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  • 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.
11

Parametric splines in tension /

Gupta, Surendra K. January 1989 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--Rochester Institute of Technology, 1989. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 72-73).
12

Modeling Inter-plant Interactions

Larson, Jessica 01 January 2006 (has links)
The purpose of this paper is to examine the interactions between two plant species endemic to Florida and develop a model for the growth of one of the plant species. An equation for the growth of Hypericum cumulicola is developed through analyzing how the distance to and the height of the nearest Ceratiola ericoides (Florida rosemary) affects the growth of Hypericum cumulicola. The hypericums were separated into five separate regions according to the distance to the nearest rosemary plant. The parameters for a basic growth equation were obtained in each of the five regions and compared to each other along with the average deviations in each of the five regions. Analysis of the five separate regions aided in the creation of different growth equations that each encompassed all of the regions together. Four different growth equations are developed and then compared and analyzed for their accuracy.
13

Autonomous Vehicle Waypoint Navigation Using Hyper-Clothoids

Kotha, Bhavi Bharat 20 January 2022 (has links)
This research study presents two control solutions, PID and the novel hyper-clothoid control strategy, to autonomously navigate a car. These waypoint navigation solutions smoothly connect the given waypoints with C1 continuity using Hermite cubic splines which is used as a reference path for the controller to track. The PID controller uses lateral and heading error to generate a steering profile for the vehicle to track the constructed reference path. A novel real time solution is presented as the second control strategy which involves constructing clothoids to generate a steering profile. The resultant car trajectory preserves curvature and curvature rate continuity. A simulation test bench was developed in MATLAB and Simulink. Six benchmark waypoint datasets have been used for regression testing and validating the algorithms. Both the proposed control strategies have been implemented on a 2017 GM Chevy Bolt EV. A real time operating system (QNX) has been used and was time-synced with the localization suite in the test vehicle. Closed loop results with accuracies up to 50 cm of lateral error have been achieved using the test vehicle. / Doctor of Philosophy / The research into self-driving cars has been one of the most sought out areas these past couple of decades. There are many components into building a self-driving car - Sensing, Perception, Localization, Navigation. Lot of strategies have been developed over the years with waypoint navigation being the most widely used for navigation an autonomous vehicle. Waypoint Navigation utilizes GPS data to move the car from one point to the other. The traditional process of this strategy involves two parts - curve fitting between waypoints and using a control scheme to track the path with the car. Numerous methods have been developed to fit a curve in between two points. Most of these methods use a variant of 3rd degree or higher order polynomials . Also different control strategies have been developed to track the generated path. Model predictive control strategies are among the popular control architectures used for this purpose. This work proposes a novel method to track a path using clothoids. The proposed algorithm has a novel approach of integrating the path construction and control strategy. The algorithm also has a low computational requirement making it highly suitable for implementation in real-time.
14

Depth Map Compression Based on Platelet Coding and Quadratic Curve Fitting

Wang, Han 26 October 2012 (has links)
Due to the fast development in 3D technology during recent decades, many approaches in 3D representation technologies have been proposed worldwide. In order to get an accurate information to render a 3D representation, more data need to be recorded compared to normal video sequence. In this case, how to find an efficient way to transmit the 3D representation data becomes an important part in the whole 3D representation technology. Recent years, many coding schemes based on the principle of encoding the depth have been proposed. Compared to the traditional multiview coding schemes, those new proposed schemes can achieve higher compression efficiency. Due to the development of depth capturing technology, the accuracy and quality of the reconstructed depth image also get improved. In this thesis we propose an efficient depth data compression scheme for 3D images. Our proposed depth data compression scheme is platelet based coding using Lagrangian optimization, quadtree decomposition and quadratic curve fitting. We study and improve the original platelet based coding scheme and achieve a compression improvement of 1-2 dB compared to the original platelet based scheme. The experimental results illustrate the improvement provided by our scheme. The quality of the reconstructed results of our proposed curve fitting based platelet coding scheme are better than that of the original scheme.
15

Polynomial Curve and Surface Fitting

Capps, Ann Dowdy 01 1900 (has links)
The main problems of numerical analysis involve performing analytical operations, such as integration, differentiation, finding zeroes, interpolation, and so forth, of a function when all the data available are some samples of the function. Therefore, the purpose of this paper is to investigate the following problem: given a set of data points (x[sub i], y[sub i]) which are samples of some function, determine an approximating function. Further, extend the problem to that of determining an approximating function for a surface given some samples (x[sub i], y[sub j], z[sub ij]) of the surface.
16

Depth Map Compression Based on Platelet Coding and Quadratic Curve Fitting

Wang, Han 26 October 2012 (has links)
Due to the fast development in 3D technology during recent decades, many approaches in 3D representation technologies have been proposed worldwide. In order to get an accurate information to render a 3D representation, more data need to be recorded compared to normal video sequence. In this case, how to find an efficient way to transmit the 3D representation data becomes an important part in the whole 3D representation technology. Recent years, many coding schemes based on the principle of encoding the depth have been proposed. Compared to the traditional multiview coding schemes, those new proposed schemes can achieve higher compression efficiency. Due to the development of depth capturing technology, the accuracy and quality of the reconstructed depth image also get improved. In this thesis we propose an efficient depth data compression scheme for 3D images. Our proposed depth data compression scheme is platelet based coding using Lagrangian optimization, quadtree decomposition and quadratic curve fitting. We study and improve the original platelet based coding scheme and achieve a compression improvement of 1-2 dB compared to the original platelet based scheme. The experimental results illustrate the improvement provided by our scheme. The quality of the reconstructed results of our proposed curve fitting based platelet coding scheme are better than that of the original scheme.
17

Modeling of Peak Phosphorus : A Study of Bottlenecks and Implications for Future Production

Walan, Petter January 2013 (has links)
Today's modern agriculture is totally dependent on phosphorus to sustain their large yields. Several studies have recently expressed a concern for a future phosphorus deficiency. These studies are based on data for estimated reserves which have been increased with more than a fourfold since 2010. Some argue that these concerns are unfounded, despite the fact that only Morocco account for the bulk of these new reserves. This report provides new forecast for the world phosphorus production based on the new available reserve data. These forecasts are using bell shaped curve models to examine how individual countries' future production of phosphate rock affects a global production peak. Estimates of the size of several reserves are highly uncertain and it is therefore difficult to make an accurate forecast of future phosphorus extraction. Despite this uncertainty, a global production peak is likely to occur within this century. The global production will depend largely on China and Morocco's production as they hold a large share of the reserves and the current production. China's production will probably peak in 10-20 years at current production trend. It is uncertain if Morocco can increase production enough to replace China's production in the future. It is not likely that Morocco will be able to produce as much as would be required to meet the highest scenarios. This is mainly due to a number of bottlenecks in production such as water scarcity, increasing proportion of impurities and a decreasing concentration of phosphorus in the phosphate rock.
18

3D High Resolution T1 Mapping of Human Brain

Chen, Po-tsun 06 September 2012 (has links)
In this study, three different MR pulse sequences, IR-FSE, MP2RAGE, and firstly proposed MP3RAGE, were applied to obtain high-resolution 3D T1 mapping of whole brain at 1.5 Tesla. Among these three sequences, MP2RAGE uses fast gradient echo as readout module. Signals of two different inversion times are acquired at once and can be used to calculate T1 relaxation time according to Bloch equation. However, the magnetization was also influenced by the excitation efficiency of inversion adiabatic pulse, which was usually estimated by numerical simulation and taken as a constant over the field of view in the literature. However, this might not be true in practice. Therefore, a newly modified pulse sequence, MP3RAGE, was proposed to acquire data of three distinct inversion times without increasing scanning time. As a result, the spatial distribution of T1 and inversion efficiency can be assessed by solving nonlinear least square problem. In addition, the IR-FSE sequence with six inversion times was also applied in every experiment to provide T1 value for reference. Results showed that the T1 estimation obtained by MP2RAGE is close to, but slightly lower than that by IR-FSE, which is in agreement with those reported in literatures. In addition, the 3D high-resolution maps of T1 and efficiency were successfully estimated with the use of MP3RAGE. Spatial smoothing on inversion efficiency helps reducing the sensitivity to noise in the nonlinear approach, leading to T1 values closer to those by IR-FSE.
19

A Study on Centrodes of Human Knee Joint Using Photographic Method

Lin, Cheng-Feng 13 September 2012 (has links)
The kinematics characteristics of the human knee joint can be represented by its centrodes. This paper provides a method, called the photograph method, to construct the centrodes by using commercial digital camera to take the sequential pictures. In order to eliminate the undesired movements, a testing chair and a brace are specially designed. Two types of curve fitting methods are introduced to smooth the measured data. The differential method is applied to construct the centrodes of knee joints from the measured data. This paper provides a safe way to measure the centrodes of human knee joints.
20

Performance Analysis of a New Ultrasound Axial Strain Time Constant Estimation

Nair, Sanjay P. 2010 May 1900 (has links)
New elastographic techniques such as poroelastography and viscoelasticity imaging aim at imaging the temporal mechanical behavior of tissues. These techniques usually involve the use of curve fitting methods as applied to noisy data to estimate new elastographic parameters. As of today, however, image quality performance of these new elastographic imaging techniques is still largely unknown due to a paucity of data and the lack of systematic studies that analyze performance limitations of estimators suitable for these novel applications. Furthermore, current elastographic implementations of poroelasticity and viscoelasticity imaging methods are in general too slow and not optimized for clinical applications. In this paper, we propose a new elastographic time constant (TC) estimator, which is based on the use of the Least Square Error (LSE) curve-fitting method and the Levenberg-Marquardt (LM) optimization rule as applied to noisy elastographic data obtained from a tissue under creep compression. The estimator's performance is analyzed using simulations and quantified in terms of accuracy, precision, sensitivity, signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) and speed. Experiments are performed as a proof of principle of the technical applicability of the new estimator on real experimental data. The results of this study demonstrate that the new elastographic estimator described in this thesis can produce highly accurate, sensitive and precise time constant estimates in real-time and at high SNR. In the future, the use of this estimator could allow real-time imaging of the temporal behavior of complex tissues and provide advances in lymphedema and cancer imaging.

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