919 resultados para visual pattern recognition network
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Oxygen isotopic (d18O) climatic stratigraphy and radiocarbon chronology, at high resolution, have been used to establish an age model for Ocean Drilling Program Hole 1017E, a continuous 25-m sequence of hemipelagic sediments from the continental slope (956 m water depth), east of Point Arguella, Southern California. The upper part of Hole 1017E from ~33 ka (7.445 mbsf) was dated using 13 calendar-corrected radiocarbon ages of mixed planktonic foraminiferal assemblages. Benthic oxygen isotopic stratigraphy records a continuous 130-k.y. sequence ranging from marine isotope Stage 6 to the present day. The benthic d18O curve, representing the last two interglacial and glacial cycles, closely resembles the well-dated, deep-sea reference sequence, providing a detailed chronologic framework. Sedimentation rates remained relatively constant throughout the sequence at ~18 cm/k.y. and were sufficiently rapid to provide considerable potential for high-resolution paleoceanographic/paleoclimatic investigations. Planktonic foraminiferal oxygen isotopic stratigraphy based on the surface-dwelling form Globigerina bulloides defines an almost complete sequence of interstadial/stadial oscillations (Dansgaard/Oeschger cycles [D/O]). Combined use of radiocarbon chronology, deep-sea oxygen isotopic datums, and visual pattern matching has enabled us to identify the sequence of D/O cycles as described for the Greenland (GRIP2) ice core. This has strengthened the stratigraphic framework for the last 60 k.y. in the sequence as a basis for further paleoenvironmental investigations.
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This paper presents an automatic modulation classifier for electronic warfare applications. It is a pattern recognition modulation classifier based on statistical features of the phase and instantaneous frequency. This classifier runs in a real time operation mode with sampling rates in excess of 1 Gsample/s. The hardware platform for this application is a Field Programmable Gate Array (FPGA). This AMC is subsidiary of a digital channelised receiver also implemented in the same platform.
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We propose a level set based variational approach that incorporates shape priors into edge-based and region-based models. The evolution of the active contour depends on local and global information. It has been implemented using an efficient narrow band technique. For each boundary pixel we calculate its dynamic according to its gray level, the neighborhood and geometric properties established by training shapes. We also propose a criterion for shape aligning based on affine transformation using an image normalization procedure. Finally, we illustrate the benefits of the our approach on the liver segmentation from CT images.
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This paper proposes a stress detection system based on fuzzy logic and the physiological signals heart rate and galvanic skin response. The main contribution of this method relies on the creation of a stress template, collecting the behaviour of previous signals under situations with a different level of stress in each individual. The creation of this template provides an accuracy of 99.5% in stress detection, improving the results obtained by current pattern recognition techniques like GMM, k-NN, SVM or Fisher Linear Discriminant. In addition, this system can be embedded in security systems to detect critical situations in accesses as cross-border control. Furthermore, its applications can be extended to other fields as vehicle driver state-of-mind management, medicine or sport training.
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Biometrics applied to mobile devices are of great interest for security applications. Daily scenarios can benefit of a combination of both the most secure systems and most simple and extended devices. This document presents a hand biometric system oriented to mobile devices, proposing a non-intrusive, contact-less acquisition process where final users should take a picture of their hand in free-space with a mobile device without removals of rings, bracelets or watches. The main contribution of this paper is threefold: firstly, a feature extraction method is proposed, providing invariant hand measurements to previous changes; second contribution consists of providing a template creation based on hand geometric distances, requiring information from only one individual, without considering data from the rest of individuals within the database; finally, a proposal for template matching is proposed, minimizing the intra-class similarity and maximizing the inter-class likeliness. The proposed method is evaluated using three publicly available contact-less, platform-free databases. In addition, the results obtained with these databases will be compared to the results provided by two competitive pattern recognition techniques, namely Support Vector Machines (SVM) and k-Nearest Neighbour, often employed within the literature. Therefore, this approach provides an appropriate solution to adapt hand biometrics to mobile devices, with an accurate results and a non-intrusive acquisition procedure which increases the overall acceptance from the final user.
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This paper presents a hand biometric system for contact-less, platform-free scenarios, proposing innovative methods in feature extraction, template creation and template matching. The evaluation of the proposed method considers both the use of three contact-less publicly available hand databases, and the comparison of the performance to two competitive pattern recognition techniques existing in literature: namely Support Vector Machines (SVM) and k-Nearest Neighbour (k-NN). Results highlight the fact that the proposed method outcomes existing approaches in literature in terms of computational cost, accuracy in human identification, number of extracted features and number of samples for template creation. The proposed method is a suitable solution for human identification in contact-less scenarios based on hand biometrics, providing a feasible solution to devices with limited hardware requirements like mobile devices
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Inicio del desarrollo de un algoritmo eficiente orientado a dispositivos con baja capacidad de proceso, que ayude a personas sin necesariamente una preparación adecuada a llevar a cabo un proceso de toma de una señal biológica, como puede ser un electrocardiograma. La aplicación deberá, por tanto, asesorar en la toma de la señal al usuario, evaluar la calidad de la grabación obtenida, y en tiempo seudo real, comprobar si la calidad de la señal obtenida es suficientemente buena para su posterior diagnóstico, de tal modo que en caso de que sea necesaria una repetición de la prueba médica, esta pueda realizarse de inmediato. Además, el algoritmo debe extraer las características más relevantes de la señal electrocardiográfica, procesarlas, y obtener una serie de patrones significativos que permitan la orientación a la diagnosis de algunas de las patologías más comunes que se puedan extraer de la información de las señales cardíacas. Para la extracción, evaluación y toma de decisiones de este proceso previo a la generación del diagnóstico, se seguirá la arquitectura clásica de un sistema de detección de patrones, definiendo las clases que sean necesarias según el número de patologías que se deseen identificar. Esta información de diagnosis, obtenida mediante la identificación del sistema de reconocimiento de patrones, podría ser de ayuda u orientación para la posterior revisión de la prueba por parte de un profesional médico cualificado y de manera remota, evitando así el desplazamiento del mismo a zonas donde, por los medios existentes a día de hoy, es muy remota la posibilidad de presencia de personal sanitario. ABTRACT Start of development of an efficient algorithm designed to devices with low processing power, which could help people without adequate preparation to undertake a process of taking a biological signal, such as an electrocardiogram. Therefore, the application must assist the user in taking the signal and evaluating the quality of the recording. All of this must to be in live time. It must to check the quality of the signal obtained, and if is it necessary a repetition of the test, this could be done immediately. Furthermore, the algorithm must extract the most relevant features of the ECG signal, process it, and get meaningful patterns that allow to a diagnosis orientation of some of the more common diseases that can be drawn from the cardiac signal information. For the extraction, evaluation and decision making in this previous process to the generation of diagnosis, we will follow the classic architecture of a pattern recognition system, defining the necessary classes according to the number of pathologies that we wish to identify. This diagnostic information obtained by identifying the pattern recognition system could be for help or guidance for further review of the signal by a qualified medical professional, and it could be done remotely, thus avoiding the movements to areas where nowadays it is extremely unlikely to place any health staff, due to the poor economic condition.
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El objeto de esta Tesis doctoral es el desarrollo de una metodologia para la deteccion automatica de anomalias a partir de datos hiperespectrales o espectrometria de imagen, y su cartografiado bajo diferentes condiciones tipologicas de superficie y terreno. La tecnologia hiperespectral o espectrometria de imagen ofrece la posibilidad potencial de caracterizar con precision el estado de los materiales que conforman las diversas superficies en base a su respuesta espectral. Este estado suele ser variable, mientras que las observaciones se producen en un numero limitado y para determinadas condiciones de iluminacion. Al aumentar el numero de bandas espectrales aumenta tambien el numero de muestras necesarias para definir espectralmente las clases en lo que se conoce como Maldicion de la Dimensionalidad o Efecto Hughes (Bellman, 1957), muestras habitualmente no disponibles y costosas de obtener, no hay mas que pensar en lo que ello implica en la Exploracion Planetaria. Bajo la definicion de anomalia en su sentido espectral como la respuesta significativamente diferente de un pixel de imagen respecto de su entorno, el objeto central abordado en la Tesis estriba primero en como reducir la dimensionalidad de la informacion en los datos hiperespectrales, discriminando la mas significativa para la deteccion de respuestas anomalas, y segundo, en establecer la relacion entre anomalias espectrales detectadas y lo que hemos denominado anomalias informacionales, es decir, anomalias que aportan algun tipo de informacion real de las superficies o materiales que las producen. En la deteccion de respuestas anomalas se asume un no conocimiento previo de los objetivos, de tal manera que los pixeles se separan automaticamente en funcion de su informacion espectral significativamente diferenciada respecto de un fondo que se estima, bien de manera global para toda la escena, bien localmente por segmentacion de la imagen. La metodologia desarrollada se ha centrado en la implicacion de la definicion estadistica del fondo espectral, proponiendo un nuevo enfoque que permite discriminar anomalias respecto fondos segmentados en diferentes grupos de longitudes de onda del espectro, explotando la potencialidad de separacion entre el espectro electromagnetico reflectivo y emisivo. Se ha estudiado la eficiencia de los principales algoritmos de deteccion de anomalias, contrastando los resultados del algoritmo RX (Reed and Xiaoli, 1990) adoptado como estandar por la comunidad cientifica, con el metodo UTD (Uniform Targets Detector), su variante RXD-UTD, metodos basados en subespacios SSRX (Subspace RX) y metodo basados en proyecciones de subespacios de imagen, como OSPRX (Orthogonal Subspace Projection RX) y PP (Projection Pursuit). Se ha desarrollado un nuevo metodo, evaluado y contrastado por los anteriores, que supone una variacion de PP y describe el fondo espectral mediante el analisis discriminante de bandas del espectro electromagnetico, separando las anomalias con el algortimo denominado Detector de Anomalias de Fondo Termico o DAFT aplicable a sensores que registran datos en el espectro emisivo. Se han evaluado los diferentes metodos de deteccion de anomalias en rangos del espectro electromagnetico del visible e infrarrojo cercano (Visible and Near Infrared-VNIR), infrarrojo de onda corta (Short Wavelenght Infrared-SWIR), infrarrojo medio (Meadle Infrared-MIR) e infrarrojo termico (Thermal Infrared-TIR). La respuesta de las superficies en las distintas longitudes de onda del espectro electromagnetico junto con su entorno, influyen en el tipo y frecuencia de las anomalias espectrales que puedan provocar. Es por ello que se han utilizado en la investigacion cubos de datos hiperepectrales procedentes de los sensores aeroportados cuya estrategia y diseno en la construccion espectrometrica de la imagen difiere. Se han evaluado conjuntos de datos de test de los sensores AHS (Airborne Hyperspectral System), HyMAP Imaging Spectrometer, CASI (Compact Airborne Spectrographic Imager), AVIRIS (Airborne Visible Infrared Imaging Spectrometer), HYDICE (Hyperspectral Digital Imagery Collection Experiment) y MASTER (MODIS/ASTER Simulator). Se han disenado experimentos sobre ambitos naturales, urbanos y semiurbanos de diferente complejidad. Se ha evaluado el comportamiento de los diferentes detectores de anomalias a traves de 23 tests correspondientes a 15 areas de estudio agrupados en 6 espacios o escenarios: Urbano - E1, Semiurbano/Industrial/Periferia Urbana - E2, Forestal - E3, Agricola - E4, Geologico/Volcanico - E5 y Otros Espacios Agua, Nubes y Sombras - E6. El tipo de sensores evaluados se caracteriza por registrar imagenes en un amplio rango de bandas, estrechas y contiguas, del espectro electromagnetico. La Tesis se ha centrado en el desarrollo de tecnicas que permiten separar y extraer automaticamente pixeles o grupos de pixeles cuya firma espectral difiere de manera discriminante de las que tiene alrededor, adoptando para ello como espacio muestral parte o el conjunto de las bandas espectrales en las que ha registrado radiancia el sensor hiperespectral. Un factor a tener en cuenta en la investigacion ha sido el propio instrumento de medida, es decir, la caracterizacion de los distintos subsistemas, sensores imagen y auxiliares, que intervienen en el proceso. Para poder emplear cuantitativamente los datos medidos ha sido necesario definir las relaciones espaciales y espectrales del sensor con la superficie observada y las potenciales anomalias y patrones objetivos de deteccion. Se ha analizado la repercusion que en la deteccion de anomalias tiene el tipo de sensor, tanto en su configuracion espectral como en las estrategias de diseno a la hora de registrar la radiacion prodecente de las superficies, siendo los dos tipos principales de sensores estudiados los barredores o escaneres de espejo giratorio (whiskbroom) y los barredores o escaneres de empuje (pushbroom). Se han definido distintos escenarios en la investigacion, lo que ha permitido abarcar una amplia variabilidad de entornos geomorfologicos y de tipos de coberturas, en ambientes mediterraneos, de latitudes medias y tropicales. En resumen, esta Tesis presenta una tecnica de deteccion de anomalias para datos hiperespectrales denominada DAFT en su variante de PP, basada en una reduccion de la dimensionalidad proyectando el fondo en un rango de longitudes de onda del espectro termico distinto de la proyeccion de las anomalias u objetivos sin firma espectral conocida. La metodologia propuesta ha sido probada con imagenes hiperespectrales reales de diferentes sensores y en diferentes escenarios o espacios, por lo tanto de diferente fondo espectral tambien, donde los resultados muestran los beneficios de la aproximacion en la deteccion de una gran variedad de objetos cuyas firmas espectrales tienen suficiente desviacion respecto del fondo. La tecnica resulta ser automatica en el sentido de que no hay necesidad de ajuste de parametros, dando resultados significativos en todos los casos. Incluso los objetos de tamano subpixel, que no pueden distinguirse a simple vista por el ojo humano en la imagen original, pueden ser detectados como anomalias. Ademas, se realiza una comparacion entre el enfoque propuesto, la popular tecnica RX y otros detectores tanto en su modalidad global como local. El metodo propuesto supera a los demas en determinados escenarios, demostrando su capacidad para reducir la proporcion de falsas alarmas. Los resultados del algoritmo automatico DAFT desarrollado, han demostrado la mejora en la definicion cualitativa de las anomalias espectrales que identifican a entidades diferentes en o bajo superficie, reemplazando para ello el modelo clasico de distribucion normal con un metodo robusto que contempla distintas alternativas desde el momento mismo de la adquisicion del dato hiperespectral. Para su consecucion ha sido necesario analizar la relacion entre parametros biofisicos, como la reflectancia y la emisividad de los materiales, y la distribucion espacial de entidades detectadas respecto de su entorno. Por ultimo, el algoritmo DAFT ha sido elegido como el mas adecuado para sensores que adquieren datos en el TIR, ya que presenta el mejor acuerdo con los datos de referencia, demostrando una gran eficacia computacional que facilita su implementacion en un sistema de cartografia que proyecte de forma automatica en un marco geografico de referencia las anomalias detectadas, lo que confirma un significativo avance hacia un sistema en lo que se denomina cartografia en tiempo real. The aim of this Thesis is to develop a specific methodology in order to be applied in automatic detection anomalies processes using hyperspectral data also called hyperspectral scenes, and to improve the classification processes. Several scenarios, areas and their relationship with surfaces and objects have been tested. The spectral characteristics of reflectance parameter and emissivity in the pattern recognition of urban materials in several hyperspectral scenes have also been tested. Spectral ranges of the visible-near infrared (VNIR), shortwave infrared (SWIR) and thermal infrared (TIR) from hyperspectral data cubes of AHS (Airborne Hyperspectral System), HyMAP Imaging Spectrometer, CASI (Compact Airborne Spectrographic Imager), AVIRIS (Airborne Visible Infrared Imaging Spectrometer), HYDICE (Hyperspectral Digital Imagery Collection Experiment) and MASTER (MODIS/ASTER Simulator) have been used in this research. It is assumed that there is not prior knowledge of the targets in anomaly detection. Thus, the pixels are automatically separated according to their spectral information, significantly differentiated with respect to a background, either globally for the full scene, or locally by the image segmentation. Several experiments on different scenarios have been designed, analyzing the behavior of the standard RX anomaly detector and different methods based on subspace, image projection and segmentation-based anomaly detection methods. Results and their consequences in unsupervised classification processes are discussed. Detection of spectral anomalies aims at extracting automatically pixels that show significant responses in relation of their surroundings. This Thesis deals with the unsupervised technique of target detection, also called anomaly detection. Since this technique assumes no prior knowledge about the target or the statistical characteristics of the data, the only available option is to look for objects that are differentiated from the background. Several methods have been developed in the last decades, allowing a better understanding of the relationships between the image dimensionality and the optimization of search procedures as well as the subpixel differentiation of the spectral mixture and its implications in anomalous responses. In other sense, image spectrometry has proven to be efficient in the characterization of materials, based on statistical methods using a specific reflection and absorption bands. Spectral configurations in the VNIR, SWIR and TIR have been successfully used for mapping materials in different urban scenarios. There has been an increasing interest in the use of high resolution data (both spatial and spectral) to detect small objects and to discriminate surfaces in areas with urban complexity. This has come to be known as target detection which can be either supervised or unsupervised. In supervised target detection, algorithms lean on prior knowledge, such as the spectral signature. The detection process for matching signatures is not straightforward due to the complications of converting data airborne sensor with material spectra in the ground. This could be further complicated by the large number of possible objects of interest, as well as uncertainty as to the reflectance or emissivity of these objects and surfaces. An important objective in this research is to establish relationships that allow linking spectral anomalies with what can be called informational anomalies and, therefore, identify information related to anomalous responses in some places rather than simply spotting differences from the background. The development in recent years of new hyperspectral sensors and techniques, widen the possibilities for applications in remote sensing of the Earth. Remote sensing systems measure and record electromagnetic disturbances that the surveyed objects induce in their surroundings, by means of different sensors mounted on airborne or space platforms. Map updating is important for management and decisions making people, because of the fast changes that usually happen in natural, urban and semi urban areas. It is necessary to optimize the methodology for obtaining the best from remote sensing techniques from hyperspectral data. The first problem with hyperspectral data is to reduce the dimensionality, keeping the maximum amount of information. Hyperspectral sensors augment considerably the amount of information, this allows us to obtain a better precision on the separation of material but at the same time it is necessary to calculate a bigger number of parameters, and the precision lowers with the increase in the number of bands. This is known as the Hughes effects (Bellman, 1957) . Hyperspectral imagery allows us to discriminate between a huge number of different materials however some land and urban covers are made up with similar material and respond similarly which produces confusion in the classification. The training and the algorithm used for mapping are also important for the final result and some properties of thermal spectrum for detecting land cover will be studied. In summary, this Thesis presents a new technique for anomaly detection in hyperspectral data called DAFT, as a PP's variant, based on dimensionality reduction by projecting anomalies or targets with unknown spectral signature to the background, in a range thermal spectrum wavelengths. The proposed methodology has been tested with hyperspectral images from different imaging spectrometers corresponding to several places or scenarios, therefore with different spectral background. The results show the benefits of the approach to the detection of a variety of targets whose spectral signatures have sufficient deviation in relation to the background. DAFT is an automated technique in the sense that there is not necessary to adjust parameters, providing significant results in all cases. Subpixel anomalies which cannot be distinguished by the human eye, on the original image, however can be detected as outliers due to the projection of the VNIR end members with a very strong thermal contrast. Furthermore, a comparison between the proposed approach and the well-known RX detector is performed at both modes, global and local. The proposed method outperforms the existents in particular scenarios, demonstrating its performance to reduce the probability of false alarms. The results of the automatic algorithm DAFT have demonstrated improvement in the qualitative definition of the spectral anomalies by replacing the classical model by the normal distribution with a robust method. For their achievement has been necessary to analyze the relationship between biophysical parameters such as reflectance and emissivity, and the spatial distribution of detected entities with respect to their environment, as for example some buried or semi-buried materials, or building covers of asbestos, cellular polycarbonate-PVC or metal composites. Finally, the DAFT method has been chosen as the most suitable for anomaly detection using imaging spectrometers that acquire them in the thermal infrared spectrum, since it presents the best results in comparison with the reference data, demonstrating great computational efficiency that facilitates its implementation in a mapping system towards, what is called, Real-Time Mapping.
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Moment invariants have been thoroughly studied and repeatedly proposed as one of the most powerful tools for 2D shape identification. In this paper a set of such descriptors is proposed, being the basis functions discontinuous in a finite number of points. The goal of using discontinuous functions is to avoid the Gibbs phenomenon, and therefore to yield a better approximation capability for discontinuous signals, as images. Moreover, the proposed set of moments allows the definition of rotation invariants, being this the other main design concern. Translation and scale invariance are achieved by means of standard image normalization. Tests are conducted to evaluate the behavior of these descriptors in noisy environments, where images are corrupted with Gaussian noise up to different SNR values. Results are compared to those obtained using Zernike moments, showing that the proposed descriptor has the same performance in image retrieval tasks in noisy environments, but demanding much less computational power for every stage in the query chain.
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En muchas áreas de la ingeniería, la integridad y confiabilidad de las estructuras son aspectos de extrema importancia. Estos son controlados mediante el adecuado conocimiento de danos existentes. Típicamente, alcanzar el nivel de conocimiento necesario que permita caracterizar la integridad estructural implica el uso de técnicas de ensayos no destructivos. Estas técnicas son a menudo costosas y consumen mucho tiempo. En la actualidad, muchas industrias buscan incrementar la confiabilidad de las estructuras que emplean. Mediante el uso de técnicas de última tecnología es posible monitorizar las estructuras y en algunos casos, es factible detectar daños incipientes que pueden desencadenar en fallos catastróficos. Desafortunadamente, a medida que la complejidad de las estructuras, los componentes y sistemas incrementa, el riesgo de la aparición de daños y fallas también incrementa. Al mismo tiempo, la detección de dichas fallas y defectos se torna más compleja. En años recientes, la industria aeroespacial ha realizado grandes esfuerzos para integrar los sensores dentro de las estructuras, además de desarrollar algoritmos que permitan determinar la integridad estructural en tiempo real. Esta filosofía ha sido llamada “Structural Health Monitoring” (o “Monitorización de Salud Estructural” en español) y este tipo de estructuras han recibido el nombre de “Smart Structures” (o “Estructuras Inteligentes” en español). Este nuevo tipo de estructuras integran materiales, sensores, actuadores y algoritmos para detectar, cuantificar y localizar daños dentro de ellas mismas. Una novedosa metodología para detección de daños en estructuras se propone en este trabajo. La metodología está basada en mediciones de deformación y consiste en desarrollar técnicas de reconocimiento de patrones en el campo de deformaciones. Estas últimas, basadas en PCA (Análisis de Componentes Principales) y otras técnicas de reducción dimensional. Se propone el uso de Redes de difracción de Bragg y medidas distribuidas como sensores de deformación. La metodología se validó mediante pruebas a escala de laboratorio y pruebas a escala real con estructuras complejas. Los efectos de las condiciones de carga variables fueron estudiados y diversos experimentos fueron realizados para condiciones de carga estáticas y dinámicas, demostrando que la metodología es robusta ante condiciones de carga desconocidas. ABSTRACT In many engineering fields, the integrity and reliability of the structures are extremely important aspects. They are controlled by the adequate knowledge of existing damages. Typically, achieving the level of knowledge necessary to characterize the structural integrity involves the usage of nondestructive testing techniques. These are often expensive and time consuming. Nowadays, many industries look to increase the reliability of the structures used. By using leading edge techniques it is possible to monitoring these structures and in some cases, detect incipient damage that could trigger catastrophic failures. Unfortunately, as the complexity of the structures, components and systems increases, the risk of damages and failures also increases. At the same time, the detection of such failures and defects becomes more difficult. In recent years, the aerospace industry has done great efforts to integrate the sensors within the structures and, to develop algorithms for determining the structural integrity in real time. The ‘philosophy’ has being called “Structural Health Monitoring” and these structures have been called “smart structures”. These new types of structures integrate materials, sensors, actuators and algorithms to detect, quantify and locate damage within itself. A novel methodology for damage detection in structures is proposed. The methodology is based on strain measurements and consists in the development of strain field pattern recognition techniques. The aforementioned are based on PCA (Principal Component Analysis) and other dimensional reduction techniques. The use of fiber Bragg gratings and distributed sensing as strain sensors is proposed. The methodology have been validated by using laboratory scale tests and real scale tests with complex structures. The effects of the variable load conditions were studied and several experiments were performed for static and dynamic load conditions, demonstrating that the methodology is robust under unknown load conditions.
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Due to the intensive use of mobile phones for diferent purposes, these devices usually contain condential information which must not be accessed by another person apart from the owner of the device. Furthermore, the new generation phones commonly incorporate an accelerometer which may be used to capture the acceleration signals produced as a result of owner s gait. Nowadays, gait identication in basis of acceleration signals is being considered as a new biometric technique which allows blocking the device when another person is carrying it. Although distance based approaches as Euclidean distance or dynamic time warping have been applied to solve this identication problem, they show di±culties when dealing with gaits at diferent speeds. For this reason, in this paper, a method to extract an average template from instances of the gait at diferent velocities is presented. This method has been tested with the gait signals of 34 subjects while walking at diferent motion speeds (slow, normal and fast) and it has shown to improve the performance of Euclidean distance and classical dynamic time warping.
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The aim of this work is an approach using multisensor remote sensing techniques to recognize the potential remains and recreate the original landscape of three archaeological sites. We investigate the spectral characteristics of the reflectance parameter and emissivity in the pattern recognition of archaeological materials in several hyperspectral scenes of the prehispanic site in Palmar Sur (Costa Rica), the Jarama Valley site and the celtiberian city of Segeda in Spain. Spectral ranges of the visible-near infrared (VNIR), shortwave infrared (SWIR) and thermal infrared (TIR) from hyperspectral data cubes of HyMAP, AHS, MASTER and ATM have been used. Several experiments on natural scenarios of Costa Rica and Spain of different complexity, have been designed. Spectral patterns and thermal anomalies have been calculated as evidences of buried remains and change detection. First results, land cover change analyses and their consequences in the digital heritage registration are discussed.
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Nonlinear analysis tools for studying and characterizing the dynamics of physiological signals have gained popularity, mainly because tracking sudden alterations of the inherent complexity of biological processes might be an indicator of altered physiological states. Typically, in order to perform an analysis with such tools, the physiological variables that describe the biological process under study are used to reconstruct the underlying dynamics of the biological processes. For that goal, a procedure called time-delay or uniform embedding is usually employed. Nonetheless, there is evidence of its inability for dealing with non-stationary signals, as those recorded from many physiological processes. To handle with such a drawback, this paper evaluates the utility of non-conventional time series reconstruction procedures based on non uniform embedding, applying them to automatic pattern recognition tasks. The paper compares a state of the art non uniform approach with a novel scheme which fuses embedding and feature selection at once, searching for better reconstructions of the dynamics of the system. Moreover, results are also compared with two classic uniform embedding techniques. Thus, the goal is comparing uniform and non uniform reconstruction techniques, including the one proposed in this work, for pattern recognition in biomedical signal processing tasks. Once the state space is reconstructed, the scheme followed characterizes with three classic nonlinear dynamic features (Largest Lyapunov Exponent, Correlation Dimension and Recurrence Period Density Entropy), while classification is carried out by means of a simple k-nn classifier. In order to test its generalization capabilities, the approach was tested with three different physiological databases (Speech Pathologies, Epilepsy and Heart Murmurs). In terms of the accuracy obtained to automatically detect the presence of pathologies, and for the three types of biosignals analyzed, the non uniform techniques used in this work lightly outperformed the results obtained using the uniform methods, suggesting their usefulness to characterize non-stationary biomedical signals in pattern recognition applications. On the other hand, in view of the results obtained and its low computational load, the proposed technique suggests its applicability for the applications under study.
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Multi-dimensional classification (MDC) is the supervised learning problem where an instance is associated with multiple classes, rather than with a single class, as in traditional classification problems. Since these classes are often strongly correlated, modeling the dependencies between them allows MDC methods to improve their performance – at the expense of an increased computational cost. In this paper we focus on the classifier chains (CC) approach for modeling dependencies, one of the most popular and highest-performing methods for multi-label classification (MLC), a particular case of MDC which involves only binary classes (i.e., labels). The original CC algorithm makes a greedy approximation, and is fast but tends to propagate errors along the chain. Here we present novel Monte Carlo schemes, both for finding a good chain sequence and performing efficient inference. Our algorithms remain tractable for high-dimensional data sets and obtain the best predictive performance across several real data sets.
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Plant mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) casca des transduce environmental molecular signals and developmental cues into cellular responses. Among these signals are the pathogen-associated molecular patterns (PAMPs) that upon recognition by plant pattern recognition receptors (PRR), including Receptor-Like Kinases (RLKs), activate MAPK cascades that regulate PAMP-triggered immunity responses (PTI).