1,814 research outputs found

    Visual Servoing from Deep Neural Networks

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    We present a deep neural network-based method to perform high-precision, robust and real-time 6 DOF visual servoing. The paper describes how to create a dataset simulating various perturbations (occlusions and lighting conditions) from a single real-world image of the scene. A convolutional neural network is fine-tuned using this dataset to estimate the relative pose between two images of the same scene. The output of the network is then employed in a visual servoing control scheme. The method converges robustly even in difficult real-world settings with strong lighting variations and occlusions.A positioning error of less than one millimeter is obtained in experiments with a 6 DOF robot.Comment: fixed authors lis

    Visual Servoing using the Sum of Conditional Variance

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    International audienceIn this paper we propose a new way to achieve direct visual servoing. The novelty is the use of the sum of conditional variance to realize the optimization process of a positioning task. This measure, which has previously been used successfully in the case of visual tracking, has been shown to be invariant to non-linear illumination variations and inexpensive to compute. Compared to other direct approaches of visual servoing, it is a good compromise between techniques using the illumination of pixels which are computationally inexpensive but non robust to illumination variations and other approaches using the mutual information which are more complicated to compute but offer more robustness towards the variations of the scene. This method results in a direct visual servoing task easy and fast to compute and robust towards non-linear illumination variations. This paper describes a visual servoing task based on the sum of conditional variance performed using a Levenberg-Marquardt optimization process. The results are then demonstrated through experimental validations and compared to both photometric-based and entropy-based techniques

    Dense non-rigid visual tracking with a robust similarity function

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    International audienceThis paper deals with dense non-rigid visual tracking robust towards global illumination perturbations of the observed scene. The similarity function is based on the sum of condi- tional variance (SCV). With respect to most approaches that minimize the sum of squared differences, which is poorly robust towards illumination variations in the scene, the choice of SCV as our registration function allows the approach to be naturally robust towards global perturbations. Moreover, a thin-plate spline warping function is considered in order to take into account deformations of the observed template. The proposed approach, after being detailed, is tested in nominal conditions and on scenes where light perturbations occur in order to assess the robustness of the approach

    Synthetic Transaural Audio Rendering (STAR): a Perceptive Approach for Sound Spatialization

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    International audienceThe principles of Synthetic Transaural Audio Rendering (STAR) were first introduced at DAFx-06. This is a perceptive approach for sound spatialization, whereas state-of-the-art methods are rather physical. With our STAR method, we focus neither on the wave field (such as HOA) nor on the sound wave (such as VBAP), but rather on the acoustic paths traveled by the sound to the listener ears. The STAR method consists in canceling the cross-talk signals between two loudspeakers and the ears of the listener (in a transaural way), with acoustic paths not measured but computed by some model (thus synthetic). Our model is based on perceptive cues, used by the human auditory system for sound localization. The aim is to give the listener the sensation of the position of each source, and not to reconstruct the corresponding acoustic wave or field. This should work with various loudspeaker configurations, with a large sweet spot, since the model is neither specialized for a specific configuration nor individualized for a specific listener. Experimental tests have been conducted in 2015 and 2019 with different rooms and audiences, for still, moving, and polyphonic musical sounds. It turns out that the proposed method is competitive with the state-of-the-art ones. However, this is a work in progress and further work is needed to improve the quality

    Coupled oxidation–reduction of butanol–hexanal by resting Rhodococcus erythropolis NCIMB 13064 cells in liquid and gas phases

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    Rhodococcus erythropolis is a promising Gram-positive bacterium capable of numerous bioconversions including those involving alcohol dehydrogenases (ADHs). In this work, we compared and optimized the redox biocatalytic performances of 1-butanol-grown R. erythropolis NCIMB 13064 cells in aqueous and in non-conventional gas phase using the 1-butanol–hexanal oxidation–reduction as model reaction. Oxidation of 1-butanol to butanal is tightly coupled to the reduction of hexanal to 1-hexanol at the level of a nicotinoprotein–ADH-like enzyme. Cell viability is dispensable for reaction. In aqueous batch conditions, fresh and lyophilized cells are efficient redox catalysts (oxidation–reduction rate = 76 micromol min−1 g cell dry mass−1) being also reactive towards benzyl alcohol, (S)-2-pentanol, and geraniol as reductants. However, butanol hexanal oxidation–reduction is strongly limited by product accumulation and by hexanal toxicity that is amajor factor influencing cell behavior and performance. Reaction rate is maximal at 40 ◩C pH 7.0 in aqueous phase and at 60 ◩C- pH 7.0–9.0 in gas phase. Importantly, lyophilized cells also showed to be promising redox catalysts in the gas phase (at least 65 micromol min−1 g cell dry mass−1). The system is notably stable for several days at moderate thermodynamic activities of hexanal (0.06–0.12), 1-butanol (0.12) and water (0.7)

    Idiopathic chronic eosinophilic pneumonia

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    Idiopathic chronic eosinophilic pneumonia (ICEP) is characterized by subacute or chronic respiratory and general symptoms, alveolar and/or blood eosinophilia, and peripheral pulmonary infiltrates on chest imaging. Eosinophilia is present in most cases, usually in excess of 1000/mm(3). In absence of significant blood eosinophilia, a diagnosis of ICEP is supported by the demonstration of bronchoalveolar lavage eosinophilia. ICEP is typically associated with eosinophil counts higher than lymphocyte counts in the bronchoalveolar lavage. ICEP is a rare disorder of unknown cause. Its exact prevalence remains unknown. ICEP may affect every age group but is rare in childhood. It is twice as frequent in women as in men. One third to one half of the ICEP patients have a history of asthma. The mainstay of treatment of ICEP is systemic corticosteroids. Response to oral corticosteroid therapy is dramatic and has led to the consideration of corticosteroid challenge as a diagnostic test for ICEP. Nevertheless, relapses or development of severe asthma are frequent when tapering or withdrawing treatment. Long-term oral corticosteroid therapy is necessary in up to half of the patients
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