the energy. Numerical
tests reveal exceptional points for perturbed, radial potentials.
Reconstructions for several potentials are computed using simulated
Dirichlet-to-Neumann maps with and without added noise. The new reconstruction
method is shown to work well for energy values between and ,
smaller values giving better results
Co-designing the knowledge management model
This work-in-progress study reviews co-designing processes through the lens of possibility-driven design (PDD). A knowledge management model (KMM) is co-designed by facilitating the development work of senior and regional innovation actors who share ideas, experience and information in the development of smart products and services for an age-friendly smart living environment. The empirical part is divided into three stages: an orientation workshop, two panel meetings and three co-design and validation workshops where an appropriate knowledge management model is co-designed through iteration rounds. The first stage maps the regional innovation actors, relevant organisations in the region and data flows between all the parties. Ideas of suitable ways to manage knowledge are gathered from the panel meetings of the second stage and are methodologically supported by the strategic options development and analysis (SODA) approach. At the time of writing this paper, the third stage consisting of three workshops with appropriate iteration rounds is on-going. The findings of the study provide insights regarding the use of PDD activities with an inclusion of the SODA approach when facilitating the co-design of a KMM with a multi-professional group of experts. The study contributes to the theory of PDD by integrating systematic methodological aspects to it when working on complex problems.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
Quantification of uncertainty in aerosol optical thickness retrieval arising from aerosol microphysical model and other sources, applied to Ozone Monitoring Instrument (OMI) measurements
Satellite instruments are nowadays successfully utilised for measuring
atmospheric aerosol in many applications as well as in research. Therefore,
there is a growing need for rigorous error characterisation of the
measurements. Here, we introduce a methodology for quantifying the
uncertainty in the retrieval of aerosol optical thickness (AOT). In
particular, we concentrate on two aspects: uncertainty due to aerosol
microphysical model selection and uncertainty due to imperfect forward
modelling. We apply the introduced methodology for aerosol optical thickness
retrieval of the Ozone Monitoring Instrument (OMI) on board NASA's Earth
Observing System (EOS) Aura satellite, launched in 2004. We apply statistical
methodologies that improve the uncertainty estimates of the aerosol optical
thickness retrieval by propagating aerosol microphysical model selection and
forward model error more realistically. For the microphysical model selection
problem, we utilise Bayesian model selection and model averaging methods.
Gaussian processes are utilised to characterise the smooth systematic
discrepancies between the measured and modelled reflectances (i.e.
residuals). The spectral correlation is composed empirically by exploring a
set of residuals. The operational OMI multi-wavelength aerosol retrieval
algorithm OMAERO is used for cloud-free, over-land pixels of the OMI
instrument with the additional Bayesian model selection and model discrepancy
techniques introduced here. The method and improved uncertainty
characterisation is demonstrated by several examples with different aerosol
properties: weakly absorbing aerosols, forest fires over Greece and Russia,
and Sahara desert dust. The statistical methodology presented is general; it
is not restricted to this particular satellite retrieval application
mm-Wave DRW Antenna Phase Centre Determination
This document presents an approach to the phase centre determination of a dielectric rod waveguide (DRW) antenna by means of measurements obtained with a planar measuring system at millimeter wave lengths. Phase centre determination by the least squares fit technique is described in this document for different DRW antennas (silicon and sapphire). Results at different operating frequencies are offered
The impact of sleep on eyewitness identifications.
Published by the Royal Society under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/, which permits unrestricted use, provided the original author and source are credited.Peer reviewe
The impact of sleep on eyewitness identifications
Published by the Royal Society under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/, which permits unrestricted use, provided the original author and source are credited.Peer reviewe
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