30,025 research outputs found

    Instrument Pointer Recognition Scheme Based on Improved CSL Algorithm

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    The traditional pointer instrument recognition scheme is implemented in three steps, which is cumbersome and inefficient. So it is difficult to apply to the industrial production of real-time monitoring. Based on the improvement of the CSL coding method and the setting of the pre-cache mechanism, an intelligent reading recognition technology of the YOLOv5 pointer instrument is proposed in this paper, which realizes the rapid positioning and reading recognition of the pointer instrument. The problem of angle interaction in rotating target detection is eliminated, the complexity of image preprocessing is avoided, and the problems of poor adaptability of Hough detection are solved in this strategy. The experimental results show that compared with the traditional algorithm, the algorithm in this paper can effectively identify the angle of the pointer instrument, has high detection efficiency and strong adaptability, and has broad application prospects

    Self-Induced Selection: A New Approach to Quantum Decoherence

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    According to Zurek, decoherence is a process resulting from the interaction between a quantum system and its environment; this process singles out a preferred set of states, usually called pointer basis, that determines which observables will receive definite values. This means that decoherence leads to a sort of selection which precludes all except a small subset of the states in the Hilbert space of the system from behaving in a classical manner: environment-induced-superselection (einselection) is a consequence of the process of decoherence. The aim of this paper is to present a new approach to decoherence, different from the mainstream approach of Zurek and his collaborators. We will argue that this approach offers conceptual advantages over the traditional one when problems of foundations are considered; in particular, from the new perspective, decoherence in closed quantum systems becomes possible and the preferred basis acquires a well founded definition

    Variations on the Author

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    “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

    U.S. POINTER (USA)

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    Abstract Background U.S. POINTER aims to test whether a multidomain lifestyle intervention focused on physical and cognitive activity, nutrition, and risk factor management reduces risk of cognitive decline in a heterogeneous population of older adults in the U.S. The study adapts the FINGER (Finnish Intervention Geriatric Study to Prevent Cognitive Impairment and Disability) interventions to fit American culture and works with community partners at 5 sites across the country to develop sustainable community‐based intervention programs. Methods U.S. POINTER is a 2‐year RCT that is enrolling 2000 cognitively normal older adults (60‐79 years) who are at risk for decline due sedentary lifestyle, poor diet and other factors such as family history of memory impairment and suboptimum cardiovascular health. Recruitment utilizes electronic health records, as well as grassroots approaches to engage traditionally underrepresented groups. Participants are randomized to one of two lifestyle intervention groups – Self‐Guided or Structured Lifestyle Intervention – that differ in format, intensity and accountability. U.S. POINTER includes partnerships with local chapters of the Alzheimer's Association and lifestyle specialists to assist with intervention delivery. The primary outcome is 2‐year change in cognitive function measured with a composite score that permits harmonization with FINGER. Results Recruitment began in 2019 at the vanguard site in North Carolina. Study progress at all 5 participating sites will be presented. Progress toward harmonization with FINGER and other international study teams in the WW‐FINGERS network will also be discussed. Conclusion As a member of the WW‐FINGERS network of trials, U.S. POINTER provides an unprecedented opportunity to leverage lessons learned in FINGER and expand this work to test the generalizability of the findings to a heterogeneous American cohort with different cultural needs and practices. The results, in combination with those from other WW‐FINGERS studies, have the potential to identify a strategy to slow cognitive decline on a global scale

    Self attended stack pointer networks for learning long term dependencies

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    © 2020 The Authors. Published by ACL. This is an open access article available under a Creative Commons licence. The published version can be accessed at the following link on the publisher’s website: https://aclanthology.org/2020.icon-main.12We propose a novel deep neural architecture for dependency parsing, which is built upon a Transformer Encoder (Vaswani et al., 2017) and a Stack Pointer Network (Ma et al., 2018). We first encode each sentence using a Transformer Network and then the dependency graph is generated by a Stack Pointer Network by selecting the head of each word in the sentence through a head selection process. We evaluate our model on Turkish and English treebanks. The results show that our transformer-based model learns long term dependencies efficiently compared to sequential models such as recurrent neural networks. Our self attended stack pointer network improves UAS score around 6% upon the LSTM based stack pointer (Ma et al., 2018) for Turkish sentences with a length of more than 20 words

    Intensity Stability Comparison Between Different Colors of Laser Pointer

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    Different source of light can be used as a main light source in an open path optical method. Sunlight, tungsten lamp, LED, laser, mercury vapor lamp and halogen are the example of the light source.  It is important to test the stability of the light source used to avoid inaccuracy in the measurement. The purpose of this project is to determine which color of laser has higher stability. Once the light is switched on, the intensity of the light source changes slowly until it comes to a stable state. Each color has different counts of intensity and stability. Different set of laser pointer is used in this project which included blue, violet, red and green color. An open path optical method is used in the experiment. A different color of laser pointer will be used as a light source while spectrometer will act as a detector. The stability for each color of laser pointer is reported in this paper

    Left-to-right dependency parsing with pointer networks

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    We propose a novel transition-based algorithm that straightforwardly parses sentences from left to right by building n attachments, with n being the length of the input sentence. Similarly to the recent stack-pointer parser by Ma et al. (2018), we use the pointer network framework that, given a word, can directly point to a position from the sentence. However, our left-to-right approach is simpler than the original top-down stack-pointer parser (not requiring a stack) and reduces transition sequence length in half, from 2n-1 actions to n. This results in a quadratic non-projective parser that runs twice as fast as the original while achieving the best accuracy to date on the English PTB dataset (96.04% UAS, 94.43% LAS) among fully-supervised single-model dependency parsers, and improves over the former top-down transition system in the majority of languages tested

    Intensity Stability Comparison Between Different Colors of Laser Pointer

    No full text
    Different source of light can be used as a main light source in an open path optical method. Sunlight, tungsten lamp, LED, laser, mercury vapor lamp and halogen are the example of the light source.  It is important to test the stability of the light source used to avoid inaccuracy in the measurement. The purpose of this project is to determine which color of laser has higher stability. Once the light is switched on, the intensity of the light source changes slowly until it comes to a stable state. Each color has different counts of intensity and stability. Different set of laser pointer is used in this project which included blue, violet, red and green color. An open path optical method is used in the experiment. A different color of laser pointer will be used as a light source while spectrometer will act as a detector. The stability for each color of laser pointer is reported in this paper

    Exploring Emptiness: An Investigation of MA and MU in My Sonic Composition Practice

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    The commentary investigates Japanese aesthetics of space, silence and emptiness - ma and mu - that informed my compositional practice during the research period 2012 - 2015. The portfolio comprises text compositions and sound installations in which forms of micro events and sustained events are employed. Throughout, the emphasis is on my personal engagement with, and manifestation of emptiness that concerns a particular model of listening and perception. Chapter 1 discusses six primary research areas: ma and mu, material, text, form, listening and perception. Firstly, I introduce ma and mu by examining noh culture and Zeami's teaching of senu hima (where there is no-action) in the context of my personal approaches to music. The following subjects are then used to contextualise my PhD practice by means of examples from various composers and visual artists. Here, these particular and enigmatic concepts are explored through Japanese art as well as Western contemporary works by Alvin Lucier, Eliane Radigue and those of the Wandelweiser collective. Part 2 provides contextual commentaries on selected compositions from the portfolio that mostly articulate my aesthetics in relation to the topics covered in Chapter 1. koso koso addresses my methodologies to investigate the essence of senu hima, followed by treow that discusses my approach to materials and the importance of space. I move on to grade two and grade two extended in order to examine text scores, and then, look into Espèces d'espaces 03 and 04 as examples of musical forms that I employ. Finally, listening and perception are investigated through the compositions gnome and con.de.structuring. Throughout, I describe how my works explore emptiness as a result of my particular emphasis on listening over composing

    Left-to-Right Dependency Parsing with Pointer Networks

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    Proceedings of the 2019 Conference of the North American Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics: Human Language Technologies, Volume 1 (Long and Short Papers)[Abstract]: We propose a novel transition-based algorithm that straightforwardly parses sentences from left to right by building n attachments, with n being the length of the input sentence. Similarly to the recent stack-pointer parser by Ma et al. (2018), we use the pointer network framework that, given a word, can directly point to a position from the sentence. However, our left-to-right approach is simpler than the original top-down stack-pointer parser (not requiring a stack) and reduces transition sequence length in half, from 2n-1 actions to n. This results in a quadratic non-projective parser that runs twice as fast as the original while achieving the best accuracy to date on the English PTB dataset (96.04% UAS, 94.43% LAS) among fully-supervised single-model dependency parsers, and improves over the former top-down transition system in the majority of languages tested.This work has received funding from the European Research Council (ERC), under the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme (FASTPARSE, grant agreement No 714150), from MINECO (FFI2014-51978-C2-2-R, TIN2017-85160-C2-1-R) and from Xunta de Galicia (ED431B 2017/01).Xunta de Galicia; ED431B 2017/0
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