106 research outputs found
BEV-MAE: Bird's Eye View Masked Autoencoders for Point Cloud Pre-training in Autonomous Driving Scenarios
Existing LiDAR-based 3D object detection methods for autonomous driving
scenarios mainly adopt the training-from-scratch paradigm. Unfortunately, this
paradigm heavily relies on large-scale labeled data, whose collection can be
expensive and time-consuming. Self-supervised pre-training is an effective and
desirable way to alleviate this dependence on extensive annotated data. In this
work, we present BEV-MAE, an efficient masked autoencoder pre-training
framework for LiDAR-based 3D object detection in autonomous driving.
Specifically, we propose a bird's eye view (BEV) guided masking strategy to
guide the 3D encoder learning feature representation in a BEV perspective and
avoid complex decoder design during pre-training. Furthermore, we introduce a
learnable point token to maintain a consistent receptive field size of the 3D
encoder with fine-tuning for masked point cloud inputs. Based on the property
of outdoor point clouds in autonomous driving scenarios, i.e., the point clouds
of distant objects are more sparse, we propose point density prediction to
enable the 3D encoder to learn location information, which is essential for
object detection. Experimental results show that BEV-MAE surpasses prior
state-of-the-art self-supervised methods and achieves a favorably pre-training
efficiency. Furthermore, based on TransFusion-L, BEV-MAE achieves new
state-of-the-art LiDAR-based 3D object detection results, with 73.6 NDS and
69.6 mAP on the nuScenes benchmark. The source code will be released at
https://github.com/VDIGPKU/BEV-MAEComment: Accepted at AAAI 202
Morin Protects Channel Catfish From Aeromonas hydrophila Infection by Blocking Aerolysin Activity
Aeromonas hydrophila (A. hydrophila) is an opportunistic bacterial pathogen widely distributed in the environments, particular aquatic environment. The pathogen can cause a range of infections in both human and animals including fishes. However, the application of antibiotics in treatment of A. hydrophila infections leads to the emergence of resistant strains. Consequently, new approaches need to be developed in fighting this pathogen. Aerolysin, the chief virulence factor produced by pathogenic A. hydrophila strains has been employed as target identifying new drugs. In our present study, we found that morin, a flavonoid without anti-bacterial activity isolated from traditional Chinese medicine, could directly inhibit the hemolytic activity of aerolysin. To determine the binding sites and the action of mechanism of morin against AerA, several assays were performed. Ser36, Pro347, and Arg356 were identified as the main binding sites affecting the conformation of AerA and resulted in block of the heptameric formation. Moreover, morin could protect Vero cells from cell injury mediated by aerolysin. In vivo study showed that morin could provide a protection to channel catfish against A. hydrophila infection. These results demonstrated that morin could be developed as a promising candidate for the treatment of A. hydrophila infections by decreasing the pathogenesis of A. hydrophila
Laser Induced Titanium and Tungsten Coating on 304 Stainless Steel Surfaces for Wear Resistant Improvement
Laser cladding is a tmenkind of surface treat technology with good prospects for application. By using laser cladding technology, the influence of 304 stainless steel cladding layer on its hardness and wear resistance was explored. This paper studied on different Ti and W ratio of the content of coating on 304 stainless steel. The micro-hardness and wear resistance were compared before and after the coating on the materials. The results represent that the wear property of some cladding layers was improved, which provides some theoretical references for the preparation of composite cladding reinforced of stainless steel surfaces
Transport of intense ion beams in plasmas: collimation and energy-loss reduction
We compare the transport properties of a well-characterized hydrogen plasma
for low and high current ion beams. The energy-loss of low current beams can be
well understood, within the framework of current stopping power models.
However, for high current proton beams, significant energy-loss reduction and
collimation is observed in the experiment. We have developed a new
particle-in-cell code, which includes both collective electromagnetic effects
and collisional interactions. Our simulations indicate that resistive magnetic
fields, induced by the transport of an intense proton beam, act to collimate
the proton beam and simultaneously deplete the local plasma density along the
beam path. This in turn causes the energy-loss reduction detected in the
experiment
Anomalous stopping of laser-accelerated intense proton beam in dense ionized matter
Ultrahigh-intensity lasers (10-10W/cm) have opened up new
perspectives in many fields of research and application [1-5]. By irradiating a
thin foil, an ultrahigh accelerating field (10 V/m) can be formed and
multi-MeV ions with unprecedentedly high intensity (10A/cm) in short
time scale (ps) are produced [6-14]. Such beams provide new options in
radiography [15], high-yield neutron sources [16], high-energy-density-matter
generation [17], and ion fast ignition [18,19]. An accurate understanding of
the nonlinear behavior of beam transport in matter is crucial for all these
applications. We report here the first experimental evidence of anomalous
stopping of a laser-generated high-current proton beam in well-characterized
dense ionized matter. The observed stopping power is one order of magnitude
higher than single-particle slowing-down theory predictions. We attribute this
phenomenon to collective effects where the intense beam drives an decelerating
electric field approaching 1GV/m in the dense ionized matter. This finding will
have considerable impact on the future path to inertial fusion energy.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figure
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