87,118 research outputs found
A Differential Approach to Shape from Polarisation: A Level-Set Characterisation
Despite the longtime research aimed at retrieving geometrical information of an object from polarimetric imaging, physical limitations in the polarisation phenomena constrain current approaches to provide ambiguous depth estimation. As an additional constraint, polarimetric imaging formulation differs when light is reflected off the object specularly or diffusively. This introduces another source of ambiguity that current formulations cannot overcome. With the aim of deriving a formulation capable of dealing with as many heterogeneous effects as possible, we propose a differential formulation of the Shape from Polarisation problem that depends only on polarimetric images. This allows the direct geometrical characterisation of the level-set of the object keeping consistent mathematical formulation for diffuse and specular reflection. We show via synthetic and real-world experiments that diffuse and specular reflection can be easily distinguished in order to extract meaningful geometrical features from just polarimetric imaging. The inherent ambiguity of the Shape from Polarization problem becomes evident through the impossibility of reconstructing the whole surface with this differential approach. To overcome this limitation, we consider shading information elegantly embedding this new formulation into a two-light calibrated photometric stereo approach.
Variations on the Author
“Variations on the Author” discusses two of Eduardo Coutinho’s recent films (Um Dia na Vida, from 2010, and Últimas Conversas, posthumously released in 2015) and their contribution to the general question of documentary authorship. The director’s filmography is characterized by a consistent yet self-effacing form of authorial self-inscription: Coutinho often features as an interviewer that rather than express opinions propels discourses; an interviewer that is good at listening. This mode of self-inscription characterizes him as an author who is not expressive but who is nonetheless markedly present on the screen. In Um Dia na Vida, however, Coutinho is completely absent form the image, while Últimas Conversas, on the contrary, includes a confessional prologue that moves the director from the margins to the center of his films. This article examines the ways in which these works stand out in the filmography of a director who offers new insights into the notion of cinematic authorship
Input dependence of local field potential spectra: experiment vs theory
How sensory stimuli are encoded in neuronal activity is a major challenge for understanding perception. A prominent effect of sensory stimulation is to elicit oscillations in EEG and Local Field Potential (LFP) recordings over a broad range of frequencies. Belitski et al. [1] recorded LFPs and spiking activity in the primary visual cortex of anaesthetized macaques presented with naturalistic movies and found that the power of the gamma and low-frequency bands of LFP carried largely independent information about visual stimuli, while the information carried by the spiking activity was largely redundant with that carried by the gamma-band LFPs. To understand better how different frequency bands of the LFP are controlled by sensory input, we computed analytically the power spectrum of the LFP of a theoretical model of V1 (a network composed of two populations of neurons - excitatory and inhibitory), subjected to time-dependent external inputs modelling inputs from the LGN, as a function of the parameters characterizing single neurons, synaptic connectivity, as well as parameters characterizing the statistics of external inputs. Our model consists in a two populations network of excitatory and inhibitory leaky integrate-and-fire neurons. Standard analytical methods using the Fokker-Planck formalism can be used to compute average firing rates of both populations in the asynchronous state of the network, as well as the region of parameters for which this state is stable ([2,3]). The power spectrum of the global activity and the LFP (sum of average excitatory and inhibitory currents onto pyramidal cells of the network) can also be computed in a network of finite size ([2]). Using linear response theory we then calculated the response of the network to a dynamic input ([4]). The final result was an equation giving the LFP power spectrum as a function of the intrinsic parameters of the network and of the parameters characterizing the dynamic input. We then used the analytical expression of the LFP power to fit the experimental data of [1]. The data consists in LFP recordings from primary visual cortex of monkeys, during the presentation of a movie that last several minutes. In order to capture the LFP power changes during the movie presentation, the LFP traces were divided into 2 seconds non-overlapping scenes. We then fitted the LFP power of all the scenes with the same network parameters, but with input parameters free to vary scene-by-scene. We used a simplex method repeatedly applied for different initial conditions. The parameter set that was selected was the one that minimized the reduced chisquare, among sets for which the asynchronous state was stable. The model provided excellent fits of the data. The fitting procedure permitted to extract the values of the firing rates of the excitatory and inhibitory populations and the parameters characterizing the external input for most of the scenes of the movie. These outcomes could be then correlated with experimental firing rates and the features of the movie itself, such as temporal and spatial contrast as well as orientation. We found a significant correlation both between firing rates extracted from fit and the multi-unit activity recorded during the movie and between the parameters characterizing the external input and the features of the movie. These results show how an analytical approach can be used to estimate the key parameters underlying changes in the LFP spectral dynamics
[Newspaper Clipping: Author Claims Evidence of Second JFK Assassin #1]
Newspaper article titled "Author Claims Evidence of Second JFK Assassin." The article states that author Richard J. Whalen concluded "that there is circumstantial evidence to support the theory of a second assassin in the shooting of President John F. Kennedy.
Also By The Same Author: AKTiveAuthor, a Citation Graph Approach to Name Disambiguation
The desire for definitive data and the semantic web drive for inference over heterogeneous data sources requires co-reference resolution to be performed on those data. In particular, name disambiguation is required to allow accurate publication lists, citation counts and impact measures to be determined. This paper describes a graph-based approach to author disambiguation on large-scale citation networks. Using self-citation, co-authorship and document source analyses, AKTiveAuthor clusters papers, achieving precision of 0.997 and recall of 0.818 over a test group of eight surname clusters
Stimulus dependence of local field potential spectra: experiment versus theory
The local field potential (LFP) captures different neural processes, including integrative synaptic dynamics that cannot be observed by measuring only the spiking activity of small populations. Therefore, investigating how LFP power is modulated by external stimuli can offer important insights into sensory neural representations. However, gaining such insight requires developing data-driven computational models that can identify and disambiguate the neural contributions to the LFP. Here, we investigated how networks of excitatory and inhibitory integrate-and-fire neurons responding to time-dependent inputs can be used to interpret sensory modulations of LFP spectra. We computed analytically from such models the LFP spectra and the information that they convey about input and used these analytical expressions to fit the model to LFPs recorded in V1 of anesthetized macaques (Macaca mulatta) during the presentation of color movies. Our expressions explain 60%–98% of the variance of the LFP spectrum shape and its dependency upon movie scenes and we achieved this with realistic values for the best-fit parameters. In particular, synaptic best-fit parameters were compatible with experimental measurements and the predictions of firing rates, based only on the fit of LFP data, correlated with the multiunit spike rate recorded from the same location. Moreover, the parameters characterizing the input to the network across different movie scenes correlated with cross-scene changes of several image features. Our findings suggest that analytical descriptions of spiking neuron networks may become a crucial tool for the interpretation of field recordings
John F. Kennedy telegram to Roosevelt
Jersey Homesteads (later the Borough of Roosevelt) was established in the 1930s as an agro-industrial cooperative community. It was established specifically for urban Jewish garment workers, many of whom had emigrated from Europe. President John F. Kennedy sent a telegram to the citizens of Roosevelt, New Jersey, apologizing for not being able to attend the memorial dedication in honor of former President Franklin Delano Roosevelt. (Jersey Homesteads became Roosevelt in 1945 in honor of the president.) President Kennedy expressed his gratitude to the people of Roosevelt for constructing the memorial, and commented that it will serve as a constant reminder of Roosevelt's good works
Crystal engineering of brominated tectons: N-methyl-3,5-dibromopyridinium iodide gives particularly short C–Br•••I halogen bonding
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishe
Parametric study of EEG sensitivity to phase noise during face processing
<b>Background: </b>
The present paper examines the visual processing speed of complex objects, here faces, by mapping the relationship between object physical properties and single-trial brain responses. Measuring visual processing speed is challenging because uncontrolled physical differences that co-vary with object categories might affect brain measurements, thus biasing our speed estimates. Recently, we demonstrated that early event-related potential (ERP) differences between faces and objects are preserved even when images differ only in phase information, and amplitude spectra are equated across image categories. Here, we use a parametric design to study how early ERP to faces are shaped by phase information. Subjects performed a two-alternative force choice discrimination between two faces (Experiment 1) or textures (two control experiments). All stimuli had the same amplitude spectrum and were presented at 11 phase noise levels, varying from 0% to 100% in 10% increments, using a linear phase interpolation technique. Single-trial ERP data from each subject were analysed using a multiple linear regression model.
<b>Results: </b>
Our results show that sensitivity to phase noise in faces emerges progressively in a short time window between the P1 and the N170 ERP visual components. The sensitivity to phase noise starts at about 120–130 ms after stimulus onset and continues for another 25–40 ms. This result was robust both within and across subjects. A control experiment using pink noise textures, which had the same second-order statistics as the faces used in Experiment 1, demonstrated that the sensitivity to phase noise observed for faces cannot be explained by the presence of global image structure alone. A second control experiment used wavelet textures that were matched to the face stimuli in terms of second- and higher-order image statistics. Results from this experiment suggest that higher-order statistics of faces are necessary but not sufficient to obtain the sensitivity to phase noise function observed in response to faces.
<b>Conclusion: </b>
Our results constitute the first quantitative assessment of the time course of phase information processing by the human visual brain. We interpret our results in a framework that focuses on image statistics and single-trial analyses
Logarithmic variance profiles and the corresponding f-1 spectra of temperature fluctuations in turbulent Rayleigh-Bénard convection
We report experimental results for the temperature variance 2(z) and the corresponding frequency spectra P(f) in turbulent Rayleigh-Bénard convection (RBC) in a cylindrical sample of aspect ratioT= D/L = 1:00 (D = 1:12 m is the diameter and L = 1:12 m the height). The measurements were conducted in the Rayleigh-number range 1011 < Ra < 1:35 1014 and Pr ' 0:8. For Ra = 1:35x1014, 2(z) could be described well by a logarithmic dependence on the vertical position z in a range of z 1 < z < z 2 with z 1 ' 70 and z 2 = 0:1L. Here L=(2Nu) is the thickness of a thin thermal sublayer adjacent to the horizontal plate where the heat flux (denoted by the Nusselt number Nu) is carried mostly by thermal diffusion. In the log layer, we found that the temperature spectra had a significant frequency range over which P(f) f with close to 1. As Ra decreased, increased so that the log layer became thinner. At Ra = 2:05 1011, z 2 < z 1 and therefore there was no range for a log layer. Correspondingly, the temperature spectrum near the horizontal plate did not have the f1 scaling form either
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