27 resultados para task-determined visual strategy
Resumo:
The origins for this work arise in response to the increasing need for biologists and doctors to obtain tools for visual analysis of data. When dealing with multidimensional data, such as medical data, the traditional data mining techniques can be a tedious and complex task, even to some medical experts. Therefore, it is necessary to develop useful visualization techniques that can complement the expert’s criterion, and at the same time visually stimulate and make easier the process of obtaining knowledge from a dataset. Thus, the process of interpretation and understanding of the data can be greatly enriched. Multidimensionality is inherent to any medical data, requiring a time-consuming effort to get a clinical useful outcome. Unfortunately, both clinicians and biologists are not trained in managing more than four dimensions. Specifically, we were aimed to design a 3D visual interface for gene profile analysis easy in order to be used both by medical and biologist experts. In this way, a new analysis method is proposed: MedVir. This is a simple and intuitive analysis mechanism based on the visualization of any multidimensional medical data in a three dimensional space that allows interaction with experts in order to collaborate and enrich this representation. In other words, MedVir makes a powerful reduction in data dimensionality in order to represent the original information into a three dimensional environment. The experts can interact with the data and draw conclusions in a visual and quickly way.
Resumo:
Autonomous aerial refueling is a key enabling technology for both manned and unmanned aircraft where extended flight duration or range are required. The results presented within this paper offer one potential vision-based sensing solution, together with a unique test environment. A hierarchical visual tracking algorithm based on direct methods is proposed and developed for the purposes of tracking a drogue during the capture stage of autonomous aerial refueling, and of estimating its 3D position. Intended to be applied in real time to a video stream from a single monocular camera mounted on the receiver aircraft, the algorithm is shown to be highly robust, and capable of tracking large, rapid drogue motions within the frame of reference. The proposed strategy has been tested using a complex robotic testbed and with actual flight hardware consisting of a full size probe and drogue. Results show that the vision tracking algorithm can detect and track the drogue at real-time frame rates of more than thirty frames per second, obtaining a robust position estimation even with strong motions and multiple occlusions of the drogue.
Resumo:
This work aims to develop a novel Cross-Entropy (CE) optimization-based fuzzy controller for Unmanned Aerial Monocular Vision-IMU System (UAMVIS) to solve the seeand- avoid problem using its accurate autonomous localization information. The function of this fuzzy controller is regulating the heading of this system to avoid the obstacle, e.g. wall. In the Matlab Simulink-based training stages, the Scaling Factor (SF) is adjusted according to the specified task firstly, and then the Membership Function (MF) is tuned based on the optimized Scaling Factor to further improve the collison avoidance performance. After obtained the optimal SF and MF, 64% of rules has been reduced (from 125 rules to 45 rules), and a large number of real flight tests with a quadcopter have been done. The experimental results show that this approach precisely navigates the system to avoid the obstacle. To our best knowledge, this is the first work to present the optimized fuzzy controller for UAMVIS using Cross-Entropy method in Scaling Factors and Membership Functions optimization.
Resumo:
Tradicionalmente, el uso de técnicas de análisis de datos ha sido una de las principales vías para el descubrimiento de conocimiento oculto en grandes cantidades de datos, recopilados por expertos en diferentes dominios. Por otra parte, las técnicas de visualización también se han usado para mejorar y facilitar este proceso. Sin embargo, existen limitaciones serias en la obtención de conocimiento, ya que suele ser un proceso lento, tedioso y en muchas ocasiones infructífero, debido a la dificultad de las personas para comprender conjuntos de datos de grandes dimensiones. Otro gran inconveniente, pocas veces tenido en cuenta por los expertos que analizan grandes conjuntos de datos, es la degradación involuntaria a la que someten a los datos durante las tareas de análisis, previas a la obtención final de conclusiones. Por degradación quiere decirse que los datos pueden perder sus propiedades originales, y suele producirse por una reducción inapropiada de los datos, alterando así su naturaleza original y llevando en muchos casos a interpretaciones y conclusiones erróneas que podrían tener serias implicaciones. Además, este hecho adquiere una importancia trascendental cuando los datos pertenecen al dominio médico o biológico, y la vida de diferentes personas depende de esta toma final de decisiones, en algunas ocasiones llevada a cabo de forma inapropiada. Ésta es la motivación de la presente tesis, la cual propone un nuevo framework visual, llamado MedVir, que combina la potencia de técnicas avanzadas de visualización y minería de datos para tratar de dar solución a estos grandes inconvenientes existentes en el proceso de descubrimiento de información válida. El objetivo principal es hacer más fácil, comprensible, intuitivo y rápido el proceso de adquisición de conocimiento al que se enfrentan los expertos cuando trabajan con grandes conjuntos de datos en diferentes dominios. Para ello, en primer lugar, se lleva a cabo una fuerte disminución en el tamaño de los datos con el objetivo de facilitar al experto su manejo, y a la vez preservando intactas, en la medida de lo posible, sus propiedades originales. Después, se hace uso de efectivas técnicas de visualización para representar los datos obtenidos, permitiendo al experto interactuar de forma sencilla e intuitiva con los datos, llevar a cabo diferentes tareas de análisis de datos y así estimular visualmente su capacidad de comprensión. De este modo, el objetivo subyacente se basa en abstraer al experto, en la medida de lo posible, de la complejidad de sus datos originales para presentarle una versión más comprensible, que facilite y acelere la tarea final de descubrimiento de conocimiento. MedVir se ha aplicado satisfactoriamente, entre otros, al campo de la magnetoencefalografía (MEG), que consiste en la predicción en la rehabilitación de lesiones cerebrales traumáticas (Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) rehabilitation prediction). Los resultados obtenidos demuestran la efectividad del framework a la hora de acelerar y facilitar el proceso de descubrimiento de conocimiento sobre conjuntos de datos reales. ABSTRACT Traditionally, the use of data analysis techniques has been one of the main ways of discovering knowledge hidden in large amounts of data, collected by experts in different domains. Moreover, visualization techniques have also been used to enhance and facilitate this process. However, there are serious limitations in the process of knowledge acquisition, as it is often a slow, tedious and many times fruitless process, due to the difficulty for human beings to understand large datasets. Another major drawback, rarely considered by experts that analyze large datasets, is the involuntary degradation to which they subject the data during analysis tasks, prior to obtaining the final conclusions. Degradation means that data can lose part of their original properties, and it is usually caused by improper data reduction, thereby altering their original nature and often leading to erroneous interpretations and conclusions that could have serious implications. Furthermore, this fact gains a trascendental importance when the data belong to medical or biological domain, and the lives of people depends on the final decision-making, which is sometimes conducted improperly. This is the motivation of this thesis, which proposes a new visual framework, called MedVir, which combines the power of advanced visualization techniques and data mining to try to solve these major problems existing in the process of discovery of valid information. Thus, the main objective is to facilitate and to make more understandable, intuitive and fast the process of knowledge acquisition that experts face when working with large datasets in different domains. To achieve this, first, a strong reduction in the size of the data is carried out in order to make the management of the data easier to the expert, while preserving intact, as far as possible, the original properties of the data. Then, effective visualization techniques are used to represent the obtained data, allowing the expert to interact easily and intuitively with the data, to carry out different data analysis tasks, and so visually stimulating their comprehension capacity. Therefore, the underlying objective is based on abstracting the expert, as far as possible, from the complexity of the original data to present him a more understandable version, thus facilitating and accelerating the task of knowledge discovery. MedVir has been succesfully applied to, among others, the field of magnetoencephalography (MEG), which consists in predicting the rehabilitation of Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI). The results obtained successfully demonstrate the effectiveness of the framework to accelerate and facilitate the process of knowledge discovery on real world datasets.
Resumo:
In this paper we present an efficient hole filling strategy that improves the quality of the depth maps obtained with the Microsoft Kinect device. The proposed approach is based on a joint-bilateral filtering framework that includes spatial and temporal information. The missing depth values are obtained applying iteratively a joint-bilateral filter to their neighbor pixels. The filter weights are selected considering three different factors: visual data, depth information and a temporal-consistency map. Video and depth data are combined to improve depth map quality in presence of edges and homogeneous regions. Finally, the temporal-consistency map is generated in order to track the reliability of the depth measurements near the hole regions. The obtained depth values are included iteratively in the filtering process of the successive frames and the accuracy of the hole regions depth values increases while new samples are acquired and filtered
Resumo:
In this paper, we study a robot swarm that has to perform task allocation in an environment that features periodic properties. In this environment, tasks appear in different areas following periodic temporal patterns. The swarm has to reallocate its workforce periodically, performing a temporal task allocation that must be synchronized with the environment to be effective. We tackle temporal task allocation using methods and concepts that we borrow from the signal processing literature. In particular, we propose a distributed temporal task allocation algorithm that synchronizes robots of the swarm with the environment and with each other. In this algorithm, robots use only local information and a simple visual communication protocol based on light blinking. Our results show that a robot swarm that uses the proposed temporal task allocation algorithm performs considerably more tasks than a swarm that uses a greedy algorithm.
Resumo:
This paper suggests a new strategy to develop CAD applications taking into account some of the most interesting proposals which have recently appeared in the technology development arena. Programming languages, operating systems, user devices, software architecture, user interfaces and user experience are among the elements which are considered for a new development framework. This strategy considers the organizational and architectural aspects of the CAD application together with the development framework. The architectural and organizational aspects are based on the programmed design concept, which can be implemented by means of a three-level software architecture. These levels are the conceptual level based on a declarative language, the mathematical level based on the geometric formulation of the product model and the visual level based on the polyhedral representation of the model as required by the graphic card. The development framework which has been considered is Windows 8. This operating system offers three development environments, one for web pplications (HTML5 + CSS3 + JavaScript), and other for native applications C/C++) and of course yet another for .NET applications (C#, VB, F#, etc.). The use rinterface and user experience for non-web application is described ith XAML (a well known declarative XML language) and the 3D API for games and design applications is DirectX. Additionally, Windows 8 facilitates the use of hybrid solutions, in which native and managed code can interoperate easily. Some of the most remarkable advantages of this strategy are the possibility of targeting both desktop and touch screen devices with the same development framework, the usage of several programming paradigms to apply the most appropriate language to each domain and the multilevel segmentation of developers and designers to facilitate the implementation of an open network of collaborators.
Resumo:
Assessing video quality is a complex task. While most pixel-based metrics do not present enough correlation between objective and subjective results, algorithms need to correspond to human perception when analyzing quality in a video sequence. For analyzing the perceived quality derived from concrete video artifacts in determined region of interest we present a novel methodology for generating test sequences which allow the analysis of impact of each individual distortion. Through results obtained after subjective assessment it is possible to create psychovisual models based on weighting pixels belonging to different regions of interest distributed by color, position, motion or content. Interesting results are obtained in subjective assessment which demonstrates the necessity of new metrics adapted to human visual system.
Resumo:
This work aims to develop a novel Cross-Entropy (CE) optimization-based fuzzy controller for Unmanned Aerial Monocular Vision-IMU System (UAMVIS) to solve the seeand-avoid problem using its accurate autonomous localization information. The function of this fuzzy controller is regulating the heading of this system to avoid the obstacle, e.g. wall. In the Matlab Simulink-based training stages, the Scaling Factor (SF) is adjusted according to the specified task firstly, and then the Membership Function (MF) is tuned based on the optimized Scaling Factor to further improve the collison avoidance performance. After obtained the optimal SF and MF, 64% of rules has been reduced (from 125 rules to 45 rules), and a large number of real flight tests with a quadcopter have been done. The experimental results show that this approach precisely navigates the system to avoid the obstacle. To our best knowledge, this is the first work to present the optimized fuzzy controller for UAMVIS using Cross-Entropy method in Scaling Factors and Membership Functions optimization.
Resumo:
In this paper we tackle the problem of landing a helicopter autonomously on a ship deck, using as the main sensor, an on-board colour camera. To create a test-bed, we first adequately simulate the movement of a ship landing platform on the Sea, for different Sea States, for different ships, randomly and realistically enough. We use a commercial parallel robot to get this movement. Once we had this, we developed an accurate and robust computer vision system to measure the pose of the helipad with respect to the on-board camera. To deal with the noise and the possible fails of the computer vision, a state estimator was created. With all of this, we are now able to develop and test a controller that closes the loop and finish the autonomous landing task.
Resumo:
La medida de calidad de vídeo sigue siendo necesaria para definir los criterios que caracterizan una señal que cumpla los requisitos de visionado impuestos por el usuario. Las nuevas tecnologías, como el vídeo 3D estereoscópico o formatos más allá de la alta definición, imponen nuevos criterios que deben ser analizadas para obtener la mayor satisfacción posible del usuario. Entre los problemas detectados durante el desarrollo de esta tesis doctoral se han determinado fenómenos que afectan a distintas fases de la cadena de producción audiovisual y tipo de contenido variado. En primer lugar, el proceso de generación de contenidos debe encontrarse controlado mediante parámetros que eviten que se produzca el disconfort visual y, consecuentemente, fatiga visual, especialmente en lo relativo a contenidos de 3D estereoscópico, tanto de animación como de acción real. Por otro lado, la medida de calidad relativa a la fase de compresión de vídeo emplea métricas que en ocasiones no se encuentran adaptadas a la percepción del usuario. El empleo de modelos psicovisuales y diagramas de atención visual permitirían ponderar las áreas de la imagen de manera que se preste mayor importancia a los píxeles que el usuario enfocará con mayor probabilidad. Estos dos bloques se relacionan a través de la definición del término saliencia. Saliencia es la capacidad del sistema visual para caracterizar una imagen visualizada ponderando las áreas que más atractivas resultan al ojo humano. La saliencia en generación de contenidos estereoscópicos se refiere principalmente a la profundidad simulada mediante la ilusión óptica, medida en términos de distancia del objeto virtual al ojo humano. Sin embargo, en vídeo bidimensional, la saliencia no se basa en la profundidad, sino en otros elementos adicionales, como el movimiento, el nivel de detalle, la posición de los píxeles o la aparición de caras, que serán los factores básicos que compondrán el modelo de atención visual desarrollado. Con el objetivo de detectar las características de una secuencia de vídeo estereoscópico que, con mayor probabilidad, pueden generar disconfort visual, se consultó la extensa literatura relativa a este tema y se realizaron unas pruebas subjetivas preliminares con usuarios. De esta forma, se llegó a la conclusión de que se producía disconfort en los casos en que se producía un cambio abrupto en la distribución de profundidades simuladas de la imagen, aparte de otras degradaciones como la denominada “violación de ventana”. A través de nuevas pruebas subjetivas centradas en analizar estos efectos con diferentes distribuciones de profundidades, se trataron de concretar los parámetros que definían esta imagen. Los resultados de las pruebas demuestran que los cambios abruptos en imágenes se producen en entornos con movimientos y disparidades negativas elevadas que producen interferencias en los procesos de acomodación y vergencia del ojo humano, así como una necesidad en el aumento de los tiempos de enfoque del cristalino. En la mejora de las métricas de calidad a través de modelos que se adaptan al sistema visual humano, se realizaron también pruebas subjetivas que ayudaron a determinar la importancia de cada uno de los factores a la hora de enmascarar una determinada degradación. Los resultados demuestran una ligera mejora en los resultados obtenidos al aplicar máscaras de ponderación y atención visual, los cuales aproximan los parámetros de calidad objetiva a la respuesta del ojo humano. ABSTRACT Video quality assessment is still a necessary tool for defining the criteria to characterize a signal with the viewing requirements imposed by the final user. New technologies, such as 3D stereoscopic video and formats of HD and beyond HD oblige to develop new analysis of video features for obtaining the highest user’s satisfaction. Among the problems detected during the process of this doctoral thesis, it has been determined that some phenomena affect to different phases in the audiovisual production chain, apart from the type of content. On first instance, the generation of contents process should be enough controlled through parameters that avoid the occurrence of visual discomfort in observer’s eye, and consequently, visual fatigue. It is especially necessary controlling sequences of stereoscopic 3D, with both animation and live-action contents. On the other hand, video quality assessment, related to compression processes, should be improved because some objective metrics are adapted to user’s perception. The use of psychovisual models and visual attention diagrams allow the weighting of image regions of interest, giving more importance to the areas which the user will focus most probably. These two work fields are related together through the definition of the term saliency. Saliency is the capacity of human visual system for characterizing an image, highlighting the areas which result more attractive to the human eye. Saliency in generation of 3DTV contents refers mainly to the simulated depth of the optic illusion, i.e. the distance from the virtual object to the human eye. On the other hand, saliency is not based on virtual depth, but on other features, such as motion, level of detail, position of pixels in the frame or face detection, which are the basic features that are part of the developed visual attention model, as demonstrated with tests. Extensive literature involving visual comfort assessment was looked up, and the development of new preliminary subjective assessment with users was performed, in order to detect the features that increase the probability of discomfort to occur. With this methodology, the conclusions drawn confirmed that one common source of visual discomfort was when an abrupt change of disparity happened in video transitions, apart from other degradations, such as window violation. New quality assessment was performed to quantify the distribution of disparities over different sequences. The results confirmed that abrupt changes in negative parallax environment produce accommodation-vergence mismatches derived from the increasing time for human crystalline to focus the virtual objects. On the other side, for developing metrics that adapt to human visual system, additional subjective tests were developed to determine the importance of each factor, which masks a concrete distortion. Results demonstrated slight improvement after applying visual attention to objective metrics. This process of weighing pixels approximates the quality results to human eye’s response.
Resumo:
Este trabajo de investigación trata de aportar luz al estudio del tiempo de reacción (TR) en velocistas con y sin discapacidad auditiva desde las Ciencias del Deporte. El planteamiento del presente estudio surgió al cuestionarnos la existencia de las diferencias en cuanto al TR visual y auditivo aplicado a velocistas con y sin discapacidad auditiva, pensando en el desarrollo futuro de competiciones inclusivas entre ambos colectivos. Por ello, este estudio trata de resolver las dificultades que los velocistas con discapacidad se encuentran habitualmente en las competiciones. A priori, los atletas con discapacidad auditiva compiten en inferioridad de condiciones como consecuencia de una salida que no parece la más adecuada para ellos (desde los tacos, han de mirar hacia la pistola del juez o el movimiento de un rival). El documento se divide en tres partes. En la primera parte se realiza la pertinente revisión del marco teórico y justificación del estudio. La segunda parte se centra en los objetivos de la investigación, el material y el método, donde se muestran los resultados, discusión y conclusiones del estudio realizado, así como las limitaciones del presente trabajo y sus futuras líneas de investigación. La tercera parte corresponde a la bibliografía y la cuarta parte a los anexos. En la primera parte, presentamos el marco teórico compuesto por cinco capítulos organizan la fundamentación que hemos realizado como revisión sobre los aspectos más destacados del TR, determinado por las características de la tarea y otros factores que influyen en el TR como objeto de nuestro estudio. Después exponemos los principales aspectos estructurales y funcionales del sistema nervioso (SN) relacionados con el TR visual y auditivo. Tras ello se expone la realidad del deporte para personas con discapacidad auditiva, indagando en sus peculiaridades y criterios de elegibilidad que tiene ese colectivo dentro del ámbito deportivo. A continuación abordamos el estudio de la salida de velocidad en el atletismo, como aspecto clave que va a guiar nuestra investigación, especialmente los parámetros determinantes en la colocación de los tacos de salida para atletas con y sin discapacidad auditiva, la posición de salida y la propia colocación de los estímulos en dicha situación. Es la segunda parte se desarrolla el trabajo de investigación que tiene como objetivos estudiar los valores de TR visual simple manual, TR en salida de tacos y los tiempos de desplazamiento a los 10m y 20m de velocistas con y sin discapacidad auditiva, así como analizar las posibles diferencias en TR según posición y tipo de estímulo luminoso, respecto a ambos grupos de atletas. Como tercer objetivo de estudio se evalúa cualitativamente, por parte de los propios atletas, el dispositivo luminoso utilizado. La toma de datos de este estudio se llevó a cabo entre los meses de febrero y mayo del 2014, en el módulo de atletismo del Centro de Alto Rendimiento Joaquín Blume (Madrid), con dos grupos de estudio, uno de 9 velocistas con discapacidad auditiva (VDA), conformando éstos el 60% de toda la población en España, según el número de las licencias de la FEDS en la modalidad de atletismo (velocistas, pruebas de 100 y 200 m.l.), en el momento del estudio, y otro de 13 velocistas sin discapacidad (VsDA) que se presentaron de manera voluntaria con unos mismos criterios de inclusión para ambos grupos. Para la medición y el registro de los datos se utilizaron materiales como hoja de registro, Medidor de Tiempo de Reacción (MTR), tacos de salida, ReacTime®, dispositivo luminoso conectado a los tacos de salida, células fotoeléctricas, ordenador y software del ReacTime, y cámara de video. La metodología utilizada en este estudio fue de tipo correlacional, analizando los resultados del TR simple manual según vía sensitiva (visual y auditiva) entre los dos grupos de VDA y VsDA. También se estudiaron los TR desde la salida de tacos en función de la colocación del dispositivo luminoso (en el suelo y a 5 metros, vía visual) y pistola de salida atlética (vía auditiva) así como el tiempo de desplazamiento a los 10m (t10m) y 20m (t20m) de ambos grupos de velocistas. Finalmente, se desarrolló y llevó a cabo un cuestionario de evaluación por parte de los atletas VDA con el objetivo de conocer el grado de satisfacción después de haber realizado la serie de experimentos con el dispositivo luminoso y adaptado para sistemas de salida en la velocidad atlética. Con el objetivo de comprobar la viabilidad de la metodología descrita y probar en el contexto de análisis real el protocolo experimental, se realizó un estudio piloto con el fin de conocer las posibles diferencias del TR visual desde los tacos de salida en velocistas con discapacidad auditiva, usando para dicha salida un estímulo visual mediante un dispositivo luminoso coordinado con la señal sonora de salida (Soto-Rey, Pérez-Tejero, Rojo-González y Álvarez-Ortiz, 2015). En cuanto a los procedimientos estadísticos utilizados, con el fin de analizar la distribución de los datos y su normalidad, se aplicó la prueba de Kolmogorov-Smirnof, dicha prueba arrojó resultados de normalidad para todas las variables analizadas de las situaciones experimentales EA, EVsuelo y EV5m. Es por ello que en el presente trabajo de investigación se utilizó estadística paramétrica. Como medidas descriptivas, se calcularon el máximo, mínimo, media y la desviación estándar. En relación a las situaciones experimentales, para estudiar las posibles diferencias en las variables estudiadas dentro de cada grupo de velocistas (intragrupo) en la situación experimental 1 (MTR), se empleó una prueba T de Student para muestras independientes. En las situaciones experimentales 2, 3 y 4, para conocer las diferencias entre ambos grupos de velocistas en cada situación, se utilizó igualmente la prueba T para muestras independientes, mientras que un ANOVA simple (con post hoc Bonferroni) se utilizó para analizar las diferencias para cada grupo (VDA y VsDA) por situación experimental. Así mismo, se utilizó un ANOVA de medidas repetidas, donde el tipo de estímulo (situación experimental) fue la variable intra-grupo y el grupo de velocistas participantes (VDA y VsDA) la entre-grupo, realizándose esta prueba para evaluar en cada situación el TR, t1m0 y t20m y las interacciones entre las variables. Para el tratamiento estadístico fue utilizado el paquete estadístico SPSS 18.0 (Chicago, IL, EEUU). Los niveles de significación fueron establecidos para un ≤0.05, indicando el valor de p en cada caso. Uno de los aspectos más relevantes de este trabajo es la medición en diferentes situaciones, con instrumentación distinta y con situaciones experimentales distintas, del TR en velocistas con y sin discapacidad auditiva. Ello supuso el desarrollo de un diseño de investigación que respondió a las necesidades planteadas por los objetivos del estudio, así como el desarrollo de instrumentación específica (Rojo-Lacal, Soto-Rey, Pérez-Tejero y Rojo-González, 2014; Soto-Rey et al., 2015) y distintas situaciones experimentales que reprodujeran las condiciones de práctica y competición real de VsDA y VDA en las pruebas atléticas de velocidad, y más concretamente, en las salidas. El análisis estadístico mostró diferencias significativas entre los estímulos visuales y sonoros medidos con el MTR, siendo menor el TR ante el estímulo visual que ante el sonoro, tanto para los atletas con discapacidad auditiva como para los que no la presentaron (TR visual, 0.195 s ± 0.018 vs 0.197 s ± 0.022, p≤0.05; TR sonoro 0.230 s ± 0.016 vs 0.237 s ± 0.045, p≤0.05). Teniendo en cuenta los resultados según población objeto de estudio y situación experimental, se registraron diferencias significativas entre ambas poblaciones, VDA y VsDA, siendo más rápidos los VDA que VsDA en la situación experimental con el estímulo visual en el suelo (EVsuelo, 0.191 ±0.025 vs 0.210 ±0.025, p≤0.05, respectivamente) y los VsDA en la situación experimental con el estímulo auditivo (EA, 0.396 ±0.045 vs 0.174 ±0.021, p≤0.05), aunque sin diferencias entre ambos grupos en la situación experimental con el estímulo visual a 5m de los tacos de salida. Es de destacar que en el TR no hubo diferencias significativas entre EA para VsDA y EVsuelo para VDA. El ANOVA simple registró diferencias significativas en todas las situaciones experimentales dentro de cada grupo y para todas las variables, por lo que estadísticamente, las situaciones experimentales fueron diferentes entre sí. En relación al de ANOVA medidas repetidas, la prueba de esfericidad se mostró adecuada, existiendo diferencias significativas en las varianzas de los pares de medias: el valor de F indicó que existieron diferencias entre las diferentes situaciones experimentales en cuanto a TR, incluso cuando éstas se relacionaban con el factor discapacidad (factor interacción, p≤0,05). Por ello, queda patente que las situaciones son distintas entre sí, también teniendo en cuenta la discapacidad. El η2 (eta al cuadrado, tamaño del efecto, para la interacción) indica que el 91.7% de la variación se deben a las condiciones del estudio, y no al error (indicador de la generalización de los resultados del estudio). Por otro lado, la evaluación del dispositivo luminoso fue positiva en relación a la iluminación, comodidad de uso, ubicación, color, tamaño, adecuación del dispositivo y del equipamiento necesario para adaptar al sistema de salida. La totalidad de los atletas afirman rotundamente que el dispositivo luminoso favorecería la adaptación al sistema de salida atlética para permitir una competición inclusiva. Asimismo concluyen que el dispositivo luminoso favorecería el rendimiento o mejora de marca en la competición. La discusión de este estudio presenta justificación de las diferencias demostradas que el tipo de estímulo y su colocación son clave en el TR de esta prueba, por lo que podríamos argumentar la necesidad de contar con dispositivos luminosos para VDA a la hora de competir con VsDA en una misma prueba, inclusiva. El presente trabajo de investigación ha demostrado, aplicando el método científico, que el uso de estos dispositivos, en las condiciones técnicas y experimentales indicadas, permite el uso por parte del VDA, usando su mejor TR visual posible, que se muestra similar (ns) al TR auditivo de VsDA, lo que indica que, para competiciones inclusivas, la salida usando el semáforo (para VDA) y la salida habitual (estímulo sonoro) para VsDA, puede ser una solución equitativa en base a la evidencia demostrada en este estudio. De esta manera, y como referencia, indicar que la media de los TR de los velocistas en la final de los 100 m.l. en los Juegos Olímpicos de Londres 2012 fue de 0.162 ±0.015. De esta manera, creemos que estos parámetros sirven de referencia a técnicos deportivos, atletas y futuros trabajos de investigación. Las aplicaciones de este trabajo permitirán modificaciones y reflexiones en forma de apoyo al entrenamiento y la competición para el entrenador, o juez de salida en la competición que, creemos, es necesaria para proporcionar a este colectivo una atención adecuada en las salidas, especialmente en situaciones inclusivas de práctica. ABSTRACT This research aims to study of reaction time (RT) in sprinters with and without hearing impairment from the Sports Science perspective. The approach of this study came asking whether there were differences in the visual and auditory RT applied to sprinters with and without hearing impairment, thinking about the future development of inclusive competition between the two groups. Therefore, this study attempts to resolve the difficulties commonly founded by sprinters with hearing impairments during competitions. A priori, sprinters with hearing impairment would compete in a disadvantage situation as a result of the use of a staring signal not suitable for them (from the blocks, they have to look to the judge´s pistol or the movement of an opponent). The document is divided into three parts. In the first part of the review of relevant theoretical framework and justification of the study is presented. The second part focuses on the research objectives, material and method, where results, discussion and conclusions of the study, as well as the limitations of this study and future research are presented. The third part contains references and the fourth, annexes. In the first part, we present the theoretical framework consisting of five chapters, organizing the state of the art of RT, determined by the characteristics of the task and other factors that influence the RT as object of our study. Then we present the main structural and functional aspects of the nervous system associated with visual and auditory RT. After that, sport for people with hearing disabilities is presented, investigating its peculiarities and eligibility criteria is that group within the deaf sport. Finally, we discuss the theoretical foundation of the study of start speed in athletics as a key aspect that will guide our research, especially the determining parameters in placing the starting blocks for athletes with and without hearing impairment, the starting position and the actual placement of stimuli in such a situation. The second part of the research aims to study the values of simple manual visual RT, RT start from blocks and travel times up to 10m and 20m of sprinters with and without hearing impairment, and to analyze possible differences in RT as position and type of light stimulus with respect to both groups of athletes. The third objective of the study is to assess the pertinence of the lighting device developed and used in the study, in a qualitatively way by athletes themselves. Data collection for this study was carried out between February and May 2014, in the Athletics module at the High Performance Centre Joaquin Blume (Madrid) with the two study groups: 9 sprinters with hearing impairments(VDA, reaching 60% of the population in Spain, according to the number of licenses for athletics at FEDS: sprint, 100 and 200 m.l., at the time of the study), and another 13 sprinters without disability (VsDA) who voluntarily presented themselves, with same inclusion criteria for both groups. For measuring and data collection materials such as recording sheet, gauge reaction time (MTR), starting blocks, ReacTime®, luminous device connected to the starting blocks, photocells, computer and software ReacTime, and video camera were used. The methodology used in this study was correlational, analyzing the results of simple manual RT according sensory pathway (visual and auditory) between the two groups (VsDA and VDA). Also auditory and visual RT was studied depending the placement of the start light signal (on the ground and 5 meters, visual pathway) and athletic start gun signal (auditory pathway, conventional situation) and travel time up to 10m (t10m) and 20m (t20m) for both groups of sprinters. Finally, we developed and carried out an evaluation questionnaire for VDA athletes in order to determine the degree of satisfaction after completing the series of experiments with lighting device and adapted to start systems in athletic speed. In order to test the feasibility of the methodology described and tested in the context of real analysis of the experimental protocol, a pilot study in order to know the possible differences visual RT from the starting blocks in sprinters with hearing impairments was performed, to said output using a visual stimulus coordinated by a lighting device with sound output signal (Soto-Rey Perez-Tejero, Rojo-González y Álvarez-Ortiz, 2015). For the statistical procedures, in order to analyze the distribution of the data and their normality, Kolmogorov-Smirnov test was applied, this test yielded normal results for all variables analyzed during EA, EVsuelo and EV5m experimental situations. Parametric statistics were used in this research. As descriptive measures, the maximum, minimum, mean and standard deviation were calculated. In relation to experimental situations, to study possible differences in the variables studied in each group sprinters (intragroup) in the experimental situation 1 (MTR), a Student t test was used for independent samples. Under the experimental situations 2, 3 and 4, to know the differences between the two groups of sprinters in every situation, the T test for independent samples was used, while a simple ANOVA (with post hoc Bonferroni) was used to analyze differences for each group (VDA and VsDA) by experimental situation. Likewise, a repeated measures ANOVA, where the type of stimulus (experimental situation) was variable intra-group and participants sprinters group (VDA and VsDA) the variable between-group, was performed to assess each situation for RT, t10m and t20m, and also interactions between variables. For the statistical treatment SPSS 18.0 (Chicago, IL, USA) was used. Significance levels were set for ≤0.05, indicating the value of p in each case. One of the most important aspects of this work is the measurement of RT in sprinters with and without hearing impairment in different situations, with different instrumentation and different experimental situations. This involved the development of a research design that responded to the needs raised by the study aims and the development of specific instrumentation (Rojo-Lacal, Soto-Rey Perez-Tejero and Rojo-Gonzalez, 2014; Soto-Rey et al., 2015) and different experimental situations to reproduce the conditions of practical and real competition VsDA and VDA in athletic sprints, and more specifically, at the start. Statistical analysis showed significant differences between the visual and sound stimuli measured by the MTR, with lower RT to the visual stimulus that for sound, both for athletes with hearing disabilities and for those without (visual RT, 0.195 s ± 0.018 s vs 0.197 ± 0.022, p≤0.05; sound RT 0.230 s ± 0.016 vs 0.237 s ± 0.045, p≤0.05). Considering the results according to study population and experimental situation, significant differences between the two populations, VDA and VsDA were found, being faster the VDA than VsDA in the experimental situation with the visual stimulus on the floor (EVsuelo, recorded 0.191 s ± 0.025 vs 0.210 s ± 0.025, p≤0.05, respectively) and VsDA in the experimental situation with the auditory stimulus (EA, 0.396 s ± 0.045 vs 0.174 s ± 0.021, p≤0.05), but no difference between groups in the experimental situation with the 5m visual stimulus to the starting blocks. It is noteworthy that no significant differences in EA and EVsuelo between VsDA to VDA, respectively, for RT. Simple ANOVA showed significant differences in all experimental situations within each group and for all variables, so statistically, the experimental situations were different. Regarding the repeated measures ANOVA, the sphericity test showed adequate, and there were significant differences in the variances of the pairs of means: the value of F indicated that there were differences between the different experimental situations regarding RT, even when they were related to the disability factor (factor interaction, p≤0.05). Therefore, it is clear that the situations were different from each other, also taking into account impairment. The η2 (eta squared, effect size, for interaction) indicates that 91.7% of the variation is due to the conditions of the study, not by error (as indicator of the generalization potential of the study results). On the other hand, evaluation of the light signal was positively related to lighting, ease of use, location, color, size, alignment device and equipment necessary to adapt the start system. All the athletes claim strongly in favor of the lighting device adaptation system to enable athletic competition inclusive. Also they concluded that light device would enhance performance or would decrease their RT during the competition. The discussion of this study justify the type of stimulus and the start light positioning as key to the RT performance, so that we could argue the need for lighting devices for VDA when competing against VsDA the same competition, inclusive. This research has demonstrated, applying the scientific method, that the use of these devices, techniques and given experimental conditions, allows the use of the VDA, using his best visual RT, shown similar (ns) auditory RT of VsDA, indicating that for inclusive competitions, the start signal using the light (for VDA) and the usual start (sound stimulus) to VsDA can be an equitable solution based on the evidence shown in this study. Thus, and as a reference, indicate that the average of the RT sprinters in the 100 m. final at the 2012 Summer Olympic Games was 0.162 s ± 0.015. Thus, we believe that these parameters become a reference to sports coaches, athletes and future research. Applications of this work will allow modifications and reflections in the form of support for training and competition for the coach, or judge, as we believe is necessary to provide adequate attention to VDA in speed starts, especially in inclusive practice situations.