641 research outputs found

    Using Content Analysis for Video Compression

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    This paper suggests the idea to model video information as a concatenation of different recurring sources. For each source a different tailored compressed representation can be optimally designed so as to best match the intrinsic characteristics of the viewed scene. Since in a video, a shot or scene with similar visual content recurs more than once, even at distant intervals in time, this enables to build a more compact representation of information. In a specific implementation of this idea, we suggest a content-based approach to structure video sequences into hierarchical summaries, and have each such summary represented by a tailored set of dictionaries of codewords. Vector quantization techniques, formerly employed for compression purposes only, have been here used first to represent the visual content of video shots and then to exploit visual-content redundancy inside the video. The depth in the hierarchy determines the precision in the representation both from a structural point of view and from a quality level in reproducing the video sequence. The effectiveness of the proposed method is demonstrated by preliminary tests performed on a limited collection of video-data excerpted from a feature movie. Some additional functionalities such as video skimming may remarkably benefit from this type of representation

    Polymeric Ablation Induced by Free Burning Arcs in Air

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    We investigate the influence of switching arcs on different polymers and their interaction. We describe a set of experiments on a simplified model geometry typical for low voltage switchgear. In a broad range of experimental conditions and parameters such as arc current, polymeric material or contact material, the voltage, the mass loss and the corresponding pressure build-up are examined. From this raw data, we deduce the arc influence on the ablation process as well as the feedback on some arc plasma properties

    Cavity QED with separate photon storage and qubit readout modes

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    We present the realization of a cavity quantum electrodynamics setup in which photons of strongly different lifetimes are engineered in different harmonic modes of the same cavity. We achieve this in a superconducting transmission line resonator with superconducting qubits coupled to the different modes. One cavity mode is strongly coupled to a detection line for qubit state readout, while a second long lifetime mode is used for photon storage and coherent quantum operations. We demonstrate sideband based measurement of photon coherence, generation of n photon Fock states and the scaling of the sideband Rabi frequency with the square root of n using a scheme that may be extended to realize sideband based two-qubit logic gates.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, version with high resolution figures available at http://qudev.ethz.ch/content/science/PubsPapers.htm

    Extraction of Significant Video Summaries by Dendrogram Analysis

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    In the current video analysis scenario, effective clustering of shots facilitates the access to the content and helps in understanding the associated semantics. This paper introduces a cluster analysis on shots which employs dendrogram representation to produce hierarchical summaries of the video document. Vector quantization codebooks are used to represent the visual content and to group the shots with similar chromatic consistency. The evaluation of the cluster codebook distortions, and the exploitation of the dependency relationships on the dendrograms, allow to obtain only a few significant summaries of the whole video. Finally the user can navigate through summaries and decide which one best suites his/her needs for eventual post-processing. The effectiveness of the proposed method is demonstrated by testing it on a collection of video-data from different kinds of programmes. Results are evaluated in terms of metrics that measure the content representational value of the summarization technique

    Video Shot Clustering and Summarization through dendrograms

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    In the context of analysis of video documents, effective clustering of shots facilitates the access to the content and helps in understanding the associated semantics. This paper introduces a cluster analysis on video shots which employs dendrogram representation to produce hierarchical summaries of the video document. Vector quantization codebooks are used to represent the visual content and to group the shots with similar chromatic consistency. The evaluation of the cluster codebook distortions, and the exploitation of the dependency relationships on the dendrogram, allow to obtain only a few significant summaries of the whole video. Finally the user can navigate through summaries and decide which one best suites his/her needs for eventual post processing. The effectiveness of the proposed method is demonstrated, on a collection of different video programmes, in term of metrics that measure the content representational value of the summarization technique

    Hierarchical Video Summaries by Dendrogram Cluster Analysis

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    In the current video analysis scenario, effective summarization of video sequences through shot clustering facilitates the access to the content and helps in understanding the associated semantics. This paper introduces a generic scheme to produce hierarchical summaries of the video document starting from a dendrogram representation of clusters of shots. The evaluation of the cluster distortions, and the exploitation of the dependency relationships between clusters on the dendrograms, allow to obtain only a few semantically significant summaries of the whole video. Finally the user can navigate through summaries and decide which one best suites his/her needs for eventual post-processing. The effectiveness of the proposed method is demonstrated by testing it on a collection of video-data from different kinds of programmes, using and comparing different visual features on color information. Results are evaluated in terms of metrics that measure the content representational value of the summarization technique

    Arc Simulation in Low Voltage Switching Devices, a Case Study

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    Arc simulations are becoming a valuable tool in the development of low voltage switching devices. Sim-ulations reveal physical quantities that are experimentally not accessible and help in the investigation of the underlying phenomena. However, the strong interaction between different processes and the intrinsic multi-scale nature of the problem, both in time and space, pose great challenges to accurate and efficient simulations. At ABB Corporate Research, we developed a simulation tool capable of simulating the be-havior of low voltage switchgear. To verify the accuracy and predictive capability of our platform, we validate the simulations by comparing their results with available experimental findings. After describing the tool, we provide here evidence of the good agreement between measured and simulated data on several commercial ABB devices
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