322 research outputs found

    Curve segmentation using directional information, relation to pattern detection

    Get PDF
    ©2005 IEEE. Personal use of this material is permitted. However, permission to reprint/republish this material for advertising or promotional purposes or for creating new collective works for resale or distribution to servers or lists, or to reuse any copyrighted component of this work in other works must be obtained from the IEEE. This material is presented to ensure timely dissemination of scholarly and technical work. Copyright and all rights therein are retained by authors or by other copyright holders. All persons copying this information are expected to adhere to the terms and constraints invoked by each author's copyright. In most cases, these works may not be reposted without the explicit permission of the copyright holder.Presented at the 2005 International Conference on Image Processing (ICIP)September 11-14, 2005, Genova, Italy.DOI: 10.1109/ICIP.2005.1530175We propose an extension of the conformal (or geodesic) active contour framework in which the conformal factor depends not only on the position of the curve but also on the direction of its tangent. We describe several properties for variational curve segmentation schemes that justify the construction of optimal conformal factors (i.e., learning) in strong connection with pattern matching. The determination of optimal curves (i.e., segmentation) can be performed using either the calculus of variations or dynamic programming. The technique is illustrated on a road detection problem for different signal to noise ratios

    Finsler Active Contours

    Get PDF
    ©2008 IEEE. Personal use of this material is permitted. However, permission to reprint/republish this material for advertising or promotional purposes or for creating new collective works for resale or distribution to servers or lists, or to reuse any copyrighted component of this work in other works must be obtained from the IEEE. This material is presented to ensure timely dissemination of scholarly and technical work. Copyright and all rights therein are retained by authors or by other copyright holders. All persons copying this information are expected to adhere to the terms and constraints invoked by each author's copyright. In most cases, these works may not be reposted without the explicit permission of the copyright holder.DOI: 10.1109/TPAMI.2007.70713In this paper, we propose an image segmentation technique based on augmenting the conformal (or geodesic) active contour framework with directional information. In the isotropic case, the euclidean metric is locally multiplied by a scalar conformal factor based on image information such that the weighted length of curves lying on points of interest (typically edges) is small. The conformal factor that is chosen depends only upon position and is in this sense isotropic. Although directional information has been studied previously for other segmentation frameworks, here, we show that if one desires to add directionality in the conformal active contour framework, then one gets a well-defined minimization problem in the case that the factor defines a Finsler metric. Optimal curves may be obtained using the calculus of variations or dynamic programming-based schemes. Finally, we demonstrate the technique by extracting roads from aerial imagery, blood vessels from medical angiograms, and neural tracts from diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imagery

    Estimating major merger rates and spin parameters ab initio via the clustering of critical events

    Full text link
    We build a model to predict from first principles the properties of major mergers. We predict these from the coalescence of peaks and saddle points in the vicinity of a given larger peak, as one increases the smoothing scale in the initial linear density field as a proxy for cosmic time. To refine our results, we also ensure, using a suite of ∼400\sim 400 power-law Gaussian random fields smoothed at ∼30\sim 30 different scales, that the relevant peaks and saddles are topologically connected: they should belong to a persistent pair before coalescence. Our model allows us to (a) compute the probability distribution function of the satellite-merger separation in Lagrangian space: they peak at three times the smoothing scale; (b) predict the distribution of the number of mergers as a function of peak rarity: halos typically undergo two major mergers (>>1:10) per decade of mass growth; (c) recover that the typical spin brought by mergers: it is of the order of a few tens of per cent.Comment: 11 pages, submitted to MNRAS; comments welcom

    Effective homology and periods of complex projective hypersurfaces

    Full text link
    We provide an algorithm to compute an effective description of the homology of complex projective hypersurfaces relying on Picard-Lefschetz theory. Next, we use this description to compute high-precision numerical approximations of the periods of the hypersurface. This is an improvement over existing algorithms as this new method allows for the computation of periods of smooth quartic surfaces in an hour on a laptop, which could not be attained with previous methods. The general theory presented in this paper can be generalised to varieties other than just hypersurfaces, such as elliptic fibrations as showcased on an example coming from Feynman graphs. Our algorithm comes with a SageMath implementation.Comment: 35 page

    Intraspecific trait changes have large impacts on community functional composition but do not affect ecosystem function

    Get PDF
    Publisher Copyright: © 2021 The Authors. Journal of Ecology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of British Ecological Society.Plant functional traits can provide a mechanistic understanding of community responses to global change and of community effects on ecosystem functions. Nitrogen enrichment typically shifts trait composition by promoting the dominance of acquisitive plants (high specific leaf area [SLA] and low leaf dry matter content [LDMC]), translating into high biomass production. Changes in mean trait values can be due to shifts in species identity, relative abundances and/or intraspecific trait values. However, we do not know the relative importance of these shifts in determining trait responses to environmental changes, or trait effects on ecosystem functioning, such as biomass production. We quantified the relative importance of species composition, abundance and intraspecific shifts in driving variation in SLA and LDMC, and how these shifts affected above- and below-ground biomass. We measured traits in a grassland experiment manipulating nitrogen fertilisation, plant species richness, foliar fungal pathogen removal and sown functional composition (slow vs. fast species). We fitted structural equation models to test the importance of abundance and intraspecific shifts in determining (a) responses of functional composition to treatments and (b) effects on above- and below-ground biomass. We found that species intraspecific shifts were as important as abundance shifts in determining the overall change in functional composition (community weighted mean trait values), and even had large effects compared to substantial initial variation in sown trait composition. Intraspecific trait shifts resulted in convergence towards intermediate SLA in diverse communities; although convergence was reduced by nitrogen addition and enhanced by pathogen removal. In contrast, large intraspecific shifts in LDMC were not influenced by the treatments. However, despite large responses, intraspecific trait shifts had no effect on above- or below-ground biomass. Only interspecific trait variation affected functioning: below-ground biomass was reduced by SLA and increased by LDMC, while above-ground biomass was increased by SLA. Synthesis. Our results add to a growing body of literature showing large intraspecific trait variation and emphasise the importance of using field collected data to determine community functional composition. However, they also show that intraspecific variation does not necessarily affect ecosystem functioning and therefore response–effect trait relationships may differ between versus within species.Peer reviewe

    Une transformation pédagogique et numérique pour susciter engagement et motivation : exemple d’un cours à l’université

    Get PDF
    Cet article met en lumière l’évolution d’un cours à partir des constats réalisés par l’enseignant, de ses besoins vis-à-vis de sa manière d’enseigner et des effets qu’il souhaite induire chez les étudiant(e)s. Cette évolution fait part d’une transformation pédagogique et numérique d’un enseignement traditionnel CM/TD/TP (Cours Magistral, Travaux dirigés, Travaux pratiques) en un enseignement-apprentissage hybride couplé à un apprentissage par projet. L’objectif pour l’enseignant et la conseillère pédagogique accompagnant ce changement est de rendre les étudiants acteurs de leurs apprentissages, c'est-à-dire de les amener à prendre part activement aux apprentissages visés et de les rendre responsables des actions qu’ils entreprennent pour apprendre. Cet objectif est recherché afin de susciter motivation et engagement en formation pour les étudiants et de retrouver du plaisir à enseigner pour l’enseignant

    Partitioning the effects of plant diversity on ecosystem functions at different trophic levels

    Get PDF
    Biodiversity effects on ecosystem functioning can be partitioned into complementarity effects, driven by many species, and selection effects, driven by few. Selection effects occur through interspecific abundance shifts (dominance) and intraspecific shifts in functioning. Complementarity and selection effects are often calculated for biomass, but very rarely for secondary productivity, i.e. energy transfer to higher trophic levels. We calculated diversity effects for three functions: aboveground biomass, insect herbivory and pathogen infection, the latter two as proxies for energy transfer to higher trophic levels, in a grassland experiment (PaNDiv) manipulating species richness, functional composition, nitrogen enrichment and fungicide treatment. Complementarity effects were on average positive and selection effects negative for biomass production and pathogen infection and multiple species contributed to diversity effects in mixtures. Diversity effects were on average less pronounced for herbivory. Diversity effects for the three functions were not correlated, because different species drove the different effects. Benefits (and costs) from growing in diverse communities, be it reduced herbivore or pathogen damage or increased productivity either due to abundance increases or increased productivity per area were distributed across different plant species, leading to highly variable contributions of single species to effects of diversity on different functions. These results show that different underlying ecological mechanisms can result in similar overall diversity effects across functions.Peer reviewe

    Frequencies analysis of the hybrid delta Sct-gamma Dor star CoRoT-102314644

    Full text link
    Observations from space missions have allowed significant progress in many scientific domains due to the absence of atmospheric noise contributions and having uninterrupted data sets. In the context of asteroseismology, this has been extremely beneficial because many oscillation frequencies with small amplitudes, not observable from the ground, can be detected. One example of this success is the large number of hybrid delta Sct-gamma Dor stars discovered. These stars have radial and non-radial p- and g-modes simultaneously excited to an observable level allowing us to probe both the external and near-to-core layers of the star. We analyse the light curve of hybrid delta Sct-gamma Dor star CoRoT ID 102314644 and characterise its frequency spectrum. We detected 29 gamma Dor type frequencies in the range [0.32-3.66] cycles per day (c/d) and a series of 6 equidistant periods with a mean period spacing of DeltaPi=1612 s. In the delta Sct domain we found 38 frequencies in the range 8.63-24.73 c/d and a quintuplet centred on the frequency p_1=11.39 c/d and derived a possible rotational period of 3.06 d. The frequency analysis of this object suggests the presence of spots at the stellar surface, nevertheless we could not dismiss the possibility of a binary system. The initial modelling of the frequency data along with external constraints has allowed us to refine its astrophysical parameters giving a mass of approximately 1.75 solar masses, a radius of 2.48 solar radii and an age of 1241 Myr. The observed period spacing, a p-mode quintuplet, the possible rotation period and the analysis of the individual frequencies provide important input constraints for the understanding of different transport phenomena in A-F-type stars.[abridged]Comment: version 1 June 2023, accepted A&

    Ocean-Atmosphere Application Scheduling within DIET

    Get PDF
    In this report, we tackle the problem of scheduling an Ocean-Atmosphere application in an heterogeneous environment. The application is used for long term climate forecast. In this context, we analyzed the execution of an experiment. An experiment is composed of several identical simulations composed of parallel tasks. On homogeneous platforms, we propose a heuristic and its optimizations, all based on the same idea: we divide the processors into disjoint sets, each group executing parallel tasks. On heterogeneous platforms the algorithm presented is applied on subsets of simulations. The computation of the subsets is done greedily and aims at minimizing the execution time by sending each subset on a cluster. We performed experiments on the french research grid \emph{Grid'5000} which exhibited some technical difficulties. We also present some modifications done to the heuristics to minimize the impact of these technical difficulties. Our simulations are then validated by experimentations

    Apprivoiser MoReq : pour archiver et conserver l’information

    Get PDF
    L’objectif de ce document, fondé sur la mise en commun d’expériences multiples, est de fournir à tout responsable d’un projet d’archivage électronique, quel que soit son profil (informaticien, archiviste, responsable métier, juriste…) un guide pratique des questions à poser et des actions à mener pour mettre en place un système cohérent, fiable et assimilable par l’ensemble des acteurs concernés, à l’appui d’une politique d’archivage de l’entreprise
    • …
    corecore