73,337 research outputs found
Technical Materials for an Inteview-Survey of the Aging
Contains materials for an inteview-survey of aging persons and housing design
Privacy-Preserving Facial Recognition Using Biometric-Capsules
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI)In recent years, developers have used the proliferation of biometric sensors in smart devices, along with recent advances in deep learning, to implement an array of biometrics-based recognition systems. Though these systems demonstrate remarkable performance and have seen wide acceptance, they present unique and pressing security and privacy concerns. One proposed method which addresses these concerns is the elegant, fusion-based Biometric-Capsule (BC) scheme. The BC scheme is provably secure, privacy-preserving, cancellable and interoperable in its secure feature fusion design.
In this work, we demonstrate that the BC scheme is uniquely fit to secure state-of-the-art facial verification, authentication and identification systems. We compare the performance of unsecured, underlying biometrics systems to the performance of the BC-embedded systems in order to directly demonstrate the minimal effects of the privacy-preserving BC scheme on underlying system performance. Notably, we demonstrate that, when seamlessly embedded into a state-of-the-art FaceNet and ArcFace verification systems which achieve accuracies of 97.18% and 99.75% on the benchmark LFW dataset, the BC-embedded systems are able to achieve accuracies of 95.13% and 99.13% respectively. Furthermore, we also demonstrate that the BC scheme outperforms or performs as well as several other proposed secure biometric methods
File card marker Patent
Describing device for flagging punched business card
Wave drag as the objective function in transonic fighter wing optimization
The original computational method for determining wave drag in a three dimensional transonic analysis method was replaced by a wave drag formula based on the loss in momentum across an isentropic shock. This formula was used as the objective function in a numerical optimization procedure to reduce the wave drag of a fighter wing at transonic maneuver conditions. The optimization procedure minimized wave drag through modifications to the wing section contours defined by a wing profile shape function. A significant reduction in wave drag was achieved while maintaining a high lift coefficient. Comparisons of the pressure distributions for the initial and optimized wing geometries showed significant reductions in the leading-edge peaks and shock strength across the span
Why do people live apart together?
Interpretations of living apart together (LAT) have typically counter-posed 'new family form' versus 'continuist' perspectives. Recent surveys, however, construct LAT as a heterogeneous category that supports a 'qualified continuist' position – most people live apart as a response to practical circumstances or as a modern version of 'boy/girlfriend', although a minority represents something new in preferring to live apart more permanently. This article interrogates this conclusion by examining in depth why people live apart together, using a nationally representative survey from Britain and interview accounts from 2011. Our analysis shows that LAT as a category contains different sorts of relationship, with different needs and desires. While overall coupledom remains pivotal and cohabitation remains the goal for most, LAT allows people flexibility and room to manoeuvre in adapting couple intimacy to the demands of contemporary life. Hence, we suggest, LAT is both 'new' and a 'continuation'
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Plastic compression of collagen: development and assessment of a new biomaterial in nerve repair
Nerve reconstruction is a surgical challenge. Current neural conduits provide sub-optimal clinical results. We have developed a device from a composite material comprising a fibronectin core and a collagen outer layer, using collagen made by a new technique called plastic compression. This collagen element has the strength to improve the mechanical properties of nerve repair devices which is an important design consideration. Preliminary studies have been performed to assess the suitability of the new collagen material for use in nerve repair conduits
A covariant gauge-invariant three-dimensional description of relativistic bound-states
A formalism is presented which allows covariant three-dimensional bound-state
equations to be derived systematically from four-dimensional ones without the
use of delta-functions. The amplitude for the interaction of a bound state
described by these equations with an electromagnetic probe is constructed. This
amplitude is shown to be gauge invariant if the formalism is truncated at the
same coupling-constant order in both the interaction kernel of the integral
equation and the electromagnetic current operator.Comment: 17 pages, RevTeX, uses BoxedEPS.te
Solving Tree Problems with Category Theory
Artificial Intelligence (AI) has long pursued models, theories, and
techniques to imbue machines with human-like general intelligence. Yet even the
currently predominant data-driven approaches in AI seem to be lacking humans'
unique ability to solve wide ranges of problems. This situation begs the
question of the existence of principles that underlie general problem-solving
capabilities. We approach this question through the mathematical formulation of
analogies across different problems and solutions. We focus in particular on
problems that could be represented as tree-like structures. Most importantly,
we adopt a category-theoretic approach in formalising tree problems as
categories, and in proving the existence of equivalences across apparently
unrelated problem domains. We prove the existence of a functor between the
category of tree problems and the category of solutions. We also provide a
weaker version of the functor by quantifying equivalences of problem categories
using a metric on tree problems.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures, International Conference on Artificial General
Intelligence (AGI) 201
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