3 research outputs found

    Detection and classification of buried dielectric anomalies using a separated aperture sensor and a neural network discriminator

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    Includes bibliographical references.The problem of detection and classification of buried dielectric anomalies using a separated aperture microwave sensor and an artificial neural network discriminator was considered. Several methods for training and data representation were developed to study the trainability and generalization capabilities of the networks. The effect of the architectural variation on the network performance was also studied. The principal component method was used to reduce the volume of the data and also the dimension of the weight space. Simulation results on two types of targets were obtained which indicated superior detection and classification performance when compared with the conventional methods

    Recursive dynamic node creation in multilayer neural networks

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    Includes bibliographical references.This paper presents the derivations of a novel approach for simultaneous recursive weight adaptation and node creation in multilayer back-propagation neural networks. The method uses time and order update formulations in the orthogonal projection method to derive a recursive weight updating procedure for the training process of the neural network and a recursive node creation algorithm for weight adjustment of a layer with added nodes during the training process. The proposed approach allows optimal dynamic node creation in the sense that the mean-squared error is minimized for each new topology. The effectiveness of the algorithm is demonstrated on several benchmark problems, namely, the multiplexer and the decoder problems as well as a real world application for detection and classification of buried dielectric anomalies using a microwave sensor

    Adaptable connectionist text-retrieval system with relevance feedback, An

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    Includes bibliographical references.This paper introduces a new connectionist network for certain domain-specific text-retrieval and search applications with expert end users. A new model reference adaptive system is proposed that involves three learning phases. Initial model-reference learning is first performed based upon an ensemble set of input-output of an initial reference model. Model-reference following is needed in dynamic environments where documents are added, deleted, or updated. Relevance feedback learning from multiple expert users then optimally maps the original query using either a score-based or a click-through selection process. The learning can be implemented, in regression or classification modes, using a three-layer network. The first layer is an adaptable layer that performs mapping from query domain to document space. The second and third layers perform document-to-term mapping, search/retrieval, and scoring tasks. The learning algorithms are thoroughly tested on a domain-specific text database that encompasses a wide range of Hewlett Packard (HP) products and for a large number of most commonly used single- and multiterm queries.This work was supported by the Hewlett Packard, Boise, ID management and business teams under Contract 50B000553
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