• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 2105
  • 299
  • 272
  • 267
  • 174
  • 110
  • 57
  • 40
  • 36
  • 36
  • 34
  • 30
  • 25
  • 19
  • 16
  • Tagged with
  • 4263
  • 805
  • 741
  • 642
  • 361
  • 343
  • 336
  • 335
  • 306
  • 297
  • 297
  • 296
  • 285
  • 278
  • 268
  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
151

Preview-based system-inversion for output-tracking : theory & application /

Zou, Qingze. January 2003 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Washington, 2003. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references (p. 198-207).
152

Localization of a mobile robot by monocular vision /

Li, Wan-chiu. January 2001 (has links)
Thesis (M. Phil.)--University of Hong Kong, 2002. / Includes bibliographical references.
153

A distinct region based method for visual object tracking

Liu, Chongyang., 刘重阳. January 2011 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Electrical and Electronic Engineering / Doctoral / Doctor of Philosophy
154

Three-dimensional model based human detection and tracking in crowded scenes

Wang, Lu, 王璐 January 2011 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Electrical and Electronic Engineering / Doctoral / Doctor of Philosophy
155

Theory and Development of a Dynamic HITL Autotrack Evaluation System

King, Nathan, Davis, Steve 10 1900 (has links)
ITC/USA 2013 Conference Proceedings / The Forty-Ninth Annual International Telemetering Conference and Technical Exhibition / October 21-24, 2013 / Bally's Hotel & Convention Center, Las Vegas, NV / Telemetry ground antenna tracking performance evaluation and measurement was previously performed by evaluating only the antenna drive system. The integrated nature of software controlled antenna systems has prompted a need to evaluate the entire tracking antenna system, as a whole. Particularly, the ability of an antenna to remain "locked" on a dynamic target must be able to be evaluated and quantified. This paper presents one method for evaluating the tracking ability of a telemetry antenna system and discusses a likely set of metrics to be used as figures of merit for antenna system tracking performance.
156

Improved control of photovoltaic interfaces

Xiao, Weidong 11 1900 (has links)
Photovoltaic (solar electric) technology has shown significant potential as a source of practical and sustainable energy; this study focuses on increasing the performance of photovoltaic systems through the use of improved control and power interfaces. The main objective is to find an effective control algorithm and topology that are optimally suited to extracting the maximum power possible from photovoltaic modules. The thesis consists of the following primary subjects: photovoltaic modelling, the topological study of photovoltaic interfaces, the regulation of photovoltaic voltage, and maximum power tracking. In photovoltaic power systems both photovoltaic modules and switching mode converters present non-linear and time-variant characteristics, resulting in a difficult control problem. This study applies in-depth modelling and analysis to quantify these inherent characteristics,s pecifically using successive linearization to create a simplified linear problem. Additionally, Youla Parameterisation is employed to design a stable control system for regulating the photovoltaic voltage. Finally, the thesis focuses on two critical aspects to improve the performance of maximum power point tracking. One improvement is to accurately locate the position of the maximum power point by using centred differentiation. The second is to reduce the oscillation around the steady-state maximum power point by controlling active perturbations. Adopting the method of steepest descent for maximum power point tracking, which delivers faster dynamic response and a smoother steady-state than the hill climbing method, enables these improvements. Comprehensive experimental evaluations have successfully illustrated the effectiveness of the proposed algorithms. Experimental evaluations show that the proposed control algorithm harvests about 1% more energy than the traditional method under the same evaluation platform and weather conditions without increasing the complexity of the hardware.
157

A general purpose paper tape tracking system

Valladares, Miguel Rafael 08 1900 (has links)
No description available.
158

Improvement of Speckle-Tracked Freehand 3-D Ultrasound Through the Use of Sensor Fusion

Lang, Andrew 20 October 2009 (has links)
Freehand 3-D ultrasound (US) using a 2-D US probe has the advantage over conventional 3-D probes of being able to collect arbitrary 3-D volumes at a lower cost. Traditionally, generating a volume requires external tracking to record the US probe position. An alternative means of tracking the US probe position is through speckle tracking. Ultrasound imaging has the advantage that the speckle inherent in all images contains relative position information due to the decorrelation of speckle over distance. However, tracking the position of US images using speckle information alone suffers from drifts caused by tissue inconsistencies and overall lack of accuracy. This thesis presents two novel methods of improving the accuracy of speckle-tracked 3-D US through the use of sensor fusion. The first method fuses the speckle-tracked US positions with those measured by an electromagnetic (EM) tracker. Measurements are combined using an unscented Kalman filter (UKF). The fusion is able to reduce drift errors as well as to eliminate high-frequency jitter noise from the EM tracker positions. Such fusion produces a smooth and accurate 3-D reconstruction superior to those using the EM tracker alone. The second method involves the registration of speckle-tracked 3-D US volumes to preoperative CT volumes. We regard registration combined with speckle tracking as a form of sensor fusion. In this case, speckle tracking is used in the registration to generate an initial position for each US image. To improve the accuracy of the US-to-CT registration, the US volume is registered to the CT volume by creating individual US "sub-volumes", each consisting of a small section of the entire US volume. The registration proceeds from the beginning of the US volume to the end, registering every sub-volume. The work is validated through spine phantoms created from clinical patient CT data as well as an animal study using a lamb cadaver. Using this technique, we are able to successfully register a speckle-tracked US volume to a CT volume with excellent accuracy. As a by-product of accurate registration, any drift from the speckle tracking is eliminated and the freehand 3-D US volume is improved. / Thesis (Master, Electrical & Computer Engineering) -- Queen's University, 2009-10-19 00:10:25.717
159

Using Homographies for Vehicle Motion Estimation

Lundgren, Pär January 2015 (has links)
This master’s thesis describes a way to represent vehicles when tracking them through an image sequence. Vehicles are described with a state containing their position, velocity, size, etc.. The thesis highlights the properties of homographies due to their suitability for estimation of projective transformations. The idea is to approximatively represent vehicles with planes based on feature points found on the vehicles. The purpose with this approach is to estimate the displacement of a vehicle by estimating the transformation of these planes. Thus, when avehicle is observed from behind, one plane approximates features found on the back and one plane approximates features found on the side, if the side of the vehicle is visible. The projective transformations of the planes are obtained by measuring the displacement of feature points. The approach presented in this thesis builds on the prerequisites that a camera placed on a vehicle provides an image of its field of view. It does not cover how to find vehicles in an image and thus it requires that the patch which contains the vehicle is provided. Even though this thesis covers large parts of image processing functionalities, the focus is on how to represent vehicles and how to design an appropriate filter for improving estimates of vehicle displacement. Due to noisy features points, approximation of planes, and estimated homographies, the obtained measurements are likely to be noisy. This requires a filter that can handle corrupt measurements and still use those that are not. An unscented Kalman filter, UKF, is utilized in this implementation. The UKF is an approximate solution to nonlinear filtering problems and is here used to update the vehicle’s states by using measurements obtained from homographies. The choice of the unscented Kalman filter was made because of its ease of implementation and its potentially good performance. The result is not a finished implementation for tracking of vehicles, but rather a first attempt for this approach. The result is not better than the existing approach, which might depend on one or several factors such as poorly estimated homographies, unreliable feature points and bad performance of the UKF.
160

Video motion detection and tracking for surveillance applications

Quevillon, Joey 21 August 2012 (has links)
These days, video surveillance is an important security asset to control theft, trespassing or traffic monitoring for any physical systems, whether personal or commercial. Implementing a surveillance system can allow people to get an idea of what is going on without the physical need to be there. In the classical video surveillance installations, there is a need for a human operator to consistently watch the video feed to see if there is any interesting activity. An intelligent, computer vision-based motion detector eliminates the need for constant surveillance by an operator by notifying an interested party that there is relevant motion in the area being monitored. Pan tilt zoom (PTZ) cameras can be used to track an object of interest moving throughout a scene. However, in classic systems, this again would require the operator to manually move the PTZ camera to get the subject in scope. The goal of this work is to eliminate the operator from controlling the system. With the proposed automated tracking approach, an object found in a scene can be tracked automatically and followed until the target is out of camera scope. / Graduate

Page generated in 0.0702 seconds