scholarly journals The optimum processing of clipped signals: an approach based an a likelihood ratio statistic

Author(s):  
R. G. Keats ◽  
Winifred Frost ◽  
Annette Dobson

AbstractThe likelihood ratio approach to the detection of small signals in the presence of noise is investigated in the case where the available data have been clipped. The statistic obtained is the ratio of orthant probabilities and appears intractable; accordingly an approximation to this statistic is developed by truncating an appropriate Taylor expansion. Approximations are obtained for the mean and variance of this modified statistic and compared with those obtained from computer simulations.

2014 ◽  
Vol 909 ◽  
pp. 352-355 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hyo Il Park

In this study, we consider to propose combined control charts for the process mean and variance to control simultaneously. First of all, we review the existing combined control charts and then proposed new control charts based on the union-intersection test for the jointly likelihood ratio statistics. Also we adopt the Liptak combining function for another combined control chart. For those combined control charts, we use the fact that a series of the hypothesis tests is equivalent to the maintenance of control charts. In order to combine the two individual tests for the respective mean and variance, we utilize the p-values for each individual test. Then we discuss some interesting aspects of the combining charts.


Author(s):  
Hung Phuoc Truong ◽  
Thanh Phuong Nguyen ◽  
Yong-Guk Kim

AbstractWe present a novel framework for efficient and robust facial feature representation based upon Local Binary Pattern (LBP), called Weighted Statistical Binary Pattern, wherein the descriptors utilize the straight-line topology along with different directions. The input image is initially divided into mean and variance moments. A new variance moment, which contains distinctive facial features, is prepared by extracting root k-th. Then, when Sign and Magnitude components along four different directions using the mean moment are constructed, a weighting approach according to the new variance is applied to each component. Finally, the weighted histograms of Sign and Magnitude components are concatenated to build a novel histogram of Complementary LBP along with different directions. A comprehensive evaluation using six public face datasets suggests that the present framework outperforms the state-of-the-art methods and achieves 98.51% for ORL, 98.72% for YALE, 98.83% for Caltech, 99.52% for AR, 94.78% for FERET, and 99.07% for KDEF in terms of accuracy, respectively. The influence of color spaces and the issue of degraded images are also analyzed with our descriptors. Such a result with theoretical underpinning confirms that our descriptors are robust against noise, illumination variation, diverse facial expressions, and head poses.


Animals ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 568
Author(s):  
Sabine G. Gebhardt-Henrich ◽  
Ariane Stratmann ◽  
Marian Stamp Dawkins

Group level measures of welfare flocks have been criticized on the grounds that they give only average measures and overlook the welfare of individual animals. However, we here show that the group-level optical flow patterns made by broiler flocks can be used to deliver information not just about the flock averages but also about the proportion of individuals in different movement categories. Mean optical flow provides information about the average movement of the whole flock while the variance, skew and kurtosis quantify the variation between individuals. We correlated flock optical flow patterns with the behavior and welfare of a sample of 16 birds per flock in two runway tests and a water (latency-to-lie) test. In the runway tests, there was a positive correlation between the average time taken to complete the runway and the skew and kurtosis of optical flow on day 28 of flock life (on average slow individuals came from flocks with a high skew and kurtosis). In the water test, there was a positive correlation between the average length of time the birds remained standing and the mean and variance of flock optical flow (on average, the most mobile individuals came from flocks with the highest mean). Patterns at the flock level thus contain valuable information about the activity of different proportions of the individuals within a flock.


Energies ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (4) ◽  
pp. 955
Author(s):  
Alamir Elsayed ◽  
Mohamed El-Beltagy ◽  
Amnah Al-Juhani ◽  
Shorooq Al-Qahtani

The point kinetic model is a system of differential equations that enables analysis of reactor dynamics without the need to solve coupled space-time system of partial differential equations (PDEs). The random variations, especially during the startup and shutdown, may become severe and hence should be accounted for in the reactor model. There are two well-known stochastic models for the point reactor that can be used to estimate the mean and variance of the neutron and precursor populations. In this paper, we reintroduce a new stochastic model for the point reactor, which we named the Langevin point kinetic model (LPK). The new LPK model combines the advantages, accuracy, and efficiency of the available models. The derivation of the LPK model is outlined in detail, and many test cases are analyzed to investigate the new model compared with the results in the literature.


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