Search results for "nonlinear"

showing 10 items of 3684 documents

Compensation of compliance errors in parallel manipulators composed of non-perfect kinematic chains

2012

The paper is devoted to the compliance errors compensation for parallel manipulators under external loading. Proposed approach is based on the non-linear stiffness modeling and reduces to a proper adjusting of a target trajectory. In contrast to previous works, in addition to compliance errors caused by machining forces, the problem of assembling errors caused by inaccuracy in the kinematic chains is considered. The advantages and practical significance of the proposed approach are illustrated by examples that deal with groove milling with Orthoglide manipulator.

FOS: Computer and information sciences0209 industrial biotechnologyComputer sciencenonlinear stiffness modelingcompliance error compensation02 engineering and technologyKinematicsCompensation (engineering)Computer Science::RoboticsComputer Science - Robotics020901 industrial engineering & automation0203 mechanical engineeringMachiningControl theorymedicine[INFO.INFO-RB]Computer Science [cs]/Robotics [cs.RO]ManipulatorGroove (engineering)Parallel manipulatorStiffnessparallel robots020303 mechanical engineering & transportsTrajectorymedicine.symptomnon-perfect manipulatorsRobotics (cs.RO)
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Compliance error compensation technique for parallel robots composed of non-perfect serial chains

2012

The paper presents the compliance errors compensation technique for over-constrained parallel manipulators under external and internal loadings. This technique is based on the non-linear stiffness modeling which is able to take into account the influence of non-perfect geometry of serial chains caused by manufacturing errors. Within the developed technique, the deviation compensation reduces to an adjustment of a target trajectory that is modified in the off-line mode. The advantages and practical significance of the proposed technique are illustrated by an example that deals with groove milling by the Orthoglide manipulator that considers different locations of the workpiece. It is also de…

FOS: Computer and information sciences0209 industrial biotechnologyEngineeringGeneral Mathematicsnonlinear stiffness modelingcompliance error compensation02 engineering and technologyIndustrial and Manufacturing EngineeringCompensation (engineering)Computer Science::RoboticsSuperposition principleComputer Science - Robotics020901 industrial engineering & automation0203 mechanical engineeringControl theorymedicine[INFO.INFO-RB]Computer Science [cs]/Robotics [cs.RO]ManipulatorGroove (engineering)business.industryMode (statistics)Parallel manipulatorStiffnessComputer Science Applications020303 mechanical engineering & transportsControl and Systems EngineeringTrajectoryParallel robotsmedicine.symptombusinessnon-perfect manipulatorsRobotics (cs.RO)Software
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Nonlinearities and Adaptation of Color Vision from Sequential Principal Curves Analysis

2016

Mechanisms of human color vision are characterized by two phenomenological aspects: the system is nonlinear and adaptive to changing environments. Conventional attempts to derive these features from statistics use separate arguments for each aspect. The few statistical explanations that do consider both phenomena simultaneously follow parametric formulations based on empirical models. Therefore, it may be argued that the behavior does not come directly from the color statistics but from the convenient functional form adopted. In addition, many times the whole statistical analysis is based on simplified databases that disregard relevant physical effects in the input signal, as, for instance…

FOS: Computer and information sciencesColor visionComputer scienceCognitive NeuroscienceComputingMethodologies_IMAGEPROCESSINGANDCOMPUTERVISIONStandard illuminantMachine Learning (stat.ML)Models BiologicalArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)Statistics - Machine LearningPsychophysicsHumansLearningComputer SimulationChromatic scaleParametric statisticsPrincipal Component AnalysisColor VisionNonlinear dimensionality reductionAdaptation PhysiologicalNonlinear systemNonlinear DynamicsFOS: Biological sciencesQuantitative Biology - Neurons and CognitionMetric (mathematics)A priori and a posterioriNeurons and Cognition (q-bio.NC)AlgorithmColor PerceptionPhotic Stimulation
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New results on classical and quantum counter automata

2019

We show that one-way quantum one-counter automaton with zero-error is more powerful than its probabilistic counterpart on promise problems. Then, we obtain a similar separation result between Las Vegas one-way probabilistic one-counter automaton and one-way deterministic one-counter automaton. We also obtain new results on classical counter automata regarding language recognition. It was conjectured that one-way probabilistic one blind-counter automata cannot recognize Kleene closure of equality language [A. Yakaryilmaz: Superiority of one-way and realtime quantum machines. RAIRO - Theor. Inf. and Applic. 46(4): 615-641 (2012)]. We show that this conjecture is false, and also show several s…

FOS: Computer and information sciencesComputer Science - Computational ComplexityQuantum PhysicsTheoryofComputation_MATHEMATICALLOGICANDFORMALLANGUAGESTheoryofComputation_COMPUTATIONBYABSTRACTDEVICESFormal Languages and Automata Theory (cs.FL)FOS: Physical sciencesComputer Science - Formal Languages and Automata TheoryComputational Complexity (cs.CC)Quantum Physics (quant-ph)Nonlinear Sciences::Cellular Automata and Lattice GasesComputer Science::Formal Languages and Automata Theory
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Real-Time Vector Automata

2013

We study the computational power of real-time finite automata that have been augmented with a vector of dimension k, and programmed to multiply this vector at each step by an appropriately selected $k \times k$ matrix. Only one entry of the vector can be tested for equality to 1 at any time. Classes of languages recognized by deterministic, nondeterministic, and "blind" versions of these machines are studied and compared with each other, and the associated classes for multicounter automata, automata with multiplication, and generalized finite automata.

FOS: Computer and information sciencesComputer Science - Computational ComplexityTheoryofComputation_COMPUTATIONBYABSTRACTDEVICESFormal Languages and Automata Theory (cs.FL)Computer Science - Formal Languages and Automata TheoryComputational Complexity (cs.CC)Nonlinear Sciences::Cellular Automata and Lattice GasesComputer Science::Formal Languages and Automata Theory
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Retrieval of coloured dissolved organic matter with machine learning methods

2017

The coloured dissolved organic matter (CDOM) concentration is the standard measure of humic substance in natural waters. CDOM measurements by remote sensing is calculated using the absorption coefficient (a) at a certain wavelength (e.g. 440nm). This paper presents a comparison of four machine learning methods for the retrieval of CDOM from remote sensing signals: regularized linear regression (RLR), random forest (RF), kernel ridge regression (KRR) and Gaussian process regression (GPR). Results are compared with the established polynomial regression algorithms. RLR is revealed as the simplest and most efficient method, followed closely by its nonlinear counterpart KRR.

FOS: Computer and information sciencesComputer Science - Machine Learning010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences0211 other engineering and technologiesFOS: Physical sciences02 engineering and technologyMachine learningcomputer.software_genre01 natural sciencesMachine Learning (cs.LG)Physics - GeophysicsKrigingDissolved organic carbonLinear regression021101 geological & geomatics engineering0105 earth and related environmental sciencesMathematicsPolynomial regressionbusiness.industry6. Clean waterGeophysics (physics.geo-ph)Random forestNonlinear systemColored dissolved organic matterKernel (statistics)Artificial intelligencebusinesscomputer
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Disentangling Derivatives, Uncertainty and Error in Gaussian Process Models

2020

Gaussian Processes (GPs) are a class of kernel methods that have shown to be very useful in geoscience applications. They are widely used because they are simple, flexible and provide very accurate estimates for nonlinear problems, especially in parameter retrieval. An addition to a predictive mean function, GPs come equipped with a useful property: the predictive variance function which provides confidence intervals for the predictions. The GP formulation usually assumes that there is no input noise in the training and testing points, only in the observations. However, this is often not the case in Earth observation problems where an accurate assessment of the instrument error is usually a…

FOS: Computer and information sciencesComputer Science - Machine Learning010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesComputer science0211 other engineering and technologiesMachine Learning (stat.ML)02 engineering and technology01 natural sciencesMachine Learning (cs.LG)symbols.namesakeStatistics - Machine LearningGaussian process021101 geological & geomatics engineering0105 earth and related environmental sciencesVariance functionPropagation of uncertaintyVariance (accounting)Function (mathematics)Confidence intervalNonlinear systemNoiseKernel method13. Climate actionKernel (statistics)symbolsAlgorithmIGARSS 2018 - 2018 IEEE International Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium
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Efficient Nonlinear RX Anomaly Detectors

2020

Current anomaly detection algorithms are typically challenged by either accuracy or efficiency. More accurate nonlinear detectors are typically slow and not scalable. In this letter, we propose two families of techniques to improve the efficiency of the standard kernel Reed-Xiaoli (RX) method for anomaly detection by approximating the kernel function with either {\em data-independent} random Fourier features or {\em data-dependent} basis with the Nystr\"om approach. We compare all methods for both real multi- and hyperspectral images. We show that the proposed efficient methods have a lower computational cost and they perform similar (or outperform) the standard kernel RX algorithm thanks t…

FOS: Computer and information sciencesComputer Science - Machine LearningBasis (linear algebra)Computer scienceComputer Vision and Pattern Recognition (cs.CV)Image and Video Processing (eess.IV)Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition0211 other engineering and technologiesApproximation algorithmHyperspectral imaging02 engineering and technologyElectrical Engineering and Systems Science - Image and Video ProcessingGeotechnical Engineering and Engineering GeologyRegularization (mathematics)Machine Learning (cs.LG)Nonlinear systemKernel (linear algebra)Kernel (statistics)FOS: Electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineeringAnomaly detectionElectrical and Electronic EngineeringAnomaly (physics)Algorithm021101 geological & geomatics engineeringIEEE Geoscience and Remote Sensing Letters
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Nonlinear Cook distance for Anomalous Change Detection

2020

In this work we propose a method to find anomalous changes in remote sensing images based on the chronochrome approach. A regressor between images is used to discover the most {\em influential points} in the observed data. Typically, the pixels with largest residuals are decided to be anomalous changes. In order to find the anomalous pixels we consider the Cook distance and propose its nonlinear extension using random Fourier features as an efficient nonlinear measure of impact. Good empirical performance is shown over different multispectral images both visually and quantitatively evaluated with ROC curves.

FOS: Computer and information sciencesComputer Science - Machine LearningComputer scienceComputer Vision and Pattern Recognition (cs.CV)Multispectral imageComputer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition0211 other engineering and technologies02 engineering and technologyMeasure (mathematics)Machine Learning (cs.LG)Kernel (linear algebra)symbols.namesake0502 economics and businessCook's distance021101 geological & geomatics engineering050208 financePixelbusiness.industry05 social sciencesPattern recognitionNonlinear systemFourier transformKernel (image processing)Computer Science::Computer Vision and Pattern RecognitionsymbolsArtificial intelligencebusinessChange detection
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Deep Non-Line-of-Sight Reconstruction

2020

The recent years have seen a surge of interest in methods for imaging beyond the direct line of sight. The most prominent techniques rely on time-resolved optical impulse responses, obtained by illuminating a diffuse wall with an ultrashort light pulse and observing multi-bounce indirect reflections with an ultrafast time-resolved imager. Reconstruction of geometry from such data, however, is a complex non-linear inverse problem that comes with substantial computational demands. In this paper, we employ convolutional feed-forward networks for solving the reconstruction problem efficiently while maintaining good reconstruction quality. Specifically, we devise a tailored autoencoder architect…

FOS: Computer and information sciencesComputer Science - Machine Learningbusiness.industryComputer scienceComputer Vision and Pattern Recognition (cs.CV)Image and Video Processing (eess.IV)Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern RecognitionNonlinear optics020207 software engineering02 engineering and technologyIterative reconstructionInverse problemElectrical Engineering and Systems Science - Image and Video ProcessingAutoencoderRendering (computer graphics)Machine Learning (cs.LG)Non-line-of-sight propagation0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineeringFOS: Electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineering020201 artificial intelligence & image processingComputer visionArtificial intelligencebusiness
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